Russia SHOCKS The US By Developing 3 New Advanced Weapons
Russia SHOCKS The US By Developing 3 New Advanced Weapons
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Military technology innovation helps Russia’s manner of war while also informing new operational concepts and military thinking about future combat, particularly asymmetric advantages against more powerful competitors.
Welcome everyone, in today’s video; we’re going to tell you Russia SHOCKS The US By Developing 3 New Advanced Weapons
New weapons systems, known as Putin’s superoruzhie, were initially shown in 2018 and signal Russia’s intention to innovate in the defense-industrial field in response to the perceived conventional military dominance of great power opponents such as the United States and its NATO partners.
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Russia SHOCKS The US By Developing 3 New Advanced Weapons
Russia is gradually integrating asymmetric force-multiplier technology into its existing and legacy weapon systems. Meanwhile, the defence sector is creating new systems and capabilities for military robotics, and it has effectively incorporated unmanned vehicles, particularly aerial drones, into military operations. Russia is working on developing capabilities that will allow it to counter and disrupt an adversary’s satellite operations. Finally, AI technologies are being created with the goal of disrupting Western command and control systems and communication infrastructures while also establishing information superiority.
This study paper provides an outline of Russia’s current military capabilities and cutting-edge technologies in important industries. It also explores how military innovation affects Russian military thinking, as well as the implications for the United States, NATO, and their partners.
The ‘super weaponry’
Analysts were not surprised by Putin’s 2018 speech, which included the RS-28 Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile. Since 2009, the Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau has been developing a super-heavy, liquid-fueled ICBM. The Sarmat is scheduled to replace the Soviet-era RS-36M Voevoda in the Uzhurskaya and Dombarovskaya divisions of the Russian Federation’s Strategic Missile Forces. 77 Successful launch tests were conducted in 2020, and by February 2021, preparations for flight tests were underway at the Severo-Yenisei test site78. According to Colonel-General Sergey Karakaev, commander of the Strategic Missile Forces, the new missile will enter service in 2022 with the 62nd Missile Division stationed in Uzhur. where new missile facilities are being built.
The Sarmat should perform similar functions to the RS-36M it is intended to replace. It will be significantly larger than existing Russian ICBMs, including the RS-24 Yars, as well as their American counterparts. It should be able to transport a variety of payloads, including a mix of re-entry vehicles and decoys to circumvent ballistic missile defences. The most notable differences between the Sarmat and its predecessors are its claimed long range and ability to attack targets via a fractional orbit, raising the possibility that it could approach the United States via the South Pole, bypassing existing missile detection and defence systems. In the future, the Sarmat may transport the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle.
What does the Russian military hope to achieve with these weapons?
Each ‘super weapon’ is believed to have been intended to serve a specific purpose. However, it is unclear what those functions are.
The objective of the four primary strategic systems is likely the simplest to understand. Moscow’s leaders prioritise maintaining strategic nuclear capabilities capable of delivering assured retaliation that would cause unacceptable devastation to any foe. Over the last decade, Russia has undertaken significant efforts to modernise its strategic nuclear delivery systems. Two anxieties drive Russia’s need to improve its strategic arsenal now and in the future. First, Russia’s Soviet-era weaponry may be unable to penetrate new US missile defence systems built, according to Putin, “mainly for combating strategic arms that follow ballistic trajectories.“ 99 Second, US efforts to create long-range precision conventional weapons, such as the Prompt Global Strike programme, have raised concerns in Moscow about the viability of Russia’s strategic arsenal.
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