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Russian Charged with Passing Bulava Missile Secrets
by Staff Writers
Moscow (RIA Novosti) May 15, 2012

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An employee at a Russian defense firm in the Urals region has been accused of passing secrets on the Bulava intercontinental missile to a foreign intelligence service, the Kommersant daily reported on Monday.

The secrets concern the missile's guidance and control system, the paper said citing a law enforcement source.

"There is conclusive evidence of his guilt," the source said, adding however that the details of the case have not been disclosed because it involves state secrets.

Experts suggest the company in question could be the Yekaterinburg-based Avtomatika Science and Production Association, which has been developing the missile's control and guidance system.

The man is due to go on trial at the Sverdlovsk Region Court, which will take place behind closed doors due to the sensitive nature of the case.

The Bulava (SS-NX-30) SLBM, developed by the Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology (since 1998), carries up to 10 MIRV warheads and has a range of over 8,000 kilometers (5,000 miles). The three-stage ballistic missile is designed for deployment on Borey-class nuclear submarines.

Russia Does Not Rule Out Preemptive Missile Defense Strike
Moscow (RIA Novosti) May 15, 2012 - Russia does not exclude preemptive use of weapons against [NATO] missile defense systems in Europe but only as a last resort, the Russian General Staff said on Thursday at a missile defense conference in Moscow.

"The placement of new strike weapons in the south and northwest of Russia against [NATO] missile defense components, including the deployment of Iskander missile systems in Kaliningrad region is one possible way of incapacitating the European missile defense infrastructure," Chief of the General Staff Nikolai Makarov said.

Taking into account the "destabilizing nature of the missile defense system... the decision on the pre-emptive use of available weapons will be made during an aggravation of the situation," he said.

The projected European missile defense system could by 2020 have the ability to intercept Russian intercontinental ballistic missiles, Secretary of Russia's Security Council Nikolai Patrushev said on Thursday.

The United States and NATO agreed to develop the system at a summit in Lisbon in 2010, but talks between Russia and the alliance have floundered over NATO's refusal to grant Russia legal guarantees that the system would not be aimed against Russia's strategic nuclear deterrent.

"By 2018-2020 - that is the third and fourth phases of the deployment of the Euro-missile defense in Europe - the continent should have enough anti-missile defense to be able to intercept part of Russia's intercontinental ballistic missiles, and submarine launched ballistic missiles," Patrushev said at an international conference on Euro-missile defense in Moscow.

"The geographical regions and technical characteristics of these missile defense systems create the foundations for additional dangers, especially considering the current and future levels of high-precision armament of the United States," he said.

"Our experts say other targets, which could require serious missile defense against it, do not really exist," he said.

Patrushev said the creation of the Euro-missile defense, which is taking place without Russia's agreement and will lead to a degradation of Russia's nuclear deterrent, could lead to a disbalance in strategic stability at the regional and global levels.

"The refusal to discuss the conditions for providing legal binding guarantees for the deployment system to be not aimed at Russia strengthens our convictions that the real goal of this missile defense system could differ from what is stated," he said.

Russia's military and political leadership has already warned its western partners several times that if talks fail, Russia may take a series of measures including deployment of Iskander short-range nuclear-capable tactical ballistic missiles in the Kaliningrad exclave.

NATO denies its missile defense proposals are aimed at Russia.

"In fact, we have no desire at all to disturb global strategic stability," NATO's Deputy General Secretary Alexander Vershbow told the conference. "Quite the contrary: NATO missile defense will be capable of intercepting only a small number of relatively unsophisticated ballistic missiles. It does not have the capability to neutralize Russian deterrence."

The "Missile Defense Factor in Forming a New Security Space" conference has been organized by the Russian Defense Ministry. More than 200 military specialists and experts are taking part from over 50 nations inclduding the 28 NATO nations. As well as NATO and Russia, representatives of China, South Korea, Japan, the CIS nations and the OSCE are taking part in the conference.

Timeline of Bulava missile launches

Source: RIA Novosti

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Russia to Adopt New Liquid Heavy ICBM after 2022
Moscow (RIA Novosti) May 15 - Russia will only be able to adopt a new 100-ton liquid-propellant intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) intended to penetrate the US missile defense system by 2022, the manufacturer said on Tuesday.

Russian military mentioned the possibility of the new ICBMs in 2009 but the official decision to launch development of the new silo-based missile designed to replace the Voyevoda R-36M2 Satan ICBM was only announced late last year.

�Statistics says it will take about ten years,� said Andrei Goryaev, deputy director of the Russian missile maker NPO Mashinostroyeniya.

He said it was hard to make any forecasts about the timeframe. �If the country has not done it for 30 years then difficulties are inevitable,� he said.

Strategic Missile Forces chief Lt. Gen. Sergei Karakayev said in December that Russia�s current solid-propellant ICBMs might be unable to penetrate U.S. missile defenses that the country is deploying in Europe to protect against possible attacks from �rogue states� such as Iran and North Korea.

Russia has expressed concerns that the U.S. missile shield might threaten its national security.

Presently, Russia's Strategic Missile Forces reportedly have over 400 ICBMs, including 171 Topol (SS-25), 70 Topol-M (SS-27), and three RS-24 Yars missiles.



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NUKEWARS
Russian Navy to launch one Bulava missile in 2012
Moscow, Russia (Voice of Russia) May 10, 2012
The first Borei class nuclear sub, the Alexander Nevsky, is to conduct a test launch of the Bulava ballistic missile in 2012, a representative of Russia's Naval Staff Chief said. According to some previous media reports, the Alexander Nevsky was to launch several Bulava rockets this year. However the source dismissed these allegations saying there will be just one launch. The militar ... read more


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