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Mil News Russian Military News & Discussion

Moscow, Riyadh eye 1.5m bpd OPEC output hike
Russia says it will join Saudi Arabia to ask the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to increase production by 1.5 million barrels a day (bpd) in the third quarter of 2018.

Russia's Energy Minister Alexander Novak said that Moscow and Riyadh "propose increasing production in the third quarter by 1.5 million bpd".

"We are only proposing this for the third quarter. In September, we will review the situation in the market and decide the future course," RIA Novosti news agency quoted Novak as saying as reported by Reuters.

The Russian energy minister's remarks follow reports that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Thursday – a meeting which reportedly culminated in a deal on oil production ceilings.

No details on the agreement came out, but bin Salman was quoted by media as hailing Riyadh's cooperation with Moscow over oil market issues

OPEC and Russia decided together in 2016 to cut their supply in order to push prices up following a crash induced by a global crude production glut.

An oil production shortfall in Iran and Venezuela has changed the scenario for the two countries and members of the oil cartel, Reuters added in its report.

Since 2017, an OPEC agreement on production cuts has allowed oil prices to rise but there are fears that renewed American sanctions on Iran and a fall in output in crisis-hit Venezuela could disrupt supply. ...MORE

https://www.globalsecurity.org/mili...presstv05.htm?_m=3n.002a.2318.ph0ao0037n.24uj
 
Russia is launching a modernisation program for its ageing fleet of Tu-95MS long-range strategic bombers.

Despite being a Soviet-era aircraft the Tu-95MS conducted a number of bombing sorties in Syria where it attacked a total of 66 targets with cruise missiles.

Between 1979 and 1993 several dozen Tu-95MSs were produced. The 'Bear' is powered by four turboprop engines and can be equipped with either 6 or 16 Kh-55 missiles and carry a further eight Kh-101 air-launched cruise missiles or 14 Kh-65 anti-ship missiles. Self-defence capabilities include two 23mm automatic cannons and electronic jamming equipment.

The modernisation will include an upgraded NK-12MPM engine, new electronics, a new navigation system and enhanced weapon systems. Work will be performed at Tupolev's Taganrog Aviation Plant, with the first overhauled Tu-95MSM scheduled to be ready for departure by the end of 2019. Russia plans to keep the planes in service until 2040.
 
Russia, the victim? Opposite NATO’s eastern flank, it’s an expansionist West causing anxiety

The past two years have kept NATO busy. Adding to the challenge presented by Russia following its 2014 annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, U.S. President Donald Trump has spent much energy criticizing the trans-Atlantic military alliance and calling on members to spend more on defense, all the while trivializing the situation with Moscow.

But despite Western hand-wringing sparked by Trump’s rhetoric, Russia is not entirely pleased with the state of affairs of the past two years. Accustomed to being the unpredictable element in bilateral relations with Washington, Moscow has yet to square Trump’s pro-Russian rhetoric with his administration’s adversarial footing.

This shift in dynamics has caused increased anxiety among policymakers and analysts in Moscow. The hope once felt in Russia for a detente under Trump is fading, and prolonged confrontation is assumed. State media channels, themselves in wartime footing since 2014, routinely warn Russian citizens of war with an intransigent, expansionist West.

Adding to those anxieties are NATO’s ongoing efforts to modernize and expand military capabilities in central and eastern Europe.

“We don’t like the picture we are seeing,” said Vladimir Frolov, an independent political analyst in Moscow.

“NATO is getting serious about its combat capabilities and readiness levels. Trump may trash NATO and his European allies,” Frolov added, “but it is the capabilities that matter, and those have been growing under Trump.”

NATO has long been Russian President Vladimir Putin’s favorite foreign boogeyman and, as far as political footballs go, this one has been easy and fruitful to kick around at home.

Most of Putin’s legitimacy in recent years has been rooted in a well-designed domestic narrative of Fortress Russia under siege from foreign powers — with NATO being the focus of concern.

From the perspective of Russian military planners, tasked with devising a national defense for the world’s largest land power, NATO is more than a useful rhetorical scarecrow at home — though this helps secure funding for modernization and new hardware. NATO is one of Russia’s primary potential opponents, and therefore a focus of Russian military thinking.

