Login

 

Forgot password?
submarines shipbuilding Black Sea Fleet exercise Pacific Fleet Russian Navy Northern Fleet strategy cooperation Ukraine visits Russia piracy missiles trials Sevastopol history Sevmash presence contracts drills Baltic Fleet industry incident anti-piracy shipyards Gulf of Aden frigate training Somalia India developments reforms opinion Borei policy procurements Russia - India aircraft carrier Crimea arms exports USA St. Petersburg tests France financing Bulava Yury Dolgoruky US Navy Serdiukov cruise Mediterranean Zvezdochka NATO innovations United Shipbuilding Corporation Indian Navy Medvedev Arctic agreements commission Admiralteyskie Verfi Admiral Gorshkov Vladivostok Mistral accident hijacking corvettes overhaul anniversary Russia - France Admiral Kuznetsov Rosoboronexport Vysotsky event ceremony Yantar Severomorsk defense order negotiations conflict aircraft China deployment naval aviation Black Sea Putin investigations Varyag coast guard Vikramaditya Novorossiysk landing craft Far East crime marines Severnaya Verf meeting scandals memorials traditions Syria statistics Japan escort South Korea Neustrashimy Yasen tenders convoys Marshal Shaposhnikov Admiral Chabanenko Ukrainian Navy Chirkov problems Severodvinsk reinforcement tension firings tragedy technology search and rescue Moskva provocation frontier service Baltic Sea Almaz upgrade hostages Caspian Flotilla court keel laying Dmitry Donskoy rumors Turkey shipwreck Petr Veliky helicopters Kilo class death Admiral Panteleyev Atalanta Kaliningrad World War II Norway Rubin Admiral Vinogradov patrols Russia-Norway delivery
Search
Our friends russian navy weapons world sailing ships
 
Tell a friend Print version

Ballistic missile test from the White Sea

11/26/2008 
Russia will test fire another Bulava sea-based intercontinental ballistic missile before the end of November, a source at the Belomorsk Naval Base told the RIA Novosti press agency.

The missile will be fired from the White Sea to the Kura firing ground at the Kamchatka peninsulathe by the Typhoon class nuclear submarine Dmitry Donskoy, which has already conducted several successful test fires with this type of missile.

The Bulava is designed for deployment on the new Borey-class nuclear-powered submarines. The first submarine in the series, Yury Dolgoruky was built at the Sevmash plant in Arkhangelsk and is currently undergoing sea trials. It will be equipped with 16 Bulava ballistic missiles, each carrying up to 10 nuclear warheads and having a range of 8,000 kilometers. Two other Borey-class nuclear submarines, the Alexander Nevsky and the Vladimir Monomakh, are currently under construction at the Sevmash plant.

Fourth-generation Borey-class nuclear-powered submarines armed with Bulava missiles will form the core of Russia's fleet of modern strategic submarines. Russia plans to build at least seven $890-million submarines of this class by 2015.

Source: www.barentsobserver.com

Back to the news list