Ukraine protest - Photo by Dea Andreea on Unsplash

Intelligence reports say Russia’s latest weaponry is not as devastating as it might look.

Frank Ledwidge

8 min read

Every year, the 9 May Victory Day parade in Moscow showcases the latest in Russian weapons systems – and this year’s, of course, . The weaponry looked good on the parade ground – but how well are Russia’s high-tech weapons performing on the battlefield?

As always in Russia’s Victory day parade, tanks and armoured vehicles took centre stage. Most prominent among them was the T-14 Armata. Western analysts have been poring with  of trepidation over this system since 2015 when the tank first appeared. It is a , which were and are adaptations of old Soviet designs.

The  from the Russian army perspective is that there are very few of these tanks available. Credible Russian reports indicate that the programme is suffering problems with production and complexity and “is a hostage to the many new technologies in it”. As if technical problems were not enough, the company making the Armata is in .

If all goes according to plan – rare enough in any military procurement programme – this tank will begin full-scale production this year, too late for this phase of the war in Ukraine.

Other, less formidable tanks were also prominent, notably the various , which have taken  in Ukraine, especially from anti-tank missiles supplied by the ,  and European countries. Rather more concerning to Russian generals in the longer term was the first , the  in Russian combat service today, which also made an appearance at the parade.

Trundling after the tanks and assorted armoured vehicles on the parade was the Uran-9 autonomous combat vehicle. This is designed to work without an operator on roads or, in more difficult terrain, as a remotely controlled tank.

It also appears , where there were serious issues with the remote control systems, which were apparently unable to find or hit enemy targets at anything like a useful range. The Uran-9 is probably a decade or more from being an effective weapons system.

Empty skies

Moving away from the ground the Victory Day air display was cancelled due, it was said, to the weather – although it was bright and clear in Moscow that day. So we did not get to see Russia’s “aerospace force”, as it is called, in full panoply. Then again, we have not seen it  as expected in battle either.

In terms of the latest models, the Russian aerospace force seems to have used the Sukhoi Su-57, Russia’s only stealth fighter, . This is the , the US’s top-of-the-range jet.

It is significant that the decision was taken to risk it in action since its slightly older but formidable brothers the , and  – equivalents to the American F-15s and European Typhoons – .

The largest losses of manned aircraft have been sustained by Russia’s fleet of sophisticated and modern , which are similar to US and UK Apaches.

Not enough precision

Russia’s precision-guided missiles (PGMs), such as the Iskander-M ballistic missile that was on display at Monday’s parade, . A significant number are failing to .

Equally worrying for Russian planners is that having fired well over 2,000 PGMs, . As a US defence official  this week:

This is bad news for Russia in the medium and long term. As a result,  ageing munitions that are less reliable, less accurate and more easily intercepted.

One particular type of PGM has attracted particular attention. Air-launched Kinzhal hypersonic missiles were not seen over Moscow this year, but were very evident at the 2018 Victory Day parade. A  hypersonic missiles have been used against Ukrainian targets, initially , the first time such weapons have been fired in combat, and  this week in an attack on the city of Odesa.

These sound fearsome and they are formidable weapons, but in reality they are , being valuable more in presentational than tactical terms in a conventional war.

It is worth remembering that . The difference here is that the Kinzhal have a certain manoeuvring capability meaning that they cannot realistically be shot down by Ukrainian air defences.

Planning problems

That Ukraine’s air defences and   is, of course, partly a testament to , as well as the Ukrainians’ own exceptional planning and operational foresight.

None of Russia’s high-tech wizardry, even if it worked as advertised, would have saved its army from the less-than-favourable situation in which it now finds itself. Russia’s problem is not sub-par performance of advanced weaponry. There are to put it mildly, plenty of recent western examples of ,  weapons projects. War is the most brutal of testing grounds – and every country loses vast quantities of equipment in combat.

Russia’s problems are conceptual, not technical and are situated at all levels of war from  to the , even before we consider the  of Ukrainian troops. These issues lie at the root of every Russian failure, not underperforming weaponry, and they are why Russia’s army may well be destined for defeat in the field.

Frank Ledwidge is a Senior Fellow in Strategy Enterprise and Innovation at Business School in the Faculty of Business and Law

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons Licence. .

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