One thing to consider regarding russian
Wunderwaffen: They do not actually, meaningfully exist.
Russia, it has to be said, is fundamentally too screwed up to actually run advanced weapons development. Sure, they have shiny projects like the Su-57 and the T-14 that they like to parade around, but these are not actually
available in any meaningful number.
Why? Because Russia is a kleptocracy. It is fundamentally built on extraction industries, and not much else. Within the russian state, the center of power is concentrated in a balance between the security services and the people who managed to grab pieces of the soviet union when it fell apart. Neither of these have any interest whatsoever in cultivating the sort of engineering culture that sits at the heart of the western, or for that matter, chinese, military-industrial complexes.
As an example, consider the following case study:
This is an AHT 4135F. It's a russian-designed, russian produced piece of kit. It was created in response to an order from Putin to reduce reliance on imported gear.
This is a czech Zetor Forterra 135. A keen observer might notice some similarities between the two.
Why? Because what the russian company, which spent 2 years building a factory and designing the 4135F, actually did was to buy Forterra 135s in kit form from the czechs.
When this came out, it was a huge scandal, of course. The CEO of the company which so heinously scammed everyone got arrested, everything good, the governor in whose area this happened was cleared of wrongdoing and continued the big tractor project, soon presenting
this model to the public, which is very definitely a homegrown russian-made tractor, yes sir.
This picture, showing said governor shaking hands with representatives of the Zetor Tractor Company in Brno, is purely coincidental I am sure.
You might ask yourself what this person is doing now. Why, after her stint as governor of Vladimir region, she got a new job - Auditor of the Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation, where she'll be checking the transparency of other government entities and make sure they're using government funds responsibly.
Now, what this story (which is just one of many such attempts to "reduce reliance on imported tech") shows is that it is easier (and, in some ways,
more respectable) to blatantly cheat in russia than trying to build the tech base in earnest.
The people in power in Russia do not value the sort of "creative destruction" that an active technology sector requires in order to work. Russia absolutely has world-class scientists and engineers, but they aren't valued
in Russia.
The immediate consequence of this being that
anything even marginally complex requires western hardware and expertise in order to work. It's absolutely ridiculous, but that is what happens when the top tier of a society is made up of what are, essentially, mafioso who do not care how something is done as long as they get their cut.
Bottom line: Russian superweapons aren't a thing to worry about. They're not a factor.
If you absolutely want to worry about super missiles coming to kill the carriers, well.... look more towards the chinese efforts in this area. They, after all,
do see US carrier task groups as actual threats.