And from that perspective, the situation looks concerning: NATO troops and hardware are being forward deployed to former Soviet satellites in eastern Europe; in June, the alliance unveiled a new initiative — dubbed the “Four 30s” — that will see a significant expansion of NATO’s rapid deployment capabilities; and Germany is considering rearming with an eye on Russia.

“Even the shouting match over the 2 percent spending, not to mention Trump’s lunatic call for 4.5 percent, is a significant concern for Moscow,” Frolov said. “Were Germany to start remilitarizing, approaching the capabilities level of the Cold War, we should be worried. And we would hate to see Poland emerge as the new Germany for U.S. forward basing and positioning.”

NATO has its own reasons for pursuing all of these initiatives: Russia. Many of the alliance’s members, particularly the newer ones on Russia’s borders in eastern Europe, were rattled by Moscow’s brazen annexation of Crimea and have spent the past four years calling for greater collective action to deter possible Russian moves on former Soviet states now in NATO.

Russia, in turn and for a variety of reasons — political expediency and military prudence — has seized on NATO’s efforts to bolster its own defense and spun that into rationale for sustained military expenditures amid economic recession. Actors on all sides — Trump, NATO and the Kremlin — hold irreconcilable positions that sometimes feed into misunderstanding, mistrust and military bolstering.

The Kremlin has made confrontation with the West a cornerstone of its domestic legitimacy. Western politicians and pundits have honed in on Moscow with an intensity that makes their Russian counterparts nervous. And Trump cannot realistically deal with Russia in any way the Kremlin would like to see.

Under such conditions, the buildup is almost certain to continue.
https://www.defensenews.com/global/...ank-its-an-expansionist-west-causing-anxiety/

 
The 40N6 long-range surface-to-air missile of the S-400 Triumf system has been accepted for service in the Russian Army, a source in the domestic defense industry told TASS on Thursday.

"The 40N6 long-range missile [the 40N6E as its export version] has been accepted for service. All the necessary documents were signed in September, after which the Defense Ministry started the purchases of these missiles," the source said.

"Overall, more than a thousand of 40N6 missiles are planned to be purchased under the state armament program through 2027 to provide newly formed and rearm existing S400 regiments of the Aerospace Force with them," the source added, noting that a total of 56 S-400 battalions were planned to be established in the Aerospace Force under this program.

In July, another source in the Russian defense industry told TASS about the successful completion of state joint trials of the 40N6 missile.

The 40N6 is a surface-to-air very long-range missile designed to strike early warning and electronic warfare aircraft, airborne command posts, strategic bombers and hypersonic cruise and ballistic missiles.

According to official data, the missile’s destruction range is up to 380 km for aerodynamic targets and up to 15km for ballistic weapons at an altitude ranging from 10 m to 35 km. The average flight speed is 1,190 m/s. Thanks to its new homing head, the missile can destroy aircraft beyond the boundaries of the radio visibility of ground-based radars.

The missile was developed by the Fakel machine-building design bureau and is being serial-produced by the Avangard Moscow Machine-Building Enterprise. The missile was expected to enter service in the early 2010s but its trials lingered on.

The missiles that were previously in service with the S-400 system (9M96, 48N6 and 48N6DM) were capable of striking targets at a distance of up to 250 km.

The Patriot PAC-3, the US longest-range surface-to-air system, is capable of striking targets at a distance of up to 80-100 km.

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http://tass.com/defense/1026630
 
Russia’s only aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov damaged after floating dry-dock sinks

The floating dry-dock where Russian aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov was being upgraded has ‘sunk completely’, damaging the vessel and potentially killing workers according to Russian media.

“The floating dock has already sunk completely,” a source told TASS. It was earlier reported that the floating dock sank partially.

According to latest reports, four people were seriously injured in the incident and another is reportedly missing.

The accident reportedly happened as the Admiral Kuznetsov was to be taken out of the dry dock. The ship has now been towed to the nearby Sevmorput Yard No 35, yard press spokesman Yevgeny Gladyshev told Interfax. He makes clear that a power outage was what caused the accident.

United Shipbuilding Corporation’s chief, Alexei Rakhmanov, said to state media:

“Obviously when a 70-ton crane crashes on the deck there could be damage, but preliminary reports show that the damage that the ship has suffered is not significant.”

