What we know about the new hypersonic Oreshnik missile Russia used against Ukraine

What we know about the new hypersonic Oreshnik missile Russia used against Ukraine

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President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that Russia would keep testing the hypersonic Oreshnik missile it fired at Ukraine a day earlier and begin serial production of the new system.

Putin, in televised comments, said the missile was incapable of being intercepted by an enemy.

“I will add that there is no countermeasure to such a missile, no means of intercepting it, in the world today. And I will emphasise once again that we will continue testing this newest system. It is necessary to establish serial production,” he said.

The new intermediate-range ballistic missile called Oreshnik used by Russia in a strike on Ukraine is a nuclear-capable weapon that had not been previously mentioned in public.

In an unscheduled television appearance on Thursday, Putin said the strike on the city of Dnipro had tested in combat conditions “one of the newest Russian mid-range missile systems”.

He said missile engineers had christened the missile Oreshnik, or hazel tree, in Russian.

Putin said it had been deployed “in a non-nuclear hypersonic configuration”, and that the “test” had been successful and had hit its target.

Speed 

Air defences cannot intercept the Oreshnik, which attacks at a speed of Mach 10, or 2.5-3 kilometres (1.6-1.9 miles) per second, Putin said.

Hypersonic missiles travel at speeds of at least Mach 5 – five times the speed of sound – and can manoeuvre mid-flight, making them harder to track and intercept.

“Modern air defence systems… cannot intercept such missiles. That’s impossible,” Putin said.

“As of today there are no means of counteracting such a weapon,” the president boasted.

Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence wrote on Telegram that the missile took 15 minutes to fly from the Kapustin Yar range in the Astrakhan region to the city of Dnipro, a distance of around 800 kilometres (490 miles), reaching a final speed of over Mach 11.

Warheads 

The Oreshnik missile could have three to six warheads, military expert Viktor Baranets wrote in the Komsomolskaya Pravda tabloid.

Ukraine’s GUR said it had six.

Igor Korotchenko, editor of the Moscow-based National Defence journal, told the TASS state news agency that based on video footage of the strike, Oreshnik has multiple independently guided warheads.

In this case they were conventional, but it could also carry nuclear warheads, military experts said.

The “practically simultaneous arrival of the warheads at the target” shows the system is “very effective”, Korotchenko said, calling it a “masterpiece of modern Russian solid-fuel military missile construction”.

Range 

Putin described the missile in Russian as “medium-range” but Russian military experts said the English term would be “intermediate-range”.

An intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) has a range of 1,000-5,500 kilometres, a level below that of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

Military expert Ilya Kramnik told the Izvestia newspaper that Oreshnik’s range could be at the top end of intermediate, around 3,000-5,000 kilometres.

“In any case we witnessed the first combat use in history by Russia of an intermediate-range missile,” Dmitry Kornev, editor of Military Russia website, told Izvestia.

Origins 

The US Department of Defense described Oreshnik as an “experimental” missile based on Russia’s RS-26 Rubezh ICBM.

Little is known about Rubezh, a modification of Topol ICBM. 

TASS state news agency reported, citing a source, in 2018 that development of Rubezh was frozen under the state weapons programme up to 2027, to prioritise another system, Avangard.

The head of Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov, said Friday that Oreshnik was the name of the programme to develop the new missile, which itself is called Kedr, which means cedar. 

He said his agency knew of just two prototypes of the missile, although there could be slightly more, and the weapon is “not yet in serial production”.

Russian weapons expert Yan Matveyev wrote on Telegram that Oreshnik probably had two stages and would be “quite expensive” and heavy, with mass production unlikely.

Threat 

Its range means “Oreshnik can threaten practically all of Europe” but not the United States, weapons expert Pavel Podvig, director of the Russian Nuclear Forces Project, told Russian Telegram channel Ostorozhno Novosti.

The United States and the Soviet Union in 1987 signed a treaty agreeing to give up all use of missiles with a range of 500 to 5,500 kilometres.

Both Washington and Moscow withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in 2019, each accusing the other of violations.

Putin said Thursday that Russia will “address the question of further deployment of intermediate and shorter-range missiles based on the actions of the United States and its satellites”.

(FRANCE 24 with Reuters and AFP) 

France24

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