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Reuters
Reuters
Politics

Factbox-What do we know about Kinzhal, Russia's hypersonic missile?

Oleksandr Ruvin, director of the Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise, shows a Kh-47 Kinzhal Russian hypersonic missile warhead, shot down by a Ukrainian Air Defence unit amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine May 12, 2023. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko/File Photo

Russia fired hypersonic Kinzhal missiles at Kyiv on Tuesday, with Ukraine saying it had shot down all six, and Russia claiming one got through air defences to destroy a U.S.-built Patriot surface-to-air anti-missile defence system.

Reuters was unable to verify either claim, but here are some key facts on the Kinzhal, which means "dagger" in Russian:

- It is an air-launched ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear or conventional warheads. Ukraine said six of them were fired on Tuesday.

- It has a reported range of 1,500 to 2,000 km (930 to 1,240 miles) while carrying a payload of 480 kg. It may reach speeds of up to Mach 10 (12,250 kph).

- The Kinzhal is one of six "next generation" weapons unveiled by President Vladimir Putin in a speech in March 2018. He has said these weapons could penetrate both existing and any future missile defence systems.

- Putin said in December 2021, two months before the invasion of Ukraine, that Russia was the global leader in hypersonic missiles and, by the time other countries caught up, was likely to have developed technology to counteract these new weapons.

"In our advanced developments, we are definitely the leaders," he said.

- Russia sent fighter jets armed with Kinzhal missiles to Syria for the first time in 2021, military analysts say.

- Russia's defence ministry claimed to have fired a Kinzhal missile at a munitions dump in southwestern Ukraine on March 19, 2022, the first known use of the weapon in combat. It has since fired Kinzhal missiles on several other occasions in Ukraine.

- On May 6, Ukraine said for the first time that it had shot down a Kinzhal, using a Patriot system. It was not clear whether the "Western" systems Kyiv said it used against Kinzhals on Tuesday were also Patriots.

Source: Centre for Strategic and International Studies

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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