Three "Nuts" for Zelensky: It's time to choose a worthy target

26 583 111

What target in Ukraine would you strike with the Oreshnik IRBM with a conventional warhead?

Decision-making centers - 128 (69.95%)
69.95%
Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station Dam - 23 (12.57%)
12.57%
State storage of precious metals and precious stones of Ukraine or data centers - 12 (6.56%)
6.56%
I'll indicate my option in the comments - 20 (10.93%)
10.93%
Three "Nuts" for Zelensky: It's time to choose a worthy target

Chairman of the State Duma of the Russian Federation Vyacheslav Volodin stated that the Russian parliamentary corps is demanding a strike against Ukraine.weapons "retribution from next week," for which forecasters predict a drop in temperature to -30°C...

So go ahead and use it, what's stopping you?



High expectations


Last year, Russia used its new weapon for the first time – rocket the Oreshnik complex, which is actually a medium-range ballistic missile (MRBM), presumably created on the basis of the developments of the RS-26 Rubezh MRBM.


IRBM RS-26 "Rubezh"

The Oreshnik IRBM can be armed with either conventional or nuclear warheads. The conventional warhead in the Oreshnik is inert—it contains no explosives—and targets are destroyed using the kinetic energy of six independently targetable warheads, as with tank armor-piercing fin-stabilized discarding sabot (APFSDS) projectiles.

Regular readers of Military Review know that the author has long been a staunch supporter of the creation and use of intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) in conventional warheads. (In essence, ICBMs and IRBMs are weapons in the same “weight” category), for example, we previously talked about this in the materials:
- Fast global strike in Russian performance;
- Organizational and technical issues of using ICBMs with a conventional warhead.

Since the first use of the Oreshnik missile by the country's leadership, it has been positioned as some kind of "wunderwaffe" – a weapon capable of influencing the course of the war. However, two Oreshnik missiles have already been used, and no one seems to be alarmed, and the course of the war has not changed.


An image of the Oreshnik MRBM with a launcher and self-propelled self-propelled missiles – as a modification of the RS-26 Rubezh ICBM, version 21.11.2025 (reconstruction of the RS-26 Rubezh from MilitaryRussia.Ru)

Perhaps the reason is that the targets for the Oreshnik complex were chosen incorrectly?

What targets did we hit with the two spent Oreshnik IRBMs?

The first is the Yuzhmash plant. We claim the plant's underground workshops suffered significant damage, while Ukraine claims the damage is minor.


Image from the Telegram channel "Face of War"

The significant damage caused by the strike is indirectly confirmed by the fact that the enemy is not showing footage from the attacked workshops of the Yuzhmash plant. If there really were only a few holes in the ceiling, then the Ukrainian authorities would not have failed to show the weakness of Oreshnik. But given the lack of footage from this plant taken after the strikes, it seems that things are not going well for the enemy there.

However, regardless of the reality, there was no visible "stopping effect" from using "Oreshnik." Why?

Expectations were too high – people imagined something like a nuclear explosion, and not just “lightning” from the sky disappearing without a trace into the ground.


The second strike by "Oreshnik" - initially, rumors began to circulate about a strike on the Bilche-Volytsko-Uhersky underground gas storage facility (UGS) in the Lviv region; even local villagers reportedly experienced a drop in gas pressure in their gas supply networks.

In fact, the UGH can most likely be seriously damaged only by using deep-dive bunker-busting nuclear warheads, and this would be a practically “clean” nuclear explosion, with a minimal release of radioactive substances to the surface – we discussed the feasibility of developing and using such weapons in the material Artificial Earthquake: Penetrating Seismic Nuclear Warheads for Oreshnik IRBM.


Trace of the underground nuclear explosion "Crystal" (additionally covered over in 1992)

In any case, the information about the strike on the underground storage facility was not confirmed; supposedly, some underground workshops of an aircraft repair plant in the Lviv region were destroyed or damaged, so it turned out again that “the Godfather made an offer that no one understood.”

So, two Oreshnik MRBMs have already been launched at the enemy, where will the third one go?

We need to change course – if we truly want to effectively present the Oreshnik IRBM and achieve visible results from its use, then we need to choose completely different goals, for example...


decision centers


That's the first thing that comes to mind. The inexplicable refusal of our country's military-political leadership to strike at decision-making centers in Ukraine, on the other hand, is beyond comprehension.

And what a reason we had recently – an attack on the Russian President’s residence in Valdai!

In principle, according to the author, we don’t need a reason at all, everything is much simpler – “opportunity = reason”, but oh well, what can you do...

What were the consequences of the attack on the residence of our head of state? Was a flash drive containing evidence given to Trump that he "didn't believe"?

What the hell was that? Why on earth are we making excuses to the US President and trying to prove anything to him? Is Russia a great power or already a US colony?


Let's assume that, for some reason, our country's leadership believes that the drug-addicted military dictator Zelensky is extremely useful and necessary as Ukraine's president, but what's wrong with the rest of them? Why do we need all these "MPs" and other officially conscious citizens alive?


No matter how incompetent and corrupt they may be (and they are not all like that), they are still the apparatus of state governance that allows Ukraine to function more or less normally.

The simultaneous destruction of a significant number of decision-makers (DMs) is guaranteed to lead to a systemic failure in the functioning of the Ukrainian state apparatus.

Those who replace them won't be so perky—there won't be public appearances or fiery speeches, meetings in the Verkhovna Rada, or wherever they're sitting now. Who knows, since the Oreshnik IRBM has a flight time of about 5-10 minutes. They might not even have time to escape—they'll hide in cracks like cockroaches, or they'll even be in charge from abroad, which would be a whole different ballistic efficiency, not to mention how it would look to the general public—after that, the number of draft dodgers would double or even triple.

And sometimes, as an argument against attacks on decision-making centers in Ukraine, some people put forward the strange assertion: “We are not like that”?

I wonder who all these “WE” are?

The author has had the opportunity to communicate with so many people – for some reason, everyone "BY" Attacking decision-making centers in Ukraine is probably not the right circle for us. Maybe it's time for a referendum on this issue?

According to the author, decision-making centers are the first and obvious target for the Oreshnik IRBM.

It's high time to remove Ukrainian politicians and officials from the Red Book and start hunting them down.

Kyiv hydroelectric power station dam


Another of our regular topics is transport structures across the Dnieper – we have already spoken repeatedly about the need for and methods of their destruction.

Now we have another excellent option – a strike on the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Plant (HPP) dam using the Oreshnik IRBM.


The only question is whether it's sufficient for the Oreshnik IRBMs to hit the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station dam. A factory, where a hit on any of the workshops can be considered a success, is one thing, but a thin strip of dam, where a warhead missing by a few meters will only result in a splash and ripples in the water, followed by mockery from the enemy, is quite another.

By the way, if anyone thinks this is too "cannibalistic" an action, they're disappointed – unfortunately, Kyiv won't be washed away. Certain flooding is possible, of course, but nothing more – if we're lucky, a couple of metro stations will be inundated. As a bonus, the failure of the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station will be a significant factor, given the overall electricity shortage.


