Putin: Russia's hyperschallrakete in use, use in Belarus planned

Putin: Russia's hyperschallrakete in use, use in Belarus planned

President Vladimir Putin announced on Friday that Russia has started the production of his latest hyperschallrakets and his plans are still being made this year in the allied Belarus to be relocated. On the side of the Belarusian President Alexander Lukaschenko explained Putin, explained Putin, explained Putin, that locations in Belarus have already been selected for the Oreshnik medium-range missile.

production and use of the Oreshnik rocket

"The preparatory work is going, and we will probably be ready by the end of the year," said Putin, adding that the first series of the Oreshnik missiles and their systems had already been produced and taken into account.

First use against Ukraine

Russia, which means “hazelnutbaum” in Russian in Russian, first used to use Ukraine in November when the experimental weapon fired on a rocket factory in Dnipro, which was built during the Soviet Union. Putin praised the skills of Oreshnik and emphasized that her multiple explosive heads, which at speed 10 speeds, cannot be intercepted at a destination. Their destruction is so great that the use of several oreshnics could be devastating in a conventional attack, almost comparable to a nuclear attack.

warning to the West

Putin warned the west that Moscow against Ukraines could use Nato-allied allowed to use their long -range missiles against goals within Russia. The head of the Russian rocket forces explained that Oreshnik, which can be equipped with conventional or nuclear explosive heads, has a reach that enables it to reach all of Europe.

contract for security guarantees for Belarus

medium -range missiles can cover a distance of 500 to 5,500 kilometers (310 to 3,400 miles). These weapons were prohibited in accordance with a Soviet contract that Washington and Moscow announced in 2019. Last autumn, Putin and Lukaschko signed a contract that grants Moscow's security guarantees for Belarus, including the possible use of Russian nuclear weapons to fend off any aggression. This agreement follows a revision of the Russian nuclearoctrine, which Belarus first put under the nuclear protective shield of Russia, while there were tensions with the West due to the conflict in Ukraine.

Russian troops in Belarus

Lukaschenko, who has ruled Belarus with an iron hand for over 30 years and rely on subsidies and support of the Kremlin, allowed Russia to use its territory to send troops to Ukraine and to station some tactical nuclear weapons. Russia has not announced how many such weapons were stationed, but Lukashenko said in December that his country currently has several dozen of it.

expansion of the range of Russian military actions

The stationing of tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, a 1,084 kilometers (673 miles) long Border to Ukraine would enable Russian aircraft and rockets to achieve potential goals there faster and easier Moscow decides to use them. In addition, it is expanding Russia's ability to target several NATO allies in Eastern and Central Europe.

new nuclearoctrine of Russia

The revised nuclardoktrin Russian nuclear weapons formally reduced. According to this document, Moscow could "use nuclear weapons to use nuclear and other types of weapons of mass destruction" against Russia or its allies, as well as "in the case of aggression" against Russia and Belarus with conventional weapons that "threaten their sovereignty and/or territorial integrity".

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