Russia Hit Boeing Offices in Kiev

Arms giant is partnered with Antonov which makes An-196 drones striking deep into Russia

Published: June 16, 2025, 8:44 pm

    A building used by Boeing in Kyiv was badly damaged in a recent large-scale Russian air attack, in what appeared to be a deliberate strike on the US aerospace company, according to six people familiar with the matter and photographs seen by the Financial Times.

    The building was among the targets hit on Sunday night in one of the most intense attacks of the war, according to two Boeing employees, three Ukrainian officials and the head of the American Chamber of Commerce in Ukraine (ACC).

    Images published online by Ukraine’s state emergency service and verified by the FT showed severe damage to the building and first responders putting out a fire inside.

    Boeing is one of the most prominent American businesses present in Ukraine, with its operations largely focused on engineering and technical support. It has a relationship with Ukrainian aircraft maker Antonov, known for producing heavy transport aircraft, including military-capable designs. Boeing executives met with their Antonov counterparts and Ukraine’s defence minister earlier this year to discuss new joint ventures.

    The overnight barrage Sunday into Monday was among the most intense of the war, with Russia’s army launching 315 drones, two ballistic missiles and five cruise missiles at targets in Kyiv, Odesa and other cities across Ukraine. Moscow has intensified its aerial attacks on the country following Kyiv’s surprise drone attack earlier this month deep into Russian territory, which damaged Russian bombers stationed as far away as the Arctic Circle.

    A Boeing spokesperson declined to comment on the attack except to say the company prioritises the safety and security of its employees, none of whom were harmed during the bombardment  The spokesperson praised the resilience of staff operating under difficult and dangerous circumstances.

    The company employed more than 1,000 people across Ukraine and had continued to operate largely unhindered in the country despite more than three years of Russia’s full-scale war, said one of the employees and ACC’s president, Andy Hunder.

    Despite the damage to its building in Kyiv, there had been “no operational disruption” as a result of Monday’s attack, Andriy Koryagin, deputy general director of Boeing’s operation in Ukraine, told the FT. The other Boeing employee said the company had been actively hiring for roles in Ukraine. A job advertisement published on June 2 showed the company was searching for an aircraft interior design and certification engineering manager to join its operations in Kyiv.

    Western officials have warned about an escalating campaign of Russian sabotage and subversion against US and European targets across Europe. Many of those have links to western aid being shipped to Ukraine and to companies producing or shipping weapons and other materiel to the country, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington think-tank. Last year, Boeing and Antonov signed a memorandum of understanding to explore opportunities to collaborate on defence-related projects.

    That co-operation was discussed further at the Munich Security Conference in February, when Ukrainian defence minister Rustem Umerov met Steve Parker, chief executive, chief operating officer and interim president of Boeing, defence, space and security.

    “The central focus of the meeting was co-operation in manufacturing ammunition and aerial strike systems. Special attention was given by the parties to the prospect of jointly producing unmanned aerial systems,” the Ukrainian defence ministry said at the time.

    The strike on Boeing’s building also adds to a growing list of Russian attacks on industrial facilities, including repeated strikes on the Antov plants, power plants and substations, and defence production sites. Ukrainian officials say the attacks are part of Moscow’s effort to degrade the country’s ability to manufacture and repair weapns.

    The aerospace company is not the first US company being affected by the war.

    Hunder, the ACC president, said 32 per cent of its nearly 700 members have had employees killed in Russian attacks since 2022.

    Nearly half of the US chamber’s members had also reported damage or destruction to their facilities — ranging from blown-out windows to the complete destruction of plants, office buildings and other sites, he said.

    A Coca-Cola facility in the Kyiv region was occupied by Russian forces and destroyed in the early days of the 2022 invasion. A stash of Jack Daniel’s whiskey stored in that facility turned out to be of help: when the Russian soldiers discovered it, they drank it all and hunkered down, which slowed their advance towards the capital, Hunder said.

    In 2014, during Russia’s first covert invasion of eastern Ukraine, its forces seized a facility belonging to the agricultural giant Cargill. The company later lost another facility to Russian forces in the south-central city of Kakhovka.

    Source: Financial Times

    Christopher Miller

    editor@freewestmedia.com

    Consider donating to support our work

    Help us to produce more articles like this. FreeWestMedia is depending on donations from our readers to keep going. With your help, we expose the mainstream fake news agenda.

    Keep ​your language polite​. Readers from many different countries visit and contribute to Free West Media and we must therefore obey the rules in​,​ for example​, ​Germany. Illegal content will be deleted.

    If you have been approved to post comments without preview from FWM, you are responsible for violation​s​ of​ any​ law. This means that FWM may be forced to cooperate with authorities in a possible crime investigation.

    If your comments are subject to preview ​by FWM, please be patient. We continually review comments but depending on the time of day it can take up to several hours before your comment is reviewed.

    We reserve the right to del​ete​ comments that are offensive, contain slander or foul language, or are irrelevant to the discussion.

    No comments.

    By submitting a comment you grant Free West Media a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. Inappropriate and irrelevant comments will be removed at an admin’s discretion. Your email is used for verification purposes only, it will never be shared.

    Pentagon Admits Iranian Missile Hit Communications Dome at US Qatar Base

    Iran's short-range ballistics are much more accurate than mediums

    Iran Reveals President Was Lightly Wounded in Israeli June Strike

    "The attackers targeted the building's entrances and exits by firing six bombs to block escape routes and cut off air flow."

    US Army to Quadruple(!) Patriot Missile Procurement

    Yemen, Israel, Iran, and Ukraine are stripping magazine depth vs China

    China’s Satellite Pair Docks in Orbit for First-Ever Refuelling Mission

    US Space Force hopes to start doing first tests toward on-orbit servicing in 2026

    US to Spend $1.5bn Building New Bases and Facilities for the Israeli Military

    Roughly 20 separate projects

    Israel Is Enforcing Gaza Evacuations by Dropping Grenades on Civilians From Drones

    “It was clear that they were trying to return to their homes. None of them were armed. We never fired warning shots."

    Israel Wants to Build the Most Moral Concentration Camp in the World

    "The Gaza war has no military objectives, other than unacceptable ones: a second Nakba and/or a 'voluntary' transfer of all Palestinians"

    US Envoy: Kurds “Slow” to Integrate Under ex-ISIS Jolani

    “There is only one road" - US Envoy Tom Barrack

    This Is Now Trump’s War

    Goodbye Trump Process, hello East Ukraine

    US to Sanction UN Rapporteur for Palestine Critical of Israeli Atrocities

    As Netanyahu nominates Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize

    Go to archive