# [WARNING] Russia Assembles Major Missile and Drone Strike Wave on Ukraine

*Friday, April 24, 2026 at 9:04 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-24T21:04:32.404Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: Russia, Ukraine, StrategicBombers, Missiles, Drones, EuropeSecurity, Energy, FX
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4618.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 20:12 and 21:01 UTC on 24 April, multiple OSINT indicators show Russia assembling a large, multi-vector strike package against Ukraine: Tu-95MS and Tu-160M strategic bombers are airborne toward launch zones, a new wave of drones is entering Ukrainian airspace, and a high threat window for Iskander-M ballistic launches—especially toward Kyiv—has been flagged. This constitutes a significant short-term escalation in strike intensity with implications for Ukraine’s air defenses, civilian infrastructure, and European security perceptions.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

From approximately 20:09–21:01 UTC on 24 April 2026, multiple real-time reports indicate Russia is building a large-scale, multi-domain strike package aimed at Ukraine:

- At 20:12:46 UTC (Report 9), four Tu-95MS strategic bombers departed Olenya Airbase and are flying south, assessed to conduct Kh‑101 cruise missile launch maneuvers from above the northern Caspian Sea in about 4.5 hours (around 00:45–01:00 UTC if timelines hold).
- At 20:56:13 UTC (Report 6), two Russian Tu‑160M bombers at Ukrainka Airbase (Amur Oblast) were reported likely to depart within 90 minutes, with two Tu‑160M already airborne and heading west toward launch areas in Volgograd Oblast/Caspian Sea. The report notes that this posture is now confirmed.
- At 20:58:14 UTC (Report 5), a high threat of Russian Iskander‑M ballistic missile launches for the next 5 hours was flagged, with Kyiv highlighted as a primary concern. This implies elevated attack risk through roughly 02:00 UTC.
- At 20:16:04 and 20:12:46 UTC (Reports 8 and 9 combined), observers describe a Russian strike concept using successive drone waves: an initial Gerbera decoy wave aimed at exhausting Ukrainian air defenses has ended; a second wave is underway with an estimated composition of ~40% Gerbera decoys and ~60% Geran strike drones. Only ~20 drones are currently in Ukrainian airspace, but numbers are expected to rise substantially.

Taken together, these elements point to a coordinated large-scale strike package involving decoy and attack drones, land-based ballistic missiles, and strategic air-launched cruise missiles.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The activity involves Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) long-range aviation units:
- Tu‑95MS from Olenya (long-range bomber units traditionally under Russia’s Long-Range Aviation Command).
- Tu‑160M from Ukrainka and transit toward Volgograd/Caspian launch areas.
- Iskander‑M systems likely from Russian Ground Forces missile brigades facing Ukraine.
- Drone operations (Gerbera decoys and Geran strike drones) likely controlled by Russian MoD drone units and affiliated formations.

Operational direction would flow from the Russian General Staff and VKS high command, consistent with previous large, scripted strike waves on Ukrainian infrastructure.

3) Immediate military/security implications

- Air defense saturation: The multi-wave drone and cruise missile profile, combined with potential Iskander ballistic launches, is designed to stretch Ukrainian air defenses across altitude and range bands and to force expenditure of valuable interceptor stocks.
- Targeting risk to Kyiv and major cities: Kyiv is explicitly highlighted as facing elevated Iskander‑M threat, raising the likelihood of both military and dual-use infrastructure being targeted (energy nodes, command centers, logistics hubs).
- Civilian and infrastructure damage: If cruise missile and ballistic salvos are sizable, critical power, rail, and communications infrastructure could suffer acute damage overnight, with follow-on effects on logistics and civilian life.
- Escalation optics: While not the first large strike wave, the synchronized use of Tu‑95MS, Tu‑160M, ballistic missiles, and drone swarms underscores Russia’s continued ability and willingness to conduct high-intensity strategic strikes deep into Ukraine.

4) Market and economic impact

- Energy: Any major hit to Ukrainian energy infrastructure or transit logistics can revive concerns about regional grid stability and, to a lesser extent, gas transit, providing a modest upward push on European power and gas prices and supporting Brent/WTI risk premia.
- Currencies and rates: The development is mildly negative for the euro and Eastern European currencies (PLN, HUF, CZK) via risk sentiment, and it supports safe-haven flows into USD and CHF. Ukrainian assets (sovereign Eurobonds, if traded) may see additional pressure.
- Equities: European defense and missile-defense contractors could see incremental support on expectations of further NATO/EU aid, while broad European indices may experience a marginal risk-off bias if the strike damage is extensive or civilian casualties are high.
- Commodities: Gold and other safe havens (JPY) may see modest bid as geopolitical risk headlines cross, especially if strikes hit Kyiv or large civilian areas.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Execution of strike wave: Expect drone activity to increase rapidly within the current hours, followed by cruise missile launches from the Caspian region starting roughly 00:30–01:30 UTC, and possible Iskander‑M ballistic launches within the stated 5‑hour threat window.
- Ukrainian defensive response: Ukraine will attempt to intercept with layered air defenses around Kyiv and key cities. Initial claims of shootdowns and damage assessments will emerge within hours, but verified impact may lag by 6–24 hours.
- Diplomatic and aid reactions: Depending on scale and casualties, fresh calls for enhanced air defense support (e.g., additional Patriot, IRIS‑T, SAMP/T batteries and interceptor stocks) from NATO/EU capitals are likely. This may accelerate implementation of recently approved EU and US support packages.
- Russian follow-on posture: If damage is assessed as significant by Moscow, they may frame the strikes as punitive or strategic, but the pattern remains consistent with prior major waves rather than a wholly new phase of the war.

Overall, while this does not represent a new front in the conflict, the confluence of strategic bombers, ballistic missiles, and layered drone attacks in a compressed timeframe is a significant escalation in strike intensity and warrants elevated attention from both security and market perspectives over the next 24–48 hours.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Heightened near-term geopolitical risk premium for European assets and energy; modest upside pressure on oil and gas via conflict-risk channel, marginal support for gold and defense equities, and mild headwind for EUR and Eastern European risk assets if strikes are severe.