Ukrainian experts offer a pessimistic assessment of flood zones following the collapse of the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station dam.

A very interesting and attractive theory is that the destruction of the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station dam could lead to a cascading destruction of other dams located downstream; however, the enemy would likely be able to avoid this by increasing the water discharge.

But, in any case, the destruction of the Oreshnik dam by the IRBM "Oreshnik" will look very impressive! Yes, not very subtle, but very impressive!

It's important to understand that this is, first and foremost, a demonstration of capabilities—unlike the Yuzhmash workshops, the destruction of the Kyiv Hydroelectric Power Station dam cannot be hidden, and it will make the desired impression—after all, there are many more dams in the world in countries unfriendly to us, and of much larger dimensions, the consequences of whose destruction could be comparable to the use of weapons of mass destruction.

But with the third goal, things are not so clear-cut; the choice is...

Bank vaults or data centers


All these targets are located in Kyiv or its environs.

State Depository of Precious Metals and Precious Stones of Ukraine is located at Degtyarevskaya 38-44. In addition to precious stones and metals, these and other storage facilities should also contain cash.


The main question that determines the advisability of striking them is whether there is anything else there, or whether everything valuable has long since been taken abroad?

In this sense, data centers appear to be a much more attractive target for attack—their performance can be assessed using images from space taken in the infrared (IR) wavelength range—operating data centers become very hot.

The issue here is different: data centers are located on the surface, and the Oreshnik IRBM's pinpoint warheads could potentially simply pierce them at several points, causing limited damage to the surface, which, given the overall area and volume of equipment used, could be repaired relatively easily. Although this is not certain, it is possible that even single-block warheads on the surface would cause everything to fall apart.

Another question would be if something like a shrapnel or cluster-shrapnel warhead capable of operating over areas were used – we previously discussed the need to develop such a warhead and the possibility of its implementation in the material Swept away by fire: ICBMs with shrapnel warheads to hit targets deep inside Ukraine, and in relation to the "Nut" in the material The Oreshnik IRBM: not nuclear, well, maybe a little bit…


Approximate calculation of shrapnel warheads for various ICBMs

Kyiv and its surrounding areas are home to major data centers such as:

De Novo is one of the largest operators in the country. It operates a Tier III modular data center in Kyiv with a capacity of over 3,3 MW and is the base for the largest IaaS cloud in Ukraine.

- Parkovyi (Parkovyi) is a large specialized provider with Tier III Design and Facility certification, and has a modern infrastructure for cloud solutions and data storage;

- GigaCenter is one of the technological leaders in the market, part of the GigaGroup and provides colocation and cloud services through GigaCloud;

- United DC is a large data center focused on rack rental and physical infrastructure security;

- Kyivstar is a data center network providing commercial equipment colocation services for businesses.

Specialists in the field should have significantly more information about which data center is used for which tasks, and, accordingly, which of them is a priority target for the Oreshnik IRBM.

Conclusions


In fact, there are not many objects in Ukraine that can and should be targeted with the Oreshnik IRBM, at least in its non-nuclear version.

Much has already been destroyed in Ukraine, much can still be destroyed with more "classic" precision weapons, and much is dispersed and hidden in such a way that wasting an Oreshnik IRBM on them is clearly impractical. For example, high-tech weapons are mostly imported and stored decentralized, or they are assembled in large units in basements, often located under "civilian" buildings.

However, since we are using the Oreshnik MRBM, the targets being hit must correspond to the class of weapons used against them.

The destruction of decision-making centers in Ukraine using the Oreshnik IRBM with a conventional warhead seems to the author to be the most logical and expedient option.

And against what targets in Ukraine would you use the Oreshnik?

P.S. At the time of writing, yet another shameful "deal" has occurred, even though we were literally one step away from the enemy's entire energy system collapsing, mass unrest breaking out, and Ukraine simply falling apart from within...


On January 31, 2026, a blackout almost occurred in Ukraine even without our intervention – a falling...

But you can fix everything at once.

Let our negotiators agree to all of the Ukrainian side's conditions – given previous "goodwill gestures," no one will suspect a thing, they'll think we were simply "pressured" – Trump will happily announce that he orchestrated the whole thing and should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

And after Zelensky and his allies gather to proclaim victory over Russia somewhere in the Verkhovna Rada building, they will launch an Oreshnik missile at it without warning, and then declare that all agreements reached with Ukraine are invalid and continue military operations with an emphasis on destroying the enemy's infrastructure.

Only then will a truly favorable environment for negotiations be created.
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  1. +21
    3 February 2026 03: 52
    They won't hit anywhere! They'll be afraid they'll shell the fields again!
    1. -6
      3 February 2026 04: 06
      Quote: Maxim from Irkutsk
      They won't hit anywhere! They'll be afraid they'll shell the fields again!

      It's simply more effective as a threat than the actual results of its use. Therefore, it's better to simply threaten than to reveal that these are, in fact, dummy missiles lodged in the ground at a depth of several meters. In other words, everyone can see the impact of a conventional cruise missile; it's on the surface, while the impact of a "hazelnut" missile is hidden and not obvious.
      1. -1
        3 February 2026 10: 18
        I won't comment on the use of "Oreshnik" against the illegitimate government of Zelenskyy's Kyiv regime, but the fact that the ILLEGITIMATE nature of Zelenskyy and his co. as the Bandera regime's Achilles' heel is understood by both Kyiv itself, the EU, and the entire world for the implementation of the US and the collective West's "Ukraine is the anti-Russia" project. And this is the main concern that the new OSCE head, Ignazio Cassis, is currently facing, under the guise of supposedly achieving peace in Ukraine. Specifically,

        The new head of the OSCE, Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis, FIRST visited Kyiv and met with Zelenskyy!!! And only then did Cassis announce that is planning to travel to Moscow to negotiate a peaceful settlement to the Ukrainian crisis on behalf of Europe. And what nuances followed their meeting?

        And then
        The head of the Kyiv regime demanded that Moscow withdraw Russia's legal position on his illegitimacy, according to the German publication Junge Welt.
        See details - https://topcor.ru/68318-junge-welt-zelenskij-v-otchajanii-pytaetsja-izbavitsja-ot-statusa-prosrochennogo-prezidenta.html

        And no matter how others deny it, I believe that the main UNDERCOVER task of this new head of the OSCE at the meeting with Putin in Moscow will be precisely this, so that Putin, as the President of the Russian Federation, recognizes Zelensky's legitimacy as the ruler of Ukraine, Who, for the second year now, has been legally expired and de facto illegitimate as the president of Ukraine! This is what Zelenskyy is quietly trying to achieve in the eyes of the international community and, most importantly, in the country of 404! Why?
        This is primarily necessary for Zelenskyy himself to retain his personal power at any cost, and in no way as a step toward genuine peace negotiations. Why is this so?

