Miragedriver
Brigadier
I like this "fake" KA-27/Mi-24 hybrid. It would be an interesting attack/transport helicopter for Naval Infantry units.
Interesting. I thought the Northern Fleet got its first aircraft back in 2012.The first modernized Il-38N anti-submarine warfare plane was delivered to the Russian Navy on July 15, an Ilyushin Aviation Complex spokesperson told RIA Novosti.
The company completed repair and modernization work on the first mass-produced Il-38N anti-submarine warfare plane for the Russian Navy. The work was completed under a contract that provides for the modernization of five combat aircraft," according to a spokesperson for the Ilyushin Aviation Complex, a subsidiary of Russia's United Aircraft Corporation.
The modernization included the installment of the new Novella-P-38 search and tracking system, which significantly expands the plane's capacity.
At the request of Maritime Air Command, the first mass-produced modernized plane was named after designer Rady Papkovsky, who played an important role in creating the Il-38N.
The Russian Defense Ministry has signed a contract to give Belarus four S-300 air defense systems, which are worth hundreds of millions of dollars, free of charge, a top Russian military official told ITAR-Tass on Thursday.
The S-300 is one of the world's most sought after air defense systems. Its radar can hone in on aircraft, cruise missiles and even ballistic missiles, and destroy targets as far away as 150 kilometers, launching one missile every three seconds.
The S-300s will be handed over as soon as the Belarussian Defense Ministry signs the contact, said Konstantin Biryulin, deputy director of the Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu first told reporters about the planned deal in October 2013, saying that both sides were looking to beef up their joint air defense system, which was created as part of a 2009 agreement between Moscow and Minsk.
Minsk is not stopping at the S-300s, however, having recently agreed to buy four Yak-130 combat training aircraft from Moscow, and an unspecified number of Tor-M2 air defense systems, Biryulin said.
Iran has been trying to buy S-300s from Russia for years, but to no avail.
An $800-million-purchase of five S-300s by Iran was halted in 2010 by then-President Dmitry Medvedev, who was worried that the deal would tarnish Russia's image at a time when the United Nations was imposing sanctions on Tehran to pressure it into abandoning its nuclear ambitions
France should have cancelled its sale of sophisticated amphibious warships to Russia when Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine and annexed the Crimea in March. The shooting down of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 by Russian proxies in Ukraine on Thursday now mandates such action by Paris. American political and economic leadership has a role to play in the matter.
Americans of this generation rarely credit French military prowess. They instead tend to associate France with its “old Europe” opposition to the Second Gulf War or its surrenders at Deim Bein Phu or in the rail car at Compiegne in 1940. For Teddy Roosevelt and the rest of the world with a longer historical memory, however, “the brilliant gallantry of the French soldier has for many centuries been proverbial.” Vercingetorix, Charles Martel, Joan of Arc, Napoleon and Charles de Gaulle, are, to name but a few, French military heroes who have changed history.
The sophistication of French armaments is equal to the valor of its soldiers. Dassault’s Rafale is one of the most dangerous fighter jets in the world. The Mirage fighter jet is legendary. A handful of French Exocet anti-ship missiles almost turned the Falklands conflict in Argentina’s favor. The Charles de Gaulle is the only nuclear-powered aircraft carrier outside of the United States Navy. France will commission a new generation of Suffren-class nuclear attack submarines in 2017.
One of France’s most important but least known naval platforms is the 21,300 ton Mistral-class amphibious assault ship (LHD). These helicopter carriers have a 69,000 square foot flat top deck with six helicopter landing spots. Their massive hanger is large enough to hold 16 helicopters, which access the flight deck via heavy lift elevators. The ships’ size allows them to operate with up to 30 embarked helicopters. In addition, their vehicle hangers can accommodate 40 main battle tanks, and they provide quarters for up to 500 soldiers or marines. The troops can be transported to shore by helicopter or by amphibious catamarans housed in the ships’ well dock. Amphibious operations are controlled from a nearly-10,000 square foot command center fit for 150 officers and staff. The ships carry a medical facility equivalent to a hospital for a 25,000 inhabitant city with a complex surgery center.
Like their American LHD “light carrier,” “gator navy” cousins, France’s Mistral-class amphibious warships with their embarked air wings and troops are game changers in the littoral and amphibious environment. Had Russia possessed such warships in 2008, boasted its naval chief, Admiral Vladimir Vysotsky, it would have won its war against Republic of Georgia in “40 minutes instead of 26 hours.” The result would have likely been the capture of Tbilisi and the total subjugation of the nation as opposed to Russia “only” carving it up into phony autonomous regions recognized by the Kremlin alone. Thus, it was no surprise when Putin approached Nicolas Sarkozy in 2009 with an offer to purchase two Mistral-class warships. In 2011, over the objections of Georgia, its Baltic NATO allies and the United States, France agreed to sell two of the amphibs to Russia for 1.2 billion Euros. With the first of the ships almost completed, 300 Russian sailors arrived in Saint-Nazaire on June 29 for training by the Marine nationale to familiarize themselves with the warship that is due to be delivered to Moscow this winter. Very soon these impressive warships will be in the hands of a leader who will not be hesitant to deploy them to impose Moscow’s will.
At the same time, critics of the sale both in France and abroad are increasing their demand that the deal be scrapped. Paris has so far resisted, arguing that it should not take the economic hit for punishing Russia for its Ukraine adventure when Germany refuses to take action because of its industrial and energy links to Moscow, and the United Kingdom demurs due to the Capital city’s financial relationships with Russian oligarchs.
With the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight No. 17, it should now be clear to all observers that Russia is fully intent on subjugating and intimidating its former Soviet constituent states and Warsaw Pact allies, and will do so with the most advanced weapons in its inventory. There is no reason to believe that the Mistral-class warships, once in the Russian Navy, will not also be used in the Black Sea, Baltic and Pacific to further increase the pressure on Russia’s neighbors. Given its recent history, Moscow should not be handed another military tool of the Mistral-class magnitude.
For its part, the United States should relieve the economic burden on France by purchasing the warships for the U.S. Navy. American Marines have successfully operated off the ships in the past during joint exercises and they could be finished and fitted using American electronics and weapons systems, thereby providing work to American shipyards. It is well-known that the “gator navy” is short by two to four such ships, even with the new America class warships joining the fleet, so the Mistrals would provide an immediate solution. Even better, the purchase would not cost U.S. taxpayers a cent. France’s bank BNP Paribas SA just agreed to pay an $8.97 billion fine to the United States for violating sanctions against Iran. Less than twenty percent of that fine could be diverted back to France to pay for the ships. Another fraction of the fine could be used to pay for the bringing the ships up to U.S. Navy specifications, still leaving the DOJ and Treasury a healthy return on their investigation of BNP.
A very savvy Putin is worried that just such a deal could ruin his chances of quickly obtaining this key NATO naval platform. He told Russian diplomats last week: “We know about the pressure which our U.S. partners are applying on France not to supply the Mistrals to Russia … and we even know they hinted that if the French don’t deliver the Mistrals, they would quietly get rid of the sanctions against the bank, or at least minimize them.”
“What is that if not blackmail?” Putin asked. The answer to that question, of course, is that it is not blackmail. It is a sanction commensurate with Russia’s conduct in Ukraine. It is also a win-win solution to an unfortunate problem for the United States and France, whose long alliance started with a French naval victory in the Battle of the Virginia Capes, which sealed a military victory for America at Yorktown to end the American Revolutionary War against the British.