Friday, March 6, 2026
  • About us
    • Write for us
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms of use
    • Privacy Policy
  • RSS Feeds
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us
DefenceTalk
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports
No Result
View All Result
DefenceTalk
No Result
View All Result
Home Defence & Military News Defense Geopolitics News

Military rot spreads to Russia's nuclear forces

by Editor
February 19, 2004
in Defense Geopolitics News
3 min read
0
14
VIEWS

AFP, MOSCOW: Moscow's latest bid to flaunt its military might backfired dramatically when three failed ballistic missile tests revealed that even Russia's final line of defense — a fearsome nuclear arsenal — was not immune from the rot eroding the post-Soviet military.

Russia this week staged its biggest war games in 20 years aimed primarily at demonstrating that its powerful nuclear force could penetrate a missile defense shield being built by the United States.

Their launch only a month before Vladimir Putin's expected re-election on March 14 were also due help the president's tough guy image that has played so well among voters traumatized by Russia's loss of international prestige.

But little went according to plan in the Arctic waters this week.

Putin went out to sea in a nuclear submarine Tuesday to witness two failed launches of missiles that could theoretically deliver a nuclear strike on the United States. A third missile veered off course and self-destructed the next day.

“Our fictitious enemy won” the war games, the popular Gazeta.ru Internet site scoffed.

“The navy's defense shield of Russia blew up over the Barents Sea,” the centrist Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily agreed. “The naval exercises ended in complete failure.”

The disintegration of Russia's ground and air forces — equipped by Soviet tanks that no longer work and with planes grounded because there is no cash to pay for fuel — has been an open secret since the military got bogged down in the first 1994-96 Chechen war.

The navy's troubles came to prominence with the August 2000 Kursk nuclear submarine disaster. But Russia has in fact not been sending more than a few ships out to sea for years. It has only one functioning airplane carrier.

Meanwhile morale among soldiers has largely collasped. Recruits regularly complain of brutal hazing, or initiation ceremonies, and corrupt generals who force them out into the Siberian cold in threadbare outfits. Food is limited and teenagers try almost anything to avoid the draft.

But Russia's nuclear arsenal has always served as a defensive backbone that keeps politicians here referring to their country as a “great power.”

That backbone appeared to develop an unpleasant crack this week.

“These mishaps tells us one clear thing: We have little money and a lot of weapons. And these weapons are growing old,” said Ivan Safranchuk of the Center of Defense Information.

“This shows that these weapons are reaching the end of their lifetimes and should not be further used.”

Maxim Pyadushkin of the Center for the Analysis of Strategies and Technologies agreed that “what happened shattered all illusions that our nuclear and rocket forces are the most battle-ready element of our armed forces.”

Russia's main problem is that it has been churning out only a handful of missiles a year while keeping in service rockets which were built as far back as the early 1970s.

Analysts urge the military to carry out an urgent re-think of their strategy.

But the official Krasnaya Zvezda defense ministry daily announced proudly that the missile that exploded Wednesday — first constructed in 1979 — would be “exploited for another 10 years, and possibly 20 or more, serving as our nuclear backbone.”

And Russia's deputy chief of staff general reported Thursday that a new class of ballistic missiles would not be introduced until 2010.

Meanwhile analysts scorned the military's effort to cover up their embarrassment by initially denying and then giving conflicting accounts over the accidents.

The national state-controlled television stations refused to report on the test failures and instead focused three other successful ground-based missile tests.

Military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer said the navy was trying to confuse foreign intelligence services which were closely following the war games.

“But if the most modern ballistic missile available to our navy really did misfire, any serious foreign intelligence service will eventually find out about it,” Felgenhauer wrote in Novaya Gazeta.

Previous Post

Israel receives two new-generation F-16I fighter jets

Next Post

Jordanian king formally opens first Arab private aircraft production firm

Related Posts

Lebanon says Israeli strike kills 3 journalists

Middle East war enters seventh day as Israel strikes Beirut

March 6, 2026

The raging Iran war, which has spread across the Middle East and beyond, entered its seventh day Friday after Israeli...

Iran missile and drone barrages create dilemma for Gulf states

Iran missile and drone barrages create dilemma for Gulf states

March 4, 2026

For four days, Iranian missiles and drones have swept Gulf states' cities and infrastructure, sundering ties with Tehran and placing...

Next Post

Jordanian king formally opens first Arab private aircraft production firm

Latest Defense News

North Korea’s Kim oversees naval destroyer, cruise missile test

North Korea’s Kim oversees naval destroyer, cruise missile test

March 6, 2026
Turkey says NATO summit ‘not the deadline’ for Finland, Sweden talks

Finland to allow nuclear weapons on its soil: government

March 6, 2026
China, Russia, Iran to hold joint naval drills

US says it has sunk more than 30 Iranian ships

March 6, 2026
Lebanon says Israeli strike kills 3 journalists

Middle East war enters seventh day as Israel strikes Beirut

March 6, 2026
Six US Air Force F-15Cs Arrive at Turkish Air Base

Turkey says missile launched from Iran destroyed by NATO

March 6, 2026
Trump says US Navy could escort tankers, Iran aimed to strike first

Trump says US Navy could escort tankers, Iran aimed to strike first

March 4, 2026

Defense Forum Discussions

  • Middle East Defence & Security
  • European Union, member states and Agencies
  • Royal Canadian Navy Discussions and updates
  • The Russian-Ukrainian War Thread
  • Royal Australian Navy Discussions and Updates 2.0
  • ADF General discussion thread
  • Indonesian Aero News
  • 2 AgustaWestland AW-169M LUH Austrian Air Force 5M-ID 5M-IG arrival at Aigen Airbase LOXA
  • General Information on missile/artillery developments
  • General Naval News
DefenceTalk

© 2003-2020 DefenceTalk.com

Navigate Site

  • Defence Forum
  • Military Photos
  • RSS Feeds
  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports

© 2003-2020 DefenceTalk.com