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Russia says self-sufficient for early warning missile data

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  • Russia says self-sufficient for early warning missile data

    Russia says self-sufficient for early warning missile data

    21:04 | 27/ 02/ 2009


    MOSCOW, February 27 (RIA Novosti) - Russia no longer depends on Ukraine
    to provide it with strategic missile tracking data following the launch
    of its new radar facility in the country's south, the commander of
    Russia's Space Forces said on Friday.

    Russia's Voronezh-DM radar site in the southern town of Armavir went
    into service on Thursday.

    Maj. Gen. Oleg Ostapenko said the Armavir radar would monitor missile
    routes and probable directions for a missile attack in the south and
    southeast of Russia in place of the early warning facilities in
    Mukachevo in western Ukraine and Sevastopol, the Crimea.

    Russia terminated a 1997 agreement with Ukraine on the use of both
    Ukrainian radars in February 2008 on the grounds that they had become
    obsolete.

    With an effective range of 4,000 kilometers (2,500 miles) the
    Voronezh-class radar has capabilities similar to its predecessors, the
    Dnepr and Daryal, which are currently deployed outside Russia, but uses
    less energy and is more environmentally friendly.

    Gen. Ostapenko said Russia would build more radar stations to replace
    the existing ones, adding that the Armavir facility was the second,
    after the Lekhtusi complex, in the Leningrad Region, which had been put
    into operation in March 2006.

    Washington wants to place 10 missile interceptors in Poland and a radar
    station in the neighboring Czech Republic, purportedly to counter a
    missile threat from Iran and other "rogue" states. Russia has fiercely
    opposed the plans, saying the European shield would destroy the
    strategic balance of forces and threaten Russia's national interests.
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