        Because at the same time, the LEGITIMACY of Zelensky's Kyiv regime is STRATEGICALLY important not only for the survival of Zelensky himself, but also for his Western curators as the instigators of the war with Russia, as well as for third-party foreign sponsors of the Kyiv regime in the war against Russia, with the goal of continuing military and material assistance to the Kyiv regime from the heads of state - the USA, EU countries, and NATO leadership.

        For investors in the Kyiv regime it is important first of all First, the legitimacy of the current ruler in Ukraine, and only then the provision of his country, in his person, with the appropriate investments. Otherwise, for them it is nothing more than personal ruin and loss of business reputation in the face of future clients.

        In other words. Foreign aid investments in any country ultimately depend entirely on the LEGITIMACY of its ruler!
        This is the entire manipulative ploy being employed by representatives and supporters of the Kyiv regime at this historical juncture, like the opening of the "Overton window" in the pseudo-peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia! And in particular, in the upcoming visit of the new OSCE head to Moscow for talks with Putin!
      2. 0
        4 February 2026 05: 48
        It depends on what you're applying it to. If it's about Lviv, it'll be a dud (who cares about these aborigines), but there will be a lot of cries from a united and democratic Europe. But if it's about London, there will be shock and awe, and the appearance of wealthy superhumans (to me, they're simply degenerates of the human race). If they ban it, I don't even know how to "politely" describe it. hi
        1. 0
          4 February 2026 06: 16
          Quote: pin_code
          And what if there is shock and awe in London?

          Where do you get such confidence?
          1. 0
            4 February 2026 08: 59
            How can you be so sure that a nuclear strike near Russia's borders is cool or useful? Personally, I don't find it cool or useful! I have relatives there, but I don't have anyone in London!
            1. 0
              4 February 2026 09: 10
              Quote: pin_code
              How can you be so sure that a nuclear strike near Russia's borders is cool and useful?

              I didn't make any such claim.
              Quote: pin_code
              But in London I don't have anyone!

              Granted. But the question is different. Why did you decide that a strike on London would plunge its inhabitants into shock and awe, rather than anger and malice?
              1. 0
                4 February 2026 12: 51
                Why did you decide that this would shock only Hong Kongers?)). This will make them all shit themselves!
                1. 0
                  5 February 2026 03: 23
                  Quote: pin_code
                  Why did you decide that this would shock only Hong Kongers?)). This will make them all shit themselves!

                  Okay. Okay. But any plan allows for different outcomes. Option 1: They all shit themselves and fall on shaky legs at Putin's feet, begging for mercy.
                  Option 2: They got embittered and struck back. Or is that impossible?
              2. 0
                4 February 2026 13: 02
                And why did you decide that Meloni(?) Trump would be useful (not) for the Côte d'Azur? And the radioactive one? There are. Only three of them. Each has its own streets and, so to speak, its own, so to speak, finger-waving... Just... All you need is a pencil and a map...
        2. +1
          4 February 2026 09: 11
          Minusator, name yourself and I'll give you a plus! Limited time offer!
      3. +1
        4 February 2026 13: 21
        It's just that as a threat it's much more effective than the results of its use.

        This is where you're both right and wrong. Indeed, the anticipation of death is worse than death itself, but not this time.
        In war, the first rule is: destruction of headquarters, leadership, etc. There are many examples of this in history.
        Therefore, the destruction of the decision-making center immediately collapses the entire front and turns all the brave Ukrobanderite warriors in State 404 into an uncontrollable, scattered flock of sheep, fighting against everyone...
    2. 0
      3 February 2026 17: 25
      It's not that they're afraid. It's just that we really do expect something incredible from non-nuclear weapons. Although, according to the DPT center, it would be quite suitable.
      1. 0
        4 February 2026 13: 09
        I don't expect anything except higher prices. It's just a fact—we're living oil and can be pumped! I don't vote, and neither do 75-80% of the population??? And who cares! But horses... Of any kind, you need a little bit for voting... What can I do?
      2. 0
        4 February 2026 13: 35
        Alas, it won't do. If the only goal is to restore the status quo... London is simply an unripe ear of corn. And what was that about ears of corn in the Third Reich?
  2. +16
    3 February 2026 04: 18
    Go after Zelensky. The secret service can't do anything, and the guarantor is making "strange" promises.
    1. 0
      4 February 2026 13: 12
      Zelya is just a pawn, a blockhead, a log. You only need to hit him once, and that's London.
      1. 0
        5 February 2026 09: 55
        London is a nuclear war. The whole world will be in tatters. Firstly, our red-marker-loving guy won't go along with that. Secondly, it's a good thing he's not a sociopath. And thirdly, first one pawn, then another, and eventually it will become too dangerous to become a pawn.
    2. 0
      7 February 2026 23: 46
      Hit Zelensky
      For his soul, we could try the same ritual that was once used to lay Ariel Sharon and Yitzhak Rabin to rest. But Zelensky's functions are more representative. He'll be replaced by someone else, someone more vicious and less inebriated.
      Moreover, he infuriates Trump so much that he even takes pleasure in humiliating the patsy.
  3. +41
    3 February 2026 04: 27
    This article is incredibly political—threatening, menacing, and yet... nothing's happening. Honestly, I still don't understand why some people are running around with this hazelnut thing like it's nothing, considering this weapon some kind of "death star" that can destroy the entire planet at the push of a button. In reality, we've had two launches: one side is screaming "it's all dust," the other is screaming about holes in the fence. The truth is somewhere in the middle. According to satellites, of course, it's like spreading a thin layer of butter over a huge loaf of bread. Yuzhmash is standing, and it hasn't turned to dust. Did it sustain any damage? Yes, but it's unclear what kind, and how significant it was. In Hiroshima, for example, the results were visible; there was a city, but now there's no city. So, it's not clear yet. It's also unclear why a drone landing on some residence in Valdai is the pretext for attacking enemy territory. What about the shelling of Belgorod, for example, where people died, and the seizure of the Kursk region, where people also died—doesn't that count? Or is the reason somehow calculated in monetary terms? Was the attic really that expensive? Is that really it? The voting also seems kind of humorous. We've been at war for four years, and here we are, guessing who wants to throw a hazelnut. The only thing missing is 50/50 hints, a call to a friend, and help from the audience. You can get to the top three players with a spin of the wheel and a visit to the famous museum.
    1. -2
      3 February 2026 08: 54
      To be honest, I still don’t understand why some people run around with this hazelnut like it’s the apple of their eye, considering this weapon some kind of “death star” that, with the push of a button, destroys an entire planet.
      Let me explain: the reason is that the "Oreshnik" missile has only been used sporadically so far, so its effect doesn't appear as expected to the average person. It's a different matter when this missile (even with a conventional high-explosive warhead) is used en masse, targeting military and infrastructure targets on potential enemy territory. hi
      1. +8
        3 February 2026 09: 40
        Quote: Gomunkul
        It is a different matter when this missile (even with a conventional high-explosive warhead) is used en masse and simultaneously against military and infrastructure facilities on the territory of a potential enemy.

