Taranaki Daily News

Russia ‘tried and failed’ to test nuclear torpedo

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Russia probably tried and failed to test a new nuclear-powered torpedo from one of its submarines in recent weeks, according to a senior US source.

Several Russian naval vessels – including the Belgorod, a cruise missile submarine – were recently seen leaving testing areas in the Arctic and heading back to base without conducting any exercises, the official told CNN yesterday.

Washington reportedly believes that the vessel may have run into technical problems. The US official, who remains nameless, said Moscow now has a limited window for operations to test the torpedo, as the waters in the area will soon begin to freeze.

‘‘This can be seen as part of the bigger picture and Russia’s recent military practice, sending ill-trained and under-equipped troops to Ukraine,’’ an unnamed Western diplomat told CNN.

The Belgorod, one of Russia’s most modern vessels and the longest submarine in the ocean right now, is equipped to carry the state-of-the-art Poseidon torpedo, a nuclear-powered underwater drone that can carry both convention­al and nuclear munitions.

Western government­s have been alarmed by recent veiled threats by Vladimir Putin and other Russian officials indicating Moscow could resort to nuclear weapons if it faces an ‘‘existentia­l threat’’.

The Russian president, however, insisted as recently as last month that he has no need for using nuclear weapons as ‘‘there is no point in that, either political or military’’.

Western officials have said they do not see an immediate nuclear threat from Russia, as their intelligen­ce communitie­s have not detected any signs of its military gearing up for a nuclear strike.

Putin first revealed the developmen­t of the Poseidon during a state of the nation address in 2018, calling it a ‘‘unique’’ weapon.

One of Russia’s most notorious television propagandi­sts this (northern) spring warned that Russia could wipe Britain off the map with a nuclear tsunami caused by a Poseidon strike that can set off a 500-metre tidal wave of radioactiv­e seawater.

Earlier this week, the White House said the US and Russia had agreed to hold new talks to extend a nuclear weapons treaty for the first time since the invasion of Ukraine.

The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, the only remaining document limiting the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals, was extended by five years during the first weeks of Joe Biden’s US presidency in 2021, but it is due to expire in 2026.

The treaty allows both countries to send in their inspectors to the countries’ nuclear weaponsrel­ated facilities. The inspection­s under the previous treaty were suspended in 2020 due to the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic and have not resumed, something that the parties are expected to discuss as well.

Earlier this week US State Department spokespers­on Ned Price said officials from the two countries would meet ‘‘in the near future’’ for confidenti­al discussion­s.

Concerns about a nuclear accident first surfaced in the spring, when Russian shelled the area around Ukraine’s Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant and then seized it.

The internatio­nal community has pleaded with Putin to remove troops and weapons from the site but he defended the decision by voicing security concerns for his troops.

Yesterday, the UN’s nuclear watchdog, which has repeatedly called on Russia to relinquish control over the plant, lamented that efforts to get Moscow and Kyiv to establish a security perimeter around the plant were ‘‘very complicate­d’’.

Rafael Grossi, the head of the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, began shuttle diplomacy last month, travelling between Moscow and Kyiv in search of a solution.

‘‘It’s taking awfully long and I’m first to be impatient but I cannot afford to lose patience,’’ Grossi told AFP yesterday. ‘‘I’m trying to bring these two countries to accept the concept of protecting this nuclear power plant.’’

Grossi, along with other officials, has warned that shelling around the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power station and the presence of troops and weapons on the grounds could lead to a nuclear disaster at Europe’s largest nuclear plant.

 ?? ?? The Belgorod, a cruise missile submarine, was recently seen leaving testing areas in the Arctic and heading back to base.
The Belgorod, a cruise missile submarine, was recently seen leaving testing areas in the Arctic and heading back to base.

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