Thursday, April 16, 2026

 How Much More Blood must Ukrainians Shed before Trump Realizes that Putin only Wants to Kill Ukrainians

Every new day in Moscow’s war against Ukraine brings new waves of Russian drones and missiles hitting Ukrainian cities, apartment buildings, energy infrastructure, supermarkets, schools, churches, buses and trains, killing innocent men, women and children.

President Donald J. Trump, just like he has done with Iran and other hot spots, claims to believe the Russian war versus Ukraine coming to an end. The picture on the ground and in the air is markedly different.  As he pushes President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to accept all of Russian fuhrer Putin’s unacceptable, damaging demands, Putin is launching daytime and nighttime attacks on Ukrainian cities. It’s noteworthy to point out that Trump’s pressure on Zelenskyy does not compare with the silence Putin is feeling from the American president.

According to Ukrainian news sources, Russian forces attacked Kyiv and other cities with ballistic missiles and drones early Thursday morning, April 16, resulting in deaths and dozens of injuries.

More than 700 drones and missiles were launched in multiple waves at cities across the country, killing at least 18 people in what local officials described as the deadliest attack in months.

The State Emergency Service (DSNS) reported on Telegram:

“Kyiv: 4 dead, including a child, 21 injured as a result of Russian shelling. Destruction recorded in Podil, Obolon, Shevchenkivskyi and Desnyanskyi districts.”

The number of casualties has been rising throughout the day, reaching seven dead and 64 injured.

At 2:36 AM Kyiv Post correspondents in various areas of the capital heard loud explosions as Russia launched the first wave of ballistic missiles.

Eleven-year-old Maksym Veremchuk never woke up from his nightly sleep. He was in his bed when he was killed during a Russian strike on Kyiv on April 16.

Maksym's father, Ihor, said the family did not hear the air-raid warning.

"The missile hit, and it killed my son in that room. My other son, who was sleeping by the window, is alive. But he was sleeping a little further away. We hadn't even heard the air-raid warning when it all happened. We didn't have time to react and run out," Ihor said.

Nearby hotels and residential buildings also sustained heavy damage. Elsewhere, a one-story house was destroyed, and two people, including a child, were rescued.

Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said four people had died in the capital, while seven people were killed in Odesa and two in the southeastern city of Dnipro, where Russian attacks set residential buildings ablaze.

Zelenskyy said in the wake of the overnight strikes that Putin is a “truly global threat.”

Appearing in the Netherlands to receive the International Four Freedoms Award, Zelenskyy said: “Today, this is definitely not unprecedented. Putin knows exactly what he's doing. Exactly. And who he resembles.

"And he's rightly compared to Nazis, he has the same expansionist ambitions, he wants to decide the fate of nations.”

He went on: “Russia has carried its war ideas as far as Syria and Africa. This is a truly global threat."

The latest strikes left cities and towns in Ukraine’s southeast without power, including Mykolayiv and Kherson.

Russian troops have been carrying out missile and drone strikes on a number of regions of Ukraine for the second day in a row. In addition to Kyiv, Dnipro, Odesa, and Kharkiv were under fire.

In Dnipropetrovsk four people were killed and 34 injured in Russian strikes.

Oleksandra Hanzha, head of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Military Administration, on Telegram said: “Fires broke out at several locations in Dnipro as a result of a large-scale missile and drone attack yesterday evening and overnight… Sadly, two people have been killed and 30 injured."

Earlier, buildings of two universities were damaged in a Russian attack on Dnipro on the night April 14-15 – academic and accommodation buildings of the Ukrainian State University of Science and Technology and Dnipro Polytechnic.

Trump had to be probed by a RFE/RL reporter Alex Raufoglu, before he said the attack was “terrible.”

Asked whether the war had the potential to drag on for years, Trump said he believed a deal could still be reached.

“Well, possibly, but I think a deal could be reached – possibly,” he said. “It would be foolish not to. I mean, if we’re close to a deal to end it, yes, I would do that. But we’re close to a deal.”

Do Trump’s haphazard words mean they’re close to a deal? Have Ukraine’s demands been satisfied? Zelenskyy cannot sign the accord if all of his demands haven’t been met. No two ways about that.

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