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US and Ukraine warn of Russian strikes after Putin orders retaliation for deadly Ukrainian attack

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United States and Ukrainian authorities warned Saturday of a possible incoming Russian missile strike after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered retaliation for a deadly Ukrainian attack.In a post on X, the State Department said the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv received information that a missile attack could occur “at any time” in the next day and advised U.S. citizens to seek shelter accordingly.Related video above: Ukraine kills at least 65 Russian drone pilots at training facilityUkrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy referenced a possible strike with powerful Oreshnik missiles earlier Saturday and asked for support from the U.S. and Europe.”Our intelligence services reported receiving data, including from American and European partners, about Russia preparing a strike with the Oreshnik missile. We are verifying this information,” Zelensky said on X, adding, “We count on a response from the world – and on a response that is not post factum, but preventive. Pressure must be put on Moscow so that it does not expand the war.”The warnings come after Putin accused Ukraine of a “terrorist” act, claiming that Ukrainian drones struck a college dormitory in Starobilsk, an occupied town in eastern Luhansk on Friday.The Russian president added that he had ordered the defense ministry to come up with proposals for a response to the Ukrainian strike.The Russian state news agency TASS said Saturday that the death toll of “children killed in the Ukrainian drone strike” had risen to 18, citing Russia's Ministry of Emergency Situations. A further three people are believed to be trapped under the rubble.Such a toll from a Ukrainian attack would be very rare, so far from the front lines and not targeting any obvious military facility.But Ukraine's military rejected Putin's claim and accused Russian media of circulating “manipulative information” on the attack. It reiterated that it strikes “military infrastructure and facilities used for military purposes.”The military added that among targets struck early Friday was “one of the headquarters of the ‘Rubicon’ unit in the Starobilsk area.”The elite Rubicon Center for Advanced Unmanned Technologies has pioneered Russian drone technology and targeting since it was formed in 2024.Ukraine has stepped up longer-range drone attacks in recent weeks. It claimed two attacks earlier this week on Russian military facilities in occupied territory earlier this week.One wave of strikes hit a Russian drone pilot training camp in the occupied town of Snizhne, killing at least 65 cadets and an instructor on Wednesday night, according to the commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces.Robert Brovdi, the commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces, claimed the strike targeted a 2,484-square-meter complex, which housed drones and explosives as well as a command post.Footage posted on social media Wednesday night also showed a building ablaze in Snizhne, which CNN has geolocated to the same area as the drone training camp.Another set of strikes hit a Russian security service headquarters and an air defense system in the Kherson region in occupied Ukraine, killing and wounding almost 100 Russians, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed Thursday.Ukrainian claims of such high casualty figures are unusual, and CNN cannot independently verify them. CNN approached Russian authorities for comment.Ukraine has developed an arsenal of mid- and long-range drones capable of deep strikes on Russian military and energy infrastructure.Zelensky said Saturday that the security services had struck “one of Russia's important military-industrial enterprises†1,700 kilometers (1,050 miles) inside Russia.The target was a chemical plant in Perm Krai, Zelensky said, that provides a range of products to Russia's military. He posted video purporting to show smoke rising from the facility.CNN's Aleena Fayaz and Max Saltman contributed.

United States and Ukrainian authorities warned Saturday of a possible incoming Russian missile strike after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered retaliation for a deadly Ukrainian attack.

In a post on X, the State Department said the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv received information that a missile attack could occur “at any time” in the next day and advised U.S. citizens to seek shelter accordingly.

Related video above: Ukraine kills at least 65 Russian drone pilots at training facility

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy referenced a possible strike with powerful Oreshnik missiles earlier Saturday and asked for support from the U.S. and Europe.

“Our intelligence services reported receiving data, including from American and European partners, about Russia preparing a strike with the Oreshnik missile. We are verifying this information,” Zelensky said on X, adding, “We count on a response from the world – and on a response that is not post factum, but preventive. Pressure must be put on Moscow so that it does not expand the war.”

The warnings come after Putin accused Ukraine of a “terrorist” act, claiming that Ukrainian drones struck a college dormitory in Starobilsk, an occupied town in eastern Luhansk on Friday.

The Russian president added that he had ordered the defense ministry to come up with proposals for a response to the Ukrainian strike.

