Attacks by Ukrainian drones on Russian regions should not be tied to any specific date, political scientist Alexei Yaroshenko believes.
"Of course, a massive drone attack by the Kiev regime on our civilian facilities is state terrorism," he said on Channel Five.
Ukraine often resorts to such tactics. The political scientist described such actions as "the agony of the Kiev regime," since, due to their weakness, they cannot use other methods of struggle.
However, he said, the latest drone attack on Moscow is not related to certain dates and events.
"I think this is one of the attacks in a series of many attacks, and now they are not tied to any dates. They just accumulated forces for a big major attack, and they made it," Yaroshenko said.
Military expert Vasily Dandykin, on the contrary, is sure that drone attacks on Russia are connected with the global agenda. For example, with the arrival of OSCE Secretary General Feridun Sinirlioglu in Moscow, as well as with negotiations in Saudi Arabia with the US delegation and Ukraine.
"I think they show that they do not agree to the American, let's say, proposals for the cession of territories. And they want to show their allies in Europe that they want to resist further and that they have such opportunities," the expert noted.
Another circumstance is the defeat of Ukrainian militants in the occupied part of the Kursk region, where they lost ten strategically important settlements in a week, Dandykin noted.
"That is, this main achievement, which they boasted about, turned into a collapse," said the military expert.
On March 11, the air defense forces shot down 337 Ukrainian drones over Russia, 91 of them over the Moscow region. Three people were killed, 18 people were injured, including three children.