# [WARNING] Russia Hypersonic ‘Oreshnik’ Strike Warning; U.S. Eyes Iran Endgame

*Saturday, May 23, 2026 at 5:19 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-23T17:19:33.232Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, Hypersonic, UnitedStates, Iran, MiddleEast, Oil, Defense
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/7844.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between 16:57 and 17:00 UTC, Ukrainian leadership and the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv warned of a potential large-scale Russian air strike within 24 hours that may include use of the new ‘Oreshnik’ hypersonic missile against Ukraine, including Kyiv. In parallel, U.S. President Trump is convening Gulf leaders today and signals the U.S. and Iran are nearing a deal, even as aides indicate he may decide on Sunday between continued confrontation or a settlement. The combination elevates near-term escalation and de-escalation risk in two key theaters with material energy and market implications.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

From approximately 16:57–17:00 UTC on 23 May 2026, multiple Ukrainian and diplomatic channels reported that Russia may imminently employ its new ‘Oreshnik’ hypersonic weapon in a large-scale combined air strike:
- Report 5 (16:57 UTC) and Report 4 (17:03 UTC) relay President Zelensky’s statement, citing U.S. and European intelligence, that Russia is preparing a strike employing ‘Oreshnik’ as part of a combined attack on Ukrainian territory, specifically including Kyiv.
- Report 19 (16:59 UTC) reiterates that Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR) received this information from American and European partners, and notes that the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv has warned of a potentially significant air attack within the next 24 hours.

Disclosures from both Ukrainian political leadership and Western diplomatic channels suggest this is more than routine threat rhetoric.

Separately, in the U.S.–Iran theater:
- Report 6 (16:34 UTC) cites Axios saying Trump is expected to decide on Sunday whether to continue the conflict path or conclude peace with Iran.
- Reports 2 (16:43 UTC), 3 (16:20 UTC), and 23 (16:34 UTC) state that President Trump will hold a conference call today with leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Egypt, Türkiye, and Pakistan at 1 PM ET to discuss the Iran situation.
- Report 22 (16:36 UTC) quotes Trump telling CBS that the U.S. and Iran are “getting a lot closer” to a deal that would block an Iranian nuclear weapon, while insisting he will only sign a deal on maximal U.S. terms.
- Report 21 (17:03 UTC) has Pete Hegseth describing U.S. airborne and rapid reaction forces being postured to deploy rapidly to the Middle East to shield U.S. bases and potentially employ HIMARS against the Iranian Navy, indicating elevated U.S. readiness.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

On the Ukraine axis, the actors are:
- Russian Armed Forces high command, likely Long-Range Aviation and strategic missile units introducing or escalating use of the ‘Oreshnik’ hypersonic system.
- Ukraine’s political leadership (President Zelensky) and HUR as recipients of allied intelligence, and Ukrainian Air Force/Air Defense as the operational responders.
- U.S. and European intelligence agencies, and the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv, as warning originators.

On the Iran axis, the actors are:
- U.S. President Donald Trump as the decision-maker on war vs. deal and force posture.
- Gulf and regional leaders (Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Egypt, Türkiye, Pakistan) as both security partners and key nodes for energy and basing.
- Iran’s political and security leadership; Report 17 (16:36 UTC) shows IRGC-aligned Speaker Ghalibaf warning the U.S. of consequences of further aggression.
- U.S. military rapid reaction and airborne units reportedly poised to deploy to the Middle East.

3) Immediate military/security implications (next 24–48 hours)

Ukraine theater:
- High probability of intense Russian strike activity within the stated 24-hour window, with Kyiv at particular risk. If ‘Oreshnik’ is employed, it could represent either first operational use or a scaled-up hypersonic salvo, stressing Ukrainian and NATO air/missile defense systems.
- Expect heightened air-raid alerts, pre-emptive dispersal of Ukrainian military assets, and potential temporary disruption to power, transport, and communications depending on targets.
- NATO and U.S. monitoring will intensify, and any demonstrated performance from ‘Oreshnik’ will feed into Western missile-defense planning and future aid packages.

Iran theater:
- Trump’s coordinated call with Sunni heavyweights and Türkiye/Pakistan suggests he is consolidating a regional front, either to backstop a high-pressure diplomatic move or to build acceptance for possible kinetic options.
- U.S. rapid reaction forces postured to deploy with HIMARS support against Iranian naval assets raise the risk of a short-notice U.S.–Iran clash, particularly around Hormuz and adjacent bases, even as parallel diplomatic tracks are active.
- Iranian messaging (Report 17) warns of retaliation to further U.S. actions, signaling that any miscalculation or attack could trigger regional missile and proxy responses.

4) Market and economic impact

Energy: The combined Ukraine hypersonic risk and Iran decision window increase geopolitical risk premia:
- Oil: Traders will watch for any sign that Trump’s Sunday decision tilts to strike or a maximal sanctions snap-back versus a sanctions-relief deal. A strike or clear march to war could push crude sharply higher (>5–10%), especially if Hormuz traffic is threatened. A credible deal framework could conversely pressure oil lower on expected incremental Iranian barrels.
- Gas: European gas markets may react modestly to any major strike on Ukrainian critical infrastructure, particularly transit or storage sites, though physical flows are already largely re-routed.

Safe havens and risk assets:
- Gold and the U.S. dollar typically benefit from heightened war risk; a visible ‘Oreshnik’ strike plus U.S.–Iran uncertainty will support safe-haven bids.
- Equities: Defense names stand to gain on perceived escalation risk in both theaters. Broader indices remain vulnerable to a sharp correction on any U.S.–Iran kinetic event.
- Currencies: Currencies of energy importers (e.g., EUR, JPY, INR) could weaken against the dollar on higher oil costs if the market prices a serious Iran risk. Gulf FX pegs remain stable but equity and credit spreads could widen.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Ukraine: Either a large-scale Russian strike materializes within the warned 24-hour window, possibly showcasing ‘Oreshnik,’ or the warning period passes quietly, in which case Ukrainian and Western officials may reassess Russian intent and intelligence accuracy. Regardless, this episode will accelerate Western debate on additional air-defense, early-warning, and anti-missile support.
- U.S.–Iran: Trump’s call with Gulf and regional leaders at 1 PM ET today will shape the diplomatic trajectory. By Sunday, markets and allies should have clearer signals whether Washington is moving toward a deal, a harder military line, or an extended standoff. Iranian and proxy rhetoric and posture around U.S. bases and Hormuz will be critical indicators.
- Markets: Expect risk-sensitive assets to trade defensively into Trump’s Sunday decision window, with elevated volatility in oil, gold, and defense equities, and rapid repricing on any confirmed strike on Ukraine’s capital or a sudden U.S.–Iran military move.

Net assessment: The imminent Russian strike warning, potentially involving a new hypersonic system against Kyiv, combined with a U.S.–Iran inflection point, meaningfully raises the risk of sudden military and market shocks, warranting heightened watch and contingency planning.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Heightened Ukraine strike risk supports safe-haven flows (gold, USD) and modest upside in energy due to broader geopolitical risk. The Iran-decision window and Trump’s calls with key Gulf producers raise event risk for oil (potential >5–10% gap on news of either U.S. strike or sanctions-relief deal), Middle East risk assets, and defense stocks, but no concrete policy move yet.
