DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

What to Know About the Oreshnik, the Missile Russia Used Against Ukraine

January 9, 2026
in News
What to Know About the Oreshnik, the Missile Russia Used Against Ukraine

Ever since Russia first used a new intermediate-range ballistic missile to strike Ukraine in late 2024 — a nuclear-capable weapon that President Vladimir V. Putin called “unstoppable” — Ukrainians have anxiously waited to see when it would be launched again.

On Friday morning, Moscow said that it had fired another of the missiles, known as the Oreshnik, in a strike that hit western Ukraine overnight. Russia said that it had hit drone-making and energy infrastructure related to Ukraine’s war effort. No casualties were reported.

The latest Oreshnik strike, about 40 miles from the border with Poland, a NATO country, offered a reminder to alliance members in Europe that they lie within range of Russia’s arsenal as tensions over Ukraine peace talks intensify.

Is it a new weapon?

Mr. Putin has promoted the Oreshnik as an example of Russian technological prowess, built by a domestic military industry unimpeded by Western economic sanctions.

The Pentagon says the Oreshnik is a tweak of Russia’s RS-26 Rubezh missile, an intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, that has been tested since 2011.

The name Oreshnik means “hazelnut tree” — a potential reference to its sub-munitions, which resemble clusters of hazelnuts, according to Timothy Wright, an expert on Russian missiles at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London-based research group. The missile carries multiple warheads that separate in flight and plummet onto a target.

Its first known use was in November 2024, when Russia fired an Oreshnik at a military facility in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. That attack, which Mr. Putin said was in response to Ukraine’s use of American and British weapons to strike deeper into his country, was seen as a warning that Moscow could hit any part of Europe with the missile.

The Ukrainian authorities said that they were examining the components of the missile used in Friday’s attack, which struck western Ukraine, near Lviv.

Wreckage from the 2024 crash site, in central Ukraine, showed some physical differences between the Oreshnik and Rubezh missile systems, with the Oreshnik measuring about three and a half feet in circumference, compared to nearly six feet for the Rubezh.

That might be because the Oreshnik is designed to fly shorter distances than the Rubezh. As an intercontinental ballistic missile, the Rubezh would effectively be able to reach targets anywhere on earth, experts said, while an intermediate-range ballistic missile like the Oreshnik would be able to fly only about 3,410 miles. That would allow it to reach most of Europe.

Based on previous tests, experts say they believe the Rubezh can carry up to four warheads. Ukrainian officials said the Oreshnik used in Dnipro had carried six warheads, each with a cluster of six sub-munitions.

How much damage did it do?

The mayor of Lviv, Andriy Sadovyi, said that a critical infrastructure facility had been hit but did not provide further details.

Russia said it had successfully struck drone-making and energy sites. Drones now dominate the battlefield in Ukraine, making attacks on production facilities a priority for Moscow. The Kremlin has also been carrying out a campaign to cripple Ukrainian energy infrastructure.

The Ukrainian Air Force said that the ballistic missile used in the attack traveled at a speed of about 8,000 miles per hour. The Oreshnik has often been described as a hypersonic missile; such weapons can travel at least 3,800 miles per hour.

Ballistic missiles are propelled into the atmosphere by rockets before descending at high speeds because of gravity’s pull. That can make them very difficult for air defense systems to intercept, and near impossible if sub-munitions are released, though it was not clear what explosives, if any, the missile delivered in the strike on Friday.

What has the fallout been?

The use of the nuclear-capable Oreshnik is highly symbolic because Moscow has repeatedly raised the threat of nuclear war in its conflict with Ukraine.

The Russian Defense Ministry called the strike near Lviv a response to an attempted Ukrainian attack last month on one of Mr. Putin’s residences in Russia. Ukrainian officials have called the Kremlin’s claims of an attack on the residence a lie intended to derail recent peace talks, and U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that there is no evidence that such an attack occurred.

On Friday morning, Ukraine’s foreign minister warned that the Oreshnik strike was “a grave threat to the security on the European continent and a test for the trans-Atlantic community.”

“We demand strong responses to Russia’s reckless actions,” the foreign minister, Andriy Sybiha, said in a statement, noting that Ukraine had informed the United States, European nations and international organizations about the attack.

“It is absurd that Russia attempts to justify this strike with the fake ‘Putin residence attack’ that never happened,” Mr. Sybiha added.

Lara Jakes, a Times reporter based in Rome, reports on conflict and diplomacy, with a focus on weapons and the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East. She has been a journalist for more than 30 years.

The post What to Know About the Oreshnik, the Missile Russia Used Against Ukraine appeared first on New York Times.

Trump Goon Melts Down After Latest Kennedy Center Boycott
News

Trump Goon Melts Down Defending Kennedy Center Disasters

by The Daily Beast
January 10, 2026

Kennedy Center president Richard Grenell is spinning the narrative after a long-standing musical act became the latest to exit since ...

Read more
News

As U.S. debt soars past $38 trillion, the flood of corporate bonds is a growing threat to the Treasury supply

January 10, 2026
News

Indonesia becomes the first country to suspend Elon Musk’s Grok for generating ‘non-consensual sexual deepfakes’

January 10, 2026
News

Anti-ICE Protests Spread Across the U.S. After Fatal Shooting of Minneapolis Woman

January 10, 2026
News

Gwyneth Paltrow’s son Moses ‘wanted to die’ watching her ‘Marty Supreme’ sex scenes with Timothée Chalamet

January 10, 2026
Syrian security forces enter Aleppo neighborhood after clashes with Kurdish fighters

Syrian security forces enter Aleppo neighborhood after clashes with Kurdish fighters

January 10, 2026
Watch out, NYC: Zohran Mamdani’s huge press office proves relentless spin will be priority No. 1

Watch out, NYC: Zohran Mamdani’s huge press office proves relentless spin will be priority No. 1

January 10, 2026
Trump says he ‘loves the Venezuelan people’ exactly one week after attack that killed 100

Trump says he ‘loves the Venezuelan people’ exactly one week after attack that killed 100

January 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025