<p>The Kremlin on Wednesday sounded the alarm over the theft of sensitive equipment from a secretive "doomsday plane" designed for the country's top command in event of a nuclear attack.</p>.<p>The interior ministry said police in the southern city of Taganrog had been alerted that 1 million rubles ($13,600) worth of equipment was stolen from an Ilyushin Il-80 plane at an airfield.</p>.<p>President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov described the breach as an "emergency situation" and vowed that "measures will be taken to prevent this from happening in the future."</p>.<p>The interior ministry did not specify what was stolen but said that investigators had been dispatched to the scene.</p>.<p>The port city of Taganrog, more than 1,100 kilometres (700 miles) south of Moscow, is home to Beriev Aircraft Company, a struggling state-controlled enterprise.</p>.<p>Both the interior ministry and Beriev declined to comment when reached by AFP.</p>.<p>But the Kremlin-friendly REN-TV television channel reported earlier this week that radio equipment was taken from an Il-80 plane that was undergoing maintenance at Taganrog.</p>.<p>Thieves opened the aircraft's cargo hatch and shoe and fingerprints were found inside the aircraft, the channel said, adding that Beriev reported the theft to police last week.</p>.<p>The channel said that 12 people had been questioned as part of the probe that was made public on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Citing a source, it said officials with access to the airfield could be behind the high-profile theft.</p>.<p>The robbed plane is one of four flying command centres built to evacuate the president and other top officials and issue commands in case of a nuclear explosion.</p>.<p>Based on the Ilyushin Il-86 jetliner, the first such Russian plane is believed to have flown in 1985.</p>.<p>The aircraft are designed to sustain electromagnetic pulses and are almost windowless to prevent the crew and passengers from being blinded by the effects of a nuclear blast.</p>.<p>Military experts said the theft was no ordinary incident and underscored the logistics of guarding highly classified hardware.</p>.<p>Military expert Mikhail Khodarenok said that the Soviet-era radio equipment from the Il-80 was most likely targeted for its scrap value -- a common occurence in Russia.</p>.<p>Writing in the Gazeta.ru news portal, Khodarenok said the incident was significant because it constituted a "highly classified data leak."</p>.<p>"Heads will roll," said Vasily Kashin, a military expert at Moscow's Higher School of Economics.</p>.<p>But he cautioned it was important not to exaggerate the national security significance of "theft of old Soviet-era metal scrap".</p>.<p>"We don't know the condition of that plane," Kashin told AFP.</p>.<p>Another miliary expert, Pavel Felgenhauer, said the loss of the Soviet-era equipment was likely to have rendered the plane unusable.</p>.<p>Last year, Deputy Defence Minister Alexei Krivoruchko said work was under way to modernise the Il-80s.</p>.<p>The United States operates similar flying command centres which are called E-4B Nightwatch and based on the Boeing 747s.</p>
<p>The Kremlin on Wednesday sounded the alarm over the theft of sensitive equipment from a secretive "doomsday plane" designed for the country's top command in event of a nuclear attack.</p>.<p>The interior ministry said police in the southern city of Taganrog had been alerted that 1 million rubles ($13,600) worth of equipment was stolen from an Ilyushin Il-80 plane at an airfield.</p>.<p>President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov described the breach as an "emergency situation" and vowed that "measures will be taken to prevent this from happening in the future."</p>.<p>The interior ministry did not specify what was stolen but said that investigators had been dispatched to the scene.</p>.<p>The port city of Taganrog, more than 1,100 kilometres (700 miles) south of Moscow, is home to Beriev Aircraft Company, a struggling state-controlled enterprise.</p>.<p>Both the interior ministry and Beriev declined to comment when reached by AFP.</p>.<p>But the Kremlin-friendly REN-TV television channel reported earlier this week that radio equipment was taken from an Il-80 plane that was undergoing maintenance at Taganrog.</p>.<p>Thieves opened the aircraft's cargo hatch and shoe and fingerprints were found inside the aircraft, the channel said, adding that Beriev reported the theft to police last week.</p>.<p>The channel said that 12 people had been questioned as part of the probe that was made public on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Citing a source, it said officials with access to the airfield could be behind the high-profile theft.</p>.<p>The robbed plane is one of four flying command centres built to evacuate the president and other top officials and issue commands in case of a nuclear explosion.</p>.<p>Based on the Ilyushin Il-86 jetliner, the first such Russian plane is believed to have flown in 1985.</p>.<p>The aircraft are designed to sustain electromagnetic pulses and are almost windowless to prevent the crew and passengers from being blinded by the effects of a nuclear blast.</p>.<p>Military experts said the theft was no ordinary incident and underscored the logistics of guarding highly classified hardware.</p>.<p>Military expert Mikhail Khodarenok said that the Soviet-era radio equipment from the Il-80 was most likely targeted for its scrap value -- a common occurence in Russia.</p>.<p>Writing in the Gazeta.ru news portal, Khodarenok said the incident was significant because it constituted a "highly classified data leak."</p>.<p>"Heads will roll," said Vasily Kashin, a military expert at Moscow's Higher School of Economics.</p>.<p>But he cautioned it was important not to exaggerate the national security significance of "theft of old Soviet-era metal scrap".</p>.<p>"We don't know the condition of that plane," Kashin told AFP.</p>.<p>Another miliary expert, Pavel Felgenhauer, said the loss of the Soviet-era equipment was likely to have rendered the plane unusable.</p>.<p>Last year, Deputy Defence Minister Alexei Krivoruchko said work was under way to modernise the Il-80s.</p>.<p>The United States operates similar flying command centres which are called E-4B Nightwatch and based on the Boeing 747s.</p>