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Putin Says Russia Tests New, Nuclear-Capable Remote Torpedo Dubbed 'Doomsday Machine'


Russia's Poseidon nuclear-capable underwater system / Russian Defense Ministry handout animation picture via Reuters
Russia's Poseidon nuclear-capable underwater system / Russian Defense Ministry handout animation picture via Reuters

Russia has tested a new nuclear-capable, nuclear-powered long-range remote torpedo, President Vladimir Putin said, a weapon that some experts have dubbed a "doomsday machine."

The October 29 announcement came days after Putin and Russia's top military officer announced what they said was a successful test of another new weapons system: a long-range, nuclear-powered cruise missile.

Speaking in an informal setting at a Moscow hospital, drinking tea with soldiers wounded in the Ukraine war, Putin said the test of the torpedo-- called the Status-6 or the Poseidon -- occurred a day earlier.

"For the first time, we succeeded in not only launching it with an engine from a carrier submarine, but also to start the nuclear power unit on it," he said. "There is nothing like this."

"This is a huge success," he added.

There was no independent confirmation that such a test took place.

However, Russia had hinted at the existence of such a weapon -- "an intercontinental nuclear-powered nuclear-armed autonomous torpedo" -- as far back as 2015.

In a bellicose speech in 2018, Putin bragged about several new weapons systems Russia was developing, including the Poseidon torpedo. US analysts later confirmed Russia had plans to build such a device.

Western analysts have said that, if such a torpedo were deployed and actually detonated off the US East Coast, for example, it would shower radioactivity on major cities and render huge swaths of territory uninhabitable.

Some experts have called it a "doomsday machine" because of the indiscriminate destruction it would wreak.

The missile, which Putin and the chief of the general staff, General Valery Gerasimov, said had been tested on October 21, is called the Burevestnik, or Skyfall, under its NATO designation.

Powered by a small nuclear reactor, the nuclear-capable missile is theoretically able to fly for hours, if not days, before striking a target.

Since mid-summer, observers had been closely watching the Russian Arctic archipelago of Novaya Zemlya amid an uptick of construction and an influx of ships and specially designed aircraft-- hints that a test of the Burevestnik might be imminent or underway.

Gerasimov told Putin that the missile had traveled 14,000 kilometers and was aloft for 15 hours.

In a statement to RFE/RL, Norway's Intelligence Service confirmed the missile's test at Novaya Zemlya, and said it had flown "significantly longer than before."

"The missile remains in development," Vice Admiral Nils Andreas Stensoenes said. "Russia has been testing Burevestnik since 2016. It will take time before development is complete and the missile is ready for deployment to the armed forces."

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    Mike Eckel

    Mike Eckel is a senior international correspondent reporting on political and economic developments in Russia, Ukraine, and around the former Soviet Union, as well as news involving cybercrime and espionage. He's reported on the ground on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the wars in Chechnya and Georgia, and the 2004 Beslan hostage crisis, as well as the annexation of Crimea in 2014.

RFE/RL has been declared an "undesirable organization" by the Russian government.

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