# [WARNING] Russia Masses Missiles on Ukraine as US Hits Iranian Oil Shippers

*Saturday, April 25, 2026 at 1:14 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-25T01:14:39.620Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, MissileStrikes, Iran, StraitOfHormuz, USSanctions, OilMarkets, Energy
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4634.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: From 00:40–01:00 UTC, Russia conducted a large multi-vector strike on major Ukrainian cities using Iskander ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and glide bombs, while roughly 25 Kh-101-class missiles were detected in Ukrainian airspace. Simultaneously, Washington sanctioned a major China-based refinery and about 40 shipping firms over Iranian oil and Tehran moved to exempt allied nations from Hormuz tolls, tightening the energy and maritime pressure around Iran.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

OSINT reports between 00:40 and 01:00 UTC on 25 April 2026 indicate a major Russian strike package against Ukraine:
- Dnipro: At least a “5th Iskander-M on Dnipro” was reported at 00:40–00:43 UTC, mixed with two pairs of Iskander-K cruise missiles approaching from the east, followed by reports of cruise missiles over southern suburbs changing course toward the city center and explosions in the city at 00:44–00:45 UTC.
- Zaporizhzhia: “Iskander on Zaporizhzhia” and impacts near the city were reported around 00:44–00:45 UTC, with additional explosions and likely Tornado-S rocket fire by 00:50 UTC.
- Kramatorsk & Kryvyi Rih: Iskander strikes were reported on both cities between 00:48–00:50 UTC.
- Pavlohrad (Dnipropetrovsk Oblast): An Iskander trajectory was reported at 00:59 UTC.
- Kharkiv: Described as under “massive attack” at 00:39 UTC.
- Shostka (Sumy Oblast): Repeated KAB glide-bomb launches were noted at 00:46 UTC.
- Wider cruise missile activity: About 25 Kh-101s were detected over Ukraine by 00:55 UTC, with six groups entering Kherson Oblast at very low altitude, some possibly being Kalibr missiles launched from Buyan-M corvettes.

Separately, at 00:04 UTC a report noted new US sanctions on a major China-based oil refinery and about 40 shipping companies over Iranian oil. At 00:55 UTC, Iran was reported to be applying strategic toll exemptions for allied nations transiting the Strait of Hormuz. These developments occur alongside ongoing US signals that Iran/Russia oil waivers will not be renewed.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The strike campaign is conducted by Russian forces, likely under the authority of Russia’s Southern and Central Military Districts and Aerospace Forces, employing Iskander-M ballistic missiles, Iskander-K cruise variants, Kh-101 cruise missiles, KAB glide bombs, and Tornado-S rockets. Targeted cities—Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv, Kryvyi Rih, Kramatorsk, and others—are key Ukrainian industrial and logistical hubs.

On the sanctions side, the US Treasury and State Department, under the Trump administration, are targeting a large China-based refinery and ~40 shipping entities, aiming to squeeze Iranian crude exports. Iranian authorities are responding by using their control over Hormuz tolls to favor allies, an instrument under the purview of Iran’s maritime and energy bureaucracy and ultimately the Supreme National Security Council.

3) Immediate military/security implications

The Russian strike pattern in the 00:40–01:00 UTC window represents a synchronized, multi-axis attack on central and eastern Ukraine, likely aimed at:
- Overwhelming Ukrainian air defenses by saturating multiple regions simultaneously.
- Threatening industrial, energy, and military infrastructure in Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, and Kryvyi Rih.
- Maintaining pressure on Kharkiv and front-line logistics in Kramatorsk and Sumy.

The use of numerous Kh-101/Kalibr-class cruise missiles and KAB glide bombs underscores Russia’s continued ability and willingness to expend high-end munitions, and it may presage another campaign against Ukraine’s power or defense industry once specific targets are confirmed. Civilian casualties and infrastructure damage are likely but not yet quantified.

In the Gulf, US sanctions combined with Iran’s selective toll exemptions raise the risk of fragmented shipping rules in and around the Strait of Hormuz. This could incentivize some fleets to align more openly with Iran or seek alternative routes/flagging to avoid US penalties, increasing complexity and legal risk for global tanker operations.

4) Market and economic impact

Energy:
- The Ukrainian strikes by themselves do not immediately affect global supply, but they reinforce a elevated geopolitical risk backdrop, particularly if Ukrainian energy or transit nodes later prove targeted.
- The new US sanctions on a major China-based refinery and 40 shippers dealing in Iranian oil directly threaten some flows of Iranian crude to Asia, likely tightening available barrels and raising compliance costs. This supports modest upside pressure in Brent and WTI, especially if enforcement is aggressive.
- Iran’s toll exemptions for allied nations in Hormuz create a two-tier transit regime, which may lower costs for aligned states while marginally increasing uncertainty and insurance premia for others. The optics of selective treatment in a critical chokepoint could fuel an additional risk premium on Middle East crude and tanker freight rates.

Equities and currencies:
- Energy equities, particularly US and non-sanctioned Middle Eastern producers, may gain from higher price expectations. Tanker and shipping firms compliant with US rules may benefit at the expense of sanctioned or gray-market operators.
- Chinese refining and shipping names with Iran exposure face headline and compliance risk. Emerging market currencies of energy importers could come under pressure if oil prices move higher.
- Safe-haven assets such as gold could see incremental support from the combined Ukraine escalation and Hormuz tension.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Ukraine: Expect continued air alerts and further missile and drone activity overnight, with damage and casualty assessments emerging through the day. Kyiv will likely renew calls for additional air-defense assets and long-range strike capabilities. If major power or industrial facilities are hit, there could be follow-on blackouts and disruption to Ukrainian industry.
- Russia: Moscow may frame the strikes as retaliation for recent Ukrainian actions or as part of a broader campaign to degrade Ukrainian infrastructure ahead of anticipated ground operations.
- US–Iran/China: Washington is likely to issue detailed designation lists for sanctioned companies, prompting immediate compliance reviews in global shipping and insurance. China may protest the extraterritorial reach of US sanctions but is unlikely to escalate beyond diplomatic statements in the near term.
- Hormuz: Iran’s differential toll policy could be expanded or paired with additional ‘administrative’ measures affecting non-allies. Any move toward inspections, delays, or harassment of tankers would markedly escalate market concern.

Overall, the combined developments mark a significant step-up in the intensity of Russian long-range strikes and a tightening of the sanctions environment around Iranian oil and Hormuz transit, warranting close monitoring for spillover into energy markets and broader risk sentiment.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
The Ukrainian strike wave raises general geopolitical risk premium but is unlikely by itself to shift commodities immediately unless key infrastructure is later confirmed hit. The new US sanctions on a China-based refinery and 40 shippers moving Iranian crude, combined with Iran’s selective toll exemptions in Hormuz, increase perceived risk to global oil flows and could support higher Brent/WTI prices and tanker/shipping equities, while adding pressure on Chinese refiners and shipping firms and modestly supporting safe-haven assets.
