President Volodymyr Zelensky reported that Ukrainian intelligence is currently verifying information about a possible new strike by Russia using the Oreshnik ballistic missile. The data came from American and European partners — this means it is a signal from several independent sources rather than a single report.
The Oreshnik is a Russian medium-range ballistic missile that Moscow first used against Ukraine in November 2024, striking Dnipro. Russian officials openly used this strike as a demonstration — a signal to the West about the capabilities Russia is prepared to deploy if escalation occurs.
What is known for certain
Zelensky did not name specific targets, timeframes, or geography of the possible strike. He emphasized that the information is being verified rather than confirmed. This is a significant distinction — a public warning at the verification stage is itself a tool: it increases the cost of the strike for Moscow by depriving it of the element of surprise.
In parallel, Ukraine is registering a general increase in the activity of Russian armed forces on several fronts. However, no direct causal link between this and a possible Oreshnik strike has been officially confirmed.
Why this matters now
After the first use of the Oreshnik in November last year, NATO and the West in general have not developed a public response to the question: what constitutes an adequate response to this class of weapon? The air defense systems deployed in Ukraine were not designed to intercept ballistic missiles with such characteristics. No new agreements on countering the Oreshnik have been publicly announced.
That is, if a strike occurs — it will occur under the same conditions of no defense as the first one.
Unanswered questions
If US and European intelligence detected strike preparations early enough to pass the data to Kyiv — does there exist an agreed protocol among allies about what specific actions should follow such a warning, and was it activated this time?