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Revealed: Full List of Russian Sites Hit by Ukraine’s FP-1 and FP-5 in 2025 Deep Strikes

Ukraine used Fire Point strike systems in multiple confirmed long-range attacks across Russia in 2025, according to a UNITED24 Media correspondent who reviewed operational footage and military reports at the company’s press conference.
Ukrainian officials state that these systems contributed to several high-impact strikes on fuel, logistics and ammunition infrastructure deep inside Russian territory.
According to the Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR) and data provided by Ukrainian military units operating Fire Point systems, the FP-1 drone remains the platform most frequently used in confirmed deep-strike missions this year.

Footage verified by Ukrainian officers shows FP-1 drones hitting oil refineries, fuel depots, ammunition sites and command infrastructure across multiple Russian regions.
Several of these strikes, including repeated attacks on the Ryazan refinery and hits on facilities in Saratov, Volgograd, and Novokuibyshevsk, were publicly acknowledged by the General Staff.
The FP-1 platform, used at scale since 2023, has undergone continuous upgrades based on frontline feedback, making it the primary long-range strike drone in the Ukrainian inventory.
According to officers who participated in the operations, FP-1 drones were responsible for a significant share of confirmed Ukrainian strikes on Russia’s oil-processing sector in 2025, including several high-temperature fires and shutdowns of refining capacity.

During the press conference, Fire Point provided a detailed list of Russian military targets struck with FP-series systems over the past year, including energy sites, radar stations, air defense systems, oil refineries, industrial facilities and airfields. Fire Point co-founder Ihor Skalyha presented the full set of documented strikes, accompanied by imagery and pilot reports.
Energy infrastructure (8 confirmed hits)
Blizhneye — 220 kV Kafa electrical substation
Aliskerovo — Substation
Peremoha — Substation
Frolovo — Substation
Volgorechensk — GRES
Romanovo — Substation
Kazashchina — Substation
Karierne — Substation
Air defense, radar and military equipment (15 confirmed hits)
Dubna — Kronstadt JSC
Rokhmanovo — Pantsir-S1
Abrykosivka — TRLK-10 “Skala-M”
Port Olya — Components for Shahed UAVs and BK
Kaluga — S-400 & launcher
Mayak — Nebo-SVU
Kamyshin — S-400 & launcher
Bazkovskaya — Nebo-M
Kamenka — Buk-M1
Buturlinovka — P-14F Lena
Harmashivka — Sopka-2
Golyashi — Buyan-M vessel
Ulyutne — S-400 & launcher
Severodonetsk — S-300 & launcher
Donetsk — Shahed launchers & warhead storage
Factories and industrial facilities (6 confirmed hits)
Optikovolokonnye Sistemy
Kubinka — Rubicon base
Yelets — Energia JSC
Sergiyev Posad — Applied Chemistry Institute
Budyonnovsk — Stavrolen LLC
Budyonnovsk — Stavrolen LLC (second strike)
Oil refineries, depots and gas infrastructure (28 confirmed hits)
Timashevsk — Oil depot
Prudovy — Oil depot
Salsk — Oil depot
Novokuybyshevsk — Refining unit
Frolovo — Fuel train
Afipsky — Refinery
Saratov — Oil refinery
Volgograd — Lukoil refinery
Syzran — Primary processing
Novonikolskoye — LPDS
Dzhankoi — Fuel train
Ust-Luga — Gazprom refinery
Samara — Kuybyshevsky refinery
Krasnodar — Krasnodar refinery
Syzran — Syzran refinery
Ryazan — Ryazan refinery
Ilsky — Ilsky refinery
Naytopovichi — LPDS 8-R
Primorsk — Oil port
Kirishi — Kirishinefteorgsintez
Saratov — Refinery
Samara — Novokuybyshevsk refinery (repeat)
Slavyansk-on-Kuban — Slavyansk-ECO
Kirishi — Second strike
Ufa — Bashneft-Novoil
Ryazan — Ryazan refinery
Tuapse — Oil port
Volgograd — Lukoil refinery
Airfields (7 confirmed hits)
Shaykovka — BK & Tu-22M3 warehouse
Tver (Migalovo) — Il-76 destroyed
Savasleyka — Su-34 & MiG-31
Kushchevskaya — Training airfield
Marinovka — Two Su-34s destroyed, two damaged
Borisoglebsk — Yak-130 & KAB storage
Novofedorovka (Saki) — S-300 radar
Operational units also reported confirmed uses of the tactical FP-2 drone and early-stage deployments of the FP-5 aerial rocket system.
According to servicemembers from special operations units, FP-2 drones were used in confirmed strikes along recently liberated areas and near forward positions where shorter flight time and heavier payloads were required.
The General Staff has not disclosed the full number of confirmed strikes carried out using Fire Point systems in 2025, but military officers stated during the Kyiv briefing that FP-series drones were involved in “dozens” of successful missions.

According to Ukrainian personnel who operate multiple competing drone types, Fire Point systems were selected for verified operations largely due to deployment speed, reliability under electronic warfare and cost efficiency.
Ukrainian officials emphasize that the confirmed 2025 strikes were conducted to reduce Russia’s military capability and degrade fuel, logistics and ammunition infrastructure used to support ongoing attacks on Ukrainian territory.
Earlier, Fire Point CEO Denys Shtilerman announced that the company plans to launch serial production of a new Ukrainian ballistic missile by the end of 2025. He stated that the missiles “will come out like hotcakes,” emphasizing the simplicity and scalability of production.
Fire Point is already producing three FP-5 Flamingo cruise missiles per day and offering a turnkey manufacturing package for foreign buyers.


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