According to the
Armed Forces of Ukraine, the attack was carried out by
Kh-22 anti-ship missiles launched from Russian
Tu-22M3 strategic bombers that took off from the
Shaykovka air base in the
Kaluga region. The missiles were launched over the territory of the
Kursk region. Ukrainian Interior Minister
Denys Monastyrsky said that the missile hit the far end of the shopping mall. The area of the resulting fire was more than and up to 115 firefighters and 20 fire-fighting appliances were involved in extinguishing it. Both missiles fell about apart and may have been aimed at the same target, since such distance is within the known limited accuracy of Kh-22 missiles (according to the international security expert Sebastien Roblin, "only half of the shots land within 600 meters of the aiming point"). An employee in the mall told reporters that many felt they were safe at the mall as they were not a place of danger for the Russians and away from front lines. Similar comments were echoed by a shopper who expressed shock that the mall was hit, calling it a safe place with women and children. According to the survivors, an
air raid alert sounded several minutes before the strike.
Russia's defence ministry later officially admitted responsibility for the attack, saying that it hit a weapons depot in a nearby factory and that the detonation of munitions caused the fire to spread to the "non-functioning" shopping centre. Those claims were found to be false by multiple organizations. It added, "Russian planners highly likely remain willing to accept a high level of collateral damage when they perceive
military necessity in striking a target." A possibility is that, as anti-ship missiles have a different
terminal guidance design to land-attack missiles, the missile locked on to the large radar return of the shopping centre's flat metal walls instead of the intended target. That a weapon poorly optimised for the mission was used may be due to Russia depleting its stockpile of more suitable munitions. == Casualties ==