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In eastern Ukraine, Russian ‘glide bombs’ push civilians to flee

On Oleksandr’s right stands the shell of an apartment block, hollowed out days before by a single Russian “glide bomb” – a heavy Soviet-era “dumb” bomb upgraded with wings and a guidance system. On his left are all that remains of a kindergarten complex, also hit just days earlier. 

“A lot of people lived here all their lives, and have apartments and jobs, but now our lives look like this,” says the retired Ukrainian military pilot, as he describes how Russia’s advancing forces and use of glide bombs are triggering departures from this coal mining town.

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The residents of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region have been resilient in the face of the Russian war. But Russia’s introduction of upgraded, highly destructive “glide bombs” is changing civilians’ calculus.

Augmenting Russia’s supply of rockets and missiles, the glide bombs can pack more than 3,000 pounds of explosive punch each. To stay or to go is the decision being weighed by an increasing number of civilians.

Days after one barrage, a building’s residents are still collecting glass from their garden. The windows blew out when two missiles struck an adjacent school and two more hit a bus stop, killing four people.

Yet the sense of community, they say, is robust.

“There is a saying, ‘Hope dies last,’” says one woman. “It goes day by day. Today we stay; maybe tomorrow we go.”

The tiny poodle strains at its leash and barks, triggering a deafening reaction from a pack of dogs roaming the wreckage in this town in Ukraine’s embattled far east, some 10 miles from Russia’s gradually advancing forces.

“A lot of people are leaving, and let their dogs go,” explains the poodle’s owner, a retired Ukrainian military pilot in a faded orange tank top, who gives the name Oleksandr.

On their right stands the shell of an apartment block, hollowed out just days before by a single Russian “glide bomb” – a heavy Soviet-era “dumb” bomb upgraded with wings and a guidance system, and launched from a plane deep inside Russian airspace.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The residents of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region have been resilient in the face of the Russian war. But Russia’s introduction of upgraded, highly destructive “glide bombs” is changing civilians’ calculus.

On their left is all that remains of a kindergarten complex, newly built before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, but targeted a third time, also just days earlier.

“A lot of people lived here all their lives, and have apartments and jobs, but now our lives look like this,” says Oleksandr, as he describes how Russia’s advancing forces and use of glide bombs are triggering new departures from this Donetsk coal mining town.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor

Personal framed pictures lie on the ground outside a Ukrainian apartment block gutted by a Russian glide bomb, in Myrnohrad, Ukraine, July 20, 2024.

He points to a nearby building entrance where a neighbor, Olena, “didn’t have a chance” when she stepped out after the first blast, only to be killed by a second – one of three deaths in the bombardment.

“Now the front is coming closer, and it’s more and more dangerous to live here,” says Oleksandr. “Now the intensity of the strikes is like never before.”

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