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Ukraine’s effort in the war has constantly been one of improvisation, determination, and a pinch of mad ingenuity. But nothing comes close to capturing that essence like the emergence of the FP-5 “Flamingo” cruise missile—a homemade behemoth that’s now giving Russia’s generals the cold sweats and the world’s defense intellectuals something to sit up and take notice of.

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Way back in 2023, the long-range strike capacity of Ukraine was almost completely reliant on Western hand-me-downs. UK and French Storm Shadow and SCALP-EG missiles were the foundation of Kyiv’s capacity to strike deep into Russian-occupied territory. But as the war went on and Western arsenals began to run thin, Ukraine’s leadership realized they couldn’t simply sit around and wait for the next consignment of missiles to arrive from overseas. They needed their own solution—and in a hurry.

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That response came in the shape of the Flamingo, a rocket that’s as ambitious in its specs as it is in its ambitions. As reported by Fire Point, the Ukrainian defense start-up company behind the venture, the Flamingo can deliver a hefty 1,150-kilogram warhead up to 3,000 kilometers. That’s not only an improvement over the mini-cruise missiles and drones Ukraine had been mass-producing—it’s a leap into a completely new level of weaponry. The firm says it’s currently making somewhere around one Flamingo a day, to reach seven daily in October, which would set the total above 2,500 missiles annually if all goes well. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been optimistic about the prospects for the missile, stating that mass production would be in full gear by early 2025.

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The Flamingo isn’t merely a numbers game, however. It’s about blasting through hardened targets deep within Russia—oil refineries, command bunkers, and logistics centers, for example. The warhead of the missile is penetration-guided, and the jet-powered platform provides it with the velocity to bypass some air defenses that would easily knock out slower drones. It has been observed that the engine of the Flamingo closely mirrors the AI-25TL turbofan, a trusty Soviet and Ukrainian workhorse, so accessing engines will not be a bottleneck.

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For comparison, Ukraine’s previous FP-1 drone—a Fire Point product like the Flamingo—carries a 60-kilogram warhead and has a top speed of approximately 1,600 kilometers. The Flamingo, on the other hand, is a monster: six meters of wingspan, six tons of launch weight, and a guidance system purpose-built to withstand Russian electronic warfare. It’s less stealthy and agile than Germany’s Taurus missile, but by range and payload, it more than compensates. As Gustav Gressel, an Austrian military analyst, put it, the Flamingo “has a much larger range and warhead, so it has a much larger effect on the target” than its Western counterparts.

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Naturally, creating a missile this large isn’t inexpensive. Estimates place the cost of the Flamingo at somewhere between $500,000 and $1 million per device—a drastic difference from Ukraine’s ability to churn out hundreds of $55,000 FP-1 drones every day. But the strategic difference is obvious: with the Flamingo, Ukraine can present a threat to a wide area of Russian territory, including key economic infrastructure already under siege from repeated drone attacks. Fabian Hoffmann, a University of Oslo missile specialist, counters that even a steady monthly production of 30-50 Flamingos would provide Ukraine with a large number of heavy cruise missiles with real impact on the war.

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The political implications are no less significant than the technical ones. Western nations have tended to impose limits on how their donated missiles can be utilized—no attacking targets within Russia proper, say. But the Flamingo is 100% Ukrainian, meaning Kyiv can decide when and where to use it, no permission slips required. That’s a big deal, especially as the U.S. and its allies debate whether to loosen the leash on ATACMS and Storm Shadow missiles. As President Zelenskyy recently told reporters, Ukraine is now using domestically produced long-range weapons and hasn’t needed to coordinate with Washington on targeting decisions.

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Russia, not unexpectedly, is not happy. Moscow’s reaction has been a combination of nuclear threats and veiled threats of “brutal” reprisal if Western arms are used to attack deep within Russia. But Ukraine has already shown it is prepared to strike targets hundreds of kilometers deep within Russia using its own equipment. The psychological effect is gigantic—on Russian leadership and on the Ukrainian people, who view these strikes as evidence that they can strike back, rather than merely defend.

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There’s also a larger, long-term game here. If Ukraine can deploy thousands of Flamingos and other such missiles, poised to launch on a moment’s notice, it radically alters the deterrence calculus. As Hoffmann said, keeping 3,000 to 5,000 of these missiles in reserve might make further Russian military action “untenable,” as Ukraine would be able to threaten a quarter of Russia’s economy within days.

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All of this is taking place against the background of changing alignments, production competitions, and diplomacy at high stakes. Germany has indicated that it wants to co-finance the production of long-range missiles in Ukraine, albeit on an undisclosed basis. Meanwhile, Russia is testing out new intermediate-range missiles of its own and relying on North Korean assistance to keep its war machine oiled.

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Ultimately, the Flamingo is not just a missile—it’s an emblem of Ukraine’s refusal to fight with its hands behind its back, to rewrite the rules of the battlefield, and make one thing resoundingly clear: those days are over.