A satellite image shows destroyed TU 95 aircrafts in the aftermath of a drone strike at the Olenya air base, Murmansk region, Russia, June 4, 2025, Maxar Technologies/Handout via REUTERS
FILE PHOTO: Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends a meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin with Tajik President Emomali Rahmon in Moscow, Russia, March 17, 2025. Yuri Kochetkov/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

By Dmitry Antonov, Andrea Shalal and Andreas Rinke

MOSCOW/WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Russia will respond to Ukraine's latest attacks as and when its military sees fit, the Kremlin said on Thursday, accusing Kyiv of state terrorism as U.S. President Donald Trump downplayed prospects for an immediate peace between the countries.

Ukraine used drones to strike Russian heavy bomber planes at air bases in Siberia and the far north at the weekend, and Russia also accused it of blowing up rail bridges in the south of the country, killing seven people.

Trump said that during a more than two-hour-long call with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday he urged him to refrain, but fully expected Moscow to strike back.

"It's probably not going to be pretty. I don't like it," said Trump, who described what he called "great hatred" between Putin and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

The Kremlin confirmed that Putin had told Trump that Moscow was obliged to retaliate.

Trump began his second term in January vowing to swiftly end Russia's three-year-old war in Ukraine, but the deadliest conflict in Europe since World War Two is instead intensifying. On Thursday he downplayed prospects for any immediate peace.

"Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other and they're fighting in a park," Trump said. "Sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart."

U.S. SANCTIONS?

Speaking to reporters before a meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Trump said he believed that "at some point" there would be peace between Russia and Ukraine.

When asked if he would impose further sanctions on Russia, Trump responded: "When I see the moment where it's not going to stop ... we'll be very, very, very tough. And it could be on both countries to be honest. You know, it takes two to tango."

Merz said he would discuss with Trump ways to increase pressure on Russia.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, at his daily briefing with reporters, highlighted comments made by Putin a day earlier about the railway attacks.

"The president described the Kyiv regime as a terrorist regime, because it was the regime's leadership that consciously gave the order, the command, the order to blow up a passenger train. This is nothing other than terrorism at the state level. This is an important statement by the president," said Peskov.

Russia has not yet provided evidence that Ukrainian leaders ordered the rail attacks, and Kyiv has not acknowledged responsibility.

Ukrainian attacks inside Russia and Russian air strikes and advances on the battlefield have escalated the war that began in February 2022, damaging prospects for peace talks that the two sides resumed in Turkey last month.

(Reporting by Dmitry Antonov in Moscow and Andreas Rinke and Andrea Shalal in Washington; writing by Mark Trevelyan and Michelle NicholsEditing by Andrew Osborn and Chizu Nomiyama)