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Ukraine’s military intelligence (GUR) carried out two rocket launches into space during the full‑scale war with Russia, a senior Ukrainian lawmaker said in interviews published April 13–14, 2026.
Fedir Venislavskyi, chairman of a parliamentary subcommittee on state security and defense innovation, said the launches — conducted under then‑GUR chief Kyrylo Budanov — were recorded by technical monitoring systems and reached roughly the Kármán line (~100 km) and about 200–204 km.
He also disclosed an air‑launch of a rocket carrier from a transport aircraft at roughly 8,000 metres (about 26,000 ft), which Ukraine described as a European first and the second such air‑launch globally.
Venislavskyi framed the work as both operational and dual‑use: useful for placing satellites into low Earth orbit and potentially for countering advanced Russian hypersonic systems such as the Oreshnik.
He said Ukraine aims to build initial surveillance and communications satellite networks and has preliminary international cooperation offers, while noting funding and wartime priorities constrain larger civil space projects.
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Comments mainly clarify that reported altitudes imply suborbital tests rather than orbital launches, outline plausible uses (MRBM, ASAT, or small satellite constellations), and warn of escalation and serious space-debris risks if ASAT activity occurs.
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