Ukraine’s kamikaze drone struck Russia’s Iskander ballistic missile manufacturing factory.

Ukraine carried out a long-range strike overnight on February 21 targeting Russia’s Votkinsk Machine Building Plant in Udmurtia, a key facility tied to Moscow’s Iskander ballistic missile production program.

Explosions were reported shortly before midnight local time, followed by a large fire inside the industrial complex located roughly 1,400 kilometers from the Ukrainian border.

The attack appears aimed at disrupting Russia’s missile manufacturing capacity deep inside its rear areas, far beyond the reach of conventional battlefield weapons. The Votkinsk plant is widely known as one of the core enterprises involved in producing systems such as the Iskander short-range ballistic missile and the Yars intercontinental ballistic missile, both central to Russia’s strategic and operational strike capabilities.

Early reports of explosions emerged in local social media channels, where residents described multiple detonations and visible flames rising from the industrial zone. The OSINT monitoring community Tendar reported that a fire broke out on the plant’s territory following the strike. Analysts from the CyberBoroshno group later stated that production workshops were hit during the attack, citing geolocated imagery and video evidence.

Witnesses published videos showing a large blaze illuminating the night sky near the facility. Local chat groups claimed that workshops No. 22 and No. 36 were affected, though the extent of structural damage has not been independently confirmed.

Authorities in Russia initially downplayed the scale of the incident. However, Udmurtia Governor Alexander Brechalov later acknowledged the strike, stating that the facility sustained “damage and casualties.” According to the governor, three people were hospitalized following the fire, including one individual in serious condition who was transported by air ambulance to a regional clinical hospital for surgery and remains under medical supervision. Two others were reported in moderate condition. Eight additional individuals received medical examinations and were released for outpatient treatment.

The method of attack remains officially unconfirmed. Several sources claim that long-range strike systems described as FP-5 Flamingo–type cruise missiles may have been used, while other reports suggest the involvement of jet-powered strike drones, sometimes referred to in Ukraine as “reactive drones.”

The Votkinsk Machine Building Plant occupies a central role in Russia’s military-industrial complex. According to publicly available defense industry data, the enterprise manufactures solid-fuel ballistic missiles and conducts final assembly and testing for multiple strategic systems. Its distance from the frontline has historically placed it outside the threat envelope of most Ukrainian strike capabilities, making the reported attack notable for its range.

In operational terms, facilities such as Votkinsk support Russia’s ongoing missile campaign by sustaining production pipelines for both tactical and strategic weapons. Interruptions to manufacturing infrastructure can affect maintenance cycles, delivery timelines, and replenishment rates for missile inventories used in long-range strikes.

While Russian authorities have not disclosed the level of damage to production capacity, open-source imagery indicating prolonged fire activity suggests at least localized disruption within the facility. Independent verification of production losses remains ongoing.

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