        There are no high-explosive warheads for the Strategic Missile Forces missiles. They simply don't exist and that's it. They haven't developed any options like hammering nails with a microscope. If there were, do you really think they would have launched them with blanks for test launches against the Ukrainians, and not with live ones?
      2. +4
        3 February 2026 10: 25
        Massive use of this carrier would mean wasting complex and expensive-to-produce weapons on trivial targets. Considering that global politics over the past 15 years has been heading toward a deterioration and global escalation (with the prospect of WW3), it's tempting to see something unpleasant happen later.
        A global conflict has begun in the world, in which we are one of the participating countries, and we have only a small number of valuable strategic and operational launch vehicles, due to the fact that we squandered most of the missiles on dubious targets with their high-explosive parts back in Ukraine.
        It's like the German V-6s—initially, they were more frightening than they actually were damaging. In fact, German bombing raids killed orders of magnitude more people in Britain.
        If the Germans had developed their own atomic bomb, then yes, it would have been a different story. After all, the V-15 could have been used to create a serious nuclear delivery system for attacks on Britain. But the Germans never developed a nuclear weapon, and ultimately, the V-15 rockets were of no help to them. Although they did provide a good foundation for the development of our own and the American missile programs.
        If we had mass-produced AWACS aircraft in the Aerospace Forces, it would be far more useful, practical, and versatile than wasting resources on mass-producing and deploying Oreshniks.
      3. +4
        3 February 2026 11: 44
        What kind of high-explosive version, you idiot? Reread the article; there are no high-explosive warheads; they'll explode at altitude, before they hit the ground. And secondly, calculate the cost of one missile with its long manufacturing cycle. These uneducated Shapko-heroes and windbags...
        1. +2
          4 February 2026 21: 05
          The Persians somehow make high-explosive warheads for IRBMs that don't explode in the atmosphere. And they're churning out hundreds of missiles.
    2. +5
      3 February 2026 10: 26
      So it's not clear yet. It's also unclear why the drone's arrival at a certain residence in Valdai is the pretext for attacking enemy territory.

      Yes, it's still unclear how it's being conducted and why it was started, why it was necessary to start this Strange Military Operation if we're fighting so strangely, we shouldn't have hit the bridges, we shouldn't have hit the leaders, we shouldn't have hit the property of our "big-nosed partners"...
    3. +4
      3 February 2026 11: 31
      Quote from turembo
      In fact, we have two launches: one side is screaming about everything in the dust, the other side is screaming about holes in the fence


      Indeed. But let's read the article: "The significant damage caused by the strike is indirectly confirmed by the enemy's failure to release footage from the attacked workshops of the Yuzhmash plant. If there really were only a few holes in the ceiling, the Ukrainian authorities would have been quick to point out the weakness of Oreshnik. But given the lack of footage from this plant taken after the strikes, it seems the enemy isn't doing so well there."
      Is the author serious? The enemy was supposed to release photos from a previously (and still is) top-secret plant to the public domain? Sometimes you have to think a little before you write.
      But why there's no media confirmation of the colossal destruction is a big question. Judging by comments on Ukrainian forums, our drones, especially reconnaissance ones, are flying freely over their cities. Where are the drone images? The exact time of the Oreshnik launch was known. Why not send a drone to the landing site in advance? To record the destruction?
      The question inevitably arises: was there a boy? That is, this massive destruction? Like, "Yuzhmash - to dust!"?
    4. +1
      4 February 2026 05: 52
      The coolest comment! Thank you!
  4. +21
    3 February 2026 04: 44
    Beskydy Tunnel.
    Heavy Western equipment is freely supplied to the enemy.
  5. +12
    3 February 2026 04: 47
    Three "Nuts" for Zelensky: It's time to choose a worthy target

    Even a Star Destroyer.
    Putin and his generals make that decision.
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  9. +8
    3 February 2026 04: 58
    Missiles of this class are only good when armed with nuclear warheads. There's no other option.
    And all these high-explosive shells, uranium and victorious crowbars, shrapnel - this is good as a primary presentation of the product.
    And if an accuracy of 10-50 meters has become achievable, then it's necessary to strike the main targets—the supreme military and political leadership (preferably with a single salvo, so as not to dissipate resources) and important infrastructure facilities. Moreover, in territories we don't lay claim to. Let Uncle Sam restore them later.
    1. 0
      3 February 2026 08: 24
      Quote: U-58
      Missiles of this class are only good when armed with nuclear warheads. There's no other option.

      It's all the usual "Oh, wow! Look what the Americans came up with, let's do the same!" All these "kinetic instant strikes" come from the early 2000s, only the Americans immediately realized it was a futile undertaking, while we, as usual, can't calm down, trying everything we can.
  10. +7
    3 February 2026 05: 00
    The precious metals storage facility, the data centers, and the dam need to be destroyed with precision weapons. Wasting Oreshnik on them isn't worth it, in my opinion. Iskanders, Kalibr, and Kinzhals would be more effective, in my opinion. And yes, I don't understand why this hasn't been done yet.
    The decision-making centers, as has been repeatedly stated, are not in Ukraine, but in England and the United States. Destroying a clown is a spectacular, but ineffective, undertaking. It makes no difference to us who their main puppet is. Zelensky, Zaluzhny, Budanov... They're all just talking heads, voicing the puppeteers' position. So if we're going to strike, strike not at the puppets, but at the puppeteers. Oreshnik would be right at home there.
    1. +12
      3 February 2026 06: 27
      And - yes, I don’t understand why this hasn’t been done yet.

      Trump has publicly spoken about only one "request" to Putin.
      Following this "request," one can assume that there were other "requests" regarding Ukraine that pose a threat and that ignoring them would be dangerous for the Russian elite.
      Trump is a global "Don Corleone," making offers to world leaders that are hard to refuse.
      1. +3
        3 February 2026 10: 10
        Quote: AA17
        Trump is a global "Don Corleone," making offers to world leaders that are hard to refuse.
        The US is the master of global capitalism, that's all there is to it. Banderovites kill our generals for pennies, while here they stir up controversy over "Oreshnik."
        1. +1
          3 February 2026 10: 22
          The USA is the master of world capitalism, that's all the miracles.


          I agree that the USA is the master of the world and dictates its will.
          I suppose that talk about the multipolarity of the world is simply inappropriate.
          You don’t have to go far for examples.

