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Russia starts
preparing new ballistic missiles
MOSCOW—Russia has begun producing a new generation intercontinental
missile, a senior government official said on Monday, after a successful
test launch. Russia’s military hailed Friday’s test of the Bulava, a
submarine-launched ballistic missile that can carry nuclear warheads to
targets more than 8,000 km (5,000 miles) away, after a host of mishaps
that had raised doubts about its future.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, who oversees defense issues
within the government, said another test launch would take place this
year and that defense enterprises had already started large scale
production of the weapon.
“By the end of the year another test of Bulava is planned,” Ivanov told
a cabinet meeting, state RIA news agency reported. “At the same time our
defense enterprises have started mass production,” he said.
The 12-meter Bulava, which means “mace” in Russian and whose design is
based on the Topol-M missile, was supposed to complete testing two years
ago. But at least several public test launch failures had raised
concerns inside the navy about the weapon.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said the Bulava missile can penetrate
anti-missile shields such as the one the United States plans to deploy
in Poland and the Czech Republic. Russia has made much of a host of
“new” missiles it plans to produce in response to U.S. plans to build an
anti-missile system in Europe.
But many have been in development for years and are based on older
Soviet designs, according to defense analysts. The Bulava, which is
known in NATO as the SS-NX-30, is a submarine version of the Topol-M
which was begun in the 1980s but redesigned just after the 1991 collapse
of the Soviet Union.
Colonel-General Nikolai Solovtsov, Commander of Russia’s Strategic
Missile Forces, said last week Russia had intensified efforts to develop
new ballistic missiles.
He said the first of a new generation of Russian RS-24 intercontinental
ballistic missiles would enter service in December 2009. On Monday,
Solovtsov said Russia was developing weapons to counter U.S. plans to
use space weapons as part of an anti-missile shield.
Russia’s Dmitry Donskoy nuclear submarine test fired the Bulava on
Friday from the White Sea. It hit the Kura testing site testing site on
the Kamchatka peninsula in the Pacific and the exercise was a success,
the navy said. Russia’s RIA news agency quoted an unidentified Defense
Ministry source as saying on Friday it was the most successful test of
the Bulava to date.
—Agencies
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