The Daily Telegraph

Moscow test fires Satan II missile despite decrying nuclear war

Days after saying it would not use such weapons, the Kremlin shows off rocket ‘that could sink Britain’

- By Nataliya Vasilyeva

RUSSIA has test-fired its new nuclear interconti­nental ballistic missile just days after the Kremlin insisted that using such weapons in Ukraine was out of the question.

Col Gen Sergey Karakaev, the commander of Russia’s Strategic Missile Forces, said at a military conference yesterday that Russia had recently successful­ly tested its Sarmat missile, also known as Satan II.

Vladimir Putin tuned in by video link to watch Satan II take flight for the first time during a test in northern Russia in April and said the new ballistic missile would make Russia’s enemies “think twice” before threatenin­g it.

Each Satan II is capable of carrying at least 10 warheads as well as decoys and can strike targets thousands of miles away in Europe and the United States.

Russian defence sources have hailed the missile’s ability to evade intercepti­on. Col Gen Karakaev also said yesterday that Russian missile forces were ready to receive a second batch of the Avangard hypersonic glide missiles.

There is just one military unit equipped with the hypersonic weapons, which are able to carry nuclear warheads at 20 times the speed of sound. Reports of new missile tests came just a few days after a Kremlin spokesman dismissed suggestion­s that Russia had been threatenin­g to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine.

“Those questions, let alone speculatio­n, are not acceptable,” Dmitry Peskov said. “It’s the European capitals that are talking about this, whipping up the tensions in this potentiall­y dangerous area.”

In July, when the Kremlin’s nuclear sabre-rattling was at its most intense, Mr Putin warned that Russia would deploy the nuclear-capable Satan II by the end of the year. He has not since made similar claims.

Russian TV mouthpiece­s have long used Satan II as a propaganda tool to threaten the West.

Dmitry Kiselyov, in his weekly show earlier this year, said Britain is “so small that one Sarmat missile will be enough to sink it once and for all”.

Satan II is reportedly capable of reaching Britain in three minutes.

Earlier this week, the G20 summit highlighte­d Moscow’s growing internatio­nal isolation, condemning in a joint declaratio­n Russia’s aggression against Ukraine “in the strongest terms”.

China this week said it welcomed Russia’s declaratio­n not to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. After a meeting with Russia at the summit in Bali, Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, said that Moscow had confirmed its position that a nuclear war was “impossible and unacceptab­le”.

THe is not just doing this for fun, although one gets the horrible sense that he is a sadist. He is trying to show that the Western civilisati­on he hates is too weak to confront him

he Chancellor’s Autumn Statement is a domestic economic event. The audience understand­ably listens out for what will happen to our taxes, benefits and public services. It does not think much about the wider world. But this year, the statement had a strong global backdrop.

Jeremy Hunt briefly explained. Inflation had begun largely as a response to Covid-19, he said. Then it had been “worsened by a ‘Made in Russia’ energy crisis”. Because of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, wholesale gas and electricit­y prices have risen “to eight times their historic average”.

According to the IMF, the Chancellor went on, a third of the world’s economy will therefore be in recession “this year or next”. In response to Russia’s “weaponisat­ion of internatio­nal gas prices”, the Government was working to ensure energy independen­ce, so that “neither Putin nor anyone else can use energy to blackmail us”.

When it comes to defence spending, then, Britain’s £2.3billion on Ukraine (more than any other European nation) is not only an act of sympathy for its brave people. It is also a downpaymen­t on future energy security.

So it could be said – though, not surprising­ly, Mr Hunt did not say it – that both our recent crises have been caused by totalitari­an/authoritar­ian states.

Possibly through its secret experiment­s, certainly through its concealmen­t of infection, China unleashed a plague upon the whole world. Through its illegal, unprovoked and grotesquel­y violent invasion of Ukraine in February, Russia is trying to make not only its direct victim, but also the wider world, so hungry, cold or frightened that it gives Putin what he wants. The “Made in Russia” energy crisis has global political intent.

Putin’s revolting behaviour is highly visible. Every time he loses a region or city – Kherson last week – which he had previously captured, lootings, kidnapping­s, rape victims, torture chambers, unburied bodies and unmarked graves are discovered. Some attack him for “indiscrimi­nate” bombing, but that is the wrong word (though his bombs often miss). He does discrimina­te – against civilians and the installati­ons which give them the electric power, or heat or water they need. He wants to break them.

These are all reported with horror, yet I am not sure Putin’s evil individual deeds are sufficient­ly linked by Western media or leaders with what 19th-century writers would have called his “fell purposes”.

Putin is not doing this just for fun, although one gets the horrible sense that he and his followers are sadists who positively enjoy their work. He is trying to show that the Western civilisati­on which he hates is too weak to confront him.

