Ukraine launched more than 1,000 drones at Russian targets on Sunday 17 May 2026, the largest single-day Ukrainian barrage of the war 1. Russian regional authorities reported four dead and twelve wounded across the Moscow region. An Indian national working at an oil-refinery construction site was among the dead; three other Indian workers were hospitalised 2. The Indian Embassy in Moscow confirmed the casualty the following day.
The daily volume sits well above the saturation tempo ISW had recorded through April . One reading is that Kyiv is now flying enough airframes per night to exceed the engagement capacity of Russian air-defence batteries positioned to cover Moscow, the central refinery belt and the Black Sea ports simultaneously. The same fleet that lit up the Syzran fires on 20-21 May is hitting the capital district on the days in between.
India sits awkwardly on the casualty list. Delhi has been one of the largest takers of Russian crude under the discounted-shipping arrangement that Treasury has been managing through the rolling general-licence series; an Indian dead and three Indians hospitalised at a Russian energy site puts the diplomatic file on Delhi's desk. The embassy confirmation makes it impossible for the Kremlin to treat the death as a domestic news item.
Germany's €4 billion Guidance Enhanced Missile-Tactical (GEM-T) Patriot package signed in Berlin on 14 April buys Ukraine the lower-tier airframe that engages aircraft, cruise missiles and drones. The Patriot Advanced Capability-3 Missile Segment Enhancement (PAC-3 MSE), the ballistic-class interceptor that Russian missiles actually target, remains frozen behind Washington's global export suspension. Until that pipe reopens, every drone night that ends with civilian casualties on Russian soil also lands as evidence that Ukraine's offensive throughput is outpacing its defensive supply.
