Putin's new 'super weapons' that could obliterate the West in seconds: How Kremlin can trigger Armageddon at the flick of a switch with 'Flying Chernobyl', tsunami torpedo and space nuke
- Core Insights Advisory Services

- Nov 16
- 6 min read
Date: November 16, 2025
Source: Daily Mail and Russian News TV
The chilling truth for the West is this - if Vladimir Putin presses a button, cities from London to New York could be horrifically turned to wasteland in minutes.
Deep inside Russia's military machine, the tyrant is quietly assembling an arsenal designed not to win a war in Europe, but to decimate whole nations at the push of a button.
His scientists are racing ahead with a terrifying array of nuclear systems that sound closer to doomsday fiction than modern military reality.
They are building a suite of super weapons designed to frighten the world into caution - but these are not just bombs and missiles.
They are nuclear-powered underwater drones, reactor-driven cruise missiles, hypersonic attack vehicles and even suspected space-based capabilities that American officials warn could, in the most extreme scenario, blind satellites and plunge modern societies into darkness in seconds.
If Kremlin commanders are to be believed about their 'Poseidon' doomsday torpedo, a detonation would hurl a gigantic wall of irradiated seawater across coastal cities and naval bases in the West.
When unveiling a fresh test recently, Putin calmly declared there are no existing interception methods and 'there is nothing like this', as if announcing a new naval ship rather than a device capable of poisoning continents.
For decades, Washington and Moscow relied on mutual deterrence and painstaking arms control treaties to ensure nobody crossed the line. Many treaties have been pushed aside or are totally dead, and military communication channels are strained.
Russia is at war in Europe and has repeatedly rattled the nuclear sabre.
And each time the Kremlin announces progress on one of its so-called invincible weapons, military officials and diplomats in the West exchange looks that say it plainly: the world is closer to nuclear peril than at any point since 1962.
And the most chilling truth of all is that the machines Moscow says it has built are not stored away. They are being touted, tested and certified.

Perhaps the most alarming of all is a weapon Russia calls Poseidon. Western officials usually refer to it cautiously, stressing that hard performance data is not public.
But the broad contours are accepted because Putin himself has described them. Poseidon is a nuclear-powered, nuclear-capable underwater drone the size of a small submarine.
Russian state media and officials have claimed it can travel thousands of miles underwater, guided by artificial intelligence, before detonating near enemy coastlines.
In theory, analysts say, such a blast could drive a massive radioactive surge inland, sending huge tsunami waves that could devastate cities.
When Putin confirmed a Poseidon test late last month, he said Russia had launched it from a submarine and then activated the reactor that powers it.
'There is nothing like this,' he told a group of military officials. 'There is no way to intercept it.' Some critics have said that Putin's claim that it is impossible to be intercepted cannot be verified.
But in nuclear strategy, perception is reality, and whether or not the system performs exactly as billed, its purpose is undeniable. It was developed as a response to the US's withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.
Former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev declared that Poseidon can be considered a true 'doomsday weapon.'
Russian media commentators have suggested it could 'drown Britain.' Western analysts say such scenarios are likely exaggerated, but agree the concept itself is designed to terrify. It is said to be 20-24 metres long and about 2 metres in diameter.
Some experts point out that generating a continent-sweeping radioactive tsunami is scientifically uncertain. But others note that uncertainty is the point.
If even a fraction of the horror described in Russian propaganda came to pass, coastal cities would be devastated, harbours contaminated, and land rendered toxic for years.
As if that was not enough, last Saturday, Putin unveiled his new terrifying nuclear submarine, which is built to carry Poseidon.