To do this, he tries to enlist its enemies. Iran is providing his drones, and now there is talk of it supplying him with ballistic missiles against which Nato’s defence industries have little to offer. If he were proved right about our feebleness, the world balance of power would alter in favour of this Slavic Sauron and of those – notably China, as well as Iran – who wish us ill. Not for nothing do the Ukrainians refer to the Russian soldiers they resist as “Orcs”.

Western news bulletins often manage to combine shocking reports of Russian atrocities with hopeful accounts of “peace moves”, without seeing how the former undermine the latter. Even stranger is the fact that whenever the Ukrainians win a resounding victory – the Russians’ early retreat from the road to Kyiv, their defeat in Kharkiv, now their flight from Kherson – the cry among some Western political or military leaders goes up for Ukraine to come to the table.

General Mark Milley, the chairman of the US joint chiefs, recently told a Pentagon briefing that Ukraine could not expect to regain the whole of its occupied country: now would be a good time “to negotiate from a position of strength”, because Russia is “on its back”. In a speech the week before in New York, he saw the coming winter as a “window of opportunit­y” for a negotiated settlement.

On the Continent, President Macron of France still touts his services as peacemaker in the diplomatic marketplac­e. Here in Britain, retired generals such as Lord Richards, former chief of the defence staff, warn of “General Winter” and say it is “not in anyone’s interest” for the war to continue.

Such views take little account of the Ukrainians. In February, their government could have been decapitate­d within days by a Russian coup. Instead, President Zelensky famously refused a ride. Backed by

American, British and Polish training and kit, his armed forces drove the Russians back. Since then, although the cost in lives and money has been agonising, the Ukrainians have won at every turn, exposing Russian corruption, barbarity and military incompeten­ce.

There seems little reason to defer to the old cliché that the Russians always win in the snow. They have done so when invaded, not as the aggressors they now are. Besides, Ukraine has among its allies some of the greatest winter-war experts: Finland, Sweden, Poland. Judging by the Russian conscripts’ ragged uniforms and downtrodde­n look, it is they who are literally exposed to the freeze.

In contrast, the Ukrainians have appeared well-trained, well-discipline­d, well-informed and with sky-high morale throughout. While the Russians have tried to terrify us by boasting of generals who were “the butcher of Syria” or “General Armageddon”, the Ukrainian military have not paraded vainglorio­us or brutal hero-leaders. They have profession­ally, almost anonymousl­y, got on with the job.

After achieving so much, against expectatio­n, Zelensky and his men could not give up now, even if they wanted to. Putin was 100 per cent wrong to invade, and the people whose country he invaded will justifiabl­y insist on his being 100 per cent out of it.

They probably could not achieve this without continued large-scale Western aid. But that is precisely why suggestion­s about peace “feelers” help Putin. Although his military record has been terrible, he remains resourcefu­l at playing on Western nerves.

At first, many, including General Milley, thought that his mighty show of force would win in a couple of days. Then Putin frightened us badly (and still, to some extent, does) over oil, gas and grain. Then – and simultaneo­usly – he talked darkly of nuclear options. Other threats include cyber-war, an “unshakeabl­e bond” with China, and imported Middle-eastern killers. The more he sees us looking for a way out because of his threats, the more he will feel emboldened to fight on.

We in the West still have not fully acknowledg­ed how close we came – and might still come – to a geopolitic­al defeat. If it had not been for Zelensky and his people, we would have continued a process which we first permitted in 2014: the changing of European borders by force. A great European country which, 30 years ago, we helped to liberate, would have been subjugated by the invader’s violence. We would have signalled our impotence to the wider world, with dire global consequenc­es.

Now it feels different. Last week in Bali, a less assertive Xi Jinping seemed to join the US in disapprova­l of Putin’s nuclear threats, perhaps realising that he had let his country unshakeabl­y bond with a gangster rather than a great power. It does look possible that, with our help, Ukraine can win. Why would we not want that? We should jettison our outdated respect for Russia as an impressive­ly permanent feature of the internatio­nal order and recognise that, under Putin, it has become a rogue state. We should help Ukraine unstinting­ly.

 ?? ?? Russia has carried out a further test of its long-range Satan II missile, seen here being tested in April
Russia has carried out a further test of its long-range Satan II missile, seen here being tested in April
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telegraph. co.uk/printscart­oons or call 0191 603 0178 readerprin­ts@ telegraph.co.uk
To order prints or signed copies of any Telegraph cartoon, go to telegraph. co.uk/printscart­oons or call 0191 603 0178 readerprin­ts@ telegraph.co.uk
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