The head of the President's Office, Andriy Yermak, reported on this matter.
He assured that Kyiv would provide American partners with "a lot of information" regarding this strike and how the Russians "constantly launch drones over the Chernobyl zone, posing threats to the shelter and nuclear safety they bring."
"The atmosphere right now is such that everyone is very angry about this news here in Munich. Not 'concerned,' as is often the case, but genuinely angry," Yermak stated.
He recalled that in the 1980s, the world helped the Kremlin address the tragedy at Chernobyl when Moscow "sent unprotected people into radiation," while then-General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev received robots, equipment, and scientists.
"Later, the whole world invested in the shelter, and today these Russian fools launched a drone at it," added the head of the President's Office.
Russian occupiers attacked Ukraine with 133 strike drones of the Shahed type and imitation drones on the night of February 14. Ukrainian military forces shot down 73 UAVs, while another 58 were lost to radar.
During the attack, a Russian strike drone with a high-explosive warhead hit the New Shelter, which covers the damaged reactor unit No. 4 at Chernobyl. Initial assessments indicate that the damage to the shelter is significant; however, radiation levels remain normal.