US warns Russia may be ready to use new lethal missile against Ukraine
again in 'coming days'
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[December 12, 2024]
By AAMER MADHANI and LOLITA C. BALDOR and TARA COPP
WASHINGTON (AP) — Russia could launch its lethal new intermediate-range
ballistic missile against Ukraine again soon, the Pentagon said
Wednesday, as both sides wrestle for a battlefield advantage that will
give them leverage in any negotiations to end the nearly 3-year war.
Sabrina Singh, Pentagon spokeswoman, told reporters in a briefing that
an attack could be carried out “in the coming days.” She added that the
U.S. does not consider this missile — called the Oreshnik — a game
changer on the battlefield, but that the Russians are “trying to use
every weapon that they have in their arsenal to intimidate Ukraine.”
She said the U.S. is basing its warning on a new intelligence
assessment, but she couldn't provide any other details, including where
Russia may strike.
U.S. officials said earlier Wednesday that the U.S. was seeing the
Russians make preparations for another launch of the missile, which was
used for the first time last month. The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity to discuss the sensitive information.
The threat comes as President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to end the
war and Western allies suggest that negotiations to do so could begin
this winter.
Singh said the U.S. will continue to support Ukraine, including with
additional air defense systems designed to protect the country against
air assaults. Just days ago, the U.S. promised close to $1 billion in
new security aid to Ukraine, including munitions for air defense.
The Russian Defense Ministry also suggested that Moscow is prepared to
retaliate because Ukraine used six U.S.-made ATACMS missiles to strike a
military air base in Taganrog in the southern Rostov region on
Wednesday, injuring soldiers. It said two of the missiles were shot down
by an air defense system and four others deflected by electronic warfare
assets.
“This attack with Western long-range weapons will not be left unanswered
and relevant measures will be taken,” the ministry said in a statement.
This isn't the first time that U.S. officials have warned of potential
Russian action or strategic moves, in part as a diplomatic effort to
message Moscow and possibly sway decisions.
In the run-up to Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, the U.S.
openly discussed intelligence that Russia was readying troops to move on
Kyiv. And later publicly said Moscow was positioning operatives in
eastern Ukraine to conduct a “false-flag operation” that would create a
pretext for its troops to invade.
According to the U.S. officials, Russia has only a handful of the
Oreshnik missiles and they carry a smaller warhead than other missiles
that Russia has regularly launched at Ukraine.
Russia first fired the missile in a Nov. 21 attack against the Ukrainian
city of Dnipro. Surveillance camera video of the strike showed huge
fireballs piercing the darkness and slamming into the ground at
astonishing speed. It was the first time the weapon was used in combat.
Within hours of the attack on the military facility, Russian President
Vladimir Putin took the rare step of speaking on national TV to boast
about the new, hypersonic missile. He warned the West that its next use
could be against Ukraine’s NATO allies who allowed Kyiv to use their
longer-range missiles to strike inside Russia.
The attack came two days after Putin signed a revised version of
Russia’s nuclear doctrine that lowered the threshold for using nuclear
weapons. The doctrine allows for a potential nuclear response by Moscow
even to a conventional attack on Russia by any nation that is supported
by a nuclear power.
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Journalists at a center for forensic analysis in undisclosed
location in Ukraine on Nov. 24, 2024, film fragments of what
authorities in Kyiv described as a Russian hypersonic missile that
struck a factory in Dnipro, Ukraine, on Nov. 21. (AP Photo/Evgeniy
Maloletka, File)
That strike also came soon after President Joe Biden agreed to
loosen restrictions on Ukraine’s use of American-made longer-range
weapons to strike deeper into Russian territory, and just one day
after the U.S. said it was giving Ukraine antipersonnel mines to
help it slow Russia’s battlefield advances.
“We believe that we have the right to use our weapons against
military facilities of the countries that allow to use their weapons
against our facilities,” Putin said at the time.
He also warned that the new missile could be used against other
Ukrainian sites, including the government district in Kyiv, and last
month said the General Staff of the Russian military was selecting
possible future targets, such as military facilities, defense plants
or decision-making centers in Kyiv.
The Russian president declared that, “while selecting targets for
strikes with such systems as Oreshnik on the territory of Ukraine,
we will ask civilians and nationals of friendly countries there to
leave dangerous zones in advance.”
Putin has hailed Oreshnik’s capability, saying its multiple warheads
that plunge to a target at Mach 10 are immune from interception and
are so powerful that the use of several of them in one conventional
strike could be as devastating as a nuclear attack.
Speaking Tuesday, Putin charged that “a sufficient number of these
advanced weapon systems simply makes the use of nuclear weapons
almost unnecessary.”
The Pentagon said the Oreshnik was an experimental type of
intermediate-range ballistic missile, or IRBM, based on Russia’s
RS-26 Rubezh intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM. They have
said it is not technically a hypersonic missile as it does not have
a hypersonic glide vehicle that propels the missile for most of the
launch and re-entry.
Intermediate-range missiles can fly between 500 to 5,500 kilometers
(310 to 3,400 miles). Such weapons were banned under a Soviet-era
treaty that Washington and Moscow abandoned in 2019.
Fighting has escalated in the grinding war as both Russia and
Ukraine scramble to get an upper hand in any coming negotiations.
Trump's inauguration next month has also raised questions about how
much support the U.S. will continue to provide to Kyiv.
Trump has insisted in recent days that Russia and Ukraine
immediately reach a ceasefire and said Ukraine should likely prepare
to receive less U.S. military aid. Writing on social media last
weekend, Trump said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy “would
like to make a deal and stop the madness.”
The Biden administration, meanwhile, announced a $988 million
long-term aid package last weekend. That funding is on top of an
additional $725 million in U.S. military assistance, including
counter-drone systems and HIMARS munitions, announced early last
week that would be drawn from the Pentagon’s stockpiles to get them
to the front lines more quickly. The U.S. has provided Ukraine with
more than $62 billion in military aid since Russia’s invasion in
February 2022.
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