Russia rings in new year with mass drone strike on Ukraine, Putin says he’s confident of victory
KYIV, Ukraine โ Russia rang in the new year by launching more than 200 drones at Ukraine, while President Vladimir Putin used his year-end address to rally support for his troops and to assure his nation of victory.
In Ukraine itself, President Volodymyr Zelenskyyโs Dec. 31 address was defiant but also optimistic about the frenetic shuttle diplomacy being brokered by the United States.
Zelenskyy said that Russia, whose officials are also in talks with the Americans, remains the central barrier to peace, with Putin unyielding in his maximalist demands.
โI would give anything in the world if, in this address, I could say that peace will also come in just a few minutes,โ Zelenskyy said just before the clock struck midnight. โUnfortunately, I cannot say that yet. But with a clear conscience, I โ all of us โ can say that Ukraine is truly doing everything for peace.โ
The Ukrainian leader recently returned from a meeting with President Donald Trump in Florida on Sunday. Afterward, Zelenskyy said Trump had offered 15 years of the crucial โsecurity guaranteesโ that he says are essential to stop Putin from attacking again. Ukraine had asked for 50 years, he said.
Hours before the new yearโs bells chimed, Trumpโs special envoy Steve Witkoff posted on X that he had held a call with Zelenskyy, Ukrainian national security secretary Rustem Umerov and the national security advisers of Britain, France and Germany.
In his own post on X, Umerov said Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Trumpโs son-in-law Jared Kushner were also on the call.
Though Zelenskyy said that the โpeace agreement is 90% ready,โ he suggested that the remaining 10% contained the thorniest issues preventing peace.
โThose are the 10% that will determine the fate of peace, the fate of Ukraine and Europe, how people will live,โ he said. โTen percent to save millions of lives. Ten percent of the determination needed for peace to work 100%. Ten percent of the unity and wisdom so desperately needed โ Ukrainian, American, European, from the entire world. Ten percent to peace.โ

The Ukrainian leader charted what has been a roller-coaster year trying to retain the goodwill of Trump, a pivotal and changeable figure in the peace process. Zelenskyy said โit was not easy at all to achieve such a change in the tone of relations between Ukraine and the United Statesโ after he clashed with Trump and Vice President JD Vance in an extraordinary White House meeting in February.
Trump has often shifted between appearing to favor Russia and then Ukraine during these negotiations, and has at various points been criticized for freezing Ukraine and Europe out of the process.
โWithout Ukraine, nothing will work. Ukraine has defended its right to have a voice,โ Zelenskyy said, adding later: โUkraine is, in fact, the only shield that now separates Europeโs comfortable way of life from the Russian world.โ
Hours after Zelenskyy spoke, Russia launched 205 drones โ mostly Iran-designed Shaheds along with some Russian Gerbera drones โ into Ukraine, according to the countryโs military. Air defense systems downed 176 of these, but 24 strikes were recorded at 15 locations, it said. There was also shelling right along the line of contact between Russia and Ukraine.
At least two people were killed and more than a dozen injured across the country, according to regional officials.
For its part, Ukraine launched a strike against Russiaโs Rosrezerv oil depot in the Yaroslavl region, the Security Service of Ukraine, the SBU, said in a statement. The SBU said this was the latest strike designed to โcut off the supply chains of Russian petroleum products with surgical precision, both abroad and for the troops attacking Ukraine.โ
Russia claimed this week that Ukraine had attempted to assassinate Putin with a drone strike on his country residence, something that Ukraine denied and the CIA concluded was not true, a source with knowledge of the matter told NBC News.
In his own New Yearโs address, Putin said his country was striving โto bring joy and warmthโ to those in need, as well as the โheroesโ fighting in Ukraine. โI wish all our soldiers and commanders a happy new year! We believe in you and in our victory,โ he said.
Daryna Mayer reported from Kyiv and Alexander Smith from London.
