Don't care about upgrades... I want to know what is new to help understand where Russia will sit in 10-15 years when Soviet equipment is unservicable.All Arms, all Services?!
What about acquisiton of upgraded/refited platforms?
This is NapoleonicProduction and Distribution of Russian Military Armaments (1992-99)
Most of the 11 billion spent is on nuclear forces
I would appreciate any procurement data you can pick up... my Russian isn't very good.This is Napoleonic
When the infantry is poor, use more artillery
I was going to do this myself anyway, but this may take time ok
Well its only the first deliveries. German forces received three NH-90 this year. That doesnt imply we are getting three only each year.At this rate it will take them 7 years to get one operational squadron.
The Mig-31s never carried R-77, they just got upgraded Mig-31M with better avionics and I think they are probably carrying some improved version of AA-9.Back to my post number 3 above... doesn't anybody have answers (for instance by browsing Jane's all the World's aircrafts ) ?
If the only new bird is SU34 in 50-something production series, knowing which MIG29/31-SU27/30/32 can carry R77 is key to evaluating their operational capabilities
cheers
I'm looking for inventory numbers of Russian platforms acquired since 91'... all branches of service included.
2005 Military Procurement
Not at these rates. The Cold-War stuff they're upgrading is still obsolete and maintenance instensive equipment is eating up even more of the few precious funds needed for procurement.Cumulated it becomes quantity.
In addition to "St. Petersburg" another three Type 677 SSK are being built, those are: "Kronstadt" (IOC 2009), "Petrosawodsk" (IOC ?) and "Sewastopol" (IOC 2010). The russian naval shipbuilding programme is definitely gaining momentum, although its still a far shot from the soviet procurements. Still, now they are actually getting new boats instead of cancelling existing procurements. Source: Russian state news agency RIA Novosti, 11/30/06.677 SSK---- 1
How long will it last? Once the inflation from gas prices drop the budget will fall to it's low levels. All the started projects will take 10 years to complete if they don't cancel them later. They still have ships from the Cold War that aren't done yet.In addition to "St. Petersburg" another three Type 677 SSK are being built, those are: "Kronstadt" (IOC 2009), "Petrosawodsk" (IOC ?) and "Sewastopol" (IOC 2010). The russian naval shipbuilding programme is definitely gaining momentum, although its still a far shot from the soviet procurements. Still, now they are actually getting new boats instead of cancelling existing procurements. Source: Russian state news agency RIA Novosti, 11/30/06.
Obsolete depending on environment. Overall I agree. As you know, I would also downsize their forces considerably in order to get funding per unit up.Not at these rates. The Cold-War stuff they're upgrading is still obsolete and maintenance instensive equipment is eating up even more of the few precious funds needed for procurement.
It would be one thing if it was just a year or two, but trends over the last 15 years show the same lack of procurement. You can't say 15 years of scant buys equal a servicable modern military.I'm just saying: don't read too much into current procurement numbers.