‘Listen
to us now’: Putin unveils new Russian nuclear arsenal
RT,
1
March, 2018
Russia
has developed a number of advanced weapons systems, including a
nuclear-powered cruise missile, which make all US capabilities aimed
at undermining the Russian nuclear deterrent obsolete, President
Vladimir Putin announced.
The
latest advances in Russian strategic deterrence have made America’s
anti-missile systems obsolete, so Washington should stop trying to
diminish Russia’s security and start talking to Moscow as an equal
partner, not the dominant military power it seeks to be, Putin said.
The
Russian leader made the comments during his state of the nation
address on Wednesday. While the first part of the address was a
straightforward description of domestic goals and achievements, the
second became a defiant challenge to the US. Putin announced that
Russia has successfully developed several new weapons systems, which
basically negate American anti-ballistic missile capabilities.
The
Russian president accused the US of arrogance, saying that it thought
that Russia would not be able to recover anytime soon after the
collapse of the Soviet Union and that its interests can simply be
ignored. One particular move – the withdrawal by George W Bush from
the Anti-ballistic Missile Treaty (ABM) in 2002 – resulted in
Russia being increasingly surrounded by American assets, which
undermined the country’s nuclear deterrence.
“In
the end, if we did nothing, this would render the Russian nuclear
potential worthless,” Putin
said. “They
could simply intercept all of it.”
Without
a nuclear deterrent, Russia would be exposed to US military pressure
and would not be able to pursue a sovereign policy, Putin said. The
president warned as early as in 2004 that Russia would not sit idle
and that it would respond to this threat by developing new weapons
systems.
Russia's new 'big stick'
Russia
has now done this, according to Putin, who went on to present a
number of new systems, some of which don’t yet have names, and
which are all meant to counter current and future ABM systems. His
speech was accompanied by a series of video clips showing those new
systems, partially as footage of tests and partially as
computer-generated images showing their capabilities.
One
system is the new Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM)
called Sarmat,
or RS-28. It’s already well-known, but Putin stressed that its
increased range allows the missile to reach US territory from Russia
via a South Pole route. The US has dozens of interceptor missiles
deployed in Alaska on the presumption that Russia’s ICBMs would
approach from that direction, which would not be the case with
Sarmat.
.
In
fact, the Soviet Union had a missile that could approach the US from
any direction. It was not a regular ballistic missile but rather one
that put the warhead into low-earth orbit. The warhead would then
deorbit when close to its target, thanks to its own engines. However,
the R-36orb missiles were scrapped as part of nuclear reduction
process.
Putin
then went on to weapons systems that were not previously known to the
public. One is a yet-to-be-named cruise missile with an
almost unlimited
range.
This
is achieved thanks to a highly-efficient on-board miniaturized
nuclear reactor, which powers the flight. Such a missile can fly low
enough to avoid early detection, can change course to avoid enemy
anti-missile assets along its path, and maneuver to pierce the
anti-missile systems protecting its target.
According
to Putin, Russia successfully tested a nuclear-propelled cruise
missile at the end of 2017. It is now developing a new class of
strategic weapons, he added.
The
idea of a nuclear-powered projectile is hardly new. The US tried
to develop one as part of Project Pluto in the early 1960s, but
abandoned it since strategic missiles with chemical propellants
proved to be a more viable alternative. Russia has reportedly made a
breakthrough in this technology, becoming the first nation to bring
it to maturity.
Putin
also said that miniaturization of a nuclear reactor gave Russia
another advanced weapons system in the form of a
high-endurance underwater
drone.
The drone can dive “really
very deep” and
travel between continents at a speed that is several times higher
than that of a submarine, a modern torpedo or even a surface ship, he
said.
According
to the president, such drones can attack enemy aircraft carrier
groups, shoreline defenses or infrastructure, and cannot be countered
by any defense system in the world. Both conventional and
nuclear-tipped versions can be made, he said.
In
December 2017, Russia completed the trials of a nuclear reactor which
gives the drones such capabilities. The reactor is “100
times smaller” than
those used by nuclear-propelled submarines and generates more power,
Putin said. It can also reach its peak power 200 times faster than a
conventional nuclear power plant.
The
video shown for this weapon system didn’t include any actual test,
but presumably the claimed miniaturization of a nuclear reactor,
which was used for the cruise missile, can also work for a
watercraft.
Putin
then showcased two variants of a hypersonic weapons systems already
developed by Russia. One is an air-launched vehicle that is already
deployed in southern Russia for test combat duty. The projectile
travels at a speed of Mach-10 and has a range of 2,000km (1,240
miles). The weapon, which is called Kinzhal (“dagger”
in Russian) is available in conventional and nuclear forms, Putin
said. A video shown to the audience included the moment the weapon
was deployed by a fighter jet and the fire from its engine.
Another
weapon that is being developed, but which was not shown being tested
because its appearance is classified, according to Putin, is a
hypersonic glider warhead deployed from space. Russia first tested
one back in 2004 and has made significant progress since, the
president said. The glider can fly in the atmosphere at speeds of
over Mach-20 and can withstand a heat of up to 2,000C (3,632F)
generated by air fiction. The system is in series production and is
called Avangard (“advance
guard” in Russian).
The
last weapon system showcased by Putin during his speech was a combat
laser, which he said Russia had started to deploy last year. A small
video clip showed what presumably is an anti-aircraft laser system,
but no test footage was shown.
'Speaking softly': Russia wants negotiations, not confrontation
Putin
stressed that Russia would not need all these new weapons if its
legitimate concerns had not been ignored by the US and its
allies. “Nobody
wanted to talk with us on the core of the problem. Nobody listened
to us. Now you listen!” he
said.
He
suggested that the US abandon its costly and inefficient hostile
plans towards Russia and start negotiating a security arrangement
which would take Moscow’s interests into account.
“To
those who for the last 15 years have been trying to fan an arms
race, achieve unilateral advantage against Russia, impose sanctions,
which are illegal from the standpoint of international law and are
aimed at holding back the development of our country, including in
the military area, I have this to say: All the things you were
trying to prevent through your policies have already happened. You
have failed to hold Russia back,” Putin
said.
“You
now have to acknowledge this reality, confirm that everything I said
is no bluff – which it isn’t – think for some time, send into
retirement the people stuck in the past and incapable of looking
into the future, [and] stop rocking the boat that we all ride in and
which is called planet Earth,” he
said. Russia would be responsive if talked to as an equal partner,
Putin added.
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