There has been several cases of power outages all over the region recently, including in the cities of Severomorsk and Murmansk.

The carrier has a history of trouble. In November and December 2017, the carrier lost one Su-33 and one MiG-29KR, when both jets reportedly ditched into the sea. Problems with arresting gear were cited as the cause. In 2009, the aircraft carrier also lost a sailor when a fire broke out due to a short circuit.

The carrier started an overhaul and modernisation in the first quarter of 2017. This is expected to extend its service life by 25 years.

...bad photo of sunken Russian drydock;



Russia's aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, was damaged in Murmansk when the dry dock PD-5 where it was undergoing a refit sank on Oct. 30, 2018, sending a giant crane crashing on to the ship. PD-5 is known as one of the world's largest floating dry docks. (Photo/Agencies)
 
Russia Admits That It Can’t Retrofit Aircraft Carrier After Accident

Following the sinking of one of the world’s largest dry docks on October 29 in a shipyard in the far northwest part of Russia, officials have finally admitted that they are unable to continue work on Russia’s sole aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, for the time being. While Russia’s shipbuilding industry is reportedly looking into alternatives, no timely and viable solution to continue retrofitting work on the Russian Navy’s flagship has emerged to date.

“We have alternatives actually for all the ships except for [the aircraft carrier] Admiral Kuznetsov. Our enterprises are in operation, [including] the Nerpa [Ship Repair Factory],” the head of Russia’s United Ship-Building Corporation (USC), Alexei Rakhmanov, is quoted as saying on November 7 by TASS news agency. “After all, we can perform certain docking works in Severodvinsk, not far from Murmansk. We don’t feel any special problems in this regard.”

However, the Russian shipbuilding industry does not possess a large enough facility to accommodate the carrier and it will take at least six to 12 months to recover the sunken floating dry dock. According to open source information, Russia would require international support for any such complex recovery operation as it does not possess the equipment to lift the massive drydock from the seabed on its own.

While work in the ship’s interior can continue, absent a large floating dry dock, it is unlikely that Russia will be able to keep up with the current overhaul schedule, as all work on the ship’s bilge had to cease. Initially, the carrier was to return to active duty within the next two years. Shorty after the incident, there were reports that Severodvinsk shipyard possesses another floating dock, PD-1, that could be used to continue work on the carrier. However, following an evaluation, it was determined that the facility would not be able to accommodate a warship the size of the Admiral Kuznetsov.

The Swedish-made PD-50 drydock reportedly sank when the Admiral Kuznetsov was being pulled out after the failure of a pump system on the night of October 29. As a result of the sinking, a crane fell on the carrier’s deck leaving a hole above the waterline that measures 4 by 5 meters. The accident also injured four workers. The Russian government has set up a commission to investigate the sinking. After the conclusion of the investigation, the commission is set to offer its recommendation whether to recover the PD-50 or look for alternative ways to complete work on the carrier.
 
Wait there's more!!..excuse the google translate of sina military..

According to local media reports in Russia, when the only Russian Kuznetsov aircraft carrier completed(??) the maintenance work, the floating dock suddenly sank. The accident caused two tower cranes to collapse, one of which fell into the bay and the second fell on the hull of the aircraft carrier, causing injuries to the hull and personnel. Recently, some netizens uploaded a high-definition map of the Russian aircraft carrier after the accident. (Source: Caiyun Xiangjiang)

http://slide.mil.news.sina.com.cn/h/slide_8_204_68314.html#p=1







 
NATO is amassing troops in countries bordering Russia, Russian Deputy Defense Minister, Colonel General Alexander Fomin, told reporters on Friday.
“The NATO member-countries are arming themselves, with troops, heavy and armoured vehicles being amassed in the Baltic countries, Poland and other countries under the guise of drills,” he said.

According to Fomin, among the countries building up their military presence are the ones that owe a great deal to Russia. “We lost over 600,000 lives for Poland. Now Poland is the key proponent of that plan and is ready to open a base and three command centers on its soil,” he added.

Some Polish media outlets earlier reported that Poland’s and the United States’ plans to set up a permanent US military base dubbed Fort Trump are unlikely to be executed, and the parties are exploring other options.

