Shahed drones can fly as low as the upper floors of blocks of flats, where Russia’s enemies have hunkered down. Moscow’s latest plan of action is not to destroy infrastructure or energy facilities — that can wait for the winter — but to target the civilian population and the Patriot missile systems that protect the country’s cities.
It usually begins around midnight. A siren howls. Telegram channels leap into action, saying which parts of town need to pay particular attention. Then there are the explosions, either near or far. An experienced ear can differentiate incoming fire from air defences.
Taking cover is, of course, the right thing to do, especially if there’s a car park or metro station nearby. But not everyone can sit there until dawn, dozing off on a chair or rug, phone in hand, waiting for the second wave of drones to die down after the first is fended off. People need to go to work, to school, or just to run errands. Kyiv isn’t a frontline zone, after all.