# [WARNING] Russia Follows Record Barrage With New 100‑Drone Wave Over Ukraine

*Thursday, May 14, 2026 at 2:29 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-14T02:29:36.019Z (1h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, MissileAndDroneStrikes, Kyiv, AirDefense, EuropeSecurity, DefenseMarkets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6741.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Around 01:50–02:00 UTC on 14 May, OSINT indicates Russia launched another wave of over 100 Geran‑2/‘Gerbera’ drones into Ukrainian airspace, shortly after a record 24‑hour attack of more than 1,300 drones and 55 missiles. Large fires and reported residential impacts in Kyiv suggest continued heavy pressure on Ukrainian air defenses and civilian areas, heightening risks of further escalation and Western response.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

Between approximately 01:50 and 02:00 UTC on 14 May 2026, multiple OSINT reports (Reports 3, 4, 15, 17) state that more than 100 additional Russian Geran‑2/Gerbera loitering munitions entered Ukrainian airspace, following an already unprecedented 24‑hour period in which Russia reportedly launched over 1,300 drones and about 55 missiles at Ukraine. Concurrent posts show large fires burning in Kyiv after ‘dozens of missile impacts’, described as among the largest attacks on the city since the war began, with at least one residential zone reportedly hit and people missing.

This follows the earlier record‑scale mixed missile‑drone attack already covered in prior WARNING alerts. The new information indicates that the offensive is not a single salvo but a sustained, multi‑wave air campaign.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The strikes are conducted by Russian forces, likely under Russia’s Long‑Range Aviation and associated drone units, controlled by the Russian Ministry of Defense and ultimately the Kremlin’s strategic command. The Geran‑2 (Shahed‑type) drones are Iranian‑designed loitering munitions that Russia manufactures domestically or assembles from supplied components. Targets appear to include Kyiv and potentially other Ukrainian urban and infrastructure sites, though current posts explicitly reference Kyiv fires and residential damage.

3) Immediate military/security implications

The key development is the intensity and continuity of the air campaign. A follow‑on wave of over 100 drones after a record barrage:
- Stresses Ukrainian air defenses, forcing further expenditure of interceptor missiles and ammunition and increasing the chance of leak‑throughs to critical infrastructure and residential areas.
- Suggests Russia may be testing or seeking to overwhelm integrated air defense nodes in and around Kyiv, potentially shaping conditions for future operations or political pressure.
- Raises near‑term civilian casualty risk and internal displacement from Kyiv if strikes on residential zones continue.
- Heightens pressure on Western partners to accelerate air defense resupply, potentially including additional Patriot, IRIS‑T, NASAMS munitions, and counter‑drone systems.

If residential areas continue to be hit with high casualty counts, expect intensified calls for new sanctions, additional long‑range weapons for Ukraine, and potentially authorization to use Western systems against launch platforms deeper inside Russian territory.

4) Market and economic impact

This escalation is directionally supportive for:
- Gold and other safe‑haven assets as geopolitical risk in Eastern Europe rises.
- Defense sector equities in the US and Europe on expectations of higher munitions demand and further air defense aid packages.
- European gas and, to a lesser degree, oil, as markets price incremental risk to regional infrastructure and the possibility of broader NATO‑Russia friction.

However, absent confirmed strikes on cross‑border energy or transport infrastructure, the immediate macro impact should remain contained. Ukrainian sovereign risk and reconstruction‑linked assets remain under pressure due to higher damage expectations, while regional insurers and reinsurers with Ukrainian exposure may also face sentiment headwinds.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Ukraine will prioritize damage assessment in Kyiv, casualty counts, and integrity checks on power, rail, and command infrastructure.
- Expect urgent public statements from Ukrainian leadership requesting additional air defense support, and likely emergency consultations with key NATO states.
- Russia may continue staggered waves of drones and missiles to exploit depleted interceptors and test response cycles.
- Western governments will monitor for evidence of mass civilian casualties or major infrastructure hits; if confirmed, expect escalated sanctions discussion and potential announcements of new air defense or long‑range strike packages within days.
- Markets will watch for any sign of spillover beyond Ukraine or direct Russian attacks on NATO territory or critical energy assets; absent that, risk premia rise modestly but remain bounded.


**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Sustained extreme Russian strikes on Kyiv increase perceived war‑risk premia, marginally bullish for gold and defense equities and mildly supportive for oil and European gas on higher geopolitical risk. Unless followed by Western escalation or critical infrastructure hits, immediate broad equity or FX dislocation is limited, but Ukraine‑related reconstruction, defense, and insurance names remain sensitive.
