3 August 2006
Russian Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Hits Target on Kamchatka Peninsula
MosNews


http://www.mosnews.com/news/2006/08/03/missiletest.shtml


Kamchatka / Photo from MosNews Archive
Kamchatka / Photo from MosNews Archive

Russia has successfully test launched an intercontinental ballistic missile from its northern space-vehicle launching site, Plesetsk.

The intercontinental Topol class ballistic missile (CC-25 under Western standards) was launched on Thursday at 1:38 p.m. Moscow time from a mobile launching installation, sources from the northern cosmodrome told ITAR-TASS news agency.

The aim of the test was to assure that the exploitation period of the missile could be extended, a Russian space forces’ press-service representative told Regions.ru online daily.

The flight of the missile was strictly controlled by Russian space force devices. The launch and the flight of Topol have met all necessary standards. At the scheduled time the missile hit its target situated on the exercise polygon on the Kamchtaka Peninsula.

The RT-2PM Topol is a mobile intercontinental ballistic missile designed in the Soviet Union in 1970 and is still used in Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces. The first tests of the missile were conducted in 1981. Full deployment of 360 missiles was achieved in 1996, and as of 2005, 300 remain on duty. Ballistic missiles are typically designed for nuclear weapons delivery.

The Topol is a road mobile 3-stage, single warhead missile. It is 29.5 meters in length and 1.7 meters in diameter. It weights 1000 kg and can deliver a single warhead over a range of 10,500 km with an accuracy (CEP) of 900m, according to Russian sources. Its road mobile capability gave the Topol an extremely high rate of survivability. It can fire from field deployment sites or through sliding roof garage bases.

More than 500 intercontinental ballistic missiles, including 80 Topols, have been launched from the cosmodrome Plesetsk since it has been in operation.

More than 1550 carrier rockets have been launched, 60 types of spacecrafts tested, and over 38 percent of the worlds’ spacecraft put into the orbit from the Plesetsk cosmodrom. No other launching site has so rich a history.

 


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