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Russia’s Salvo Strategy: Massed Strikes Aim to Coerce Ukraine and Test the West

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Russia launched its largest aerial assault of the war on September 7–8, unleashing more than 800 munitions—primarily Shahed drones, along with cruise and ballistic missiles—in coordinated waves across Ukraine. The strikes killed at least four civilians, set fire to Ukraine’s Cabinet of Ministers building, and marked the first direct attack on the government’s seat of power in Kyiv. The scale of the operation underscores Moscow’s reliance on saturation firepower as its frontline remains largely static.

Analysts describe Russia’s approach as a “salvo strategy”: routine daily drone strikes punctuated by massive, coordinated barrages designed to overwhelm air defenses, inflict psychological strain, and signal escalation. What was rare in 2022—salvos of around 100 weapons occurring once a month—has become routine in 2025, with average barrages of nearly 370 munitions every eight days. These strikes serve less as battlefield breakthroughs and more as tools of coercion, testing both Ukraine’s endurance and Western resolve.

Negotiations shape their timing. Data show that during talks with U.S. President Trump in August 2025, Russia reduced the scale and frequency of salvos, stretching the interval between them to 38 days. Once talks ended, however, Moscow immediately resumed large-scale strikes, demonstrating that pauses were tactical, not structural. By calibrating intensity, Russia seeks to shape headlines and influence bargaining without abandoning its punishment campaign.

Despite Ukraine intercepting about 85% of incoming drones and missiles, Russia’s evolving tactics—swarming flight paths, staggered waves, and improved Shahed variants—are slowly eroding defenses. Even partial penetration adds pressure, while the constant pace wears down civilian morale and stretches resources.

Western experts argue that only a significant reinforcement of Ukraine’s air defense, coupled with new technologies like laser weapons, smart flak, and long-endurance drones, can counter Russia’s theory of victory. For NATO and allies, Ukraine is not just a battlefield but a proving ground for modern air defense strategies that may be critical in future conflicts, from Europe to the Indo-Pacific.

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