
Russian forces have launched their new hypersonic ballistic Oreshnik missile at Ukraine, striking a city just 60 miles from the Nato border of Poland.
Moscow has claimed it was fired in response to an attempted Ukrainian drone strike on one of president Vladimir Putinâs residences, a strike which Kyiv says never happened. Europe has also condemned Russiaâs latest attack as a âclear escalationâ and warned it was an attempt to âinstill fearâ.
It marks only the second time Russia is believed to have used the intermediate-range Oreshnik missile, which has nuclear capabilities. Putin has claimed enemy forces cannot intercept the weapon because of its velocity of more than 10 times the speed of sound.
âSuch a strike close to EU and NATO border is a grave threat to the security on the European continent and a test for the transatlantic community,â Ukrainian foreign minister Andriy Sybiha said on X.
âIt is absurd that Russia attempts to justify this strike with the fake ‘Putin residence attack’ that never happened,â he added. âPutin uses an IRBM near EU and NATO border in response to his own hallucinations â this is truly a global threat. And it demands global responses.â
The missile, based on the RS-26 Rubezh, which Russia had originally developed as an intercontinental weapon, is capable of carrying nuclear as well as conventional warheads, but there was no suggestion of any nuclear component to the overnight attack.
Images released by Ukrainian authorities show apparent debris of an Oreshnik missile fired at Lviv, a city of more than 700,000 people.
The attack came days after European countries, including the UK and France, committed to putting boots on the ground in Ukraine to aid peacekeeping efforts in the event of a ceasefire, while Washington reaffirmed its pledge to provide security guarantees for Kyiv.
The EUâs foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, said the strike was âmeant as a warning to Europe and to the USâ.
âEU countries must dig deeper into their air defence stocks and deliver now,â she said. âWe must also further raise the cost of this war for Moscow, including through tougher sanctions.”
German chancellor Friedrich Merz added: âThreatening gestures are intended to instill fear, but they will not work. We stand with Ukraine.â
A senior Ukrainian official said the missile had struck the workshop of a state enterprise near the Polish border.
Impact from several submunitions caused âminor penetrations of concrete structuresâ at the workshop and made craters in the forest area, they added.
Meanwhile, the SBU state security service said Russia sought to destroy civilian infrastructure in the surrounding region amid ârapidly deteriorating weather conditionsâ.
Temperatures in Ukraine are set to plummet well below zero, forecast to drop to -15C in the capital of Kyiv early on Saturday morning.
Russia has scaled up its attacks on energy infrastructure ahead of the cold snap. On Friday, an attack on Kyiv has left 500,000 without power, with mayor Vitali Klitschko called for people to temporarily evacuate if possible.
At least four people were killed in Kyiv after Russia launched a major offensive across Ukraine with 278 missiles and drones, according to Ukrainian tallies. Kyiv said it downed 244 of them in flight.
UK defence minister John Healey visited the site of a strike on an apartment building after meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky.
It comes after a Russian air attack on Thursday left one million people without electricity and heating across large swathes of Ukraineâs central and southeastern Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia regions.
