Russia plans to launch mass production of Oreshnik missile: Putin
A day prior, Putin said in an evening address that Russian forces had used the "Oreshnik" to attack the city of Dnipro in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
KYIV INDEPENDENT
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Russian President Vladimir Putin
Moscow, 23 Nov
Russia aims to launch the "Oreshnik" intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) into mass production, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on 22 November during a meeting with the representatives of the Russian Defense Ministry and the national military-industrial complex.
A day prior, Putin said in an
evening address that Russian forces had used the "Oreshnik" to attack
the city of Dnipro in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.
Ukrainian authorities have not yet
provided an official report on Russia's weapon used in the recent attack.
Ukraine's military intelligence agency (HUR) suggested that this was not a new
Russian design but part of Russia's Kedr missile complex that has been in
development since at least 2021.
Putin denied that the Oreshnik is a
modernization of old Soviet systems, as the missile is allegedly based on
"the latest Russian developments." The Russian president added that
there are no analogs of such weapons in the world, nor are there any means to
intercept them.
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"Given its striking power,
especially in mass use, and combined with other high-precision long-range
systems Russia also has, its use against enemy targets will be comparable to
strategic weapons. Although the system is not a strategic weapon," Putin
claimed.
Russian forces still have a
stockpile of these missile systems ready for use, according to Putin. The
Russian president also said that Russia will continue to test the Oreshnik
missile, including in combat conditions.
Putin added that Russia is working
on a series of medium- and short-range missiles. Several Russian systems are
allegedly being tested and planned for mass production.
Little is known about the
"Oreshnik" missile referred to by Putin, but military expert Yan
Matveev told Russian independent media outlet IStories that it could be a
modified version of the "Rubezh" IRBM.
The RS-26 "Rubezh" is
reported to have a range of up to 6,000 kilometers and can carry four warheads,
each with an estimated payload of 0.3 megatons. KYIV INDEPENDENT
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