          Panama withdrew from the project with China after Trump's remarks about the Panama Canal.
          https://www.forbes.ru/biznes/530047-panama-otkazalas-ot-ucastia-v-proekte-s-kitaem-posle-slov-trampa-o-panamskom-kanale

          Trump: "India has agreed to stop buying Russian oil and buy it from the US to end the war."
          https://aftershock.news/?q=node/1584453
      2. +1
        3 February 2026 16: 05
        Trump is the global "Don Corleone"

        I don't argue. But he's not the one making the decisions. The CIA, the NSA, MI6—these are some of the decision-making centers. Maybe not the decision-making, but the implementation, or communication with Ukrainian puppets, but it's precisely these hotbeds of tension in the world that need to be eliminated. I think Mossad wouldn't be out of place on this list either.
  11. +3
    3 February 2026 05: 09
    The first use of the "Nut" missile may have involved a North Korean IRBM on a tracked chassis - such a launcher was photographed on a train carrying "Koksany" missiles.
  12. +3
    3 February 2026 05: 13
    Holy shit... "And the city dump is burning"... Fuck it, it reeks of Maidan slogans a mile away like "let's drop a nuclear bomb on Donetsk - and immediately Crimea is ours" (copyright Tymoshenko). Where are you planning on hitting? What fucking centers, what solutions? Who ever trusted those losers to decide what? What data centers in a hut cut off from the power grid? Hosting abroad is a no-brainer... Do you really think you just install a diesel engine, bury it in the ground, and the data center will work?! It'll just burst into flames from overheating; it eats up energy, the question is, which is more for power or cooling? Why do you think one of those burned down in Korea not long ago? Is it possible to maintain such a center in Ukraine now, in a bunker, protected from bombing, and with cooling for the entire bunker?! There, an entire nuclear power plant unit would be used for it - do they have those?
    It's time to put a muzzle on the Bandar-logs
  13. -1
    3 February 2026 05: 33
    When you go to the toilet, you flush everything down the drain. If the dam were to collapse, we'd be able to flush all the waste down the drain or into the Dnieper. And there's a huge amount of Maidan-era waste there since the collapse of the USSR! Just keep cleaning it up! Although I voted for a crackdown on decision-making centers.
  14. +11
    3 February 2026 05: 49
    The question here is different. They don't think first about where to strike the next Hazelnut, but rather about the consequences of its use for their financial and economic activities. As long as the bad guys who invest in the EU economy and consider it a second home are in power, any strikes that would cause colossal, acceptable damage are out of the question. In short, this rot has become so deeply ingrained at all levels of power that it has infected most of the politicians in power (I'm downplaying this, of course). The worst thing is that everyone is satisfied with everything, and there are no improvements in sight. And what's most shocking is the inaction of the top brass in response to all this; it feels like he's an integral part of this bacchanalia.
    1. +2
      3 February 2026 10: 34
      But what is most striking is the inaction of the Supreme Commander in response to all this.

      You wrote everything correctly, except for this sentence, since the "majority of politicians in power" is headed by the "supreme leader," so one should not expect any action from him against this "majority," i.e., against himself...
      And to think that "the tsar is good, but the boyars are bad"...
      1. +2
        3 February 2026 11: 26
        I left a drop of faith in the future, if everything is as you described, then we simply won’t have it.
        1. +5
          3 February 2026 13: 24
          then we simply won't have it.

          But I don’t have that little bit of faith. After what they did in the 90s and what they continue to do, over the past 25 years my faith in the future hasn’t increased...
          1. man
            0
            3 February 2026 14: 23
            Quote: Ilnur
            then we simply won't have it.

            But I don’t have that little bit of faith. After what they did in the 90s and what they continue to do, over the past 25 years my faith in the future hasn’t increased...

            You're quite the original, don't you really believe we'll live to be 150? I've already stocked up on salt and buckwheat... request laughing
        2. +2
          4 February 2026 21: 13
          They said the other day that Shoigu's daughter, who has already made a ton of money in St. Petersburg, will now be working at our rare earth technology production facility.
          https://ura.news/news/1053065369
          I've completely stopped believing in the future. The higher-ups aren't going to come to their senses, they're going to continue sawing.
    2. man
      +3
      3 February 2026 14: 18
      As long as the bad guys in power invest in the EU economy and consider it their second home
      Just not the second, but the only one, and the Russian Federation is their "hunting ground." The words in quotation marks are Khodorkovsky's. About Me and others like him from a letter from a place of imprisonment...
  15. +9
    3 February 2026 06: 10
    And you'll still put this issue to a referendum. In the fifth year.
  16. +1
    3 February 2026 06: 11
    Another issue is that the Strategic Missile Forces have been virtually excluded from participating in the Central Military District. The war is being waged by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which drew the red lines, and by ground forces with infantry platoons, individual tanks, and individual artillery, due to their suppression by various UAVs on the ground. The Strategic Missile Forces have various types of missiles capable of carrying from one ton to 10-20 tons of conventional explosives, plus delivery at cosmic speeds.
    There are plenty of missiles with an expiring combat duty warranty, and they need to be used effectively. And it's possible to strike not just three targets, but thirty, if not more. Four years of war is already too long, especially with strikes extending all the way to the Urals, although there have also been strikes against strategic aircraft deep in Siberia. soldier
    1. +5
      3 February 2026 08: 02
      Quote: V.
      The Strategic Missile Forces have various types of missiles capable of carrying from one ton to 10-20 tons of conventional explosives, plus delivery at cosmic speed.

      Do you think they're shovelling explosives in there? The Strategic Missile Forces don't have conventional warheads—only blanks and nuclear ones. They just don't exist. Plus, they're not highly accurate compared to, say, the Iskander.
      1. -5
        3 February 2026 08: 31
        I served in the Strategic Missile Forces and I stand by my word. In principle, the Oreshnik warhead can be installed on any missile with the required payload capacity. Just 50 years ago, we could hit within a 50-meter radius. Now, the accuracy has improved even further. hi
        1. +5
          3 February 2026 09: 35
          Quote: V.
          I served in the Strategic Missile Forces and I stand by my word. In principle, the Oreshnik warhead can be installed on any missile with the required payload capacity. Just 50 years ago, we could hit within a 50-meter radius. Now, the accuracy has improved even further.

          I also served in the Strategic Missile Forces, and you can serve in very different places. So, the interchangeability of warheads between different missiles, nuclear and non-nuclear, is, excuse me, utter nonsense. Do you even know what a MIRV looks like up close, or did you serve as a driver in some training battalion? Okay, since you're an expert... Will six Iskander warheads fit into Oreshnik? Or what kind? Give me an expert's opinion. You're also supposed to have a MIRV for Oreshnik, if you're so confident. 50 years ago, a 50-meter circle—which missile was that, or do they all have the same CEP?
          1. -4
            3 February 2026 10: 11
            What can I tell you if you have zero knowledge of rocket and space technology? My military specialty is electrical technician for underground missile systems. I participated in the modernization of the launch vehicle from single-head to cluster heads. I served in the launch duty team.
            1. +4
              3 February 2026 10: 28
              Quote: V.
              What can I tell you if you have zero knowledge of rocket and space technology? My military specialty is electrical technician for underground missile systems. I participated in the modernization of the launch vehicle from single-head to cluster heads. I served in the launch duty team.

