🔴 European intelligence reports potential Russian coup involving Sergei Shoigu.
— UNITED24 Media (@United24media) May 4, 2026
According to CNN, the Kremlin has restricted Vladimir Putin’s movements to fortified bunkers and intensified security for top military commanders following reports that the former defense minister… pic.twitter.com/8JqGDHf0L8

Acc to Russian channels, tonight Ukraine may have possibly launched one of its biggest drone attacks on Russia since the war began. https://t.co/E1JtGTazQS
— raging545 (@raging545) May 4, 2026
Ukrainian long range Flamingo missiles are slamming into the Russian city of Novocheboksarsk tonight.
— WarMonitor🇺🇦🇬🇧 (@WarMonitor3) May 4, 2026
#BREAKING: Russia announces an unconditional ceasefire with Ukraine on May 8-9.
— Status-6 (War & Military News) (@Archer83Able) May 4, 2026
"If Ukraine attempts to implement its criminal plans to disrupt Victory Day celebrations, the Russian Armed Forces will launch a retaliatory strike on central Kyiv," Russian Defense Ministry said in… pic.twitter.com/0JCvoL9oyD
❗️BREAKING: 🇺🇦Ukraine declares a ceasefire on May 5 and 6, if 🇷🇺Russia wants a ceasefire on May 9, they will start it earlier - Zelensky
— Cloooud |🇺🇦 (@GloOouD) May 4, 2026
If Putin refuses, as I understand it, he should expect a Ukrainian "delegation" of attack drones at the May 9 parade
A very important and fair statement from President @ZelenskyyUa. Peace cannot wait until ‘parades’ and ‘celebrations’.
— Andrii Sybiha 🇺🇦 (@andrii_sybiha) May 4, 2026
If Moscow is prepared to end hostilities, it can do so already tomorrow night. Ukraine is ready: at midnight from May 5th to May 6th. This is a serious… https://t.co/Jbefe6h5V2
Germany is transferring a gas-fired power plant in Lubmin to Ukraine
— Visegrád 24 (@visegrad24) May 4, 2026
The station was previously used to support the technical process of feeding gas into Germany’s gas transmission system. After Russian gas supplies stopped in 2022, it became unprofitable and was shut down in… pic.twitter.com/a4auZ28lLU
A Ukrainian 🇺🇦 FP-5 missile struck the VNIIR-Progress facility specializing in the production and research of advanced electronic warfare systems for the Russia
— Ukraine Battle Map (@ukraine_map) May 4, 2026
The facility is located in Cheboksary, Russia ~930km from Ukraine and was hit by a Flamingo for the first time tonight pic.twitter.com/t6Coa8ikpK
Footage of a Ukrainian Flamingo heavyweight cruise missile hitting a Russian target in Novocheboksarsk tonight. pic.twitter.com/BOotQjDX9J
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) May 4, 2026

I just leave this clip from 2022? From russian TV1.https://t.co/HgVdRSKPSM
— m.o.t (@KentUranium) May 5, 2026
PJYoung said:I just leave this clip from 2022? From russian TV1.https://t.co/HgVdRSKPSM
— m.o.t (@KentUranium) May 5, 2026
Seems like a complete lack of air defenses as the Ukrainian drone raid goes on, striking a military plant that makes guidance components for Russian air-defense missiles like S400. https://t.co/1R2KCOyH2x pic.twitter.com/8jq7toUCJV
— Yaroslav Trofimov (@yarotrof) May 5, 2026
Putin's panic is growing by the hour.
— Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦 (@jurgen_nauditt) May 5, 2026
He needs his parade.
The Russian side even suggested, through unofficial channels, that prisoners be exchanged on the eve of May 9th if Ukraine agreed not to attack the parade in Red Square.
