Defense
Russian
'ABM killer' intercontinental missile to enter service in 2016
Published time: December 25, 2014 19:22
RS-20 Voyevoda (SS-18
Satan) intercontinental ballistic missile (RIA Novosti/Vladimir Fedorenko)
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Russia’s
newest RS-26 missile system, dubbed the ‘anti-missile defense killer’, will
join the ranks of the country’s defenses in less than two years, Russia’s
Strategic Missile Force commander said.
“We are continuing the test program for
RS-26 and plan to finish it next year, with the missile to be put on combat
duty in 2016,” Lt. Gen. Sergey Karakayev is cited as saying by
RIA Novosti.
Currently,
there is hardly any information available about the new missile system because
it was developed in secrecy.
Reportedly,
the RS-26 is a solid-fuel missile with an advanced splitting warhead, which is
launched from a mobile platform.
It
was designed at the Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology, apparently under
the codenames Rubezh (Frontier), or Avangard (Vanguard).
Previously, the Russian deputy prime minister in
charge of defense, Dmitry Rogozin, referred to the RS-26 as “the ABM
killer.”
“Neither modern nor prospective American
missile defenses will be able to prevent this missile from being able to hit
the bull's eye,” Rogozin explained.
Chief
of Russia's Strategic Missile Force (RVSN), Lieutenant General Sergey
Karakayev. (RIA Novosti/Vladimir Rodionov)
According
to RIA Novosti, the new missile has been test-fired previously on at least four
occasions, with three tests registered as successful.
However,
there was no official information on any new RS-26 tests carried out after
2013.
Karakayev
also said development of the new silo-based heavy ballistic Sarmat missiles
will be completed by 2020.
“This heavy rocket will be deployed in
Uzhur [in the Krasnoyarsk Region] and Dombarovsky [in the Orenburg Region],” the Strategic Missile
Force commander said.
Sarmat
is said to weigh around 100 tons and has an operational range of some 5,500
kilometers.
It’s
seen as a replacement for the Russian military’s current SS-18 Satan
intercontinental ballistic missiles.
In
mid-December, Karakayev also announced that Russia is building a new railway
missile system called Barguzin.
Topol-M
ground missile complex launcher (RIA Novosti/Ramil Sitdikov)
The draft project for “the missile train has
been completed; design documentation is now being developed, with the industry
already working hard on preparing a model for testing,” he said.
The
Soviet army used to have a railway missile system, but it was outlawed by the
1991 START treaty.
However,
Russian Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov stressed the 2010 New START
treaty doesn’t forbid the construction of missile trains.
Barguzin,
which is expected to stay in service till 2040, will far exceed its Soviet
predecessor in terms of accuracy, range of missiles and other characteristics,
Antonov said.
Russia’s
Strategic Missile Force will return to three service groupings, which includes
silo, mobile and rail-based missiles.
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