The Khabarovsk is said to have cost £1billion and has a 10,000-ton displacement.
The country's defence minister, Andrei Belousov, who oversaw the unveiling, said: 'The heavy nuclear-powered missile cruiser Khabarovsk is being launched from the renowned Sevmash shipyard.
'Carrying underwater weapons and robotic systems, it will enable us to successfully secure Russia's maritime borders and protect its national interests in various parts of the world's oceans.'
Russian sources now say the Khabarovsk has been sent off for sea trials.
Above the waves, a second horror - where the United States once abandoned nuclear-powered cruise missile research as too dangerous, Russia pressed forward.
The Burevestnik, known as the 'Flying Chernobyl,' a weapon of 'unlimited range' as Putin puts it, is designed to fly using a miniature nuclear reactor, according to Russian officials.
In October, Putin said Russia had achieved 'key objectives' in a fresh test. General Valery Gerasimov added that the missile flew for several hours, covering a distance of nearly 87,000 miles, adding that 'this is not the limit.'
Western governments have not verified those performance claims. What is confirmed is the risk: in 2019, a suspected Burevestnik-related accident killed multiple Russian nuclear specialists and caused a detectable radiation spike.
Critics say the very concept of a nuclear-propelled missile is reckless. 'Nuclear-powered cruise missiles are not a new idea,' said Patrycja Bazylczyk, a research associate at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies. 'They are just a bad idea.'
She added the world risks 'radioactive wreckage or some other unintended consequence.'
Even if Russia never fields Burevestnik operationally, the fact that Moscow pursued and tested such a system at all underscores the Kremlin's mindset of deterrence through dread.
On Russian television, the missile is nicknamed the Flying Chernobyl because of the radioactive exhaust its propulsion allegedly leaves in its wake, a feature the Kremlin uses to underline the device's terror value as much as its strike capability.
Putin has bragged that it is a 'unique system' and 'one that no other country in the world possesses'.
Then comes the frontier that was supposed to be protected by treaty: space.
In February 2022, Russia launched a satellite called Cosmos-2553 into an orbit so high and radiation-filled that analysts noted its unusual profile immediately.
The Khabarovsk is said to have cost £1billion and has a 10,000-ton displacement. The country's defence minister, Andrei Belousov, who oversaw the unveiling, said: 'The heavy nuclear-powered missile cruiser Khabarovsk is being launched from the renowned Sevmash shipyard.
'Carrying underwater weapons and robotic systems, it will enable us to successfully secure Russia's maritime borders and protect its national interests in various parts of the world's oceans.' Russian sources now say the Khabarovsk has been sent off for sea trials.
Above the waves, a second horror - where the United States once abandoned nuclear-powered cruise missile research as too dangerous, Russia pressed forward.
The Burevestnik, known as the 'Flying Chernobyl,' a weapon of 'unlimited range' as Putin puts it, is designed to fly using a miniature nuclear reactor, according to Russian officials.
In October, Putin said Russia had achieved 'key objectives' in a fresh test. General Valery Gerasimov added that the missile flew for several hours, covering a distance of nearly 87,000 miles, adding that 'this is not the limit.'
Western governments have not verified those performance claims. What is confirmed is the risk: in 2019, a suspected Burevestnik-related accident killed multiple Russian nuclear specialists and caused a detectable radiation spike.
Critics say the very concept of a nuclear-propelled missile is reckless. 'Nuclear-powered cruise missiles are not a new idea,' said Patrycja Bazylczyk, a research associate at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies. 'They are just a bad idea.' She added the world risks 'radioactive wreckage or some other unintended consequence.'
Even if Russia never fields Burevestnik operationally, the fact that Moscow pursued and tested such a system at all underscores the Kremlin's mindset of deterrence through dread.
On Russian television, the missile is nicknamed the Flying Chernobyl because of the radioactive exhaust its propulsion allegedly leaves in its wake, a feature the Kremlin uses to underline the device's terror value as much as its strike capability. Putin has bragged that it is a 'unique system' and 'one that no other country in the world possesses'.
Then comes the frontier that was supposed to be protected by treaty: space.
In February 2022, Russia launched a satellite called Cosmos-2553 into an orbit so high and radiation-filled that analysts noted its unusual profile immediately.

Russia's Defence Ministry said it was testing equipment, but American officials later briefed that the satellite might be linked to experiments for a future nuclear anti-satellite device.
US intelligence has said publicly it believes Russia is exploring a space-based nuclear capability, a claim the Kremlin denies.
But when the United States brought a resolution to the United Nations reaffirming the decades-old ban on nuclear weapons in orbit, Russia vetoed it, while China abstained. The US and its allies voted in favour.
'Why, if you are following the rules, would you not support a resolution that reaffirms them?' asked US Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield.
In orbit, Russian sources and domestic commentary describe a programme that would give Moscow the power to blind and paralyse modern society from above.
Kremlin-aligned analysts talk of an orbital capability that would detonate over enemy lines and fry satellites, shut down GPS and military networks and plunge entire regions into darkness without a single ground strike.
This would effectively turn space into a theatre where modern civilisation can be switched off in seconds.
The last time a nuclear device detonated at high altitude, during the 1962 Starfish Prime test, streetlights failed in Hawaii hundreds of miles away.
