Russia test-fires ballistic missile to mid-Pacific
MURMANSK, Oct 11 (Reuters)
Russia carried out the first test launch on Saturday of a strategic
missile that reached the equator in the Pacific Ocean, a navy spokesman
said.
The spokesman said the Sineva missile was launched from the
nuclear-powered submarine, Tula, based in the Arctic Barents Sea during
military exercises observed by President Dmitry Medvedev.
"For the first time in the history of the Russian Navy the target of
the missile was in an equatorial part of the Pacific Ocean rather than
the Kura testing ground on the Kamchatka Peninsula," he said.
The spokesman did not specify the area where Russia's newest missile
landed. The Sineva missile was introduced into Russia's arsenal last
year.
"The area where the dummy warhead landed is legally part of an open
sea and the area was closed to navigation and flights at the time of the
exercise," he said. Medvedev's predecessor Vladimir Putin made the
revival of the armed forces, neglected for around 10 years after the
fall of the Soviet Union, a symbol of Russia's resurgence.
Russia's strategic bombers have restarted regular patrols over the
Atlantic Ocean irking NATO and a group of the Northern Fleet ships is on
its way to the Caribbean to take part in joint exercises with U.S. foe
Venezuela.
|