“Any
ruler that has ground troops has one hand, but one that also has a navy has
both”.
Peter
the Great
Alphen, Netherlands. 20 October.
What is the state of the Russian Navy? Many years ago at Oxford I wrote a paper
entitled, “The Development of the Soviet Navy as a Blue Water Fleet with the
1956 Appointment of Admiral Sergei Gorshkov”. Snappy title, eh? As I write a ‘blue
water’ power-projection Russian fleet is sailing towards the English Channel
having been escorted in turn by a Type-23 Royal Navy frigate HMS Richmond, and two Type-45 destroyers
HMS Duncan and HMS Daring. At the core of the eight-ship Russian task group is
Moscow’s one aircraft-carrier the 1980s built, 43,000 ton (standard load) Kuznetsov. Ironically, the Kuznetsov has just steamed a few nautical
miles from where Britain is fitting out and completing the new 72,500 ton
aircraft carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth
and HMS Prince of Wales.
The Russian task group
certainly looks impressive. It left Severomorsk Harbour on Saturday to sail
round the North Cape into the Norwegian Sea. The Kuznetsov is supported by the nuclear-powered missile cruiser Petr Veliky, and the anti-submarine
cruiser Severomorsk, together with
five other units. Two further Russian ships are at this moment off the French
coast heading north seemingly to rendezvous with the task group.
Some distance off
Severomorsk the carrier’s air wing arrived and included Mig-29/KUB, Su-27 and
Su-35 fighters and fighter-bombers, together with Ka-52K helicopters. From the exercising that began in the
Norwegian Sea and continued south past the Orkneys it appears the group is
preparing to undertake air strikes against Syria (most likely Aleppo) from the
sea when the group arrives in the eastern Mediterranean.
This year the Russian
Navy celebrated its 320th birthday. Whilst much younger than the
Royal Navy, the Russian Navy remains one of the world’s most celebrated. From its
founding by Peter the Great for much of its history the Russian Navy, if not a
blue water fleet – a force capable of operating globally – could still project
Russian might far and wide. After the disastrous loss of the 1905 Battle of
Tsushima to the British-aided Japanese, and the subsequent 1917 overthrow of
the Tsar, the Soviet Navy for a time became little more than a coastal
protection force. That limited role ended with Gorshkov. In the 1960s and 1970s
the Soviet Union constructed a powerful global reach force of cruisers,
destroyers and nuclear attack and ballistic missile submarines, culminating in
the enormous Typhoon-class nuclear ballistic missile submarines.
The Soviet strategy was
pretty much the same as today. The strategy had four elements: to create
protected bastions or spaces from which Soviet ‘boomers’ could launch ballistic
missiles in relative safety; to protect the approaches to the Soviet Union; to provide
an outer-layer for a multi-layered defence; and to harry and stretch Western
navies through the aggressive deployment of fast nuclear hunter-killer
submarines, particularly Western ‘boomers’ and surface forces.
For much of the 1990s the
Russian Navy fell into a terrible state of disrepair, eventually resulting in
the tragic loss of the new nuclear attack submarine Kursk in 2000. The loss was due to a highly-dangerous experiment
into the use of a form of torpedo propellant that the Royal Navy had also tried
and abandoned in the 1950s. With the 2000 arrival in
power of President Putin the Russian Navy has been steadily reclaiming its
strength. Now armed with the new Iskandr
family of missiles the Russian Navy is fast developing again the capability to
exert power, influence and effect far beyond Russia’s borders.
Admiral Viktor Chirkov
said recently, “The Russian Navy is being equipped with the newest weapons,
including long-range strike weapons, and has big nuclear power. Naval forces today
are capable of operating for a long time and with high combat readiness in
operationally important areas of the global ocean”. It is true that the Russian
Navy can deploy an impressive array. However, and even though President Putin
has prioritised naval construction to an extent, Russia’s difficult fiscal
situation means that the Navy has far fewer platforms than in the past, and
they are required to do far more tasks by Russia’s aggressive foreign policy. Equally,
the ships the Russian Navy does possess have seen a step-change over the last
decade in a whole suite of capabilities from weapons, to sensors, to enhanced command,
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities.
It is in the design and
construction of submarines where the Russian are making particularly impressive
progress. Since 2010 the sixty strong Russian submarine fleet has been
augmented by the commissioning of 8 new Borei-class
nuclear-powered, ballistic/long-range nuclear cruise missile submarines, 10 Graney-class nuclear hunter-killer submarines
and 20 super-quiet diesel-electric submarines of the Varshavyanka class. By way of comparison the Royal Navy’s seven
Astute-class nuclear-attack submarines have been under construction since 2001
and only three have yet been commissioned.
That said, for all the
impressive appearance of the Kuznetsov
group the Russian Navy of today is a work-in-progress and still enjoys nothing
like the strategic reach or operational flexibility of the United States Navy.
It is also open to question whether the Russian Navy will continue to receive
the necessary investments needed to meet its impressive post-2010 build programme.
Moreover, Russia lacks key shipbuilding capabilities which has limited the expansion
of the Navy. The loss of the two French-built Mistral-class assault ships has also reduced the
maritime-amphibious capacity of the Russian Navy significantly.
However, Moscow remains
utterly committed to developing a twenty-first century navy that can properly
fulfil its three core missions of deter, defend and demonstrate Russian power.
The West must therefore grip the strategic challenge implicit in today’s
Russian Navy because it is first and foremost a weapon being honed for possible use
against the West.
Julian Lindley-French
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