At a news conference in the White House on September 18, Polish President Andrzej Duda called on Washington to send more US troops to his country, arguing that would meet the two countries’ interests.

Warsaw earlier agreed to earmark up to $2bln to finance the establishment of a permanent US military base on its soil.
Poland currently hosts a US armor brigade of 3,500 men on a rotating basis. Also, there is a multi-national NATO battalion (another 1,000 troops).
https://www.almasdarnews.com/articl...along-russia-border-amid-ukraine-turmoil-mod/
 
Did Fomin mention anything about the build-up of Russian units along the Ukrainian border?
 
@berkut76 , not a word mate, I submitted the post just to give an idea of what and how those guys are thinking. They are masters at the old "bait and switch" con game aren't they?
 
@berkut76 , not a word mate, I submitted the post just to give an idea of what and how those guys are thinking. They are masters at the old "bait and switch" con game aren't they?

Everything that is in top condition, pretty much all of their air force is right now forwardly deployed around Ukrainian borders. They threaten verbally every country that borders them on a daily basis and not just through talk shows, but through official spokespersons.
 
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Everything that is in top condition, pretty much all of their air force is right now forwardly deployed around Ukrainian borders. They threaten verbally every country that borders them on daily basis and not just through talk shows, but through official spoke persons.
I believe that Putin and company believe that NATO and the EU are crumbling and will do nothing and that the risk of the US getting into it militarily is low.......and they might be right unfortunately.
 
I believe that Putin and company believe that NATO and the EU are crumbling and will do nothing and that the risk of the US getting into it militarily is low.......and they might be right unfortunately.

They are openly talking about re-building Russian Empire in... 1913 borders. Funny thing is that the 1913 borders apply only to the Western expansion with zero interest in Central Asia.
 
The 1913 border? That would mean re-annexing Finland, Estonia and Latvia, Lithuania and Poland (bordering Kaliningrad enclave), Belarus and Ukraine?

Wow they have some designs on going back to the future!
 
The 1913 border? That would mean re-annexing Finland, Estonia and Latvia, Lithuania and Poland (bordering Kaliningrad enclave), Belarus and Ukraine?

Wow they have some designs on going back to the future!

Yep. The new line of thinking is that dissolution of the Russian Empire was the greatest tragedy of the 20th Century.
 
Russia’s militarisation of the Black Sea shouldn’t go unchecked
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A tanker was used to block Ukrainian navy ships from entering the Sea of Azov.

It’s tempting to view the recent confrontation between Russian and Ukrainian naval vessels in the Sea of Azov—in which Russia denied Ukrainian vessels access to the Strait of Kerch and the Ukrainian city of Mariupol—as an extension of the ongoing conflict between the two countries.

Moscow was clearly testing Ukraine’s response to its aggressive interdiction and may have been seeking to provoke an overreaction by Kyiv. These events are also part of a broader pattern of behaviour by Russia that not only impedes legitimate Ukrainian commercial activity, but also significantly encroaches on Ukraine’s exclusive economic zone. Since May, Russia has been stopping and delaying shipping in the region, in the process imposing significant costs on vessels seeking to transact in Ukrainian ports. It has also seized a number of maritime gas fields in the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea belonging to Ukraine and has reportedly extracted an estimated 7.2 billion cubic metres of gas from those fields.

Moscow has significant strategic interests in Mariupol, which is an important port city that not only sits on critical Ukrainian maritime, rail and river junctions, but also dominates the territory between the Russian–Ukrainian border and Crimea. Russian-backed separatists seized Mariupol during the early stages of the Ukrainian conflict but were forced by government troops to relinquish it. It’s likely that Moscow’s designs on the important industrial and commercial hub haven’t diminished.

However, these recent events are potentially more about Moscow asserting military dominance across the Black Sea than about a new phase in Russia’s proxy war in Ukraine. Russia’s brinkmanship in the Sea of Azov could also presage a more aggressive pursuit by Moscow of its strategic interests across the entire Black Sea region, and has profound implications for both regional and global security.

