Russia successfully tested on Tuesday its new Bulava intercontinental missile which Moscow aims to make the cornerstone of its nuclear arsenal over the next decade.The program was never in serious question.
The Defense Ministry said the 12-meter long Bulava, or Mace, fired from a submarine near Russia's border with Finland, successfully hit its target some 6,000 km (3,370 miles) away on the peninsula of Kamchatka in Russia's far east.
"The launch was successful in all respects. The Bulava missile delivered its warhead to the target area in the Kura testing site in the Kamchatka Peninsula region," spokesman Colonel Igor Konashenkov told Interfax.
The Bulava, which will face four more trials this year before being introduced into service this year or next, had failed half of its previous fourteen trials, calling into question the expensive missile program.
The Russians do missile testing: test, fix, test, fix.
Americans just do tests to validate their analysis, we operate under the assumption that our missiles will, after a few decades of simulation and systems analysis will work perfectly out of the box.
One of these methods is faster and cheaper, but it is not ours, and catches serious problems early enough that when you do catch a stinker, you don't have so much invested in your techno whiz bang that you cannot abandon it.
1 comments :
Definitely. We, unfortunately, apply this principle to many things besides weapons testing, such as economic programs. Unfortunately, the tendency with economic programs is they continue to be applied in spite of real world confirmation that they have failed.
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