12:43 21.10.2023

Kinzhal actually in operational testing stage - British intelligence

2 min read
Kinzhal actually in operational testing stage - British intelligence

British intelligence experts assessed the prospects for the use of Russian interceptor aircraft equipped with Kinzhal air-launched ballistic missiles, noting that they are still at the stage of operational testing, and the results of their use in Ukraine are unsatisfactory.

As noted in a report from the Ministry of Defense of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, published on the social network X (Twitter) on Saturday morning, “on October 18, 2023, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Russia will begin conducting fighter patrols in the eastern Black Sea using the MiG-311 interceptor aircraft armed with Kh-47M2 KINZHAL (DAGGER) air-launched ballistic missiles.”

“His justification referred to the recent uplift in the US’ maritime presence in the eastern Mediterranean, with the intent of holding these vessels at risk using a weapon system with a published range of up to 2000km.” “This announcement is in line with typical Russian rhetoric aimed at its domestic audience, calling the West aggressors whilst framing Russian activity as necessary for protection of the state,” the British Intelligence concluded.

The intelligence analysts believe that “the specific mention of the KINZHAL missile and its capabilities by Putin was almost certainly for strategic messaging purposes, to demonstrate that Russia remains able to produce and operate newly developed weapons, despite the ongoing Ukrainian conflict.”

“The KINZHAL effectively remains in operational testing, with its performance in Ukraine to date being poor. It remains highly capable on paper, able to fly at hypersonic speeds and evade modern air defence systems, although there almost certainly needs to be significant improvement in how Russia uses it to achieve this potential,” the message reads.

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