The Russian leader has allegedly ordered the production of additional missiles, but the rush is putting quality control under pressure.
During an overnight missile and drone attack in May, the Russians fired an Oreshnik ballistic missile at Kyiv — a powerful weapon able to travel at hypersonic speeds.
Ballistic missiles are difficult to stop, as they hurtle toward their targets at high speed, giving air defenses only a short window to detect and intercept them.
Since the first confirmed use of the Oreshnik in the war, the Kremlin has promoted its capabilities and used the missile to try to deter further Western support for Ukraine.
But does the Kremlin actually have an arsenal of Oreshnik missiles? Well, not exactly, according to new data.
Stockpiles running low
In fact, Moscow may be nearly out of advanced Oreshnik ballistic missiles, according to a new assessment by the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
The think tank cited fresh data from Dallas Analytics, a Ukrainian intelligence firm.
Behind the scenes, Russian leader Vladimir Putin personally demanded four additional missiles immediately. That order came right after the weapon’s debut against the city of Dnipro in late 2024.
Russian forces quickly burned through three of those weapons. In January, one missile targeted the Lviv region, followed by two strikes near Kyiv. Another launch failed completely.
Because of these rapid launches, analysts believe the Kremlin holds just one operational Oreshnik from that original batch. Its stockpile is effectively empty.
Rushed and inaccurate
This frantic pace came with a steep cost. In order to meet deadlines set by the Kremlin, manufacturers allegedly skipped critical quality-control checks, according to a source inside the Russian Defense Ministry.
Worse still, Dallas Analytics obtained sensitive Russian procurement documents detailing major flaws. The missile relies on an old Soviet design. Its legacy GU-503 aviation gyroscope reportedly severely limits modern guidance capabilities because it cannot adequately handle hypersonic stabilization.
At hypersonic speeds, even a tiny stabilization error can cause major deviations. The internal papers suggest that these gyroscope issues may cause the weapon to drift tens of kilometers away from its target.
Publicly, Vladimir Putin dismissed any reports of failure. He stated that the launches were merely for testing purposes. According to the Russian leader, drones flew into the structures to examine the warheads and calculate everything down to the millimeter.
Fearsome but Fflawed
On paper, the Oreshnik is a terrifying weapon. According to United24Media, the nuclear-capable ballistic missile travels through the stratosphere, making interception incredibly difficult for standard air-defense systems.
It also carries several warheads that separate during flight to strike different targets. However, because these warheads are not independently guided after separation, the weapon relies entirely on its initial trajectory.
Still, Moscow is working hard to expand the reach of this flawed system. A Belarusian monitoring group recently tracked a massive military train delivering Oreshnik components to an airfield near the border.