logo
Belarus gives update on deployment of Russian Oreshnik missiles

Belarus gives update on deployment of Russian Oreshnik missiles

Russia Today15 hours ago
Russia's Oreshik hypersonic missile systems are set to arrive in Belarus by the end of 2025, as agreed with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko has said.
The president made the remarks on Tuesday during an event marking the anniversary of Belarus independence.
'We agreed with Putin in Volgograd. The first positions of Oreshnik will be in Belarus. You have seen the performance of Oreshnik. By the end of the year, these weapons will be deployed in Belarus,' Lukashenko stated.
The Russian missiles are expected to be mounted on locally produced chassis. Earlier this year, Lukashenko revealed a handful of such vehicles had already been manufactured and tested.
Russia battle-tested the new missile in November by conducting a strike on a military factory in Ukraine. At the time, Moscow said the demonstration of the advanced weapon was a response to Western authorization allowing Kiev to use donated long-range missiles to strike deep inside Russian territory.
The hypersonic medium-range missile is believed to be nuclear-capable, although Putin had previously stated its conventional form can inflict damage comparable to a low-yield nuclear explosion.
The system is believed to have multiple independently guided warheads, which remain controllable even while traveling at extreme speeds.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ex-Ukrainian president accuses Zelensky of ‘authoritarianism'
Ex-Ukrainian president accuses Zelensky of ‘authoritarianism'

Russia Today

timean hour ago

  • Russia Today

Ex-Ukrainian president accuses Zelensky of ‘authoritarianism'

Former Ukrainian President Pyotr Poroshenko has accused his successor, Vladimir Zelensky, of using state power to suppress political rivals, including himself. The warning about Zelensky's 'authoritarianism' was made in an interview published on Tuesday by The Times. Poroshenko, who lost a presidential election to Zelensky in 2019, alleged that the current leader has targeted him as a potential electoral challenger. Zelensky, a comedian-turned-politician, surged in the polls by campaigning against corruption and criticizing the government's failure to resolve the conflict in Donbass. After taking office, he pursued policies that escalated tensions with Russia, before Moscow launched its military operation in 2022. Now a member of parliament, Poroshenko said he would continue to support Zelensky for the duration of the conflict with Russia, despite being personally sanctioned by Zelensky's administration in February, which included a ban on foreign travel and restrictions on media access. Poroshenko told The Times he believes the measures were designed to neutralize political opposition ahead of any potential election that might take place if martial law were lifted. Although polls show Poroshenko trailing behind, with former top general Valery Zaluzhny the likely winner in a hypothetical run, the former president said the measures take against him are part of a broader pattern. 'Today Poroshenko, tomorrow Zaluzhny, [the] day after tomorrow anybody,' he said. 'This is authoritarianism.' The Times disputed Poroshenko's characterization, describing Ukraine's political landscape as 'diverse and rambunctious.' In a 2019 presidential debate, Zelensky declared he was 'a sentence' for Poroshenko, alluding to possible prosecution for corruption and abuse of power. No trial was conducted, but Poroshenko told the British newspaper that Zelensky hates him personally 'on a biological, chemical level.' Following the interview, Kiev Mayor Vitaly Klitschko visited Poroshenko. The official has previously made similar criticisms of Zelensky. Poroshenko remarked that the current leader risks a surge of public dissent unless he listens to opposing voices. The Zelensky administration had shuttered opposition media and launched investigations against several political adversaries even before the 2022 escalation, saying it was suppressing 'pro-Russian' actors. After the conflict escalated, Ukraine's largest opposition bloc in parliament was effectively dismantled, leaving Poroshenko's European Solidarity party as the second-largest faction behind Zelensky's Servant of the People party in the Ukrainian parliament.

