Russian forces have struck a storage site in Ukraine allegedly housing domestically produced Sapsan ballistic missiles, Moscow’s defense ministry claimed on Aug. 17.
The ministry did not provide the location of the missile storage site it claims to have targeted.
Also known as the Hrim-2, the Sapsan is a Ukrainian-produced short-range ballistic missile system.
The report states that the Sapsan missile system had already been successfully tested in combat and was “in the process of serial production.”
4 Sites Hit Last Week, Moscow Claims
Last week, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) claimed that four Sapsan missile production sites had been destroyed in a joint operation carried out in conjunction with Russia’s defense ministry.Two of the targeted sites were located in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region and two were located in the Sumy region, the FSB said, according to Russia’s state-run TASS news agency.
According to the map, most of western and central Russia—including Moscow—would have come within range, along with most of neighboring Belarus, a key Russian ally.

The FSB official cited by TASS also claimed that Ukraine’s Sapsan missile system was being developed with German financial support and with “the assistance of foreign specialists.”
Germany has yet to issue a statement in response to the FSB’s claims.
A week later, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that Moscow would regard Berlin as a direct participant in the war if it supplied Ukraine with Taurus missiles.
“What is this if not the involvement of the Federal Republic [of Germany] in a direct armed conflict with the Russian Federation?” Putin said at the time.
The Russian security agency said intercepted communications further suggested that foreign officials—it did not say from which country—were planning to visit the missile production sites before they were allegedly struck.
The Epoch Times could not independently verify any of the Russian claims.
“The FSB is spreading [false] information about the alleged destruction [of Sapsan missile production sites] ... with which Ukraine allegedly planned to strike Moscow, [Belarusian capital] Minsk, and strategic objects deep inside the Russian Federation,” the anti-disinformation agency stated.







