Ukraine develops new surface-to-air missile

Key Points
  • President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s video first publicly showed a new Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile alongside Vilkha and Neptune missile systems.
  • Previous public models indicated the missile was intended for targets at ranges of 30 to 50 kilometers.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has, for the first time, publicly appeared alongside what is believed to be a new Ukrainian-developed surface-to-air missile during a video message marking the professional holiday of the country’s defense industry workforce.

The missile was shown in the background behind the president together with several weapons systems developed during the active phase of Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, which began in February 2022. Among the systems visible in the footage were the guided Vilkha rocket, the Neptune cruise missile, the Areion missile, and, for the first time, a previously unseen anti-aircraft missile.

The appearance of the new missile is one of the clearest public visual indications to date that Ukraine’s domestic air defense missile development program has moved beyond the concept and mock-up stage. Based on its external appearance and previously disclosed exhibition models, the missile is believed to be an industrial sample of the “Koral” missile, a project that has been kept largely out of the public eye.

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No official designation was provided in the presidential video, and Ukrainian authorities have not released technical details, range figures, or the name of the air defense system for which the missile is intended. Even so, the missile’s design features visible in the footage offer important clues.

(Screengrab from video posted to social media)

Developers have stated that one of the missile’s defining features is the use of already tested and verified subsystems, including the motor, seeker head, pulse correction engines, inertial navigation system, and a non-contact radio or laser proximity fuze.

That reliance on mature components is particularly important for a country attempting to accelerate weapons development during wartime. Reusing existing propulsion, guidance, and detonation technologies can shorten development timelines and reduce technical risk compared with building a missile entirely from scratch.

The program itself remains highly classified. Ukraine has not disclosed whether the missile has entered serial production, completed live-fire testing, or been fielded with operational units. Exact performance characteristics also remain undisclosed.

However, earlier public display models shown at defense exhibitions and demonstrations suggested that the missile was being developed for engagement ranges between 30 and 50 kilometers. Those same presentations indicated the future system is intended to replace older Soviet-era air defense systems still in Ukrainian service, including the Buk and S-300PT.

If confirmed, that would place the missile in the medium-range air defense category, intended to defend military formations, infrastructure, and rear-area assets against aircraft, cruise missiles, and potentially some classes of drones.

Unlike older Soviet missiles that were designed decades ago, the newly shown interceptor appears to reflect lessons drawn from modern air warfare, where reaction time, maneuverability, and integration with contemporary sensors are increasingly decisive.

Its debut alongside other domestically developed missile systems signals Ukraine’s continued effort to modernize its air defense architecture with locally produced solutions.

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