US and Ukraine warn of Russian strikes after Putin orders retaliation for deadly Ukrainian attack

Pavel Klimov/Reuters via CNN Newsource

A view of the Ukrainian strike on Starobilsk, a Russian-controlled area. Ukraine disputed Putin's claim of terrorism, saying it only targeted military facilities.

The Russian state news agency TASS said Saturday that the death toll of “children killed in the Ukrainian drone strike” had risen to 18, citing Russia's Ministry of Emergency Situations. A further three people are believed to be trapped under the rubble.

Such a toll from a Ukrainian attack would be very rare, so far from the front lines and not targeting any obvious military facility.

Rescuers work amid debris of a destroyed dormitory building of the Starobilsk College of Luhansk Pedagogical University following an overnight attack.

Pavel Klimov/Reuters via CNN Newsource

Rescuers work amid debris of a destroyed dormitory building of the Starobilsk College of Luhansk Pedagogical University following an overnight attack.

But Ukraine's military rejected Putin's claim and accused Russian media of circulating “manipulative information” on the attack. It reiterated that it strikes “military infrastructure and facilities used for military purposes.”

The military added that among targets struck early Friday was “one of the headquarters of the ‘Rubicon’ unit in the Starobilsk area.”

The elite Rubicon Center for Advanced Unmanned Technologies has pioneered Russian drone technology and targeting since it was formed in 2024.

Ukraine has stepped up longer-range drone attacks in recent weeks. It claimed two attacks earlier this week on Russian military facilities in occupied territory earlier this week.

One wave of strikes hit a Russian drone pilot training camp in the occupied town of Snizhne, killing at least 65 cadets and an instructor on Wednesday night, according to the commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces.

TOPSHOT - A technician works on drones at a workshop at an undisclosed location in Ukraine on October 7, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Ed JONES / AFP via Getty Images)

ED JONES

A technician works on drones at a workshop at an undisclosed location in Ukraine on Oct. 7, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Robert Brovdi, the commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces, claimed the strike targeted a 2,484-square-meter complex, which housed drones and explosives as well as a command post.

Footage posted on social media Wednesday night also showed a building ablaze in Snizhne, which CNN has geolocated to the same area as the drone training camp.

A Ukrainian serviceman pilots a drone during the "Wild Drones" racing competition  designed to simulate battlefield conditions  in Truskavets, Lviv region, on May 20, 2026, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by YURIY DYACHYSHYN / AFP via Getty Images)

YURIY DYACHYSHYN

A Ukrainian serviceman pilots a drone during the “Wild Drones” racing competition designed to simulate battlefield conditions in Truskavets, Lviv region, on May 20, 2026, amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Another set of strikes hit a Russian security service headquarters and an air defense system in the Kherson region in occupied Ukraine, killing and wounding almost 100 Russians, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed Thursday.

Ukrainian claims of such high casualty figures are unusual, and CNN cannot independently verify them. CNN approached Russian authorities for comment.

Ukraine has developed an arsenal of mid- and long-range drones capable of deep strikes on Russian military and energy infrastructure.

Zelensky said Saturday that the security services had struck “one of Russia's important military-industrial enterprises†1,700 kilometers (1,050 miles) inside Russia.

The target was a chemical plant in Perm Krai, Zelensky said, that provides a range of products to Russia's military. He posted video purporting to show smoke rising from the facility.

KHARKIV REGION, UKRAINE - MAY 22: (EDITOR'S NOTE: Image has been reviewed by Ukrainian military officials prior to transmission) Members of the Lava Unmanned Systems Regiment,  Norman, poses for a photograph with a Bulava strike drone, a kamikaze UAV capable of carrying a 3.5-kilogram payload with a range of up to 100 kilometres, on May 22, 2026 in Kharkiv region, Ukraine. The Lava Unmanned Systems Regiment, part of the 2nd Khartiia Corps of the Ukrainian National Guard, is a specialized unit focused on combat operations using drones and robotic systems, including deep reconnaissance and precision strikes behind enemy lines. Originally formed as a battalion in 2025, the unit was expanded into a regiment in 2026 as Ukraine increasingly relies on unmanned technologies in warfare. (Photo by Diego Fedele/Getty Images)

Diego Fedele

Members of the Lava Unmanned Systems Regiment, Norman, pose for a photograph with a Bulava strike drone, a kamikaze UAV capable of carrying a 3.5-kilogram payload with a range of up to 100 kilometres, on May 22, 2026, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine.

CNN's Aleena Fayaz and Max Saltman contributed.