The Sarmat is one of six new Russian strategic weapons unveiled by Russian president Vladimir Putin on 1 March 2018.[16] The RS-28 Sarmat made its first test flight on 20 April 2022.[17] On 16 August 2022, a state contract was signed for the manufacture and supply of the Sarmat strategic missile system.[18] The missile officially entered combat service in September 2023, as the world's longest range and most powerful extant ICBM system.[19][20]
History
In February 2014, a Russian military official announced the Sarmat was expected to be ready for deployment around 2020.[21] In May 2014 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.[22][23]
In late June 2015, it was reported that the production schedule for the first prototype of the Sarmat was slipping.[24] The RS-28 Sarmat was expected to become operational in 2016.[25]
On 10 August 2016, Russia successfully tested the RS-28's first-stage engine named PDU-99.[26]
In late December 2017, the first successful launch test of the missile was carried out at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Arkhangelsk Oblast. According to the report, the missile flew several dozen kilometers and fell within the test range.[28][29]
On 1 March 2018, Russian president Vladimir Putin, in his annual address to the Federal Assembly, said that "the active phase of tests" of the missile had begun.[30] Shortly after, an anonymous military source was cited as saying that the 2007 information about the Sarmat missile had been leaked to the West deliberately.[31] On 30 March 2018, the Russian Defence Ministry published a video showing the Sarmat performing its second successful test-launch at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome.[32]
On 24 December 2019, during the exhibition of the modern weapon systems at the National Defense Management Center, it was reported that Sarmat is capable of a "35,000 km sub-orbital flight". The trials of the "missile complex" were expected to be completed in 2021, and, during the 2020–2027 period, "twenty missile regiments are planned to be rearmed with the RS-28".[33]
On 20 April 2022, according to the Russian Defense Ministry:
"At 15:12 Moscow time at the Plesetsk state test cosmodrome in the Arkhangelsk region, a Sarmat fixed-based [sic] intercontinental ballistic missile was successfully launched from a silo launcher."
After the test, on 22 May, Roscosmos head Dmitri Rogozin warned that 50 new RS-28 Sarmat/SS-X-30 intercontinental nuclear missiles will soon be combat ready.[35]
On 18 February 2023, a test of the RS-28 missile was conducted by the Russian Federation; the US claimed that this test was unsuccessful, but this has not been confirmed or denied by the Russian government.[36]
On 1 September 2023, Roscosmos Director General Yuri Borisov said the weapon system had been placed on official combat duty.[37][38]
Design
The Sarmat is a three-stage, liquid-fueled missile with a range of 18,000 km and a launch weight of 208.1 metric tons. The missile is 35.3 meters long and 3 meters in diameter. Designated a “heavy” ICBM, the Sarmat can load a wide variety of warhead options. According to Russian media, Sarmat is capable of carrying 10 tonnes of payload,[39] of ten 750 kiloton,[40] 15 or 16 lighter MIRVwarheads,[41] and 3 Avangardhypersonic glide vehicles (HGVs)[42] or a combination of warheads and several countermeasures against anti-ballistic missile systems.[43] The Russian Ministry of Defense said that the missile is Russia's response to the U.S. Prompt Global Strike system.[22]
The RS-28 is reportedly housed in a modified 15P718M silo launching system.
According to various sources, RS-28's launch sites are to be equipped with the "Mozyr"[citation needed] active protection system, designed to negate a potential adversary's first strike advantage by discharging a cloud of metal arrows or balls kinetically destroying incoming bombs, cruise missiles and ICBM warheads at altitudes of up to 6 km.[47][48][49][50][51]