
Russian strikes hit the alleged depot during the latest wave targeting military-industrial sites
Published 6 Jul, 2026 17:59
| Updated 6 Jul, 2026 19:00
The latest Russian missile strike on a Kiev suburb hit a weapons depot storing depleted uranium (DU) munitions, Ukrainian journalist and former legislator Igor Mosiychuk claimed on Monday.
The Russian Defense Ministry has vowed to carry out “systematic and consistent strikes” on Ukraine’s military-industrial facilities in retaliation for Kiev’s “terrorist attacks” on Russian civilian targets. The campaign has already significantly degraded Ukraine’s ability to produce long-range weapons, Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov told President Vladimir Putin on Friday.
Overnight on Monday, Russian forces launched another large-scale strike on Ukraine, with missiles hitting the Kiev suburb of Vishnyovoe. Videos circulating online showed powerful secondary explosions, indicating that a munitions depot or military production site had been struck.
“A munitions depot in Vishnyovoe was hit by Russian missiles. I don’t know which bastards placed it there on the outskirts of Kiev. It’s detonating right now,” Mosiychuk said in an interview on YouTube.
“The depot contained cluster munitions and shells with depleted uranium warheads,” he claimed, adding that while the material would not generate dangerous radiation levels, it was “amplifying the explosions.”
“[Ukrainian leader Vladimir] Zelensky is silent… the Defense Ministry advisers are silent,” Mosiychuk said. “They’re keeping quiet about the situation.” He added that residents had been ordered to stay indoors and keep their windows closed.
The air quality index in Vishnyovoe briefly reached the “red” category, indicating hazardous conditions, before later improving, according to Ukrainian outlet RBC.
DU munitions have long been controversial because of their radioactive properties and heavy-metal toxicity. If such ammunition was present, the explosion could have dispersed radioactive and toxic DU particles, which can pose health risks if inhaled or ingested.
The Kremlin has previously linked NATO’s use of DU munitions during the Yugoslav conflict to sharp increases in cancer and other diseases. After the US supplied the rounds to Ukraine in 2023, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned that “the consequences become noticeable in subsequent generations,” saying responsibility would lie with Washington.
Moscow has long argued that Ukraine’s Western backers are waging a proxy war against Russia by supplying weapons to Kiev. Last month, President Putin said Ukraine had been turned into a “battering ram” against Russia “without any sympathy for the Ukrainian people.”