Russian ally names ‘first step' towards Ukraine ceasefire
Russian ally names ‘first step' towards Ukraine ceasefire

Russia Today

time4 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Russian ally names ‘first step' towards Ukraine ceasefire

The US could pressure Ukraine into halting long-range strikes against Russian territory as a first step toward achieving a comprehensive ceasefire, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said on Tuesday. Lukashenko recently met with Keith Kellogg, a special envoy for US President Donald Trump. The meeting marked a rare diplomatic engagement between Washington and Minsk after years of limited contact. The Belarusian leader said he shared his views with Kellogg on how the Ukraine conflict could be resolved, which he said were based on conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin. According to Lukashenko, Putin wants an end to Ukrainian drones and Western-supplied cruise missiles being launched at Russian cities. 'Let them tell their client [Vladimir] Zelensky to stop strikes against Russia. Then we could agree,' Lukashenko stressed, characterizing Moscow's stance. 'That's the position I relayed to the American and asked him, 'Is there something wrong with it?' He said, 'We are working in that direction.' You do that. That would be a good first step toward stopping this fratricidal war,' he added. 'But I don't believe they want to end this war.' Kellogg later said on X that 'at no point did I make comments related to Ukraine's prosecution of the war outside of a total ceasefire.' Kiev has pushed for more US sanctions on Russia to punish Moscow for rejecting its calls for a comprehensive truce. Russia has accused Kiev of trying to stall and regroup its forces, and has stated its own conditions for ending hostilities. It has said Kiev can either withdraw troops from disputed territories or suspend mobilization and Western arms shipments. Zelensky has rejected both proposals. Moscow has proposed several temporary de-escalation measures this year, including a one-month pause in attacks on energy infrastructure, a three-day ceasefire for Easter, and a ceasefire in commemoration of the end of World War II. Kiev refused some of the proposals and failed to fully honor the terms of others, according to Russia. Belarus remains a key ally of Russia and a target of Western sanctions, which Lukashenko describes as a form of economic warfare aimed at a sovereign nation resisting long-standing external pressure.

Pentagon halts weapons supplies to Kiev
Pentagon halts weapons supplies to Kiev

Russia Today

time4 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Pentagon halts weapons supplies to Kiev

The Pentagon has suspended shipments of several categories of US-made weapons to Ukraine, according to Politico and NBC News. The decision reportedly followed an internal review of American weapons reserves ordered by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, amid rising concerns about the rate at which munitions are being depleted. The move reportedly affects dozens of Patriot missile interceptors, Stinger and AIM air-to-air missiles, hundreds of Hellfire and GMLRS systems, as well as thousands of 155mm artillery shells that Washington had previously pledged to Kiev. Some of the weapons which were already positioned in Europe have now been withheld and will be provided to Ukrainian forces, NBC reported. The weapons in question had been funded under the Biden administration through two mechanisms: direct drawdowns from existing US military stockpiles and the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI), which contracts new production from defense contractors. The Trump administration has not requested any additional aid for Kiev, and existing resources are expected to last only 'several more months,' according to Politico. White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly defended the move as a necessary step to prioritize American defense needs. 'This decision was made to put America's interests first following a DOD review of our nation's military support and assistance to other countries across the globe. The strength of the United States Armed Forces remains unquestioned – just ask Iran,' she said, without confirming any details. The decision to freeze or slow-walk the remaining aid without formal notice to Congress may raise legal concerns similar to the 2019 withholding of some Ukraine assistance under Trump's first administration –a move the Government Accountability Office ruled unlawful at the time, Politico noted. Kiev has repeatedly voiced frustration over what it sees as dwindling support from Washington. Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky met with President Donald Trump at the NATO summit in The Hague last week but received no firm promises. Trump said Patriots were 'very hard to get' and that the US needed them for its own defense and for Israel. Trump has stated that he intends to negotiate a ceasefire with Moscow and bring the conflict to an end. Hegseth said last month that the White House is reducing military funding for Kiev as part of its 'America First' strategy, in the hopes of achieving a diplomatic settlement. Earlier this year, the Trump administration signed a deal giving the US priority access to Ukraine's mineral wealth –a step the White House said would allow America to 'get back' some of the hundreds of billions spent under Biden. The Pentagon's policy shift appears to reflect a broader realignment under Trump, who has publicly questioned the rationale behind endless aid to Ukraine. Russian presidential envoy Kirill Dmitriev, CEO of the Direct Investment Fund, noted that the move 'highlights the real limits of Western capacity and the shifting priorities of the US military.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store