# [FLASH] Russia Launches New Prolonged Nationwide Strike on Ukraine

*Wednesday, May 13, 2026 at 11:29 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-13T11:29:39.537Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Russia, Ukraine, Airstrikes, Drones, Missiles, EnergyInfrastructure, EuropeSecurity, Commodities
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6647.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 10:40–11:00 UTC on 13 May, Ukrainian military intelligence and multiple field reports confirmed that Russia has launched a new prolonged combined strike on Ukraine using 150–200 Shahed/Geran‑2 drones in the first wave against critical infrastructure nationwide, especially in the west. Explosions and power outages are reported in Rivne, Ivano‑Frankivsk and other cities, with further cruise and ballistic missile salvos expected. This marks a significant escalation in Russia’s pressure campaign against Ukraine’s energy grid, industry, and command centers, with implications for European energy security and the course of the war.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

From approximately 10:30–11:00 UTC on 13 May 2026, Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR/GUR) and multiple OSINT channels reported that Russia has initiated a new, prolonged combined air campaign against Ukraine. According to HUR (Report 21, 10:43:47 UTC; Report 36, 10:11:27 UTC), Moscow is executing a multi‑phase plan: an initial mass wave of strike drones to saturate air defenses and hit civilian and critical sites, to be followed by air‑ and sea‑launched cruise missiles and ballistic missiles against energy, defense industry, transport, and government targets.

Analyst estimates (Report 23, 10:44:20 UTC) indicate Russia has launched 150–200 Geran‑2/Gerbera drones in recent hours, with at least 120 simultaneously detected in Ukrainian airspace, many heading toward western regions. Report 22 (10:58:48 UTC) lists first‑wave impacts or attacks on a wide set of locations, mostly in western and central Ukraine, including Lutsk, Dubno, Rivne, Ivano‑Frankivsk, Kolomyya, Khmelnytskyi, Zdolbuniv, Yampil (Vinnytsia Oblast), Chernivtsi, Smila, Cherkasy, Kyiv, and Malyn.

Local Ukrainian channels corroborate explosions and damage: Rivne has been partially de‑energized (Report 12, 10:35:00 UTC) and Ivano‑Frankivsk is experiencing rolling blackouts following blasts (Report 36). Odesa reports active air defenses and at least two wounded after drone debris ignited vehicles near a residential building (Report 13, 10:34:27 UTC). Lutsk, Rivne, and other western cities report explosions (Reports 15 & 16, ~10:11–10:16 UTC). An air‑raid alert for Kyiv has been lifted (Report 9, 10:58:53 UTC), but threats persist in other regions, indicating the strike is geographically broad and multi‑wave.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The operation is being conducted by the Russian Armed Forces under the Russian General Staff and Aerospace Forces (VKS), employing Iran‑designed Shahed‑type loitering munitions (Geran‑2/Gerbera branding) and preparing follow‑up missile salvos from air and sea platforms. Targeting priorities—energy infrastructure, defense industry, logistics nodes, and government facilities—reflect strategic guidance from the Kremlin, likely approved at the level of the Russian Security Council. Ukrainian air defense operations are led by the Air Force Command and integrated with HUR’s early‑warning and tracking.

3) Immediate military/security implications

This strike pattern indicates another major round in Russia’s campaign to systematically degrade Ukraine’s power grid, defense industry, and transport infrastructure ahead of or during anticipated Russian offensive pushes. The focus on western regions, traditionally rear areas and logistics hubs, suggests an attempt to disrupt arms flows, maintenance facilities, and command centers supporting the front. Mass drone use in the opening phase aims to saturate Ukrainian air defenses and reveal radar sites before higher‑value cruise and ballistic missiles are launched.

Short‑term impacts will likely include:
- Localized blackouts in multiple regions (Rivne and Ivano‑Frankivsk already affected), with potential knock‑on effects on rail operations and industrial output.
- Additional civilian casualties and housing/infrastructure damage, as seen in Odesa.
- Depletion of Ukrainian air defense missile stocks, intensifying Kyiv’s call for more Western air defense systems and interceptors.

If missile waves follow as HUR expects, there is risk of substantial damage to high‑voltage substations, power plants, and industrial sites, potentially forcing renewed emergency load‑shedding nationwide.

4) Market and economic impact

While Ukraine is not a major global energy exporter, sustained targeting of its grid and industrial base raises broader European security and energy risk perceptions. This can:
- Support higher risk premia for European power prices and TTF gas futures, as markets price in heightened infrastructure and regional conflict risk.
- Modestly support Brent and WTI prices through increased geopolitical risk and the cumulative signal of intensifying Russia‑West confrontation.
- Boost demand for safe‑haven assets such as gold and the US dollar, especially if the strike sequence continues over 24–48 hours.
- Positively impact defense sector equities, especially air‑defense, missile, and drone‑countermeasure manufacturers, as NATO members reassess stockpile levels and procurement plans.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Additional waves: Expect follow‑on salvos of cruise and potentially ballistic missiles overnight and into the next day, consistent with previous multi‑wave Russian campaigns.
- Target expansion: Russia may expand strikes to additional power generation assets, railway junctions, and defense‑industrial sites, including in central and eastern Ukraine.
- Ukrainian response: Kyiv will likely intensify diplomatic pressure for expedited delivery of air defense assets (Patriot, SAMP/T, IRIS‑T, NASAMS) and long‑range strike weapons. Retaliatory Ukrainian drone or missile strikes on Russian oil refineries and logistics hubs are probable, maintaining the tit‑for‑tat pattern.
- Western posture: NATO states may use this attack cycle to justify increased military aid, including air defense interceptors and grid‑protection support, and to review contingency planning for a prolonged Russian campaign.

We assess this as a significant escalation within an ongoing pattern, but not yet a fundamental change in the conflict’s geography. Its importance lies in the potential cumulative degradation of Ukraine’s energy and industrial capacity and the pressure placed on Western support timelines.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Sustained Russian strikes on Ukraine’s grid and infrastructure increase war‑risk premia in European energy and power markets, support safe‑haven demand (gold, USD), and reinforce upward pressure on oil and gas via heightened geopolitical and infrastructure risk. Defense equities and drone/air defense names are likely to benefit.
