Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Envoy

    Moscow, eyeing U.S. missile defense plans, announces work on 100-ton “monster” missile

    Russia's Defense Ministry said it tested a missile defense interceptor in Kazakhstan Monday. (Yahoo News still/Russian …

    During campaign season, it never hurts for a presidential candidate facing a frustrated public to display toughness and resolve in the face of an old and familiar adversary. And it also doesn't hurt to throw in some shock-and-awe--say, a ballistic missile nicknamed "Satan."

    This appears to at least partly explain why on Monday Russia announced that it had successfully tested a short-range interceptor missile; part of its ongoing effort to develop a domestic missile defense system, according to Russia's RIA News Agency. (The Russian Defense Ministry has provided a video of the missile's launch on its website.) Russia also announced it is working on the development of a 100-ton ballistic missile slated for release in 2015, Pravda reports. Russia recently held contested parliamentary polls and is due to hold presidential elections in March. Russia watchers note the political backdrop to the announced plans and their part in the wider narrative agenda: resurgent Russia's determined opposition to American missile defense plans in Eastern Europe.

    "In connection with the plans of the United States to develop the air defense system in Europe, in close vicinity to Russia's borders, and because of the unwillingness of the U.S.  side to provide any guarantees, the Russian Federation continues to take measures to preserve parity in the field," Pravda reports.

    "Russia does not stand against the U.S. missile defense system," Sergei Karakaev, the Russian Defense Ministry commander of the missile troops, was cited by the paper. "Russia stands against the creation of the missile defense system, which would be directly aimed against Russia to potentially reduce the possibilities of the Russian nuclear containment forces."

    The field tests come a month after Russia's outgoing president Dmitry Medvedev declared that he was walking away in protest from U.S.-Russian missile defense negotiations. "The United States is unwilling to provide a written guarantee that the system would not be used against Russian nuclear forces," the Union of Concerned Scientists' Elliot Negin wrote at the Huffington Post Monday. "[Medvedev] warned that, if the United States carries out its plans to build it without such an assurance, Russia would site missiles in its westernmost Kaliningrad region and consider walking away from the New START agreement." (The strategic arms reduction treaty, signed last year, calls for the United States and Russia to reduce their stockpiles of nuclear arms by a third over the next seven years.)

    Medvedev's throwing down the gauntlet on missile defense talks with the West also played to a delicate moment in Russian domestic politics, analysts say.

    Medvedev has served since 2008 as the Kremlin-approved placeholder for Russian president Vladimir Putin after the latter served two terms as president and moved over to serve a term as prime minister. However, Putin, a former KGB colonel, announced in September his plans to run for president again in March.

    But things haven't gone as smoothly as Putin planned. Putin's United Russia party barely claimed a majority in contested Russian parliamentary polls held Dec. 5 that many Russians and international observers believed were rigged. Protests ensued, with another major demonstration scheduled for Dec. 24.

    "Putin typically has consolidated his power by pursuing campaigns against nefarious foes -- Chechen extremists, Russian oligarchs, and now the West," Anya Schmemann, a Russia watcher at the Council on Foreign Relations, told Yahoo News Tuesday. "This is a time-tested tactic in Russia.  The Russian government's threat in November to target missile defense sites fits into this category--blustery talk for a domestic audience.  However, the Russian public has become more savvy in recent years and Putin's effort to blame the United States and Clinton for supporting the protests and criticizing the elections was mocked in the streets."

    "Russia's military establishment is concerned about losing parity with the United States on the number of deployed strategic nuclear warheads that it maintains," the Ploughshare Fund's Joel Rubin told Yahoo News Tuesday. "By developing a new heavy missile, a perverse outcome is taking place, where Russia is attempting to not fall further beneath New START levels in order to satisfy the concerns of its military establishment."

    Of course, tough-guy posturing on the well-worn grooves of the Cold War axis is not unique to Moscow. On Saturday, President Obama's nominated envoy to Moscow, Michael McFaul, was finally confirmed after Republican Senator Mark Kirk of Illinois lifted a weeks-long hold on the nominee.

    "Kirk lifted his objections after the White House wrote him a letter assuring him that it will 'not provide Russia with sensitive information about our missile defense systems that would in any way compromise our national security,'" Agence-France Press reported. "Specifically the White House told Kirk that 'under no circumstances' would the United States provide hit-to-kill technology and interceptor telemetry to Russia."

    Other popular Yahoo! News stories:

    Want more of our best national security stories? Visit The Envoy or connect with us on Facebook and on Twitter.