              You're a technician, not even an engineer like me, and an electrician, which means you're in rocket and space technology. You shouldn't be afraid of my knowledge, but with secondary technical education, you just weren't properly taught it.
              Okay, so where did you get the information about the possibility of installing non-nuclear warheads in place of nuclear ones? Your job description wouldn't have allowed you to access this information, especially since the Strategic Missile Forces don't even have non-nuclear warheads (except for dummy warheads). Was it a modernization transition? Anyone who served in the Strategic Missile Forces would have said something like they participated in replacing the warhead with a single MIRV. And how could you have participated in your job description? That's what the missile defense and control unit does, not the combat crew. Unless you were present during the removal and installation, and the warhead isn't even visible there—it's under the fairing. Also, may I ask, which missile launcher was used to simply replace the MIRV with a single MIRV—was it the R-36? laughing
              1. -2
                3 February 2026 10: 38
                You're a very unpleasant conversationalist. Let's stop talking. If you don't believe me, that's your problem.
                1. +6
                  3 February 2026 11: 15
                  Quote: V.
                  You're a very unpleasant conversationalist. Let's stop talking. If you don't believe me, that's your problem.

                  Well, I'm sorry for the unpleasant emotions, your comments caused a strong reaction in me, because I'm "in the know" hi
              2. +2
                6 February 2026 03: 11
                Quote: Level 2 Advisor
                You're a technician, not even an engineer like me, and an electrician, which means you're in rocket and space technology. You shouldn't be afraid of my knowledge, but with secondary technical education, you just weren't properly taught it.

                Sorry to interrupt, but this character is truly unique. wassat He judges the current state of American rocketry based on stories told by a political officer 40 years ago and is incapable of calculating the energy of a body using a ready-made formula, given its mass and velocity. Don't waste your time on him!
                1. +2
                  6 February 2026 07: 12
                  Quote: Bongo
                  Forgive me for interrupting, but this character is truly unique. He judges the current state of American rocketry based on the stories of a political officer 40 years ago and is incapable of calculating the energy of a body using a ready-made formula, given its mass and velocity. Don't waste your time on him!

                  Thanks for the clarification, Sergey. hi
                  1. +1
                    6 February 2026 11: 52
                    Quote: Level 2 Advisor
                    Thanks for the clarification, Sergey.

                    drinks
      2. +1
        3 February 2026 10: 58
        Quote: Level 2 Advisor
        The Strategic Missile Forces don't have conventional warheads—only blanks and nuclear ones. They simply don't exist.

        There's no such thing in nature, because there's been no need for others up until now. But that doesn't mean there's no fundamental possibility of developing warheads with high-explosive, cluster, or fuel-air explosive charges for the Strategic Missile Forces. It's just that they should have been considered early on. And there are more than enough targets for such charges now.
        This is what concerns technical side of the issue.
        As for the side political - Everything is very strange here.
      3. 0
        4 February 2026 21: 18
        In fact, someone could have bothered to make a heavy warhead capable of firing at a range of up to 2000 km. The speed would be lower there, and more traditional guidance systems could be used. But we decided to abandon the missile sites in warehouses and not bother with them. It was out of desperation that they loaded their missile sites with aerial bombs and fired them, thinking, "What if we hit?"
    2. +3
      3 February 2026 08: 30
      Quote: V.
      The Strategic Missile Forces have various types of missiles capable of lifting from one ton to 10-20 tons of conventional explosives.

      You seem to be a fisherman, good at throwing your arms around... 10-20 tons... Cut the sturgeon down to about ten times smaller.
      1. -2
        3 February 2026 08: 38
        Satan lifts 10 tons, Stiletto 2 tons. Reducing the range and removing one stage could further increase the warhead's weight.
        1. +1
          3 February 2026 08: 42
          Quote: V.
          By reducing the range and removing one stage, the weight of the warhead can be further increased.

          The "Satan" is liquid-fueled. How are you planning to trim the stage? Topol, Yars, yes, you can, but you won't be able to lift it from 1,5 tons to even 5 tons. The RSD-10 also only lifted 1,5 tons.
          1. -3
            3 February 2026 08: 49
            Satan, Topol, and Yars have three stages each. Nothing needs to be cut. Each stage can be used independently. Each has its own engines.
            1. +2
              3 February 2026 08: 51
              Quote: V.
              Satan, Topol, and Yars have three stages each. Nothing needs to be cut. Each stage can be used independently. Each has its own engines.

              Of what you listed, which could be reproduced in a limited version by domestic industry?
              1. -3
                3 February 2026 08: 55
                All that is needed is a trajectory calculation, and everything else will be done by the troops at the missile and technical base.
                1. +2
                  3 February 2026 08: 58
                  Quote: V.
                  All that is needed is a trajectory calculation, and everything else will be done by the troops at the missile and technical base.

                  You're writing utter nonsense. Should we remove a strategic missile from combat duty? We have thousands of them?
                2. 0
                  3 February 2026 09: 01
                  Quote: V.
                  All that is needed is a trajectory calculation, and everything else will be done by the troops at the missile and technical base.

                  Even if the deadline has passed, no one will rework it. We launched the Dnepr when Yuzhmash was reworking it, but after that, there's no more Dnepr. And the Start isn't being built at the RTB either.
                  1. -2
                    3 February 2026 09: 26
                    Relax, we have someone to handle this. The main thing is to receive the assignment, the order, and the target designation, and then farewell, citizens of Nezalezhnaya.
                    1. +3
                      3 February 2026 09: 44
                      Quote: V.
                      Relax, we have someone to handle this.

                      Well, I'm not worried. We have people to deal with space, and migrants... we have everything...
              2. +1
                4 February 2026 21: 19
                Hazel is a cut-down yars, without the third step. Yars is poplar with a rgch.
  17. +2
    3 February 2026 06: 14
    As for the decision-making centers, strikes on the Ragul Ministry of Defense, the Main Intelligence Directorate, and the Security Service of Ukraine have long been in the offing.
  18. +4
    3 February 2026 06: 22
    E' da quando leggo questo sito di notizie(circa tre anni) che chiedo il bombardamento dei centri decisionali,ma per qualche motivo sconosciuto questo non è mai avvenuto. Sicuramente darebbe una grossa spallata alla caduta di questo maledetto regime e probabilmente anche alla fine della guerra. Sarebbe anche una grande dimostrazione, da parte della Russia, di forza.
  19. +5
    3 February 2026 06: 35
    It's not clear what else there is to feel sorry for; we need to hit everything we have. If you don't want Oreshnik, hit them with other weapons. They're hitting our cities and not bothering, but what are we expecting, what are we afraid of?
  20. +1
    3 February 2026 06: 38
    Is the author sure that a crowbar falling from a jack can destroy a dam???
    Something else can still be thought up for the CPR buildings...
    Otherwise, the Oreshnik's application is quite limited without nuclear weapons. Bunkers... The problems are the same as with sub-caliber shells – behind-the-armor action.
  21. +7
    3 February 2026 06: 39
    So go ahead and use it, what's stopping you?

