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Russia successfully test fires anti-satellite missile system: US intelligence report

This video grab made from the footage released on Russian Defense Ministry's official web site shows a Bulava SLBM fired from the Russian nuclear submarine Yuri Dolgoruky in the White Sea, May 22, 2018. (Photo by AP)

Russia has successfully test-fired an anti-satellite missile system that is reportedly capable of disrupting US navigation and communications satellites.

Citing two people with direct knowledge of a classified US intelligence report, CNBC reported on Friday that the system, dubbed PL-19 Nudol, was put to the test twice last year.

The most recent test of the system came on December 23, when the anti-satellite missile flew for 17 minutes before successfully splashing down in its target area 1,864 miles away, CNBC wrote.

The successful launch was the seventh overall test of the system, according to one of the sources who was speaking on condition of anonymity.

The new missile system is capable of targeting communication and imagery satellites in low Earth orbit, according to another unnamed source.

Space wars

The revelation came shortly after US President Donald Trump personally unveiled the first overhaul of US missile defense doctrine in nearly a decade, which made establishing a space force as a a new branch of the US military a priority.

"Russia is developing a diverse suite of anti-satellite capabilities, including ground-launched missiles and directed-energy weapons, and continues to launch 'experimental' satellites that conduct sophisticated on-orbit activities to advance counter-space capabilities," the missile defense review stated.

The new plan called for developing space-based alarm systems to detect incoming missiles and space-based weapons that could intercept incoming threats among a series of other steps to defend the US mainland.

“Our goal is simple: To ensure we can detect and destroy any missile launched against the United States – anywhere, anytime, anyplace,” Trump said as he unveiled the review at the Pentagon..

To achieve that objective, the plan called for investments in space-based sensors that could better detect and track incoming missiles.

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Russia's foreign ministry warned that Trump's new missile strategy would unleash a dangerous arms race in space.

The Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the strategy as an “irresponsible” act which “gives the green light to the prospect of basing missile strike capabilities in space.”

This was not the first time Russia was warning the US against sparking an arms race. Moscow issued a similar warning against triggering a nuclear arms race last year, when the Trump administration said it decided to leave a landmark Cold War-era nuclear arms control treaty with Moscow.

The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF), which was signed towards the end of Cold War in 1987 by then US President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, bans developing new land-based missiles with ranges between 310 and 3,420 miles.

Trump cited Russia’s “violations” of the deal as the reason behind the plan to exit the INF.

Washington said last month it would withdraw from the treaty within 60 days if Moscow did not dismantle missiles that the US claims breach the deal.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in December that his country could easily develop and deploy land-based intermediate-range missiles if the United States proceeds with Trump's threats withdraw from the treaty.


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