Russia’s military has said it fired its new hypersonic Oreshnik missile at a target in Ukraine during a massive overnight strike.
Ukraine confirmed the attack, saying it took place in the west of the country near the European Union border. Moscow said the launch of the intermediate-range ballistic missile was retaliation for a supposed attempted Ukrainian drone attack on Vladimir Putin’s residence late last month – an allegation both Kyiv and Washington have said is false.
Ukraine’s foreign minister said the use of an Oreshnik missile so close to the EU and Nato border posed a “grave threat” to European security and called on partners to increase pressure on Moscow. Kyiv also dismissed Russia’s attempts to justify the strike, calling them “absurd”.
The governor of Ukraine’s western Lviv region said Russian strikes had damaged a critical infrastructure facility. Unverified social media reports suggested the site may have been a large underground gas storage facility.

Russia first used the Oreshnik – named after the Russian word for hazel tree – in November 2024, when Moscow said it struck a Ukrainian military-industrial facility. Ukrainian officials and analysts at the time said the missile carried dummy warheads rather than explosives and caused limited damage.
Initial reports suggest the Oreshnik used in Friday’s strike may again have carried inert warheads, indicating the launch was largely symbolic. The strike came days after Ukraine’s European allies agreed to provide key elements of postwar security guarantees in the event of a ceasefire with Russia.
President Putin has repeatedly invoked the Oreshnik in recent months as a threat against both Ukraine and the west, warning it could be used against countries that supply Kyiv weapons to strike targets inside Russia with longer-range missiles.
The Russian leader has claimed the intermediate-range missile is impossible to intercept because of its speed – which he says exceeds 10 times the speed of sound – and that its destructive power rivals that of a nuclear weapon even when armed with a conventional warhead.
Some western analysts have expressed scepticism about those claims, though Ukraine has no air defence systems capable of intercepting the missile.
Russian forces also carried out overnight strikes on Kyiv, hitting several districts of the Ukrainian capital. At least one person was killed, according to Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the Kyiv City Military Administration. Five rescue workers were injured while responding to the attacks, Ukraine’s security service said.
The Oreshnik launch capped a week in which Ukraine and its European allies said they had made significant progress on plans for postwar security guarantees.
On Tuesday, Britain and France said they were prepared to deploy troops to Ukraine following a future peace agreement – a major commitment under discussion for months.
Russia’s foreign ministry rejected the idea on Thursday, calling the prospect of western troops in Ukraine a “direct threat”, a position that again casts doubt on the prospects for a negotiated peace.

16 hours ago
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