# [WARNING] Russia Launches New Nationwide Multi‑Wave Strike on Ukraine Grid

*Wednesday, May 13, 2026 at 10:19 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-13T10:19:44.806Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, Airstrikes, EnergyInfrastructure, EuropeanEnergy, Commodities, Defense
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6641.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 09:38 and 10:01 UTC, Ukrainian intelligence and regional authorities reported that Russia has initiated a prolonged, combined strike on critical infrastructure and major cities across Ukraine. The operation uses a large swarm of drones to overload air defenses, followed by cruise and ballistic missile salvos against energy, defense industry, and government facilities, with early indications of power disruptions in western regions. This represents a renewed major escalation in Russia’s strategic bombing campaign, with implications for Ukraine’s war‑fighting capacity, civilian resilience, and European energy and grain markets.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

At approximately 09:40:58 UTC, Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate (GUR) reported that Russia had begun a “prolonged combined strike” against critical facilities across Ukraine. According to this official assessment, the first wave consists of a “significant number of UAVs” intended to overload air defenses and hit civilian targets, followed by a second wave comprising a large number of cruise and ballistic missiles aimed at critical infrastructure and life‑support systems in major cities, including energy facilities, defense‑industrial enterprises, and government buildings.

Supporting posts from regional administrations in the 09:38–10:01 UTC window corroborate active engagements: air defenses operating over Odesa (Report 3, 09:58:44 UTC), an ongoing attack on Ivano‑Frankivsk region in western Ukraine (Report 4, 09:56:30 UTC), and reported power interruptions in Kolomyia, Ivano‑Frankivsk oblast (Report 5, 09:45:13 UTC). Debris from UAVs fell in Kyiv’s Obolon district without reported casualties so far (Report 2, 10:01:30 UTC). A separate military summary (Report 1, 09:43:33 UTC) notes a large UAV presence over Ukraine (claimed 265+), ongoing strikes across western regions, and the earlier destruction of Kharkiv railway infrastructure.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The attacking force is the Russian Armed Forces, likely under the centralized control of the Russian General Staff and Aerospace Forces, with long‑range aviation and missile forces coordinating with drone units. The GUR’s characterization of a planned, multi‑wave campaign suggests pre‑planned tasking from senior Russian political and military leadership, consistent with prior nationwide strikes on Ukraine’s grid. Ukrainian responses involve the Air Force, territorial air defense assets, and regional emergency services.

3) Immediate military and security implications

This operation marks a renewed high‑intensity phase in Russia’s strategic strike campaign, particularly against energy and critical infrastructure across the entire country, including western regions that had previously been relatively less affected. Overloading Ukraine’s air defenses with large UAV swarms increases the risk that later missile waves will penetrate to high‑value targets, degrading power generation, transmission, rail nodes, and defense‑industrial facilities. Reported blackouts in Kolomyia and attacks on Ivano‑Frankivsk suggest western grid nodes and possibly logistics hubs are under threat.

Sustained damage could:
- Further reduce Ukraine’s available power for industry and rail transport, complicating military logistics and civilian resilience.
- Force diversion of scarce Ukrainian air defense munitions away from the front, potentially easing Russian air and missile pressure on frontline cities.
- Increase internal displacement and strain on municipal services if attacks persist.

4) Market and economic impact

While today’s strikes do not directly target international oil or gas production, they increase geopolitical and infrastructure‑security risk in Eastern Europe. Key implications:
- European natural gas and power: Markets may price in higher risk premiums, especially for winter 2026–27 contracts, as Ukraine’s ability to support transit, storage, and emergency power flows remains under pressure.
- Agricultural commodities: Recurrent hits on power and rail nodes in western and central Ukraine raise concerns about reliability of grain exports over coming months, supporting volatility and potential upside in wheat and corn futures, particularly if Black Sea logistics are indirectly affected.
- Global risk assets: The renewed intensity of strikes may prompt modest risk‑off sentiment, favoring gold and safe‑haven currencies (USD, CHF) and weighing on European and EM equities with Eastern European exposure.
- Defense and energy infrastructure sectors: Defense names may benefit from expectations of additional air defense and missile procurement; European grid and infrastructure firms may see supportive flows on anticipated hardening and redundancy investments.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

If the GUR assessment is accurate, the current drone wave is likely the prelude to one or more heavy missile salvos over the next several hours, potentially into the night cycle when strikes are harder to intercept and repair operations are constrained. We should expect:
- Additional reports of missile launches from Russian strategic aviation and naval platforms, with air‑raid alerts across multiple Ukrainian regions.
- Further localized or regional blackouts, especially in western and central Ukraine, with emergency load‑shedding and grid rerouting.
- Possible follow‑on strikes targeting repair crews and substations, consistent with prior Russian tactics.
- Ukrainian appeals for more air defense systems and ammunition, which may accelerate Western decisions on additional deliveries or changes to employment rules.

Market participants should monitor: 1) evidence of prolonged or widespread grid outages, 2) any impacts on Black Sea export corridors or rail links to EU ports, and 3) Western political and military responses, which could shift both escalation risk and defense‑sector valuations.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Heightened geopolitical risk supports upside pressure on European natural gas and power prices, as well as defensive flows into gold and safe‑haven FX (USD, CHF). Limited direct oil supply disruption so far, but sustained damage to Ukrainian infrastructure and rail could affect regional grain exports and Black Sea logistics, underpinning volatility in wheat and corn futures. European equities may see incremental risk‑off moves, especially in utilities and industrials exposed to Eastern Europe.
