The Russian president solved his address yesterday Thursday (21.11. 24) the mystery with Oreshnik, following the attack launched by Russian forces with a ballistic missile in the city of Dnipro in eastern Ukraine, following reports from the Ukrainian Air Force that an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) had been used Putin explained that Russia launched the mid-range ballistic missile (IRBM) of the Oreshnik type, which has the ability to develop ultrasonic speeds and equip itself with multiple re-entry vehicles (MIRV), i.e. multiple autonomous warheads detached from the main part of the rocket in the final flight phase to the enemy target. This technology also explains the explosions in videos released on social media since the Oreshnik attack. Footage of the new Russian Oreshnik hyperonic missile stringing its targets in Ukraine at Mach 10 (7,600 mph). Like a thunderbolt The U.S. Ministry of Defence reported that Russia’s new experimental ballistic missile is based on much of the plan of the RS-26 Rubezh intercontinental ballistic missile, which several analysts however categorize as a midrange ballistic missile, with a range ranging from 3,500 to 5,500 km . Pentagon: – Russia’s experimental intermediary-range ballistic missile launched at Ukraine was based on the RS-26 Rubezh ICBM model? – The US was notified by Russia about the launch Briefly before it Occurred through nuclear risk reduction channels. — Status-6 (Military & Conflict News) (BlueSkyo) (@Archer83Able) The RS-26 Rubezh ballistic missile RS-26 Rubezh-type ballistic missiles are a, smaller in size, configuration of RS-24 Yars intercontinental ballistic missiles and has the capability of equipment with MIRV. The development and construction program was completed in the 2000s and its first successful test was made on 26 May 2012 , when it hit a target in a range of 5,800 km . Since then it has successfully completed other test launches with different warheads by 2015 at a maximum range of 2,000 km and Moscow has decided to put RS-26 Rubezh in operation in 2016, and has been linked to the Avangard type ultrasonic drift vehicle development program , a “superweapon” for nuclear blows (as shown in its test, in the video below). However, the Russian strategy also changed the development program of the RS-26 Rubezh type “frozen” while other programs such as Avangard took the “green light” in combination with other ultrasonic missiles and cruise missiles, such as the Kinzhal and Zircon missiles, which were first used in the Ukrainian operations fields. Analysts estimate that Russia brought back the development program of RS-26 and secretly managed to develop a new ballistic missile, which was revealed to be called “Oreshnik” at speeds of 10 Mach, which make it particularly difficult to intercept it from enemy air defense systems, while it seems to be able to incorporate multiple warheads and potential nuclear weapons. Putin blames the West Moscow wanted to send a clear “message” to Ukraine and the West that it has the ability to launch advanced and destructive weapons to defend its territory, after the blows to the Russian regions of Briansk and Kursk with American ATACMS ballistic missiles and British cruise missiles of the Storm Shadow type. 🚨⚡️President Putin Confirms ‘Operational Test’ Of Novel Intermediate-Range Missile With a Non-Nuclear Payload — RussiaNews (@mog_russen) That is what Vladimir Putin pointed out in his speech yesterday, saying that: “In response to the use of American and British long-range weapons, on 21 November, Russian armed forces launched a combined blow to one of Ukraine’s military-industrial complex facilities”. Thus, Moscow conducted battle tests of the ultrasonic missile system “Oreshnik” without nuclear warheads. Source: onalert.gr
Oreshnik: Russia’s new ballistic missile – How it is connected to Putin’s nuclear “superweapons”
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