Kura Missile Test Range

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Kura Missile Test Range (Russian: Ракетный полигон Кура́), originally known as Kama, is a Russian intercontinental ballistic missile impact area located in northern Kamchatka Krai in the Russian Far East. It is the destination for ballistic missiles which are test fired from other centers, and was chosen due to its remoteness and distance. It is 130 kilometers (81 mi) northeast of the settlement of Klyuchi and the military townlet is called Klyuchi-1, after the nearest settlement.[1][2]

Kura Missile Test Range
Near Klyuchi in Russia
Kura Missile Test Range is located in Russia
Kura Missile Test Range
Kura Missile Test Range
Location in Russia
Kura Missile Test Range is located in Kamchatka Krai
Kura Missile Test Range
Kura Missile Test Range
Location in Kamchatka Krai, Russia
Coordinates57°20′00″N 161°50′00″E / 57.33333°N 161.83333°E / 57.33333; 161.83333
TypeICBM test range
Site information
OwnerRussian Armed Forces
OperatorRussian Aerospace Forces (VKS)
Open to
the public
No
Site history
Built1955 (1955)
General trajectory of missiles from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome to the Kura Missile Test Range – 5,700 km (3,100 nmi; 3,500 mi)

History

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The range was developed beginning in 1955 and was operational in 1957.[2][3] The first impact occurred on 21 August 1957, and was followed by 136 impacts through 1964.[4]

Although the range is a test site for intercontinental ballistic missiles, which are controlled by the Russian Strategic Rocket Forces, the range is administratively under Plesetsk Cosmodrome, and consequently is part of the Russian Space Forces.[5][6]

Kura Missile Testing Range remains active in 2024. An ICBM was launched there on 25 Oct 2023,[7] after the Russian Parliament withdrew from the 1996 Nuclear Test Ban treaty in response to the failure by the USA to ratify the Treaty for 28 years.[8]

It was reported that the strategic nuclear submarine Yury Dolgorukiy of Project 955 (Borei) on Wednesday, 29 October 2014 20:27 MSK (17:27 UTC) successfully conducted its fifth launch of Bulava submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) at Kura firing range. On 30 October 2013 Russia conducted a large-scale exercise to check the readiness of its strategic forces. The Strategic Rocket Forces conducted two ICBM launches – a Topol missile was launched from the Plesetsk test site and an R-36M2 (RS-10V/SS-18) missile from a silo in Dombarovskiy. Both missiles delivered their warheads to the Kura test site in Kamchatka. Previous impact was recorded at 10:15 (06:15 GMT) on Wednesday 23 May 2012 when a new as yet unnamed ballistic missile designed to evade the US missile shield was tested. The missile was fired from a mobile launcher on the Plesetsk range. The warhead was delivered successfully to its designated area on the Kura range on Kamchatka.[9] A Bulava missile, launched from submarine Dimitri Donskoi, landed at Kura in October 2010.[10] Test launches of R-29RMU Sineva and RT-2PM2 Topol-M missiles also frequently target the Kura Missile Test Range.

United States surveillance

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The Kura range attracted intense interest from United States intelligence agencies in 1957. There was early speculation that missiles were being launched from this range, but this was settled by information from Lockheed U-2 missions in summer 1957 which flew directly over the range and could find no launch infrastructure.[11] The study noted that impacts in the nearby water were likely, and that the Soviets were expected to install sonic detection systems to measure water impacts. The missions revealed a regiment of seven Mil Mi-4 helicopters based at Klyuchi which provided logistical support for the range.

Up to 1994, the United States maintained Eareckson Air Station (formerly Shemya Air Force Base) only 935 km (581 mi) away, equipped with radars and aircraft to monitor impacts at Kura. One of these radars, Cobra Dane, was fielded in 1977 at Shemya specifically for this purpose.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Не каждая "Булава" долетит до середины Камчатки [Not every Bulava will reach the middle of Kamchatka] (in Russian). Novaya Gazeta. 5 May 2011. Archived from the original on 28 August 2012. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
  2. ^ a b Soviet Technical Capabilities in Guided Missiles and Space Vehicles, NIE 11-5-6, TOP SECRET, declassified 1996. Central Intelligence Agency. 1961.
  3. ^ The Soviet ICBM Program, NIE 11-10-57, TOP SECRET, declassified 1995. Central Intelligence Agency. 1957.
  4. ^ SOVIET ANTIBALLISTIC MISSILE ACTIVITY AT KAMCHATKA, 18 October 1965 (Top Secret, declassified 11 August 2003), Central Intelligence Agency, Washington D.C., 1965.
  5. ^ Podvig, Pavel (1 December 2011). "Russia creates Air and Space Defense Forces". Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces. russianforces.org. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  6. ^ "Structure". Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. n.d. Archived from the original on 7 December 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  7. ^ Началась тренировка стратегических сил сдерживания под руководством Путина, 25 October 2023 https://iz.ru/1595079/2023-10-25/nachalas-trenirovka-strategicheskikh-sil-sderzhivaniia-pod-rukovodstvom-putina
  8. ^ Lebedev, Filipp; Trevelyan, Mark (18 October 2023). "Russian lawmakers vote to scrap ratification of nuclear test ban treaty". Reuters.
  9. ^ Podvig, Pavel (23 May 2012). "Russia tests prototype of a new ICBM". Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces. russianforces.org. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  10. ^ Начальник Генштаба доложил Президенту об успешном пуске ракеты "Булава" [The Chief of the General Staff reported to the President on the successful launch of the Bulava missile] (in Russian). Kremlin.ru. 7 October 2010. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
  11. ^ GUIDED MISSILE INTELLIGENCE FROM THE KLYUCHI/KAMCHATKA COVERAGE, 22 August 1957 (Top Secret, declassified 26 April 2001), Central Intelligence Agency, Washington D.C., 1957.
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