The Perm was rolled out of the giant ship hall in Severodvinsk in Arkhangelsk region on March 27.

Sevmash launches Perm multi-purpose nuclear-powered submarine

The brand new submarine was floated out of the yard's dock hall on Thursday. Russia is now half-way in launching the series of the Yasen-M class. 

The Perm is the sixth submarine of the Yasen/Yasen-M class and is expected to sail for the Pacific Fleet. First, a year or so of sea trials have to be conducted to measure the vessel's performance, general seaworthiness and weapons systems. 

Unlike previous classes of Soviet-designed attack submarines, the Yasen/Yasen-M vessels have a multi-role function; the hunter-killer role as well as to target sea or land enemies with vertical launched cruise missiles. 

According to the Sevmash yard, the Perm is the first in the series that is a regular carrier of Zirkon missiles, the hyper-sonic weapon designed to be armed either with a conventional warhead or a nuclear warhead. 

It is a worry in the West that Russia again sails multi-purpose submarines armed with nuclear weapons, not only the fleet of ballistic missile submarines. Tactical nuclear weapons were removed from U.S. and Russian submarines by the end of the Cold War, but are now coming back in Russia's underwater fleet for warfare. 

The launch of Perm in Severodvinsk took place with Vladimir Putin attending via video-link from Murmansk where he on Thursday met with navy commander Admiral Aleksandr Moiseev onboard Perm's sister vessel, the Arkhangelsk. Putin also attended the Arctic Forum conference

Putin praised the designers and builders of the new submarine, and noted that Perm is the first multi-purpose submarine armed with Tsirkon hypersonic cruise missiles. 

The missile, though, has already been tested with the Yasen-class. The first such test took place in October 2021 from the Severodvinsk. The submarine was then in surface position in the White Sea and launched against a target in the Barents Sea. 

Unconfirmed Russian sources claim the Tsirkon missile has a range of up to 1,000 kilometers. 

Putin is confident the new generation submarines will help Russia strengthen its position as a global maritime power.

"Such submarines and ships will increase the power of all our fleets, will strengthen the security of Russia's maritime borders, the Northern Sea Route, will ensure the solution of tasks to protect national interests in various areas of the World Ocean, including the Arctic zone, which in the conditions of intensifying global competition is acquiring the most important economic, logistical, and transport significance," Vladimir Putin said from Atomflot, the base for Russia's fleet of nuclear-powered icebreakers in Murmansk. 

Of the five submarines in the class already in operation, three are with the Northern Fleet (Severodvinsk, Kazan and Arkhangelsk), while two sail with the Pacific Fleet (Krasnoyarsk and Novosibirsk). 

Three more are at different stages of construction at the Sevmash yard (Ulyanovsk, Voronezh and Vladivostok). Construction of one more is expected to start in 2025 (Bratsk), while two more are announced, but contracts are yet to be signed. 

Putin spoke from Murmansk where he went onboard the Arkhangelsk, the Northern Fleet's newest Yasen-M class multi-purpose submarine, a siste-vessel of Perm.
"We have continued, and will continue, to strengthen the Navy, including its strategic component, and in general increase the pace and volume of construction of surface and submarine ships of various designs, equipping them with the latest weapons, equipment, and communications equipment," Putin said in his video-speech at the launching ceremony. In the background is Arkhangelsk, the Northern Fleet's Yasen-M class submarine visited by Putin on March 27.
Vladimir Putin gave a live-video speech from the port of Atomflot in Murmansk to the launching ceremony of Perm at the Sevmash yard in Severodvinsk.
Perm was rolled out of the ship hall at Sevmash late Thursday evening.
The Perm is powered by one nuclear-reactor of the KTP-6 type, allegedly running much quieter than previous generations of Soviet designed submarine reactors.
Ship yard officials, the crew and others were lined up next to the submarine listening to Vladimir Putin talking on a big screen inside the ship hall before Perm was rolled out.

A video of the ceremony is posted by the Kremlin

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