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TBILISI: Nadiradze's missile made people in Tbilisi worry

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  • TBILISI: Nadiradze's missile made people in Tbilisi worry

    Kviris Palitra, Georgia
    June 11 2012


    Nadiradze's missile made people in Tbilisi worry

    by Irakli Aladashvili
    [translated from Georgian]

    People in South Caucasus, Lebanon, Syria, Israel, and Iran saw flight
    of Aleksandre Nadiradze's Topol in night sky


    The majority of Tbilisi's residents (and not just them) stared at the
    night sky 7 June, trying to determine what that strange illumination
    was: A bright spot was advancing in the sky, leaving a trail behind
    it. Then there was a flash, it started to spiral, and finally the
    light disappeared.

    What could this strange "celestial object" possibly have been?
    Multiple theories were proposed, starting with the explosion of a
    comet and ending with an alien spaceship crash. Meanwhile, the cause
    of the strange illumination in the night sky was completely ordinary:
    These were the final seconds of the operation of a stage engine of a
    missile launched from earth....[ellipsis as published]

    The command of the Russian Defence Ministry's Strategic Missile Forces
    issued an official report the next day, stating that a Topol
    intercontinental ballistic missile was launched from the Kapustin Yar
    test site in Astrakhan Oblast at 2139 hours Moscow time [1739 GMT].
    Its dummy warhead hit a hypothetical target at the Sary-Shagan test
    range in Kazakhstan.

    According to Russian generals, the main goal of the test was to
    examine the flight performance of this type of missile after multiple
    years of storage.

    The Soviet Union began deploying the Topol mobile intercontinental
    ballistic missiles in 1985 and Russia still had 360 Topol mobile
    complexes in its arsenal by 1996.

    The Georgian president [Enhanced Coverage LinkingGeorgian president [
    -Search using:Biographies Plus NewsNews, Most Recent 60 DaysMikheil
    Saakashvili] Enhanced Coverage LinkingMikheil Saakashvili] -Search
    using:Biographies Plus NewsNews, Most Recent 60 Dayssaid in one of his
    recent speeches that, during the August 2008 war, the Russians fired
    into Georgian territory Iskander [missiles] designed by our compatriot
    Nadirashvili.

    While it is true that two Iskander tactical missiles hit our territory
    during the August war (one in downtown Gori and the other near
    Vaziani), they were not designed by our compatriot.

    There is no one named Nadirashvili among the constructors of missile
    systems. However, Aleksandre Nadiradze, a great constructor and our
    compatriot, is frequently mentioned in Soviet and world rocket
    scientist circles along with [late Soviet rocket engineer Sergey]
    Korolev and [late German rocket scientist Werner] von Braun.

    In 1977, as the chief constructor of the Moscow Thermotechnical
    Institute, Aleksandre Nadiradze began designing a solid-fuel
    intercontinental ballistic missile that would be deployed on a wheeled
    chassis and would therefore be mobile. Unlike the ballistic missiles
    placed inside silos, whose location coordinates were traceable by US
    satellites with a margin of error of a mere couple of meters,
    Nadiradze's wheeled missiles would "hide" in Russia's vast taiga and
    be launched towards the United States from the least likely locations.

    The new mobile missile system was dubbed Topol. It became the most
    modern and dangerous nuclear weapon. US presidents still take account
    of it, and this will continue for another 10-15 years.

    Preparing the Topol for launch only takes a couple of minutes. The
    chassis that has seven axes stops and the missile container moves into
    a vertical position. The missile moves several meters above the
    container and then the rocket engine of the 45-ton three-stage
    ballistic missile's first stage starts. Once the solid fuel burns out
    in each of the stages, [the stage] detaches from the missile's body.
    What the residents of Tbilisi saw on the night of 7 June was probably
    the last seconds of the operation of a rocket engine from a stage that
    had detached from the missile.

    Once all three stages detach, the nuclear warhead that weighs about a
    ton continues to fly towards the target. Its power is the equivalent
    of 0.55 megatons of TNT.

    It is noteworthy that the Topol designed by Aleksandre Nadiradze
    carried a nuclear warhead created by Armenian constructor Samvel
    Kocharyants. It was capable of wiping a provincial US town off the
    map.

    [translated from Georgian]

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