# [WARNING] Russia Launches Multi-City Ballistic and Cruise Missile Barrage on Ukraine

*Saturday, April 25, 2026 at 3:04 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-04-25T03:04:38.235Z (12d ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, MissileStrikes, Iskander, Kh101, Kalibr, Geran2, EuropeSecurity
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/4637.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: From roughly 02:46–02:47 UTC on 25 April, OSINT channels report a major Russian strike wave on Ukraine using Iskander-M ballistic missiles, Kalibr and Kh-101 cruise missiles, and Geran-2 drones. Impacts are reported in Kharkiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Bila Tserkva (Kyiv Oblast), central Cherkasy Oblast, and Nizhyn in Chernihiv Oblast. This marks a significant escalation in the ongoing overnight attack and may stress Ukrainian air defenses and critical infrastructure.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

Between approximately 02:46:00 and 02:47:36 UTC on 25 April 2026, multiple near-simultaneous OSINT reports describe a large, coordinated Russian strike package across Ukraine. Key reported elements:

- At 02:46:00–02:46:27 UTC, at least four Iskander-M ballistic missiles reportedly struck the Kyivskyi district of Kharkiv City, with subsequent reports raising the total to at least eight Iskander impacts in Kharkiv and additional explosions (Reports 20–22, 24, 26).
- At 02:46:19 and 02:47:06 UTC, three Iskander-M impacts and resulting fires were reported in Dnipro (Reports 16, 19), alongside ongoing Geran-2 drone attacks and continuous explosions (Report 13, 12).
- Additional Iskander impacts were reported near Zaporizhzhia City and in Nizhyn, Chernihiv Oblast, with launches indicated from the Kursk direction (Reports 18, 23, 25).
- A Kalibr cruise missile impact was reported in Bila Tserkva, Kyiv Oblast (Report 14), and a probable strike in central Cherkasy Oblast where 3–4 missiles “disappeared” simultaneously, likely indicating either impacts or intercepts (Report 15).
- At 02:46:47 UTC about 25 Kh‑101 air‑launched cruise missiles were detected in Ukrainian airspace (Report 17), indicating the main wave of strategic aviation-launched missiles entering engagement zones.

These reports come on top of earlier information (Report 2) of a “large-scale, combined Russian missile and drone attack” overnight using around 26 Kalibr cruise missiles, suggesting a multi-wave operation. Activity on Russian strategic aviation frequencies was also noted, consistent with Kh-101 launches.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The attackers are Russian Armed Forces, likely under the direction of the Russian General Staff and the long-range aviation command, with participation from Black Sea or other naval units (Kalibr), ground missile brigades (Iskander-M), and strategic bomber units (Tu-95MS/Tu-160 launching Kh-101s). Drone strikes with Geran-2 are typically operated by Russian Aerospace Forces or affiliated units.

The targets—Kharkiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Bila Tserkva, Cherkasy Oblast, and Nizhyn—are major urban and industrial centers and logistics hubs, indicating a continued Russian strategy of degrading Ukrainian energy, industrial capacity, and command-and-control, and stressing air defenses.

3) Immediate military/security implications

- Scale and distribution: This is a geographically broad, multi-vector strike impacting eastern, central, and northern Ukraine almost simultaneously. The concurrent use of Iskander ballistic missiles, sea-launched Kalibrs, air-launched Kh-101s, and loitering Geran-2 drones is designed to saturate or confuse Ukrainian air defenses.
- Air defense strain: The detection of ~25 Kh‑101s on top of Iskander and Kalibr waves substantially increases the number of inbound threats, potentially leading to higher leakage rates. Malfunctioning radars reported in Kharkiv suggest either technical strain, targeted SEAD/ELINT effects, or physical damage from impacts.
- Infrastructure risk: Fires in Dnipro and multiple impacts in core city districts raise the probability of damage to energy, industrial, or transportation infrastructure. Detailed damage assessments are not yet available, but the pattern is consistent with Russia’s previous campaigns against grid and industrial nodes.
- Civilian impact: Concentrated strikes on large cities at night increase the risk of significant civilian casualties and displacement, which could trigger renewed calls for enhanced air defense support from Western states.

4) Market and economic impact

While the strikes themselves do not directly target cross-border energy or grain export infrastructure as reported so far, they reinforce several market-relevant dynamics:
- Risk premia: Continued high-intensity attacks keep geopolitical risk elevated in Europe, supporting a mild safe-haven bid for the US dollar, US Treasuries, and gold.
- Energy: No direct hits on pipelines, refineries, or Black Sea/Danube export facilities have been reported in this specific wave, but sustained Russian missile usage keeps attention on the security of regional energy infrastructure. Oil and European natural gas may see incremental upside on risk sentiment rather than physical disruption.
- European and EM equities: European indices, especially those with high exposure to energy, defense, and industrials, may react modestly to the renewed escalation. Defense sector equities could gain on expectations of further ammunition and air defense demand, while risk-sensitive EM assets near the region could face mild pressure.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Ongoing wave: As of 02:47 UTC, Kh‑101 missiles are still in flight and Geran-2 drones continue to attack Dnipro, so further impacts and additional cities may be reported over the next 1–3 hours.
- Ukrainian response: Ukraine is likely to claim interception rates and publish damage assessments later in the day. Requests for additional long-range air defense systems, missiles, and fighter aircraft may intensify.
- Russian posture: The observed use of strategic aviation and large numbers of high-value cruise missiles indicates Russia is still willing to expend significant stockpiles. More waves could follow in coming nights, especially if Russia aims to exploit perceived gaps in Ukraine’s air defense coverage while Western resupply is constrained.
- International reaction: Western governments may issue condemnations and could accelerate discussions of further air defense packages or sanctions, but immediate new sanctions are not yet indicated by these reports alone.

Overall, this strike constitutes a significant escalation within the ongoing campaign, warranting continued close monitoring for infrastructure damage, casualty figures, and any indication of hits on energy export or nuclear facilities that would materially escalate both security and market risks.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Sustained high-intensity Russian strikes on Ukrainian cities slightly increase geopolitical risk premia: modest upside pressure on oil and gas (Russia risk, infrastructure vulnerability), safe-haven bid to gold and USD, and marginal downside for European and EM equities sensitive to war escalation. No immediate direct disruption to energy flows reported yet.
