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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
Michelle Cullen

Putin launches 'world's most powerful missile' that could wipe out millions in minutes as he warns 'those who threaten Russia'

Vladimir Putin has issued yet another chilling threat after claiming that Russia has successfully launched 'the world's most powerful missile' known as 'Satan-2'.

The Russian leader boasted that the intercontinental ballistic missile would provide "food for thought" and deter anyone from thinking of retaliating against Moscow.

Experts believe that the weapon can fire more than ten nuclear warheads at a time, and Putin has claimed that no nation would have the capabilities to stop it.

READ MORE: Russia claims World War Three has begun as Vladimir Putin makes terrifying move near Ukraine

Russia's President Vladimir Putin looks on during talks with Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko at the engineering building of the technical complex of the Soyuz-2 space rocket complex at the Vostochny Cosmodrome, some 180 km north of Blagoveschensk, Amur region, on April 12, 2022. (gettyimages.ie)

Russia's ministry of defence has reported that the missile was launched at the Plesetsk cosmodrome in the northwest of the country and successfully hit targets in the far east.

A video released by Moscow shows the giant missile emerging from rocket flames and smoke from an underground silo as it was tested.

Putin , who is being investigated for war crimes committed by his forces in Ukraine, reportedly claimed the missile would "strengthen the combat potential of our armed forces".

It is said the weapon could potentially kill millions as it is capable of flying 6,000 miles and could target an area as big as France.

Putin was shown on state TV being told by the military that the missile had been launched from Plesetsk and hit targets in the Kamchatka peninsula.

The Russian president said: "The new complex has the highest tactical and technical characteristics and is capable of overcoming all modern means of anti-missile defence.

"It has no analogues in the world and won't have for a long time to come.

"This truly unique weapon will strengthen the combat potential of our armed forces, reliably ensure Russia's security from external threats and provide food for thought for those who, in the heat of frenzied aggressive rhetoric, try to threaten our country."

He was seen in a video conference with defence minister Sergei Shoigu - who had been rumoured to be sidelined.

Shoigu told the President: "Comrade Supreme Commander-in-Chief - preparations for the first flight test of the Sarmat missile system completed at the first state test cosmodrome in Arkhangelsk region."

A military announcement said: "Today at 15:12 Moscow time, a successful launch of a stationary intercontinental ballistic missile Sarmat was conducted from the silo at the Plesetsk state test facility in the Arkhangelsk region.

"The objectives of the launch were fully achieved.

"The design and performance of the missile were tested.

"This launch is the first in the program of state tests. After the completion of the testing programme, the Sarmat missile system will be put into service of the Strategic Missile Forces,"

Professor Malcolm Chalmers from the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) previously told Reuters Sarmat was unlikely to make a big difference to Russia's ICBM force due to its "already considerable destructive potential".

However, he said a single missile armed with ten warheads could target areas as large as Texas or France, potentially killing millions of people.

Commenting on the weapon's destructive power, Prof Chalmers said: "Claims that a large nuclear attack would kill every living being in the world are sometimes made as a result of wider climate-changing consequences, such as a nuclear winter.

"This should not be ruled out, but would at a minimum require hundreds of warheads, not a single missile."

The missile has been under development for years, and so its test-launch is not a surprise for the West, but it comes at a moment of extreme geopolitical tension due to Russia's war in Ukraine .

Russia has denied plans to deploy nuclear weapons "at this stage" in its invasion of Ukraine.

Foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said yesterday: "At this stage, we are considering the option of conventional weapons only."

The 15,880 mph weapon can deliver a MIRV warhead that weighs up to 10 tonnes to any point in the world, flying over both the North and South Poles, says the Russians.

It has the capability to use trajectories and unpredictable routes that "substantially impede their destruction even by advanced missile defence systems".

READ MORE: Ukrainian woman who was accused of sex working by Irish host says she was just going on dates

READ MORE: Leo Varadkar shares 'incredible' picture from Ukraine as Putin raises nuclear fears in Russia

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