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • William  •  4 months ago
      Why are we spending our money to build a missile defense system for Europe? Aren't we already broke enough? let Europe build itself a defense system if they want it. can somebody explain this to me?
      • Taylor 4 months ago
        Glad to explain. Russia is in close proximity to Europe. It is in our best interest to put a missile defense shield in Europe because first, that is the closest place we can place our missile defense shield, second, any missile fired from Russia would be intercepted within minutes from this missile defense shield effectively neutralizing any chance Russia has of launching a nuclear attack on ANYBODY. This missile defense shield could in fact also be used to intercept missiles that are intended to intercept USA's nuclear weapons, therefore giving us the upper hand if it came down to nuclear war. Mind you nobody wants that to happen, but I would wayy rather be on the winning side. Just sayin'
      • Marx Sux 4 months ago
        better to be broke than dead.
      • Gevork 3 months ago
        Exactly. So all this talk about it being against Iran and North Korea is pure #$%$It's against Russia, and the Russians know it.All this does is push the arms race forward, and potentially disbalance MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction).Because if Americans think they got the upper hand, they'll try something.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Southgate, United States  •  4 months ago
      The Tsar Bomba gravity bomb in 1961 was a 100 megaton yield design but was scaled down to 58 megaton because they couldn't ensure the safety of the airplane pilots. They couldn't get far enough away.
    • William  •  Lemont, United States  •  4 months ago
      "Kirk lifted his objection after the White House assured him that it will not provide Russia with sensitive information about our missile defense system" in other words,the White House will not act as a spy? For Russia? I can't beleive what I am reading.
    • St. Sassypants  •  4 months ago
      Nuclear bombs will destroy the ozone layer, killing everyone. See Wired magazine, "How One Nuclear Skirmish Could Wreck the Planet," By Dave Mosher, February 25, 2011
    • John B  •  Washington, United States  •  5 months ago
      Ever get the feeling that all the world’s leaders are nuts?
      They act like children; may be every nation should have their people take all the leaders, spank them good and send them to be without supper!
      Then ground them for a month and don't allow them to play with any toys.
      • Manne 5 months ago
        ...how about just grind them up and feed them to the pigs....
      • Deja Vu 5 months ago
        Russia needs a 'Time Out'.
      • Fish Hook 5 months ago
        No, they are NOT NUTS !!!!
        Their Nuts are lose !!!!!
    • MVEMNT  •  Phoenix, United States  •  5 months ago
      "I do not know with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones" -Albert Einstein
      • Billy Wolf 5 months ago
        So true
      • Al 5 months ago
        Wow, never heard that one before. You sound smart!
      • Willow™ 5 months ago
        Wow, a video game taught you that. Fail.
    • Tim  •  Bakersfield, United States  •  5 months ago
      I don't care who has them, when they start flying we are all done.
      • Bri Adams 5 months ago
        that would be idiotic to send them out. Its just to show strength and scare america into going into debt with them and china
      • Jon 5 months ago
        More Russian junk.
      • SaiNt 5 months ago
        Yeah the world would end faster than someone being able to finish their bathroom break.
    • tri-stater  •  5 months ago
      no wonder governments are looking for new life sustaining planets;;;;they are going to blow this planet up
      • ray 5 months ago
        right
      • EVILONE 5 months ago
        They'll corrupt those planets too. Man is a virus.
      • C. 5 months ago
        Evilone - Yeah right!
    • Barney the Purple Dinosau ...  •  5 months ago
      The SS-18 "Satan" was first built in the early 1970's (and spec'd in 1969). The author references that OLD missile design for shock value because of the name.

      It's underhanded or sloppy journalism.
    • Solidus Snake  •  San Antonio, United States  •  4 months ago
      Start World War 3 and get on with it already.
    • Barry  •  Reno, United States  •  5 months ago
      Lack of leadership ability and a sick paranoia seems to be what fuels top politicians these days; and of course corruption...
    • brian  •  5 months ago
      Meanwhile the U.S. is locking down the Internet, the world is taking a dangerous turn before our eyes. Very interesting, but not looking good for freedom or posterity.
    • Stealth  •  Prescott, United States  •  5 months ago
      Here's reality, if Russia or the US ever launches nuclear warheads, it won't matter, try stopping thousands of them.
    • The_Rifleman  •  5 months ago
      The Soviet SS-18 (SATAN) was deployed in the 1960's. It is a land based ICBM that can
      deliver 10 400 kiloton warheads in under 30 minutes to the United States. Tom Clancy
      said that "only 1 warhead would turn Cheyenne mountain (NORAD) into Cheyenne lake".
      A very vicious weapon; Nicknamed (SATAN) by NATO years ago.
    • annedwards  •  5 months ago
      another cold war on the way.
    • Eric  •  5 months ago
      Can this Satan Missle carry Kim Kardashian in it or is her butt too heavy?
    • takeiteasy04  •  Dallas, United States  •  5 months ago
      Great! A 100 megaton killer of mankind! I wonder who's curing cancer?
    • G  •  5 months ago
      Oh great, it is 1984. In 2011.

      As long as there is a constant threat of war, we are all just controllable sheep.
    • Rick  •  5 months ago
      When are humans going to grow up?
    • Ryan  •  Honolulu, United States  •  5 months ago
      Russian people dont believe America to be a threat nor an enemy... I have friends in many parts of Russia.. Russia's people seem to be frustrated with its government from what they tell me. Corruption,spending,rigged elections, massive gaps in income, losses of liberties... Sound familiar ??? Kinda astounding honestly.