Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Russia Stockpiled Missiles In September For New Large-Scale Strikes On Ukraine ISW


(MENAFN- UkrinForm) According to Ukrinform, this is said in a report by the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).

“Russian forces likely stockpiled ballistic and cruise missiles throughout September 2025 to conduct a few large-scale drone and missile strikes on select days,” the report says.

ISW analysts noted that Russian forces do not regularly launch missiles in nightly strike packages against Ukraine and often go several days without using missiles in these packages.

Russian forces appear to be stockpiling ballistic and cruise missiles most days and then launching large numbers of missiles in conjunction with large numbers of drones, likely to overwhelm Ukrainian air defense systems, analysts said.

Read also: ISW expert warns: Kremlin testing NATO air defenses for future attac

According to their estimates, Russian forces notably only conducted four overnight strikes containing over 10 missiles in September 2025 and have conducted one overnight strike containing over 40 missiles roughly every two weeks since late August 2025, underscoring Russia's recent pattern of intermittently conducting a few large, combined strikes between Russia's most consistent, smaller drone strikes

“Russian forces are continuing to use more cruise missiles and fewer ballistic missiles in combined strikes and are likely continuing to rely on ballistic missiles to conduct pinpoint strikes on specific targets while using drones and cruise missiles to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses,” the report says.

As noted, Ukraine's Patriot air defense systems remain Ukraine's only air defense systems capable of downing Russian ballistic missiles, and Russian forces may be specifically targeting cities and energy infrastructure not actively defended by Ukraine's Patriot systems to increase the chances that Russia successfully strikes its intended target.

As reported by Ukrinform, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) analyzed how Russian state media acknowledge the growing gasoline shortage in Russia, while downplaying the role of Ukraine's deep-strike campaign in causing this deficit.

Photo from open sources

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