# [WARNING] Russia Launches Major Multi-City Missile Barrage Across Ukraine

*Saturday, April 25, 2026 at 1:24 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-25T01:24:39.290Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, MissileStrikes, AirWarfare, EuropeSecurity, MarketsWatch
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4635.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: From 00:39–01:00 UTC on 25 April, Russian forces conducted a coordinated large-scale missile and glide-bomb strike on multiple Ukrainian cities, including Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Kryvyi Rih, Kramatorsk, Kharkiv, Pavlohrad and Shostka. OSINT channels report at least ~25 Kh-101 cruise missiles in Ukrainian airspace, multiple Iskander ballistic and cruise missile launches, and repeated KAB glide-bomb attacks. This represents a significant escalation in Russia’s ongoing strategic strike campaign and may have material military and civilian impacts.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

Between approximately 00:39 and 01:00 UTC on 25 April 2026, multiple OSINT and Ukrainian-language alert channels reported a large, coordinated Russian strike package across Ukraine:

- 00:39–00:44 UTC: Alerts of a “massive attack” on Kharkiv (Report 7) and instructions for residents of Dnipro to stay in shelters as rockets and UAVs approached the city (Report 8). A combined attack was explicitly noted (Report 9).
- 00:40–00:43 UTC: Multiple reports of Iskander strikes on Dnipro (Reports 27, 28) and two pairs of Iskander-K cruise missiles approaching Dnipro from the east with explosions in the city (Report 29).
- 00:44–00:46 UTC: Cruise missiles were observed over southern suburbs of Dnipro, changing course toward the city center with explosions reported (Reports 25, 22). Simultaneously, Iskander missiles were reported on Zaporizhzhia with impacts near the city (Reports 23, 24, 21).
- 00:48–00:50 UTC: Additional Iskander launches/impacts reported on Kryvyi Rih (Report 18) and Kramatorsk (Reports 16, 15), and repeated KAB glide-bomb launches against Shostka in Sumy Oblast (Report 20). Two further explosions were heard in Zaporizhzhia City, likely Tornado-S rockets (Report 14).
- 00:54–00:55 UTC: Approximately 25 Kh-101 cruise missiles were detected in Ukrainian airspace (Report 12). Six groups of Kh-101s were reported entering Kherson Oblast (Reports 19, 17), heading northwest toward targets in Kirovohrad Oblast (Novoukrainka, Kropyvnytskyi – Report 13).
- 00:59–01:00 UTC: Additional Iskander launches toward Pavlohrad in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, with one missile disappearing from tracking near Shakhtarske (Reports 11, 10).

This pattern indicates a coordinated strike wave, combining air-launched cruise missiles (Kh-101, possibly Kalibr), SRBM/ground-launched cruise missiles (Iskander-M/K), multiple rocket systems (Tornado-S), and guided glide bombs (KAB), directed at a broad set of urban and potentially infrastructure targets.

Casualty and damage figures are not yet available. There is no current indication in this batch of hits on nuclear plants, major gas pipelines, or seaports, but several targeted cities (Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Kryvyi Rih, Pavlohrad) host significant industrial and logistics infrastructure.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The attackers are Russian Federation forces, almost certainly under the Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) and associated missile units. Kh-101s are typically launched from Tu-95MS / Tu-160 bombers, Iskander systems from Russian ground units, and Tornado-S from rocket artillery brigades. Targeting of multiple oblasts simultaneously suggests a centrally planned strike package approved at Russian General Staff level, likely with political authorization from Moscow given the scale.

The defenders are Ukrainian Armed Forces air defense units (Air Force, Army air defense, possibly National Guard), engaged in intercepting cruise missiles and SRBMs, and civil defense/emergency services in affected cities.

3) Immediate military/security implications

- Operational impact: This appears to be one of the more intense coordinated strikes in recent weeks, matching earlier OSINT indications of Russia “massing missiles” for a large salvo. Targets likely include power infrastructure, military-industrial facilities, logistics hubs, and possibly air defense nodes.
- Air defense saturation: Multiple concurrent vectors (Kherson axis, eastern axis, bombers) suggest an attempt to saturate Ukrainian air defenses and force expenditure of interceptor stocks.
- Civilian risk: Major urban centers (Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Kharkiv) under large-scale fire raise risk of mass casualties and damage to housing, hospitals, or civilian energy infrastructure, which could become clear in the next few hours.
- Potential follow-on: Large cruise-missile waves are often accompanied or followed by UAV swarms and additional waves later in the night to exploit gaps in defense.

4) Market and economic impact

- Energy: If further reporting confirms significant damage to Ukrainian power plants, high-voltage substations, or gas transit infrastructure, this could briefly lift European gas and power prices and marginally support coal demand. At present, there is no explicit confirmation of energy targets.
- Risk assets: Renewed evidence of Russia’s capacity and willingness to conduct large strike packages may reinforce geopolitical risk premia, modestly supporting defense equities and safe-haven assets (USD, CHF, JPY, USTs, Bunds, gold). Broader equity indices likely see limited direct impact unless civilian casualties or infrastructure destruction is especially severe.
- Grain and logistics: Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro are important industrial and logistics regions. If rail nodes or depots are hit, inland logistics for grain and metals export could be temporarily disrupted, but primary Black Sea/Danube export nodes are not mentioned here.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Damage assessment: Over the next 6–12 hours, expect Ukrainian authorities and OSINT to release imagery and details on impact sites, casualties, and whether energy, rail, or military-industrial sites were hit.
- Additional waves: There is a realistic possibility of further missile and drone waves overnight and into the following night, as has been Russia’s pattern during major strike campaigns.
- Diplomatic response: Ukraine and allies are likely to highlight the strikes to press for additional air defense systems and munitions. Western capitals may respond with new pledges or accelerated deliveries if civilian damage is high.
- Market reaction: Unless critical infrastructure (e.g., nuclear plants, major gas transit) is confirmed damaged, market reaction should remain contained and largely sentiment-driven. A more pronounced move in European energy or global risk assets would require evidence of sustained infrastructure degradation or a broader Russian escalation beyond Ukraine.

Overall, this event marks a notable escalation in the intensity and breadth of Russian long-range strikes, reinforcing the war’s trajectory toward a sustained strategic bombardment phase rather than any de-escalation.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
If damage is extensive, this could modestly increase safe-haven flows into gold and high-grade sovereigns, and marginally pressure European gas and power prices on renewed fears over Ukrainian infrastructure. Defense sector equities may see incremental support. However, absent confirmed hits on energy, nuclear or export infrastructure, broad market impact should be limited and sentiment-driven.
