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Is Putin's evil scheme the new Satellite Destroyer Missile?

Russia's S-550 air defense system is designed to shoot down adversary ballistic missiles and aircraft, including the United States' fifth generation fighters, the F-22 and F-35, as well as the future B-21 Raider bomber. Is the S-550, however, as effective as Russia claims? Here's what military strategists have to say about it.

By InfoPublished about a year ago โ€ข 4 min read
Satellite Destroyer Putin's Evil Plan ๐Ÿ˜ˆ๐Ÿ—บโš 

Russia's S-550 air defense system is designed to shoot down adversary ballistic missiles and aircraft, including the United States' fifth generation fighters, the F-22 and F-35, as well as the future B-21 Raider bomber. Is the S-550, however, as effective as Russia claims? Here's what military strategists have to say about it. ๐Ÿ˜ˆ๐Ÿ—บโš 

  • Things are about to go horribly wrong for American special operators in Eastern Europe who are on a covert mission in 2030. The team's GPS systems abruptly lose connectivity. As a result, they discover that they are unable to contact home base and are completely without air support. However, things are going to get worse. The operators quickly realized that the satellites themselves, not just their GPS, were the problem. It appears as though they just vanished. In actuality, they have, as the systems on which they relied were recently destroyed in space by the S-550, Russia's new missile system designed specifically to destroy satellites. However, how likely is this scenario? Is the S-550 really going to cause the U.S. such a big problem?
  • On November 9, 2021, Russia announced the development of its S-550 air defense system, and a little over a month later, according to its military sources, Russia successfully tested this system. S. and NATO forces the way Russia is claiming they will. The S-500 Prometheus, another brand-new defensive missile system designed to shoot down enemy ballistic missiles and aircraft, served as the S-550's inspiration. That reportedly includes the F-22, F-35, and upcoming B-21 Raider bomber from the United States, which are fifth-generation fighters. The S-550 would complement the S-500 by handling a different kind of mission, one that is possibly even more delicate. The S-550 system is intended to reach targets even higher than those that can be reached by the S-500 system, which is made to track and destroy targets in the air.
  • Its mission is to defend Russia against space-based threats, and the Russian news agency RIA Novosti has claimed that the S-550 would have ranges that are orders of magnitude greater than those of the SM-3 Block II B missiles used by the American THAAD and Aegis missile defense systems. The S-550 will be responsible for intercepting incoming ICBMs and taking out enemy satellites, according to the Polish Warsaw Institute, a think tank that tracks Russian military activity. The S-550 is also reportedly capable of striking hypersonic targets thousands of kilometers in the air. A number of allegedly successful tests preceded the S-550's alleged entry into active service in late 2021.
  • One of these tests involved shooting down Cosmos-1408, a retired Soviet satellite that was still in orbit. However, Russian media claims that the S-550 was never intended to destroy satellites belonging to other nations. The real goal of the missile, according to a defense expert quoted by the Russian news agency TASS, is to physically destroy the target missile's warhead in order to prevent a nuclear explosion. This principle would differ from earlier anti-ballistic missile systems from the Soviet era, which were intended to intercept incoming ICBMs with a counter-nuclear blast, said defense expert Dmitry Litovkin. Instead, the new S-550 would function as a purely kinetic intercept, necessitating much greater precision.
  • Although radiation would still be present from the broken pieces of a nuclear warhead, it would be much less destructive than a nuclear explosion. Although both the United States and Russia have anti-ICBM defense systems that are capable of this, the missiles that they currently use are stationary. Instead, they are found in stationary silos, which are easy to hit on the first try, especially with satellite accuracy. The S-550 is mobile, making it much more difficult to target and simpler to conceal. The S-550's presence is a sign that the Russian military establishment is eager to develop space defense and anti-satellite capabilities, and while it would be prudent to be skeptical about the veracity of its claims; this is something the United States will need to take seriously given that its GPS satellites are crucial to its dominant position in international politics.
  • The American GPS system, however, is comprised of a 24-satellite constellation spread across six orbital planes. What is it, and why is it so crucial? Every orbital plane contains at least four satellites. Since Operation Desert Storm against Saddam Hussein's Iraq in 1991, the United States has used the GPS system to devastating effect, giving it a distinct advantage in military operations. During the Gulf War, GPS was a helpful navigational aid in the Arabian Desert's otherwise uniform sands. A total of 5,500 GPS-guided JDAM bombs were used for the first time during the conflict, or about 25 percent of all the weapons dropped. Desert Storm's resounding success served as proof of concept, and ever since, the GPS system has become an integral part of the American military.
  • It is the foundation of navigation for the Air Force and Navy, and it is essential to command and control systems. Commanders can send supplies to the most precise location possible by using GPS. Marines and soldiers are very aware of when and where they are supposed to be. The GPS system is used in many weapons used by the US military, including the infamous JDAM bombs. A GPS-guided munition, such as the 155-millimeter M982 Excalibur artillery shell, allows the U.S. military to fire precision-guided artillery.
  • The ability to launch deadly, accurate, and precise artillery strikes on targets up to 25 miles away with little risk of friendly fire or collateral damage is a capability that the U.S. Army and Marines have. The 120-millimeter Roll Control Guided Mortar, a GPS-guided mortar round, is also being developed by the U.S. military. Future military doctrine will place even more emphasis on precision-guided artillery.

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