Moscow is in complete chaos: the internet is… pic.twitter.com/0Fdd0qVXve
👀💥 Cheboksary, Chuvash Republic, unfortunately EW work… and consequences of Putin's "SVO" on the territory of Russia. pic.twitter.com/KI6PFzRfkK
— MAKS 25 🇺🇦👀 (@Maks_NAFO_FELLA) May 5, 2026
nah, blow the parade to pieces. Putin didn't seem to care when he launched this Special OperationQuote:
The Russian side even suggested, through unofficial channels, that prisoners be exchanged on the eve of May 9th if Ukraine agreed not to attack the parade in Red Square.
NEW!! U.S. approves $373m sale of extended-range precision bombs to Ukraine
— Alex Raufoglu (@ralakbar) May 5, 2026
State Department clears 1,500 JDAM kits to bolster Kyiv’s long-range strike capabilities against Russian forces pic.twitter.com/ttXH0JIpau
President Trump:
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) May 5, 2026
I like Zelenskyy. I've always sort of gotten along with him, other than the one moment in the White House, which I thought was a little aggressive on his behalf.
They [Ukrainians] fight. Because whether the equipment is great or less than great, they are able… pic.twitter.com/L8L2uMhApD
Massive explosions at a Russian ammunition depot have been recorded in Khrustalnyi, Luhansk region. It was reportedly hit by what sounds like jet powered drones. pic.twitter.com/xE0AFmIAZF
— raging545 (@raging545) May 5, 2026
Oh my!
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) May 5, 2026
The Trump Admin has been helping Ukraine target Russian oil for months!?!
The TDS crowd is gonna have an aneurysm. 🤷♂️ https://t.co/mj1Tmmxkeg
🇺🇦🇷🇺 Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9th—technically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
— Visioner (@visionergeo) May 5, 2026
Specifically,… pic.twitter.com/zlIFfVb0Ad
Quote:
Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9thtechnically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
Specifically, carrying out a strike on Moscow on May 9th would carry only political weight; it would be a form of humiliation for Putin, his elite, and the myth of Russian "greatness." In other respects, it would not bring about a significant military breakthrough on the front lines or alter the overall course of the war in the short to medium term. On the other hand, the potential Russian responsethe announced retaliatory missile strikes on the center of Kyivwould also be a purely political act and would have no impact on Ukraine's capacity to resist.
Consequently, the only real factor that might deter Ukraine from striking Moscow specifically on May 9th is the combined intelligence of Ukraine's military and foreign services regarding the impact on Russian citizens. They must weigh how bombing the primary center of the capital's "greatness" on a day of such national symbolic importance would be perceived: would it make the war popular again among the lower and middle classes, or would the resulting sense of vulnerability and fear make their attitude toward their ruler, Putin, more critical and negative?
In reality, the fact that the Armed Forces of Ukraine have so far avoided bombing Russian civilian targets, residential areas, and peaceful citizens isalongside ethical and moral considerationslargely dependent on the trajectory of public sentiment within Russia. Today, the war is highly unpopular in Russia, both among the middle class and, given the critical economic complications, now among the lower/poor classes as wellthe very segment that provided Russia with its "cannon fodder." This is reflected on the front lines. According to recent assessments, Russia can no longer balance its human losses; essentially, they have been operating at a monthly deficit recently. Furthermore, because the war is unpopular, even under conditions of partial mobilization, it is impossible to recruit motivated and qualified soldiers, even with relatively high pay. All of this is caused by the lack of "fuel" for Russian propaganda, including the protracted war, the lack of real progress on the front, the economic crisis, and deep strikes by Ukrainian drones. The once-powerful Russian propaganda now has nothing to feed the masses ("bidlo") domestically, which directly affects the number of people willing to go to war.
Therefore, it is difficult to say with certainty what result a strike on Red Square on May 9th would yield. Naturally, Ukrainian special services will conduct preliminary assessments, analyze incoming data, and plan accordingly. They will determine whether this action will have a positive or negative effect on the course of the war for Ukraine, and only then will they make the decision on whether or not to strike Red Square on May 9th.
Jarrin Jay said:
If Ukraine attacks Moscow on May 9, the response is likely going to flatten a good part of Kyiv.
