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Friday, 2 March 2018
Putin threatens US arms race with new missiles declaration
Vladimir Putin is seeking a fourth term as president in elections this month.
Photograph: Sergei Chirikov/EPA
Vladimir Putin
has announced that Russia has developed and is testing a new line of
strategic nuclear-capable weapons that would be able to outmanoeuvre US
defences, in a possible signal of a new arms race between Moscow and the
west.
Speaking in a nationally televised address to the country’s political
elite weeks before the presidential election, Putin showed video and
animations of ICBMs, nuclear-powered cruise missiles, underwater drones
and other weapons that he said Russia had developed as a result of the US pulling out of the 1972 anti-ballistic missile treaty signed with the Soviet Union.
“You didn’t listen to our country then,” Putin said during the speech
on Thursday. “Listen to us now.” Some of the weapons were already being
tested, he added.
The existence of several of the weapons systems – like the RS-28
Sarmat, or Satan 2, nuclear missile – were well-known and their tests
had been previously reported. What was new was Putin’s portrayal of
Russia’s modernising arsenal as an adversarial response to US policy
since 2001.
Putin presents new ballistic rocket, Sarmat - video
The speech came in the same month that the Pentagon released a new nuclear arms policy,
which followed a promise by the US president, Donald Trump, to develop
an arsenal “so strong and powerful that it will deter any acts of
aggression”. The policy envisioned low-yield nuclear weapons on
submarine-launched ballistic missiles that could match similar Russian
weapons.
Putin’s message was one of defiance. “I would like to tell those who
have been trying to escalate the arms race for the past 15 years, to
gain unilateral advantages over Russia, and to impose restrictions and
sanctions … The attempt at curbing Russia has failed,” he said.
His remarks came during a state of the union speech heavy with
economic promises for the Russian people and sabre-rattling against the
US. It was widely viewed as his first campaign speech for Russia’s
presidential elections on 18 March. The Kremlin is primarily concerned
with boosting turnout, as Putin is expected to cruise to a fourth term
as president. There were signs that the authorities wanted to attract extra
attention to the speech by moving it from the gilded St George’s Hall at
the Kremlin to an exhibition space in central Moscow where video and
infographics could be shown.
The first hour of the speech was conventional, if optimistic. Putin
promised to raise life expectancy by 10 years, to increase Russia’s GDP
by 50% by 2025 and halve the poverty rate. He said Russia would have to
latch on to a wave of technological advances or risk “drowning in that
wave”.
The interactive presentation began with graphs showing birth rates
and harvest totals in recent years, but it was mainly used as a platform
to show off Russia’s latest weaponry, some of it capable of delivering a
nuclear strike anywhere in the world.
The video screen shows the Kinzhal air missile system as
Vladimir Putin (right) delivers his annual address. Photograph:
Tass/Barcroft Images
Putin highlighted a test of Russia’s RS-28 Sarmat missile. According
to state media, the intercontinental ballistic missile is able to fly
6,800 miles with a payload of 15 warheads, though the actual
capabilities of the missile have not been shown. The Russian defence
ministry said it had conducted a successful test launch in October,
during which the missile had travelled 3,600 miles before hitting a
target area in Russia’s far east.
Putin also said Russia had developed a working laser weapon, a
hypersonic missile and a cruise missile powered by a nuclear reactor
that could fly indefinitely.
He said the plane-launched hypersonic missile, called Kinzhal
or dagger, could manoeuvre while travelling at more than 10 times the
speed of sound, making it “guaranteed to overcome all existing and I
think prospective anti-missile systems” and deliver a nuclear strike.
Putin claimed it had completed testing and was already in use.
He also spoke about the RS-26 ballistic missile, Avangard,
which Putin said “heads towards its target like a meteorite”. The
missile has already raised concerns in the US about its compliance with
global arms treaties.
Putin delivers his annual address to the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation. Photograph: Tass/Barcroft Images
Putin showed several animated videos of prototype weapons, including a
nuclear-powered cruise missile that theoretically has a limitless
range. He showed it navigating anti-air defences in the Atlantic Ocean
before skirting the coast around South America and heading for the
California coastline before the video faded to black.
After each demonstration, the crowd applauded.
The Pentagon played down Putin’s speech, saying Moscow’s weaponry had
already been factored into US assessments. “We’re not surprised by the
statements and the American people should rest assured that we are fully
prepared,” said spokeswoman Dana White.
US officials say American missile defence systems are not aimed at
Moscow, but are instead designed to defend against threats from Iran,
North Korea and other potential adversaries.
Russia has been aggressively marketing its latest military
technology. Its first stealth fighter, the Su-57, was deployed to Syria
for combat testing last week. Analysts said the jet’s capabilities were
still not clear, and that the deployment could be designed to show the
Su-57 programme was moving forward despite time and cost overruns.
In a nod to public opinion, Putin announced an online contest to name Russia’s new cruise missile and underwater drone.
Putin has given the constitutionally mandated speech on “the
situation in the country” 14 times since he first became president in
2000. He did not do so during the four years he was prime minister.
His address, which generally lasts around an hour, is given to an
audience of lawmakers from the state Duma and federation council,
judges, ministers and other members of the political establishment, and
generally focuses on domestic issues such as the economy and corruption.
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