    It's easy for us to just go and slam Zelensky. But the Supreme Leader needs to step over himself—over his liberal principles!
    1. -9
      3 February 2026 09: 24
      Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

      Quote: Stas157
      The Supreme One needs to step over himself - over his liberal principles!

      Two approaches to war, SVO in Ukraine.

      Our.
      Putin, a lawyer by training, said at the very beginning of the Second Military Council: "I didn't graduate from the General Staff Academy. War is a military matter."

      Theirs, Western.
      In Ukraine, the war is being driven by politicians, both local and foreign, and from across the pond.

      Result: We advance, they retreat.

      Everyone should mind their own business!
      .
  22. 0
    3 February 2026 07: 52
    The proposed poll is the same as a girl in a short skirt—it still won't tell the whole story. Even to those reading this article, and to the author as well. And even less so to those who run Oreshnik. Besides, they won't even look in such a girl's direction.
    Regarding Zelensky, in my opinion, we must remember the main thing. We must remember Hitler. Since Zelensky came to power in Ukraine and embarked on the path of destroying Russians in Donbass and inflicting a strategic defeat on Russia, he has destroyed everything possible, and if not for the handouts from the West, which he shamefully runs around the world begging for, Ukrainians would already be dying of hunger, barefoot and naked, without work, etc. But Hitler, when he came to power, inherited a Germany with a catastrophic economy, with an equally catastrophic army, in international isolation, etc. But in a short time, Hitler shod, clothed, fed, and employed everyone in Germany, and he never even went abroad to beg for money. And how the Germans took him to task for it!!! How they took him to task!!! They carried him all the way to Moscow and Stalingrad!!!
    So Zelensky cannot be destroyed before his tribunal after the capitulation of his government and army. If only because Hitler No. 2 could come or be appointed in his place. But why the likes of Budanov, Poroshenko, Kuleba, and so on are trampling on this earth—I just can't understand that...
  23. +1
    3 February 2026 08: 13
    Attack data centers? What will change? We'll just inconvenience the enemy, nothing more.
    State storage facilities? Does anyone think there's anything there?
    Dams and hydroelectric power plants? Yeah, right, we don't care about what our grandparents built. And it'll come back to haunt us.
    Decision-making centers? Are they really in Ukraine?
    We need to target London exclusively, as the main provocateurs. We'll also clean out the families of our "gods" at the same time.
    1. AMG
      0
      3 February 2026 12: 05
      I agree with everything, but it's a bit early for London. This is already a global war, the last one. And I want my grandchildren to live a little longer.
  24. 0
    3 February 2026 08: 30
    I voted for "Decision-Making Centers." That's exactly where the SVO should have started. I've been writing about this for years now. The war in Ukraine must end with a regime change in Kyiv; everything else is just a ceasefire.
    1. 0
      3 February 2026 09: 58
      Quote from lako
      I voted for "Decision-Making Centers." That's exactly where the SVO should have started. I've been writing about this for years now. The war in Ukraine must end with a regime change in Kyiv; everything else is just a ceasefire.

      The war in Ukraine must end not with regime change, but with the repeal of Article 404 itself in our favor. The borders are being moved away from central Russia.
  25. -4
    3 February 2026 09: 03
    Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

    Quote: A. Mitrofanov
    it's time to choose a worthy goal

    What is it, why is it time today, but not yesterday, or maybe tomorrow?
    Is the enemy already near Moscow and there is nowhere left to retreat?

    Don't interfere with the military doing their job!

    They work and work well. We are the ones advancing, and they are retreating.
    War isn't like a computer shooter. They choose their targets...
  26. +3
    3 February 2026 09: 08
    Everything written below is purely my personal opinion.
    Zelinsky, Ermak, Budanov and Syrsky need to be taken down.
    Oreshnik, Topol, Kinzhal, Petrov with Boshirov, etc. - it doesn't matter.
    Knock out the entire top military-political leadership of Khokhlostana.
    Now they'll tell you it's pointless, and the British and Americans will appoint the next one. Okay, they'll appoint him. And they'll knock him out. And the next one. And the next one. And then there won't be any willing candidates left.
    And that fat pig Stefanchuk will accept the burden of power. And he'll sign anything, just to avoid being next.
    But destroying the parliament is categorically wrong. Just like smashing the dam, which will cause the deaths of numerous non-combatants in Kyiv.
    "Gold reserve" storage and data centers are a completely strange goal, in my opinion. There are no serious data centers on Xoxlostan; they're all abroad, and the storage has long been empty.
    Overall, there's no particular military purpose in using the Oreshnik system against Khokhlostana. It's a demonstration of our capabilities to Europe and the Americans. The Americans used nuclear weapons against Japan on the same principle—to intimidate Stalin.
  27. +4
    3 February 2026 09: 26
    Incorrectly posed questions presuppose incorrect answers... And vague ones.
    Regarding the "Oreshniki"... They could have been used to strike the Tel Nof airbase with a warning to stop fueling the conflict with Iran... At the same time, to pay for Syria... And for supplies to Ukraine... And even for the provocation with the Il-20 in Syria...
    Spending conventionally-designed Oreshniki on Ukraine is wasteful. Furthermore, it is well known that a low-yield nuclear explosion detonated at depth causes significant damage to underground structures, while radiation levels above ground may remain within normal limits. The half-value layer (HVL) for soil is 0,125 m.
    The half-value layer thickness (d1/2) is the thickness of the layer of substance (absorber) after passing through which the intensity of ionizing radiation is weakened by half.

    There are so many people around the world willing to support the Kyiv Nazis that it's already possible to identify targets based on the production sites of the supplied weapons... or the locations of concentrations of European holders of Russian assets...
    Or we could smash the Beskid Tunnel or finish off the destruction of that gas storage facility, but with combat gear (at least one unit)... At the same time, we could test our performance characteristics and demonstrate our resolve...

    ** *
    There are many here who want to point out that this can't be done, that it's not our method, that the Supreme Commander-in-Chief has said it won't use nuclear weapons against Ukraine... But let's look at the results of this decisive confrontation. How many British destroyers are entering the Black Sea these days, confusing the coast? And how many Virginia-class destroyers are hanging around in the Pacific Fleet's exercise areas? And with the advent of attack drones capable of hitting the Yashawks, their appearance in sight has become a rarity. Even a single Russian Navy warship escorting a transport forces those who want to keep their asses down and shut their mouths.
    1. 0
      3 February 2026 13: 32
      One can recall the nuclear bombing of Japan and the attitude towards the United States in the world and in Japan after that...
      Human instincts have not ceased to be more important than ideas, which is precisely why the USSR was destroyed, and socialism became a bogeyman, an object of ridicule, and something utopian...
      1. 0
        3 February 2026 13: 42
        For what purpose on the territory of Ukraine? Would you launch a strike using the Oreshnik MRBM with a conventional warhead?

