Destinus, Rheinmetall accelerate RUTA Block 3 long-range cruise missile

Defense Destinus RUTA Block 3 cruise missile
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Swiss-Dutch defense company Destinus announced on May 18, 2026, the accelerated development of RUTA Block 3, a 2,000-kilometer (1,240-mile) range precision-strike weapon developed in partnership with Germany’s Rheinmetall. Flight testing is planned to begin in 2027.

Block 3 represents a step change in range for the RUTA family. RUTA Block 1 is already in serial production at Destinus’s primary facility in the Netherlands, while RUTA Block 2, with a stated range exceeding 450 kilometers (280 miles), is undergoing flight testing in Ukraine and is scheduled to enter production ramp-up in 2026.

A 2,000-kilometer strike weapon

Block 3 will roughly quadruple Block 2’s range, placing the RUTA family in a long-range, deep-strike category that European militaries have largely lacked in indigenous form. It is designed around a Destinus T220 turbojet engine currently in development and a 250-kilogram-class (550-pound) warhead.

The system uses autonomous navigation suited for GNSS-degraded environments along with a terminal sensing and guidance architecture still under development. Launch relies on standard ISO containerized launchers compatible with land-based, maritime, and fixed-site deployment.

Three-hub industrial structure

The program distributes development and production across three countries. The Netherlands remains Destinus’s engineering design authority and primary RUTA production site, where the company already manufactures over 2,000 cruise missile systems per year. Ukraine will contribute to development, operational testing, and component manufacturing. Germany will host the planned Rheinmetall Destinus Strike Systems joint venture at Rheinmetall’s Unterlüß facility in Lower Saxony.

Rheinmetall and Destinus announced the joint venture in April 2026, with Rheinmetall holding a 51% stake and Destinus 49%. The venture is scheduled for formal setup in the second half of 2026 and will produce both cruise missiles and ballistic rocket artillery. Production at Unterlüß is expected to begin with Block 1 and Block 2 in 2026-2027, with Block 3 to follow as it progresses through qualification.

European long-range strike

Destinus CEO Mikhail Kokorich framed Block 3 as a move away from “symbolic quantities of exquisite missiles” toward “a credible European long-range strike capability with real industrial depth.”

Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger said the company expected to deliver the first missiles from Unterlüß before the end of 2026.

The announcement comes as European governments rebuild their missile production base. Germany contracted MBDA and Saab’s Taurus Systems joint venture to prepare serial production of the Taurus Neo in December 2025. France and the United Kingdom have restarted Storm Shadow/SCALP production and are developing the STRATUS family as a longer-term successor.

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