This was the point of the test that caused the ISS to have to move.
RUSSIA'S new weapon dubbed "Star Warrior" has the West worried as it can blast satellites out of orbit at heights of up to 500 miles above Earth.
Vladimir Putin's state owned TV issued a chilling threat that Russia may deploy the system to destroy some 32 Western satellites to render Nato missiles useless.
It comes after Putin used the weapon to destroy a redundant Soviet-era Tselina-D military reconnaissance satellite - blasting it into an orbital debris storm.
Intelligence sources in the West and Russia believe the hunk of space junk was annihilated by the new satellite killer missile system.
The weapon has been dubbed the "Star Warrior" by state Russian media and is the next step in an orbital arms race.
Putin tested the missiles nine times between 2014 and 2020 before it was deployed to destroy an actual satellite on November 15, according to Moscow-based Centre for Analysis of Strategy and Technologies.
State-controlled Russian Channel One TV host Dmitry Kiselyov - dubbed Putin’s “mouthpiece” and “propagandist-in-chief” - has claimed the satellite strike was a deliberate warning to the West not to cross the Kremlin’s red lines on Ukraine.
He boasted in the event of worsening relations, Russia could wipe out 32 GPS satellites crucial for Nato’s military operations, including the pinpointing of missile strikes.
“That was the completion of tests of Russia’s anti-satellite system, the accuracy of which (Defence Minister) Sergei Shoigu called jewellery-like.
“It means that if Nato crosses our red line, it risks losing all 32 of its GPS satellites at once.”
This would “blind all their missiles, planes and ships, not to mention the ground forces."
The warning comes as relations continue to worsen between Russia and the West amid fears that Putin may be about to invade Ukraine.
Putin's "Star Warrior" missile system is believed to fire 14TS033 two-stage interceptor missiles which on the final version will be able to be armed with a nuclear or kinetic warhead.
We will continue to clearly and consistently delineate our red lines, which no-one is permitted to cross
Dmitry Kiselyov The A-235 missile system is both an anti-satellite system, and an anti-ballistic missile system - with its predecessor currently guarding Moscow.
It uses the ominous-looking and pyramid-esque Don-2N radar to detect incoming threats and blast them out the sky - which can also detect threats in space.
The radar - known to Nato as the Pill Box - is currently used by Russia's A-135 missile defences and will be used with its successor, A-235.
The centrepiece of the radar is a supercomputer called Elbrus-2.
Once threats are detected, the 14TS033 missiles can reportedly accelerate to speeds of up to Mach 12 - some 15,000mph.
And they are believed to be able to hit targets some 500 miles over the Earth, with the ISS orbiting at heights of around 250 miles. ...