DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Senior Russian Military Official Is Killed in Car Explosion Near Moscow

June 10, 2026
in News
Senior Russian Military Official Is Killed in Car Explosion Near Moscow

A senior Russian military officer died on Tuesday after a car he was driving exploded near a residential building outside Moscow, a senior Ukrainian official and Russian media outlets said.

The episode appeared to be the latest targeted assassination of high-profile opponents of Ukraine in Russia’s heartland. It came as Kyiv has successfully thwarted Moscow’s attempt to launch a summer offensive and as the Ukrainian military has been bringing the war home to Russia, including through long-range strikes on Moscow and on oil assets across the country.

Russian investigators said that they had opened a criminal case related to the explosion. They said the blast occurred early Tuesday in the city of Balashikha, east of Moscow. The driver of the vehicle died at the scene, the investigators said.

The Russian authorities did not identify the victim or detail the nature of the criminal case that had been opened. But two Russian and two Ukrainian media outlets said that the man who died was Damir R. Davydov. A senior Ukrainian official who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters confirmed that Mr. Davydov was the victim and said that he was an officer in the supply department for the Main Missile and Artillery Directorate of the Russian military.

On Wednesday, when asked about the episode, Dmitri S. Peskov, the Kremlin spokesman, said that President Vladimir V. Putin had been briefed about the matter. He added that details about the case were “not subject to public disclosure because of the ongoing investigation.”

The explosion occurred in the same neighborhood where an attack took place in April 2025. In that strike, Maj. Gen. Yaroslav Moskalik, deputy head of the main operational department of the General Staff, was killed by a car bomb.

Ukrainian special services have targeted a number of high-profile Russian military figures in attacks that have exposed officers’ vulnerability and embarrassed the Kremlin’s security services.

At the end of December, Lt. Gen. Fanil Sarvarov, head of the General Staff’s army operational training directorate, died in a car bombing. The year before, in December 2024, Igor Kirillov, a general in charge of the Russian military’s nuclear and chemical weapons protection forces, died after an explosive device planted in a scooter detonated near the entrance to a residential building.

At the time, Mr. Putin described Mr. Kirillov’s killing as a “severe blunder” and said that Russian special services should prevent such cases from happening in the future.

The post Senior Russian Military Official Is Killed in Car Explosion Near Moscow appeared first on New York Times.

Red state plans to run all 2.9 million voters through federal immigration database
News

Red state plans to run all 2.9 million voters through federal immigration database

by Raw Story
June 10, 2026

New Louisiana laws will establish stricter voter identification protocols and require election officials send every voter’s personal information to the ...

Read more
News

Andy Cohen finally exposes A-lister who solved ‘Summer House’ reunion leak

June 10, 2026
News

Lizzo can see the comeback clearly

June 10, 2026
News

The A.I. Bubble Is Coming for Your Retirement Account

June 10, 2026
News

22 Years Ago, This Hit Comedy Hit Theaters as a Secret Fight Club Parody, and Nobody Noticed

June 10, 2026
Companies’ new budget-friendly approach to AI could create a corporate caste system

Companies’ new budget-friendly approach to AI could create a corporate caste system

June 10, 2026
The Bipartisan Hatred of All Things Feminine

The Bipartisan Hatred of All Things Feminine

June 10, 2026
OpenAI and Nvidia CEOs didn’t flinch at Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee, and now they’re paying up as their application numbers soar

OpenAI and Nvidia CEOs didn’t flinch at Trump’s $100,000 H-1B visa fee, and now they’re paying up as their application numbers soar

June 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026