US-made chips found in Russian Izdeliye-30 missile used in Kharkiv strike
Mar 10th 2026
Ukrainian analysts say debris from an Izdeliye-30 cruise missile that hit Kharkiv contained electronic parts from the United States, Belarus, Taiwan and Europe, and that investigators have mapped roughly 20 firms in the weapon's supply chain.
- Investigators recovered fragments of an Izdeliye-30 cruise missile that struck Kharkiv on March 7, killing civilians including children.
- Debris contained electronic components from US companies including STMicroelectronics, UBlox, Analog Devices and Texas Instruments.
- The missile also included parts from Belarusian firm Integral, Taiwanese memory modules, and a German switching connector.
- Ukraine says the Kometa navigation system has 12 antenna patches and uses microchips produced in the United States or possibly China.
- Some recovered components were manufactured as recently as 2023, and investigators identified about 20 enterprises in the missile's supply chain.
- The Izdeliye-30 is assessed to have a wingspan of about three meters, a warhead up to 800 kilograms, and a range of at least 1,500 kilometers.