Russian President Vladimir Putin says Moscow will boost its nuclear forces by deploying a much-delayed new intercontinental ballistic missile, rolling out hypersonic missiles and adding new nuclear submarines.
Key points:
- During a speech to mark a Soviet victory public holiday, Mr Putin said Russia needed modernised armed forces to guarantee its sovereignty
- Mr Putin says the Sarmat silo-based intercontinental ballistic missiles will be deployed this year
- He says Russia will also continue mass production of air-based hypersonic Kinzhal systems and start mass supplies of sea-based Zircon hypersonic missiles
A year since ordering the invasion of Ukraine, Mr Putin has signalled he is ready to rip up the architecture of nuclear arms control — including the big powers’ moratorium on nuclear testing — unless the West backs off in Ukraine.
Mr Putin on Tuesday sought to underscore Russian resolve in Ukraine by suspending a landmark nuclear arms control treaty, announcing new strategic systems had been put on combat duty and warning Moscow could resume nuclear tests.
In an address to mark the Defender of the Fatherland public holiday, known in Soviet times as Red Army Day, Mr Putin invoked the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany to argue that Russia needed modernised armed forces to guarantee its sovereignty.
“As before, we will pay increased attention to strengthening the nuclear triad,” Mr Putin said, referring to nuclear missiles based on land, sea and in the air, in an address broadcast on state television.
Mr Putin, who casts the conflict in Ukraine as an existential struggle to defend Russia against what he sees as an arrogant and aggressive West, said the Sarmat silo-based intercontinental ballistic missiles would be deployed this year.
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The RS-28 Sarmat liquid-fuelled missile, nicknamed Satan 2, was first announced by Mr Putin in 2018. The missiles were supposed to have been deployed last year.
CNN reported the United States believed Russia carried out a test of the Sarmat just before US President Joe Biden visited Ukraine earlier this week but the test failed. The Russian defence ministry has not commented on that report.
‘Priority to strengthening defence’
The 35-metre missile has a range of 18,000 kilometres and can carry at least 10 multiple targetable re-entry vehicles — each with a nuclear warhead — which can each be aimed at a different target. It can also deliver hypersonic Avangard glide vehicles.
In addition, Mr Putin said, Russia would continue mass production of air-based hypersonic Kinzhal systems and would start mass supplies of sea-based Zircon hypersonic missiles.
“With the adoption of the Borei-A nuclear-powered submarine project ‘Emperor Alexander III’ into the navy, the share of modern weapons and equipment in the naval strategic nuclear forces will reach 100 per cent,” Mr Putin said.
“In the coming years, three more cruisers of this project will replenish the fleet’s combat strength.”
The Emperor Alexander III was launched in late December. It is the seventh Borei-A class submarine. Each can carry 16 Bulava submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
Mr Putin also said Russia would develop all parts of Russia’s conventional armed forces, improve training, add advanced equipment, bolster the arms industry and promote soldiers who had proven themselves in battle.
“A modern, efficient army and navy are a guarantee of the country’s security and sovereignty, a guarantee of its stable development and its future,” Mr Putin said.
“Therefore, we will continue to pay priority attention to strengthening our defence capability.”
Reuters