Space consists of high-energy particles and high-temperature fluctuations, which causes single event upsets (SEUs). Conventional 6T static random access memory (SRAM) is unable to tolerate this harsh environment in space. Therefore, it is necessary to design an SRAM, which can withstand this harsh environment. In order to mitigate SEUs, a radiation-hardened SRAM cell, named soft-error resilient read decoupled 12T (SRRD12T), is presented in this article. To estimate the relative performance of the proposed cell, it is compared with other contemporary designs, such as RHMN12T, RHMP12T, RHD12T, QUCCE12T, and QUATRO12T, over various important design metrics. SRRD12T can not only recover from SEU induced at any of its sensitive nodes but also from single event multi-node upsets (SEMNUs) induced at its storage node pair. Furthermore, due to the read decoupled design of SRRD12T, it exhibits the highest read stability. In addition to these, SRRD12T shows 1.14 x /1.17x shorter write delay than RHD12T/RHMP12T. Moreover, SRRD12T consumes lower hold power and exhibits higher write ability than most of the comparison cells. However, these advantages are obtained by exhibiting a slightly longer read delay.