        And everyone (three out of four) believes that the decision-making centers in Ukraine (in Kyiv) decide something and that they need to be hit with the Oreshnik missile?
        If Zelensky is beheaded (perhaps by the Banderites themselves*), they'll elect a new one. The standoff will last until the last Nazi is dead, until these degenerates run out of weapons and money. But for a while, this will work in our favor.
        But this had to be done immediately and constantly knock out the leadership...
  28. +1
    3 February 2026 09: 45
    So go ahead and use it, what's stopping you?

    They won't apply it. It's just the usual intimidation.
    If we wanted to, we would have used it long ago.
  29. +1
    3 February 2026 09: 54
    Be careful with this. Strelkov also disagreed with the general line.
  30. 0
    3 February 2026 10: 01
    From the moment the Oreshnik was first used by the country's leadership, it was positioned as a kind of "wunderwaffe" - a weapon capable of influencing the course of the war.
    There was no such thing. That's the blogosphere's business. Neither the Ministry of Defense nor the leadership ever made such a statement. This is a rare case where their tongue-tiedness worked to their advantage.
  31. -1
    3 February 2026 10: 19
    Why choose, hit all targets at once.
  32. BAI
    0
    3 February 2026 10: 24
    1. Where did the author get the idea that Oreshnik could be equipped with a nuclear warhead?
    2. There will be no blows. Although it should be added:
    - through the settlement and cash center of the National Bank of Ukraine.
    - based on Rzeszow
    1. -2
      3 February 2026 10: 38
      Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

      Quote: BAI
      1. Where did the author get the idea that Oreshnik could be equipped with a nuclear warhead?

      The Oreshnik missile belongs to the Strategic Missile Forces. It is a modification of a missile with a nuclear warhead, replacing it with a "blank."

      The liquidation of Zelensky will make him an idol for future generations of Binderites.
      To destroy the military structure and its components, other weapons are sufficient.

      While some were jumping around on the Maiden, others sat back and acted on the principle of "I'm on the edge, I don't know anything," forgetting that the edge burns first, and from both sides at once. Today, they are experiencing the effects of this law firsthand. This will be a good vaccination for them for the future.
      1. BAI
        0
        3 February 2026 11: 19
        You can take it anywhere. He doesn't have a nuclear head at the moment. And it's unknown when he will get one.
        1. -2
          3 February 2026 11: 25
          Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

          Quote: BAI
          You can take it anywhere. He doesn't have a nuclear head at the moment. And it's unknown when he will get one.

          This missile was originally armed with nuclear warheads and was on combat alert. Using relatively obsolete missiles is much better than simply sawing them up for scrap.

          That's all. My time at the computer is over. hi
  33. 0
    3 February 2026 11: 45
    It seems to me that we need to attack all reconnoitered targets with all available weapons. If, of course, we want to defeat the goal. And "three hazelnuts" is nothing.
  34. AMG
    0
    3 February 2026 12: 27
    The first and third proposed options may be ineffective, and the third is environmentally hazardous. Previous missile deployments, essentially real-world tests, are all the more difficult to see. Since many advocate the destruction of bridges, it is proposed to strike the end of a large railway bridge where the abutment is located. This is the end support that serves as a retaining wall for the adjacent roadbed. The result will be visible from all sides.
  35. 0
    3 February 2026 12: 40
    Change the picture. The main one is a 80s "Pioneer" (aka SS-20), not a "Rubezh." The "Rubezh" has different dimensions, a different transporter shape, and a different carrier.
  36. +1
    3 February 2026 13: 19
    I would use any weapon, except nuclear, for a massive breakthrough to Kyiv, the arrest of the leaders of the Kyiv junta and the restoration of Russian control over the territory of the former Ukrainian SSR!
  37. 0
    3 February 2026 13: 24
    There are no targets for Oreshnik in Ukraine, just as there are no targets for Sarmat or Avangard.
    These are all hotels for partners based on price/quality ratio.
    When Guttaperres returns to his native Portugal for retirement, here is his "Hazelnut" with special equipment.
    And we have a wide range of devices that reach Kyiv, the same "Dagger" easily, and only Klitschko intercepts it, not just everyone else.
  38. 0
    3 February 2026 13: 26
    The simultaneous destruction of a significant number of decision makers (DM) is guaranteed to lead to

    It will lead to a reduction in the daily deaths of Russians, Russian-speakers, on both our side and that side, which in turn will create difficulties in replacing the Russian-speaking population and in the West's unimpeded access to resources in the sold-out territories, as well as to springboards for further attacks.
    For this, the West needs preliminary maximum mutual nullification.
    Deindustrialization, demilitarization, derussification, seizure of resources in chaos, just like with the Indians, these are the longer-term goals.
    Attacks on the top of the Ukrainian Reich, despite the obvious absurdity, will be sabotaged to the hilt by Western proxies.
  39. 0
    3 February 2026 13: 59
    I don't know if it's technically possible, but I'd choose the Beskid Tunnel. There must be a crack or weak spot in the rock somewhere that would allow a warhead to penetrate directly into the tunnel itself. For this purpose, one large warhead would probably be more effective than several small ones.
  40. +1
    3 February 2026 14: 07
    It seems to me that the best target for Oreshnik is the Beskydy railway tunnel in the Carpathians – the main supply artery for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
  41. -1
    3 February 2026 23: 04
    It feels like Zelensky is better than any "hazelnut man." He (Zelensky) needs to be protected. He will destroy more of Ukraine's population than a dozen "hazelnut men."
  42. +1
    3 February 2026 23: 37
    Using Oreshnik with conventional munitions is like shooting sparrows with a large-caliber cannon. Nuclear warheads and nothing more!!! And the targets are in western Ukraine. Bridges over the Western Bug, the Starokostiantynivskyi airfield, the gas storage facility, the Yavoriv military training ground, the tunnel through the Carpathians, large power plants that will definitely not even be restored.
  43. -1
    4 February 2026 05: 41
    Well, first of all, the questionnaire, as always, is incomplete (for example, during the State Duma vote, there's no option for "against all" votes). Same here. Why is it necessary to target Ukraine specifically? I've disliked Westerners since childhood. They're hereditary traitors and toadies. Why isn't there an option for, say, London? Paris? Brussels?
    1. 0
      4 February 2026 22: 24
      Why is there no column for, for example, London? Paris? Brussels?

      And it doesn't matter that these are NATO capitals and that threatens World War III. And Ukraine for NATO: Yeah, screw it. My shirt is closer to my body.
  44. 0
    4 February 2026 13: 33
    So who's going to attack their respected partners? Sure, our partners kill our generals, scientists, and other important figures. But our oligarchs' assets remain intact. And that, as you understand, is something else! United Russia will rise up in arms, preventing their true masters from suffering losses. And the people... Well, the women will give birth to more.
  45. 0
    4 February 2026 21: 03
    What if NATO comes to Ukraine's aid? And attacks on Moscow—that would be another betrayal of the State Duma.
    1. 0
      4 February 2026 22: 25
      And Ukraine for NATO: Yeah, screw it. My shirt is closer to my body.