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WATCH: Russia Tests New Anti-Missile System

Responding to NATO’s muscle flexing in Eastern Europe and the Baltics, which Moscow sees as a threat, Russia is upgrading its missile defenses with new and more accurate interceptors.
Sputnik

The Russian military has successfully tested a new interceptor missile of for its A-135 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) system at a testing range in in Kazakhstan.

A video posted by the defense ministry on its website shows the moment the missile is fired from the Sary-Shagtan range on the Kazakh steppe.

Deputy Commander of the Aerospace Forces’ air and missile defense task force, Colonel Andrei Prikhodko, said that the technical characteristics of the new interceptor missile by far exceed those of its present-day counterparts.

He added that the missile is capable of intercepting single and multiple strikes, including new generation ICBMs.

Missile Defense System

Space Power: Russian Anti-Missile Warning System Protects on Multiple Tiers
The new interceptor missiles will be added to the A-135 anti-ballistic missile system operated by the Russian Aerospace Forces and deployed around Moscow to protect the Russian capital and its environs against enemy missile strikes.

It is also part of an existing system of early missile warning and space control.

Initial testing of the A-135 ABM system began in 1979. The system consists of the Don-2N radar in Sofrino, outside Moscow, the 5K80 command center in Pushkino and several batteries of 53Tb short-range interceptor missiles.

READ MORE: Russian Missile Defense to Track US-Led Coalition Aircraft in Syria — MoD

The A-135 system became fully operational in 1995.

Initial tests of the new, A-235, missile defense system, began in 2014.

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