Russia touts new generation of 'blinding' laser weapons
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[May 18, 2022] By
Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - Russia on Wednesday
touted its new generation of laser weapons including a mobile laser
system first announced by President Vladimir Putin in 2018 which Moscow
said had advanced so far it could blind orbiting satellites and destroy
drones.
Putin in 2018 unveiled an array of new weapons including a new
intercontinental ballistic missile, a small nuclear warhead that could
be attached to cruise missiles, underwater nuclear drones, a supersonic
weapon and a laser weapon.
Little is known about what exactly the laser weapon, named Peresvet
after a medieval Orthodox warrior monk Alexander Peresvet who perished
in mortal combat, does. Putin gave few specifics in 2018 and the laser's
details are secret.
Yury Borisov, the deputy prime minister in charge of military
development, told a conference in Moscow that Peresvet was already being
widely deployed and it could blind satellites up to 1,500 km above
Earth.
He cited a test on Tuesday which he said had burned up a drone 5 km away
within five seconds. Reuters was unable to independently confirm the
test.
"It is already being mass-supplied to the (missile) troops, and it can
blind all satellite reconnaissance systems of a likely enemy in orbits
of up to 1,500 km, disabling them during flight due to the use of laser
radiation," Borisov said.
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Russia's Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Borisov attends a military
parade on Victory Day, which marks the 77th anniversary of the
victory over Nazi Germany in World War Two, in Red Square in central
Moscow, Russia May 9, 2022. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
"But that, let's say, is of today, or even in some ways of yesterday:
our physicists have now created, and practically mass-produced, laser
systems which are more powerful by an order of magnitude that can
inflict thermal destruction on various apparatus," Borisov said.
Borisov's remarks indicate that Russia has made
significant progress with Peresvet, and other yet to be unannounced
successors, a trend of considerable interest to other nuclear powers
such as the United States and China.
His remarks indicate Russia could blind the satellites and an array
of other systems which the United States uses to monitor Russia's
intercontinental ballistic missiles - or the drones used to target
artillery positions in the Ukraine war.
Borisov said he had just returned from Sarov, a closed town in the
Nizhny Novgorod region once known as Arzamas-16 because it was so
secret, which is a centre of Russia's nuclear weapons research.
"Today, so called weapons systems based on new physical principles
are on the way," Borisov said.
"This is primarily a laser weapon, an electromagnetic wideband
weapon that will replace (conventional weapons) in the next decade -
this is not some sort of exotic idea; it is the reality," Borisov
said.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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