Ukraine has fought Russia to a stalemate in the E & SE, though no real progress on Crimea.
Russia failed to take Kyiv as they tried to do it with minimal collateral damage and non-combatant casualties, they didn't want to destroy the city WWII style but that was a strategic error and the reason they are in this stalemate 4 years in.
Waffledynamics said:🇺🇦🇷🇺 Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9th—technically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
— Visioner (@visionergeo) May 5, 2026
Specifically,… pic.twitter.com/zlIFfVb0AdQuote:
Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9thtechnically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
Specifically, carrying out a strike on Moscow on May 9th would carry only political weight; it would be a form of humiliation for Putin, his elite, and the myth of Russian "greatness." In other respects, it would not bring about a significant military breakthrough on the front lines or alter the overall course of the war in the short to medium term. On the other hand, the potential Russian responsethe announced retaliatory missile strikes on the center of Kyivwould also be a purely political act and would have no impact on Ukraine's capacity to resist.
Consequently, the only real factor that might deter Ukraine from striking Moscow specifically on May 9th is the combined intelligence of Ukraine's military and foreign services regarding the impact on Russian citizens. They must weigh how bombing the primary center of the capital's "greatness" on a day of such national symbolic importance would be perceived: would it make the war popular again among the lower and middle classes, or would the resulting sense of vulnerability and fear make their attitude toward their ruler, Putin, more critical and negative?
In reality, the fact that the Armed Forces of Ukraine have so far avoided bombing Russian civilian targets, residential areas, and peaceful citizens isalongside ethical and moral considerationslargely dependent on the trajectory of public sentiment within Russia. Today, the war is highly unpopular in Russia, both among the middle class and, given the critical economic complications, now among the lower/poor classes as wellthe very segment that provided Russia with its "cannon fodder." This is reflected on the front lines. According to recent assessments, Russia can no longer balance its human losses; essentially, they have been operating at a monthly deficit recently. Furthermore, because the war is unpopular, even under conditions of partial mobilization, it is impossible to recruit motivated and qualified soldiers, even with relatively high pay. All of this is caused by the lack of "fuel" for Russian propaganda, including the protracted war, the lack of real progress on the front, the economic crisis, and deep strikes by Ukrainian drones. The once-powerful Russian propaganda now has nothing to feed the masses ("bidlo") domestically, which directly affects the number of people willing to go to war.
Therefore, it is difficult to say with certainty what result a strike on Red Square on May 9th would yield. Naturally, Ukrainian special services will conduct preliminary assessments, analyze incoming data, and plan accordingly. They will determine whether this action will have a positive or negative effect on the course of the war for Ukraine, and only then will they make the decision on whether or not to strike Red Square on May 9th.
2wealfth Man said:
They have evidently pulled more ADA into the Moscow region to protect this ridiculous parade. Take the golden opportunity to hit'em elsewhere where it really counts.
2wealfth Man said:
They have evidently pulled more ADA into the Moscow region to protect this ridiculous parade. Take the golden opportunity to hit'em elsewhere where it really counts.
Ag with kids said:Waffledynamics said:🇺🇦🇷🇺 Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9th—technically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
— Visioner (@visionergeo) May 5, 2026
Specifically,… pic.twitter.com/zlIFfVb0AdQuote:
Regarding the potential strikes on Moscow on May 9thtechnically, the Armed Forces of Ukraine possess all the means to create a "living hell" on Red Square, whether through covert operations or direct drone and missile attacks. However, there is one "but..."
Specifically, carrying out a strike on Moscow on May 9th would carry only political weight; it would be a form of humiliation for Putin, his elite, and the myth of Russian "greatness." In other respects, it would not bring about a significant military breakthrough on the front lines or alter the overall course of the war in the short to medium term. On the other hand, the potential Russian responsethe announced retaliatory missile strikes on the center of Kyivwould also be a purely political act and would have no impact on Ukraine's capacity to resist.