Moscow’s actions in the Sea of Azov have occurred in the context of a dramatic increase in the size and capability of Russia’s Black Sea fleet and land-based forces in Crimea under the Russian state armament program. Russia is now deploying significant new surface and submarine assets in the region. It is also rolling out air and coastal defences that will provide it with the capability to establish an anti-access/area-denial zone preventing freedom of movement that covers almost all of the Black Sea and parts of NATO members Romania, Turkey and Bulgaria.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has defended the military build-up in the region by saying that it is intended to neutralise the ‘emerging threat for national security’. And while Russian defence policymakers’ concerns about NATO encirclement are largely justified, during the first decade of the 21st century there were encouraging signs of greater collaboration between NATO and Moscow in the Black Sea region. NATO and Russian forces conducted joint exercises that were held up as examples of a more constructive approach to managing shared concerns, and this collaboration reflected the reality that Russia wasn’t the only state with equities in Black Sea security. But Russia’s invasion of Georgia in 2008 and its later decision to underwrite a proxy war in eastern Ukraine killed off prospects for enduring collaboration between Moscow and NATO.

Russia’s military build-up in the region over the past five years undermines the sovereign rights and interests of all Black Sea littoral states, because it is designed to empower Moscow with the capability to assert monopoly control over the region, including to deny freedom of movement at sea and in the air. Moscow may have been able to defend its claims to the region as a ‘Russian lake’ in Tsarist and Soviet times, when it administered most of the territory surrounding the Black Sea. But Russia is now just one of five sovereign states that border the Black Sea, and the view that the area is a Russian domain is no longer defensible.

Russia’s aggression in the Sea of Azov is also clearly a marker of its intent in the region, and indicates that Moscow has no qualms about using military capabilities to interdict and delay both commercial and military interests operating in the region. Moscow’s current focus may be the interdiction of commercial shipping into Mariupol, but it has the capability to employ similar disruptive tactics against other critical Ukrainian transportation hubs and commercial centres, such as Odessa, which would have a significant impact on Ukraine’s economy. Similarly, other Black Sea littoral states—in particular, Romania—are closely watching Russia’s military build-up around the Black Sea and its associated belligerent actions and are revising their strategic calculations accordingly. Moscow sees dominance of the region through military pressure as a way to weaken the NATO alliance and European security architecture, enabling it to coerce former Soviet-bloc countries to return to Russia’s orbit.

As noted by Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum, the timing of Russia’s belligerent actions in the Sea of Azov is curious. President Vladimir Putin may be seeking to maximise his gains in the Black Sea region at a time when Washington is preoccupied with China and Iran, and when Europe is fragmenting politically and economically. The inertia in Washington and European capitals is likely to continue into the foreseeable future. So, if Applebaum’s assessment of Moscow’s modus operandi is correct—that it makes a move, waits for a response, and then makes another move when no response is forthcoming—we can likely expect more provocative and disruptive actions by Russian forces deployed around the Black Sea in the near future.

If NATO and key policymakers in the US and Europe continue to cede influence and authority in the Black Sea region to Russia, not only will they be empowering Putin to enforce his will on Ukraine and a number of NATO partners, they will also be contributing to the unravelling of the global rules-based order upon which international security depends.

https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/russias-militarisation-of-the-black-sea-shouldnt-go-unchecked/?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Weekly The Strategist&utm_content=Weekly The Strategist+CID_14733a151fa34cd5cecaa27bc396600f&utm_source=CampaignMonitor&utm_term=Russias militarisation of the Black Sea shouldnt go unchecked
 
Russia sends 2 nuclear-capable bombers to Venezuela

by VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press Monday, December 10th 2018

MOSCOW (AP) — Two Russian nuclear-capable strategic bombers arrived in Venezuela on Monday, a deployment that comes amid soaring Russia-U.S. tensions.

Russia's Defense Ministry said a pair Tu-160 bombers landed at Maiquetia airport outside Caracas on Monday following a 10,000-kilometer (6,200-mile) flight. It didn't say if the bombers were carrying any weapons and didn't say how long they will stay in Venezuela.

The ministry said the bombers were shadowed by Norwegian F-18 fighter jets during part of their flight. It added that a heavy-lift An-124 Ruslan cargo plane and an Il-62 passenger plane accompanied the bombers to Maiquetia.

