Not enough distance, and if you think about it, you will know why. Air flow unstuck produces turbulence over the length of the cylinder.
From the citation Judah 14 helpfully provided (thank you, sir.):
Following the February 1953 decree, OKB-1 superseded the N-3 study with a development project code-named T-1, from "Tema" (theme) No. 1. Reflecting the expansion of the work on the ballistic missile, several new departments were formed within OKB-1 to focus on the task. To meet the required specifications, the intercontinental rocket was expected to have a launch mass of 170 tons. (52) For comparison, the largest existing Soviet ballistic missile at the time -- the R-5 -- weighed just under 29 tons! Thus, the proposed new rocket represented a major technological leap.
From the outset, the intercontinental missile was conceived as a two-stage rocket because it was the only practical way to achieve the required flight range. However, the ignition of the second stage during flight presented a serious technical obstacle at the time. After considering up to 60 designs during 1953, engineers chose a "parallel" architecture, clustering short boosters of the first stage around a much taller core booster. (18) Some called it a one-and-a-half-stage rocket, because all five boosters would ignite on the pad, but the second stage (also known as a sustainer stage) would continue firing, after the four boosters of the first stage had separated.
The R-6 used FOUR wrap-around strap-ons and a core sustainer. The reason was that if one strap-on one more strap-on actually could be dead-manned and the fuel pumped through the three working to still balance the thrust line along the CG of the mass. If the core failed then you use the four strap-ons. If the core and a strap-on failed, you could still use two engines to throw it downrange instead of having an H-bomb land on top of you. (Where did you get the idea that Russian liquid fuelled war rockets did not have engine out? The people didn't want their own hydrogen bombs falling on their own territory.) The R-6 you drew shows three, not four strap-ons. If one fails, the rocket tilts as uneven thrust shoves it into an uncontrolled loop. You have no way to balance the thrust. Loss of rocket, loss of mission. So I suggest that it might be okay to redraw the R-6 (R-7) with a symmetric payload cover, or insert the staging ring and put a cluster of four strap-ons around the core engine. That would work. What you have now doesn't and it won't work. The Russians are not stupid. Real or AU.