Russian President, Vladimir Putin on Wednesday, October 25 oversaw ballistic missile drills from his office, the Kremlin said, hours after Russia moved to revoke its ratification of a landmark nuclear test ban treaty.
Moscow's defence minister Sergei
Shoigu also said Russia's forces would also be practising a "massive"
retaliatory nuclear strike.
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The drills came 20 months after Russia launched a war on Ukraine -- which has raised some fears of nuclear war .The reported nuclear drill also comes hours after Russia moved to revoke a key nuclear arms control treaty.
"Under the leadership of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Russian armed forces, Vladimir Putin, a training exercise was conducted with the forces and equipment of ground, sea and air components of nuclear deterrent forces," the Kremlin said in a statement.
"During the training, practical launches of ballistic and cruise missiles took place."
It
said one of the missiles was fired from the Plesetsk cosmodrome in the
Russian north and that another missile was fired from a nuclear-powered
submarine in the Barents Sea.
Moscow said "long range Tu-95MS planes" took part in the training.
It added that the drills checked "the level of preparedness of military command and control bodies".
Russian
news agencies later reported defence minister Shoigu as saying Russia
will also involve practising "delivering a massive nuclear strike by
strategic offensive forces in response to an enemy strike."
Russian state television aired footage of Putin being briefed by Shoigu and army chief Valery Gerasimov.
The
drills came after Russia's upper house of parliament, the Federation
Council, approved to revoke the ratification of the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban treaty, moving Moscow closer to abandoning the landmark
agreement.
The 1996 treaty outlaws all nuclear explosions
including live tests of nuclear weapons, but it has never come into
force because some key countries -- including the United States and
China.
They also came after Moscow said it would study US
proposals to resume dialogue on nuclear arms control, but that it would
not accept them unless Washington dropped its "hostile" stance.
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