The Tu-160 is capable of carrying conventional or nuclear-tipped cruise missiles with a range of 5,500 kilometers (3,410 miles). Such bombers took part in Russia's campaign in Syria, where they launched conventionally-armed Kh-101 cruise missiles for the first time in combat.

Code-named Blackjack by NATO, the massive warplane is capable of flying at a speed twice exceeding the speed of sound. Russia has upgraded its Tu-160 fleet with new weapons and electronics and plans to produce a modernized version of the bomber.

The bombers' deployment follows Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's visit to Moscow last week in a bid to shore up political and economic assistance even as his country has been struggling to pay billions of dollars owed to Russia.

Russia is a major political ally of Venezuela, which has become increasingly isolated in the world under growing sanctions led by the U.S. and the European Union, which accuse Maduro of undermining democratic institutions to hold onto power, while overseeing an economic and political crisis that is worse than the Great Depression.

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said at last week's meeting with his Venezuelan counterpart Vladimir Padrino Lopez that Russia would continue to send its military aircraft and warships to visit Venezuela as part of bilateral military cooperation.

Russia sent its Tu-160 strategic bombers and a missile cruiser to visit Venezuela in 2008 amid tensions with the U.S. after Russia's brief war with Georgia. A pair of Tu-160s also visited Venezuela in 2013.

Russia-U.S. relations are currently at post-Cold War lows over Ukraine, the war in Syria and allegations of Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election. Russia has bristled at U.S. and other NATO allies deploying their troops and weapons near its borders.

Asked about the Russian bombers, Pentagon spokesman Col. Rob Manning said he had no specific information about the deployment.

However, Manning cited the humanitarian assistance provided in Central and South American by a U.S. Navy hospital ship, the USNS Comfort, in the past eight weeks. Numerous Venezuelan migrants were among the people who received medical and dental treatment.

"Contrast this with Russia, whose approach to the man-made disaster in Venezuela is to send bomber aircraft instead of humanitarian assistance," Manning said.
 
Two strategic bombers Tu-160 VKS Russia arrived in Venezuela

in the Ministry of Defense reported that the flight of aircraft held in strict accordance with international regulations on the use of airspace

, two Russian strategic bombers Tu-160 and heavy military transport aircraft An-124 "Ruslan" arrived in Venezuela . This was reported on Monday in the press service of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation.

“Two Tu-160 strategic missile carriers, an An-124 heavy military transport aircraft and an IL-62 long-range Aerospace Force (VCS) aircraft flew from airfields in the Russian Federation to the International Airport of Macetiac of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela,” the department said .

The Defense Ministry added that the flight of the aircraft took place over the waters of the Atlantic Ocean, the Barents Sea, the Norwegian Sea, the Caribbean Sea in strict accordance with the International Rules for the Use of Airspace. “During the flight, pilots of the VKS traveled more than 10,000 kilometers,” the ministry said.

This is not the first such flight of Russian Tu-160. Previously, these strategic missile carriers visited Venezuela in September 2008 and in October-November 2013.

(c) Buryat

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The Russian Ground Forces will receive more than 450 armored vehicles, including T-72B3M and T-90M tanks, in 2019, the Russian Defense Ministry said Monday in a statement.
"In 2019, more than 450 pieces of armored vehicles will enter service in the divisions of the Russian Ground Forces.

As part of the implementation of the state defense order, the enterprises of the defense industry complex will supply the Russian Defense Ministry with modern types of armored vehicles that have successfully proven themselves in operation in various climatic zones," the statement reads.

The ministry noted that T-72B3M and T-90M tanks, BTR-82A and BTR-82AM armored personnel carriers as well as BMP-3 infantry fighting vehicles will enter service, among others.
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Russia’s Missile Troops and Artillery will be completely rearmed with Iskander-M tactical ballistic missile systems this year.

The 9K720 Iskander-M is a short-range system deployed by Russia, which includes a cluster munitions warhead, a fuel-air explosive enhanced-blast warhead, a high explosive-fragmentation warhead, an earth penetrator for bunker busting and an electromagnetic pulse device for anti-radar missions.

In 2011 the Kolomna-based Machine-Building Design Bureau (KBM) and the Russian Ministry of Defense signed a long-term contract under which KBM was to deliver two Iskander-M brigades to the military per year. The implementation of the contract began in the year 2013.
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