Russia stages first nuclear drill since Ukraine war

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Russia has launched ballistic and cruise missiles from the Arctic in the first annual exercise involving its strategic nuclear forces since the war in Ukraine.

According to the Kremlin, a Yars inter-continental ballistic missile was launched from Plesetsk cosmodrome, some 800km (500 miles) north of Moscow, and a Sineva ballistic missile was fired from the Barents Sea to the remote Kura test site in Kamchatka province in Russia’s Far East.

All missiles reached their targets, it added.

President Putin was shown on Russian TV watching a video feed of the launch.

Footage was also broadcast of remarks he gave via videolink to a conference of regional intelligence services in which he doubled down on his accusations of a Ukrainian dirty bomb plot.

A “dirty bomb” is an explosive device mixed with radioactive material and the Russian allegations have been widely rejected by Western countries as false.

Kyiv warned the claims indicate Moscow itself could be preparing such an attack.

Putin also repeated other baseless allegations made by Russia in recent months against Ukraine, including that it had been turned by the US into a “testing ground for military biological experiments”.

The US was told about the drill under the terms of the New Start arms treaty.

The last Russian nuclear drill took place five days before it invaded Ukraine.

Also Read: Putin’s nuclear threats portend real danger – Biden

Ahead of the latest exercise, military officials in Washington pointed out that, in notifying the US, the Russians were complying with arms control obligations.

NATO is also staging its own nuclear exercises, dubbed Steadfast Noon, in north-western Europe.

The Western defensive alliance said training flights involving 14 countries were taking place until Sunday over Belgium, the UK and the North Sea.

Russia’s exercises were being held against a backdrop of a flagging campaign in southern and eastern Ukraine.

Moscow has sent troops into the key southern city of Kherson to help defend it.

Russia took Kherson in the early days of the war, but recently it has come under pressure as Ukrainian troops advance.

Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu was seen on Russian TV saying that the aim of the drill was for military command and control to practise carrying out “a massive nuclear strike by the strategic nuclear forces in retaliation for the enemy’s nuclear strike”.

 

Zainab Sa’id

Source BBC
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