Consequently, the only real factor that might deter Ukraine from striking Moscow specifically on May 9th is the combined intelligence of Ukraine's military and foreign services regarding the impact on Russian citizens. They must weigh how bombing the primary center of the capital's "greatness" on a day of such national symbolic importance would be perceived: would it make the war popular again among the lower and middle classes, or would the resulting sense of vulnerability and fear make their attitude toward their ruler, Putin, more critical and negative?
In reality, the fact that the Armed Forces of Ukraine have so far avoided bombing Russian civilian targets, residential areas, and peaceful citizens isalongside ethical and moral considerationslargely dependent on the trajectory of public sentiment within Russia. Today, the war is highly unpopular in Russia, both among the middle class and, given the critical economic complications, now among the lower/poor classes as wellthe very segment that provided Russia with its "cannon fodder." This is reflected on the front lines. According to recent assessments, Russia can no longer balance its human losses; essentially, they have been operating at a monthly deficit recently. Furthermore, because the war is unpopular, even under conditions of partial mobilization, it is impossible to recruit motivated and qualified soldiers, even with relatively high pay. All of this is caused by the lack of "fuel" for Russian propaganda, including the protracted war, the lack of real progress on the front, the economic crisis, and deep strikes by Ukrainian drones. The once-powerful Russian propaganda now has nothing to feed the masses ("bidlo") domestically, which directly affects the number of people willing to go to war.
Therefore, it is difficult to say with certainty what result a strike on Red Square on May 9th would yield. Naturally, Ukrainian special services will conduct preliminary assessments, analyze incoming data, and plan accordingly. They will determine whether this action will have a positive or negative effect on the course of the war for Ukraine, and only then will they make the decision on whether or not to strike Red Square on May 9th.
Considering they have been able to get past Russian air defenses lately...
I think what they could do would be a coordinated fly by right over the parade with a bunch of drones that could blow things up...but DON'T blow things up at the parade or even in Moscow.
Have them turn after the fly by and blow up some **** outside of town.
That way, the citizens of Moscow can see they're being lied to by Putin, but they aren't harmed.
PR win for Ukraine and ***** slap for Putin...
Zelenskyy stated that Ukraine declared a ceasefire starting at 00:00 on the night of May 5-6, noting that they would act symmetrically from that moment onward. As of 10:00 AM, the Russian Armed Forces have violated the ceasefire 1,820 times. Zelenskyy added that further actions… pic.twitter.com/3VXZiLSyAj
— WarTranslated (@wartranslated) May 6, 2026
⚡️ Ukraine will not observe the May 9 ceasefire
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) May 6, 2026
Defense Ministry adviser Sternenko, following the brutal attacks overnight, stated:
“Russia violated the ceasefire regime and carried out a series of attacks on Ukraine.
These actions by the aggressor nullify the ‘ceasefire’ for… https://t.co/mFnmP4IOop pic.twitter.com/lYgMhYoPTi
Zakharova says that Russia has sent letters to diplomacy missions in Ukraine, saying they should evacuate their staff from Kyiv. If Ukraine launches a strike on Russia on May 9, then Russia will strike back at Kyiv.
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) May 6, 2026
Russia is very afraid.
Also, Russia doesn't need a reason to… https://t.co/JNUMPLvJTS pic.twitter.com/uMjKlBP9Xj
"Air defense rings around Moscow are being reinforced by pulling systems from the regions - the Russian Federation cares more about the parade than the entire country. This opens up additional opportunities for our long-range sanctions. Our corresponding priorities will be… pic.twitter.com/pRak90MIiF
— WarTranslated (@wartranslated) May 6, 2026
“Twenty-eight people were reportedly killed and 194 injured on 5 May alone in a wave of attacks by the Russian Federation, bringing the reported civilian toll across Ukraine since 1 May to at least 70 killed and more than 500 injured, the UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in… pic.twitter.com/4EwUi1PvJl
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) May 6, 2026