Putin fires ICBMs in Russian military drills

Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, walks in a hall during a meeting with senior military officers in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Oct. 26, 2017.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, walks in a hall during a meeting with senior military officers in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, Oct. 26, 2017.

MOSCOW -- President Vladimir Putin has taken part in major military drills of Russian nuclear forces and personally directed the test-firing of four intercontinental ballistic missiles as part of the exercises, the Kremlin said Friday.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the drills Thursday involved all elements of the military's nuclear triad -- nuclear submarines, strategic bombers and a land-based launcher. He added that the exercises were routine and not directly linked to any international developments.

Still, the president's direct involvement in overseeing intercontinental ballistic missile launches is an event that has been rarely reported by the Kremlin in the past.

"The commander in chief conducted the launch of four intercontinental ballistic missiles," Peskov said in a conference call with reporters.

Peskov wouldn't elaborate on what specific part Putin played in the war games, saying that the president took "the necessary moves in line with the standard procedure for relevant situations as the commander in chief."

The Russian Defense Ministry said that in Thursday's drills, a Topol ICBM fired from the Plesetsk launchpad in northwestern Russia hit a designated target on the Kura firing range on the Kamchatka Peninsula in the far east.

A nuclear submarine in the Barents Sea also launched an ICBM at the same Kura range, while another nuclear submarine in the Sea of Okhotsk fired two ICBMs in the opposite direction, hitting targets at the Chizha firing range in the Arkhangelsk region in Russia's northwest.

As part of the maneuvers, the Tu-160, the Tu-95 and the Tu-22 bomber launched cruise missiles at mock targets at firing ranges on Kamchatka, the Komi region in the far North and in Russia's ex-Soviet neighbor Kazakhstan.

The maneuvers are the latest in a steady series of war games intended to strengthen the troops' readiness amid tensions with the West.

In September, the Zapad, or West, 2017 drills held jointly by Russia and Belarus worried some NATO members, who have criticized what they have described as a lack of transparency and questioned Moscow's intentions. Russia has rejected the criticism.

Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said at a meeting with top brass Friday that the military will continue to strengthen its forces in western Russia in response to a NATO buildup in Poland and the Baltics.

"The military-political situation at our western frontier remains tense and is set to exacerbate," he said.

A Section on 10/28/2017

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