Ukraine Strikes Russian Military Electronics Plant with domestically produced Flamingo Cruise Missiles
IR footage shows Ukraine’s 19th Missile Brigade firing Flamingo cruise missiles into Russia earlier this week. At least one missile struck the VNIIR-Progress military electronics plant. @Osinttechnical reported the strike on the Russian facility.
pravdareport.comIR footage released this week shows Ukraine’s 19th Missile Brigade launching Flamingo cruise missiles into Russia. The brigade conducted the strikes earlier this week relative to May 7, 2026. At least one Flamingo cruise missile struck Russia’s VNIIR-Progress military electronics plant during the operation.
Post by @Osinttechnical on X
The VNIIR-Progress facility is a military electronics plant located in Russia. The same outlet confirmed that one of the missiles hit the VNIIR-Progress site.
The strike on the VNIIR-Progress plant occurred earlier this week. Ukrainian forces have increasingly turned to domestically produced systems such as the Flamingo in long-range strikes against Russian targets.
Key Facts
Story Timeline
3 events- 2026-05-07
Current date; strike confirmed as having occurred earlier this week
1 source@Osinttechnical - 2026-05-04 to 2026-05-06
Ukraine’s 19th Missile Brigade launches Flamingo cruise missiles into Russia
1 source@Osinttechnical - 2026-05-04 to 2026-05-06
At least one Flamingo cruise missile strikes VNIIR-Progress military electronics plant
1 source@Osinttechnical
Potential Impact
- 01
Potential disruption to Russian military electronics production at VNIIR-Progress
Transparency Panel
Related Stories
Defense NewsZelenskyy Says Ukraine Expects Russian Drone and Missile Assault
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy told CBS News that intelligence indicates Russia will launch attacks involving drones and missiles as soon as Friday or Saturday night. He requested additional U.S. defensive systems and cited a recent Russian strike that killed two and wou…
theyeshivaworld.comU.S. Travel Group Estimates Newark Airport International Closure Would Cost $8 Billion a Year
A U.S. travel industry group has calculated that ending international service at Newark airport would reduce annual economic activity by $8 billion. The estimate covers lost spending by foreign visitors and related sectors.
physicianonfire.comBilt Rewards reports $1 billion revenue target for 2026
Bilt Rewards CEO Ankur Jain said the company's flagship credit card accounts for less than 11 percent of revenue. The firm now processes more than $100 billion in annual housing spend across one in four U.S. apartment buildings.