Harman Patil (Editor)

RS 28 Sarmat

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Place of origin
  
Russia

Weight
  
Over 100 tonnes

Type
  
Heavy Intercontinental ballistic missile

Used by
  
Russian Strategic Missile Troops

Designer
  
Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau

Manufacturer
  
Krasnoyarsk machine-building plant , НПО Энергомаш , НПО маш , KBKhA

The RS-28 Sarmat (Russian: РС-28 Сармат; NATO reporting name: SATAN 2), is a Russian liquid-fueled, MIRV-equipped, super-heavy thermonuclear armed intercontinental ballistic missile in development by the Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau from 2009, intended to replace the previous R-36 missile. Its large payload would allow for up to 10 heavy warheads or 15 lighter ones or up to 24 hypersonic glide vehicles Yu-71, or a combination of warheads and massive amounts of countermeasures designed to defeat anti-missile systems; it was heralded by the Russian military as a response to the U.S. Prompt Global Strike.

In February 2014, a Russian military official announced the Sarmat was expected to be ready for deployment around 2020. In May that year another official source suggested that the program was being accelerated and that it would, in his opinion, constitute up to 100 percent of Russia's fixed land-based nuclear arsenal by 2021. At the end of June 2015, it was reported that the production schedule for the first prototype of the Sarmat was slipping. The RS-28 Sarmat is expected to become operational in 2016.

On 10 August 2016, Russia successfully tested the RS-28's first-stage engine named PDU-99 "ПДУ-99". The first image of this new missile was declassified and unveiled in October 2016.

References

RS-28 Sarmat Wikipedia