Poland scrambled fighter jets on Monday morning to secure its airspace after neighbouring western Ukraine was hit by major Russian strikes.
“Due to the intensive air attack by the Russian Federation on the territory of Ukraine, Polish and allied aircraft began to operate in Polish airspace in the morning,” Warsaw’s Operational Command said in a statement on social media.
Russia struck deep beyond the frontlines overnight, hitting western Ukraine with dozens of drones and missiles, according to Rivne Mayor Oleksandr Tretyak, who called it “the largest attack” on the region.
Russia has recently accelerated its campaign against Ukraine, dampening hopes of a ceasefire after a renewed diplomatic push to end the biggest conflict in Europe since World War II.
Poland is one of Ukraine’s closest allies and serves as a crucial logistics hub for Western military aid to Kyiv.
Breakthrough In Ukraine War As Moscow, Kyiv Exchange First Group Of Prisoners After Istanbul Talks
In March 2024, NATO member Poland reported a breach of its airspace by a Russian cruise missile, demanding an explanation from Moscow. A similar incident occurred in December 2023, when a Russian missile penetrated Polish airspace for several minutes before returning to Ukraine.

Russia-Ukraine Peace Talks Stall
Russia said Sunday that it was advancing into Ukraine’s eastern Dnipropetrovsk region for the first time in its three-year invasion, a significant territorial escalation amid stalled peace talks.
Ukraine’s top political and military leaders did not immediately respond to the claim of the advance, which would be a symbolic and strategic blow after months of battlefield setbacks.
Moscow, which has the initiative across much of the front, has repeatedly refused calls by Ukraine, Europe, and US President Donald Trump for an unconditional ceasefire even as it holds talks with Kyiv on a possible settlement to the war.
Russia’s defence ministry said forces from a tank unit had “reached the western border of the Donetsk People’s Republic and are continuing to develop an offensive in the Dnipropetrovsk region”.
Although there was no response from leaders in Kyiv to the claims, Ukraine’s southern army command stated that Russia “does not give up its intentions to enter the Dnipropetrovsk region, but our fighters are bravely and professionally holding their section of the front line.”
Dnipropetrovsk is not one of the five Ukrainian regions — Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, and Crimea — that Moscow has publicly claimed as Russian territory.
In a set of peace demands issued to Ukraine during negotiations in Istanbul on June 2, Moscow demanded formal recognition that these regions were part of Russia, something Kyiv has repeatedly ruled out.
At a first round of talks last month, Ukraine said Russia threatened to accelerate and expand its offensive if Kyiv did not capitulate.
Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Russia’s three-year war, with millions forced to flee their homes and cities, and villages across eastern Ukraine devastated by relentless air attacks and ground combat.
Strategic Setback
Russia’s former President Dmitry Medvedev, now Deputy Chairman of the National Security Council, said the latest advance was a warning to Kyiv.
“Those who do not want to recognise the realities of the war at negotiations, will receive new realities on the ground,” he said on social media.
Russia’s army posted photos showing troops raising the Russian flag over the village of Zorya in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, close to the internal border.
A 60-year-old Ukrainian lieutenant colonel, Oleksandr, said that Russian forces entering the region would not alter the battle’s dynamics.
“They are advancing slowly, very slowly, but they are advancing,” he told AFP in the town of Mezhova, around a dozen kilometres from the border between the Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk regions.
One person was killed there in an overnight bomb attack.
Oleksandr said he remained defiant.
“They could say all of Ukraine belongs to them. Saying it is one thing. But I don’t think it will radically change the situation. Our resistance will remain unchanged.”
Dnipropetrovsk had an estimated population of three million before Russia launched its offensive. Around one million people lived in the regional capital, Dnipro.
It is a crucial mining and industrial hub for Ukraine, and deeper Russian advances into the region could have a significant impact on Kyiv’s struggling military and economy.
Ukrainian military personnel previously told AFP that Russia could advance relatively quickly in the largely flat region, given there were fewer natural obstacles or villages that could be used as defensive positions by Kyiv’s forces.
The region, and in particular the city of Dnipro, has been under persistent Russian strikes since Moscow invaded in February 2022.
Russia used Dnipro as a testing ground for its “experimental” Oreshnik missile in late 2024, claiming to have struck an aeronautics production facility.
PoW Swap
Ukraine also said Sunday that a prisoner exchange — the only agreement reached at the Istanbul talks — would start “next week” after both sides accused each other of trying to thwart and delay the swap.
Moscow said Ukraine was refusing to agree to take back the bodies of killed soldiers, while Kyiv said Russia had not sent the names of more than 1,000 captured soldiers to be released.
Both sides had said days earlier that the exchange could take place this weekend.
“The Russian side, as usual, is trying to play a dirty, political, information game,” Zelensky said in his evening address.
If Russia fails to comply with the agreement, it “will cast great doubt” on diplomatic efforts to end the three-year war, he added.
Via: Agence France-Presse