Russia will “definitely” respond to a Ukrainian attack on a southern airfield using US-supplied ATACMS missiles, the Kremlin said Thursday.
President Vladimir Putin has previously threatened to launch its new hypersonic ballistic missile, named Oreshnik, at the centre of Kyiv if Ukraine does not halt its attacks on Russian territory using US-supplied ATACMS missiles.
Russia’s defence ministry on Wednesday accused Ukraine of firing the missiles in an overnight attack on an airfield in the port city of Taganrog in the southern Rostov region.
A response “will follow when, and in a way that is deemed, appropriate. It will definitely follow,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
He did not provide details of how Russia might retaliate.
Washington only recently gave Kyiv permission to fire ATACMS on Russian territory, following months of requests.
The United States warned Wednesday that Russia could be preparing to fire Oreshnik missiles at Ukraine again.
The US warning was “based on an intelligence assessment that it’s possible that Russia could use this Oreshnik missile in the coming days,” Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh told journalists.
Both sides have escalated aerial attacks in recent months as Russia’s troops advance on the battlefield.
Russia’s defence ministry said Thursday its troops had captured the tiny settlement of Zarya in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.
Trending
- Reps amend electoral act, propose N10m fine, two-year jail for party membership
- Naira falls to N1,401/$ at official FX market amid global tensions
- Dangote Refinery cuts petrol price to N1,075 per litre
- Govt aware of terrorists’ identities, locations in Nigeria – Gumi
- US embassy warns of possible terror threat in Nigeria
- Zamfara gov Lawal dumps PDP for APC
- Dangote Refinery hikes petrol price to N1,175 per litre
- Court of Appeal upholds order restraining INEC from recognising PDP 2025 convention
- Iran defies Trump’s threat, chooses Mojtaba Khamenei as new leader.
- Iran’s next supreme leader must win US approval to survive — Trump

