Europe | The flight of the flamingo

Ukraine shows off a deadly new cruise missile

But sceptics wonder if it is too good to be true

UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-MISSILE-FLAMINGO
Heading Putin’s wayPhotograph: Getty Images
|KYIV|4 min read

Earlier this month Ukraine unveiled a new cruise missile. With a declared range of 3,000km and a payload of over a tonne, the Flamingo packs a punch, on paper. If even half the claims hold, it has the potential to deal serious damage to targets almost anywhere in European Russia. Appearing in the middle of lumbering peace talks, the bird may help encourage Vladimir Putin to lay down arms. All the more striking, therefore, that the process of entering mass-production took just nine months, rather than the usual years or even decades, and was led by a management team that claims to have had no previous defence-industry experience. “I was very sceptical at first,” says one of the officials overseeing it, “but when I saw the missiles, I was stunned.”

the-economist-today
The Economist today

Handpicked stories, in your inbox

A daily newsletter with the best of our journalism

Illustration of a selection of people of different races standing beside each other, a woman in the missle wearing a hijab holds up a placard that says "wir schaffen das"

Ten years later, “Wir schaffen das” has proved a pyrrhic victory

The providential folly of Angela Merkel’s migration policy

Leader of the far-right Freedom Party (PVV) Geert Wilders delivers a speech during a protest at the provincial government building against a new asylum seekers' center in Zwolle

After a year of chaos, the Dutch hope to return to real issues

Voters want to talk about housing, but Geert Wilders wants to talk about asylum-seekers


Wind turbines are seen on a wind farm near residential homes in a small pomeranian town of Wicko in northern Poland

Why Poland is becoming less central European and more Baltic

Thanks to energy and security concerns, its centre of gravity is shifting north


Time for some Merz-Macron magic

The leaders of France and Germany meet to kickstart Europe

France is in big trouble, again

Why Macron’s prime minister called a shock confidence vote over its debt

The War Room newsletter: Archive 1945 comes to a close

Fraser McIlwraith, a news editor, reflects on an eight-month project about the second world war