Vladimir Putin is overseeing the construction of a covert new facility believed to house a powerful “Doomsday nuke” capable of devastating London in just eight minutes following launch. The site, located near Pavlovka village in Belarus, has seen significant development over the past year, expanding to the size of approximately 280 football fields. It features 13 ammunition depots, each measuring 100ft by 60ft and shielded by defensive structures.
Experts suspect that this extensive base could serve as a strategic location for Russia’s Oreshnik ballistic missile system, potentially putting the UK and other parts of Europe within easy reach for Putin’s military forces. The doomsday intermediate-range ballistic missile, which has only been tested once without a live warhead in Ukraine, is touted by Russian state media as a game-changer that could reach the UK in a mere eight minutes.
The Oreshnik, currently positioned to strike London in just 20 minutes, is said to carry a devastating warhead producing temperatures of up to 4,000C, capable of obliterating targets. The base reportedly includes three massive hangars and various structures, all concealed from the public eye and not featured on maps or in Belarusian media reports.
Military analysts speculate that the base may house the Oreshnik system or possibly nuclear weapons, leveraging Cold War-era storage facilities. Despite promises from Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko to receive the deadly missiles from Putin imminently, there is no confirmation of their deployment yet. In a related development, Polish authorities recently shot down Russian drones trespassing into their airspace, escalating tensions and prompting concerns of potential conflict as NATO assesses its response.