Russia Begins Its Strategic Nuclear Drills Including Launch Of ICBMs From Kamchatka

NATO is currently holding its own “routine” nuclear exercises. The Pentagon has announced that Russia officially notified US authorities of its plan to conduct annual exercises with its nuclear deterrence forces, amid NATO’s ongoing ‘Steadfast Noon’ nuclear drills.

Taking into account the NOTAM notifications, analysts expect the Russian strategic triad to conduct exercises from October 26 to 29 with the launch of ICBMs from Plesetsk and SLBMs from a submarine at the Kura test site in Kamchatka, Militarist channel reports.

Two Biden administration officials told CBS that Russia has notified the US that the annual Thunder «Гром» strategic exercise will begin and that it will include practical missile launches starting Wednesday, 26th of October.

“The US was notified and, as we’ve highlighted before, this is a routine annual exercise by Russia,” spokesman Air Force Brigadier General Patrick Ryder said on Tuesday. 

The US military offered no further details, but acknowledged that Russia “is complying with its arms control obligations and its transparency commitments to make those notifications.”

The Russian Defense Ministry has yet to release an official statement about the scale of the planned exercise, but such drills usually involve comprehensive tests of both nuclear-capable and non-nuclear weapons, to ensure the readiness of strategic deterrence forces and the entire chain of command. The last time Russia conducted a similar exercise was back in February, several days before Moscow launched its military operation in Ukraine.

The announcement comes amid the ongoing ‘Steadfast Noon’ nuclear drills, set to last until October 30 and take place over Belgium, the North Sea and the UK. NATO has also described the exercises as “routine” and “not linked to any current world events,” while insisting that no live weapons will be used. Some 60 aircraft of various types from 14 NATO member states are taking part in Steadfast Noon, including state-of-the-art fighter jets, surveillance and tanker planes, as well as US B-52 nuclear-capable strategic bombers.

President Vladimir Putin recently vowed that Russia will use “all the means available to us” to defend its people and territory – a statement that Washington and its NATO allies have interpreted as a veiled threat to deploy nuclear weapons.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg dismissed concerns that the alliance’s nuclear posture could cause a miscalculation amid heightened tensions with Russia, emphasizing that that it would instead send a “very wrong signal” if NATO canceled the nuclear drill because of the Ukraine crisis, RT reports

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