MOSCOW, December 11. /TASS/. Russia’s use of the Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile on a military target in Ukraine was a warning signal to certain political figures across the ocean who have seemingly lost touch with reality, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov said on Wednesday.
"The test-combat launch of this missile system against a legitimate military target inside Ukraine has, in itself, become a powerful warning to certain figures overseas who, judging by their behavior, appear to have lost their grip on reality. It was also a signal to their European clients, who have completely lost it as well, that Russia means business," Ryabkov told journalists.
"We will accomplish our set objectives in the special military operation and Russia will protect its security interests by all available means in our arsenal, including by way of the newest intermediate-range ballistic missile Oreshnik," the diplomat continued.
Asked about the potential deployment of Oreshnik missile systems in Belarus, Ryabkov responded that he could not comment on the operational deployment of any weapons systems.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said on November 21 that the United States and its NATO allies had announced their decision to grant Kiev permission to use long-range high-precision weapons, following which US-and UK-made missiles attacked Russian military sites in the Kursk and Bryansk Regions.
In response to these attacks, Russia test-launched the latest Oreshnik hypersonic intermediate-range ballistic missiles with conventional warheads against Ukraine’s major Yuzhmash defense enterprise in Dnepr (formerly Dnepropetrovsk), Putin elaborated.
The Russian leader stressed that the West’s inflammatory actions might trigger serious consequences if the Ukraine conflict escalates further.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko announced following the December 6 meeting of the Supreme Council of the Union State of Russia and Belarus that he had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin to deploy Oreshnik missile systems on the territory of Belarus. Putin stated that it could be done in the second half of 2025. The Belarusian Defense Ministry stressed that the decision to deploy Oreshnik missile systems in Belarus had come in response to the steps by Germany and the United States to deploy intermediate-range missiles to Europe.