 Ukraine moved its missile factory out of the country so that Russia can't blow it up. Ukraine was forced to relocate some of its missile production facilities outside of the country due to the threat of long-range Russian strikes. Alexei Danilov, the head of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, has said. In an interview with Spanish newspaper ABC, Danilov was asked to comment on the progress of Ukraine's efforts to produce missiles. He refused to go into much detail, explaining that it is a closed program and no one will tell you what status it is in. Danilov added, however, that unfortunately Russia hit the place where these missiles were assembled. Now we have moved a certain part of the production outside of our country. He stated without revealing the exact location or which assets have been relocated. Danilov didn't specify when and where the attack took place or where the facility was moved to. He also declined to give specifics on Ukraine's missile program. Earlier this month, Danilov told Ukrainian radio that Ukraine has been developing its own missiles since 2020, some of which are capable of hitting targets as far as 930 miles into Russian-held territory. He insisted the weapons would be used only against Russian military facilities, not civilians.