Townsville Bulletin

Russians to deploy ‘lightning’ missiles

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The Russian navy will soon receive hypersonic missiles that will allow it to strike at enemies with “lighting speed”, President Vladimir Putin, has warned.

Speaking on Russia’s annual Navy Day, Mr Putin hailed the developmen­t of the Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles that the Kremlin says can travel at nine times the speed of sound.

“The key thing here is the capability of the Russian navy. It is able to respond with lightning speed to all those who decide to infringe on our sovereignt­y and freedom,” Mr Putin said in a speech during a naval parade along the Neva River in St Petersburg.

The Kremlin says the missiles, which Russia has been developing for a number of years, can reach a speed of 9880km/h with a range of up to 965km. They can be fitted with convention­al or nuclear warheads.

Mr Putin ( p i c t u r e d ) boasted that they can evade

any missile defence systems in the world.

“They have no equivalent,” he said.

His comments came after he signed a new naval doctrine that portrayed the US as the biggest threat to Moscow and vowed to turn Russia into a “great maritime power”.

Although Mr Putin did not mention Ukraine during his speech, the document called for a “comprehens­ive strengthen­ing of Russia’s geopolitic­al position” in the Black and Azov seas.

In contrast to the pomp in St Petersburg, Russia was forced to call off its Navy Day celebratio­ns in Kremlin-occupied Crimea after a suspected Ukrainian drone attacked the headquarte­rs of its Black Sea fleet. Five naval personnel were injured, officials said. The Russian-installed governor of Sevastopol, Crimea’s biggest city, accused Ukrainian forces of seeking to “spoil” Navy Day.

Ukraine denied responsibi­lity for the attack. “Our liberation of Crimea from the occupiers will be carried out in another way and much more effectivel­y,” a spokesman said.

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