Indian firm says it shipped non-military explosives to Russia

An Indian firm that shipped $1.4 million worth of an explosive compound with military uses to Russia in December said on Saturday it complies with Indian rules and the substance it had shipped was for civilian industrial purposes. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 26 July 2025
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Indian firm says it shipped non-military explosives to Russia

  • One of the Russian companies listed in Indian customs data as receiving the compound is the explosives manufacturer Promsintez
  • Ideal Detonators said the material it shipped was not military grade

NEW DELHI: An Indian firm that shipped $1.4 million worth of an explosive compound with military uses to Russia in December said on Saturday it complies with Indian rules and the substance it had shipped was for civilian industrial purposes.

Reuters reported on July 24 that Ideal Detonators Private Limited shipped the compound, known as HMX or octogen, to two Russian explosives manufacturers despite US threats to impose sanctions on any entity supporting Russia’s Ukraine war effort.

One of the Russian companies listed in Indian customs data as receiving the compound is the explosives manufacturer Promsintez. An official at Ukraine’s SBU security service has said the Russian company has ties to the military and that Ukraine launched a drone attack in April against a Promsintez-owned factory.

Promsintez did not respond to a request for comment.

Ideal Detonators said in an emailed response to Reuters that the material it shipped was not military grade. “The shipment ... is for industrial activity and it’s a civil explosive,” the company said.

The US government has identified HMX as “critical for Russia’s war effort” and has warned financial institutions against facilitating any sales of the substance to Moscow.

The US Treasury Department has the authority to sanction those who sell HMX and similar substances to Russia, sanctions lawyers have said.

HMX is widely used in missile and torpedo warheads, rocket motors, exploding projectiles and plastic-bonded explosives for advanced military systems, according to the Pentagon’s Defense Technical Information Center and related defense research programs. The compound also has some limited civilian applications in mining and other industrial activities.


Ukraine says it hit Russian oil rig, patrol ship in Caspian Sea

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Ukraine says it hit Russian oil rig, patrol ship in Caspian Sea

KYIV: Ukraine said its drones struck a Russian oil rig belonging to ​Lukoil in the Caspian Sea and a military patrol ship near a rig as Kyiv steps up attacks on Moscow’s oil infrastructure.
The attack, which Ukraine’s general staff said took place on Friday, is one of ‌a string ‌of strikes targeting ‌Russian ⁠drilling infrastructure ​in the ‌Caspian Sea in recent weeks, but the first one that the Ukrainian military acknowledged officially. A drilling platform of the Filanovsky oil rig was damaged in the attack, according to the Ukrainian ⁠military. The rig came under drone attacks at least ‌two more times in ‍December.
Reuters was ‍not able to confirm the report. ‍Lukoil was not available for immediate comment.
Ukraine says that Russian oil infrastructure is a legitimate target since the trade revenue is ​Russia’s main source for financing its almost four-year-old full-on war against the country.
The ⁠general staff added that a military patrol ship was targeted in the strike as well, and the level of damage was being assessed.
Ukraine has been attacking Russian oil refineries throughout 2024 and 2025, but has visibly widened its campaign in recent weeks, claiming credit for sea-drone attacks on Russian shadow fleet ‌tankers in the Black Sea and Mediterranean.