Russia arming missile warheads with depleted uranium, Ukraine's SBU says

Authored by kyivindependent.com and submitted by AdSpecialist6598

Russian missiles armed with depleted uranium warheads were discovered after an attack on Ukraine's Chernihiv Oblast last month, Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) said on May 20.

Elevated levels of radiation were detected from an unexploded R-60 air-to-air missile, which was equipped on a modified Geran-2 drone and used by Russian forces to target Ukrainian helicopters and aircraft conducting air defense missions.

The SBU said the source of the radiation was depleted uranium projectiles, specifically Uranium-235 and Uranium-238.

Depleted uranium is a by-product of uranium enrichment. It is roughly two and a half times denser than steel, which makes it particularly effective for piercing heavy armor on the battlefield.

The SBU, alongside the units of the State Emergency Service and the Ukrainian Armed Forces, secured the missile's warhead and transported it to a radioactive waste storage facility.

The debris of a drone and a missile, which were used in an April 7 Russian attack on Ukraine's Chernihiv Oblast. (the Security Service of Ukraine / Telegram)

A gamma radiation level of 12 micro-Sieverts per hour was recorded, which significantly exceeds the natural radiation background and poses a threat to human health.

The SBU further warned Ukrainian citizens to be extremely cautious if they come across debris from drones, missiles, or other munitions, given the toxicity and radioactivity of depleted uranium.

"Damaged or burnt munitions pose the greatest danger, as they can release radioactive dust that is hazardous to people and the environment," the SBU said.

Investigators from the SBU are conducting a pre-trial investigation under Article 438 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine regarding war crimes, with procedural supervision from the Chernihiv Regional Prosecutor's Office.

ruledbyoligarchs on May 20th, 2026 at 13:54 UTC »

Depleted uranium is used by quite a few armed forces

Arg0n27 on May 20th, 2026 at 13:50 UTC »

They are using their old R-60 stocks. Those missiles come stock with an continuous rod DU warhead. No defence of Russia here, but this isn't some shocking news. Russia already uses depleted uranium in it's tank shells. Not sure if Ukraine uses it but it's not unheard of (NATO tanks use DU, and Ukraine also uses the R-60 missiles).

LordRaglan1854 on May 20th, 2026 at 13:21 UTC »

Although the article doesn't state it outright, I assume an R-60 air-to-air missile normally has a DU warhead. This isn't some new Russian terror tactic so much as they put an AA missile on a Geran-2 for some reason.