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Thread: Russian Armed Forces News & Discussion thread

  1. #781

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    Quote Originally Posted by void View Post
    Almost definitely the rocket engines.
    Thanks, that makes sense.
    Last edited by owais.usmani; 07-19-2011 at 06:07 AM.

  2. #782

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    Russian police arrest businessman in nuclear cruiser scam

    Police in northern Russia have detained a businessman suspected of swindling the Defense Ministry out of more than 265 million rubles ($9.4 mln) through an illegal contract on repairs of the Pyotr Veliky nuclear-powered cruiser.
    Fyodor Barashko, director of the privately-owned Zvyozdochka company, billed the Defense Ministry $12.6 mln last year for repairs on nuclear-power engines installed on the Pyotr Veliky, even though the factory only performed repairs worth $3.2 mln, according to investigators.
    "Police discovered over 60 million rubles [$2.1 mln] in cash during the search of the businessman's house," regional police head, Igor Batalov, told a news conference on Monday.
    Prosecutors say the fraudster tricked the officials from the Northern Fleet into signing the contract last year by using the similarity of his Polyarny-based company's name to the name of the well-known Zvezdochka shipyard located in Severodvinsk.
    Barashko's company, which consisted of a small workshop and a garage, did not even have a mandatory license from Russia's nuclear agency Rosatom to perform repairs on nuclear-power engines for combat ships and submarines.
    Severodvinsk-based Zvezdochka, on the contrary, is Russia's biggest authorized shipyard for repairing and dismantling nuclear-powered submarines. It has the capacity to scrap up to four nuclear submarines per year.
    Barashko faces up to 10 years in prison on charges of a large scale fraud and running an illegal business.
    Batalov expressed certainty that the businessman "will be punished to the full extent of the Russian criminal legislation."
    The case is likely to give the Defense Ministry an upper hand in the ongoing clash with the defense industry over inflated prices for armaments.

  3. #783
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    Quote Originally Posted by owais.usmani View Post
    Thanks, that makes sense.
    Well, Energomash is a premier rocket engine manufacturer. What else they would do in such a project?

  4. #784

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    Quote Originally Posted by Khathi View Post
    Well, Energomash is a premier rocket engine manufacturer. What else they would do in such a project?
    I know what Energomash is

    But other than that russianforces blog, I haven't read anywhere else that they would infact be a part of this project. Some more sources would be highly appreciated

  5. #785
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    Indeed, there's very little info on the subject.

  6. #786
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    Russian private punished for forcing soldiers to dance Lezginka

    A military court in the Russian Urals has ordered disciplinary punishment for a private who forced his fellow servicemen to dance while in the hospital, the Russian Investigative Committee said on Tuesday.
    Zainalabid Gimbatov forced three of his fellow soldiers to dance the Lezginka, a traditional Caucasus dance, in front of other patients at a military hospital in the Chelyabinsk region.
    "If those dancing made some wrong movements, Gimbatov 'awarded' them by hitting them in various parts of their bodies," the committee said in a statement.
    Russian laws stipulate a fine or prison term of up to five years for such offenses if they do not result in serious health harm.
    Hazing is common in the Russian military, but it usually affects servicemen of lower ranks who are hazed by their commanders.
    Notoriously widespread cases of mistreatment, coupled with harsh conditions, make many young men go to great lengths to avoid conscription, including bribing military officials and doctors for medical exemption certificates.
    Experts say moving from conscription to a professional military would improve the situation in the armed forces, where only about 25 percent of some 1 million personnel are contract servicemen.

    http://en.rian.ru/russia/20110719/165282532.html

  7. #787
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    OT, but it reminds me of a resent scandal in South Korea, where the hazed marine snapped and went on a rampage. As it happened, up until now the hazing was implicitly ALLOWED in RoK, that is, there weren't any prohibition of it on the books till today. They had to hastily introduce an amendment into relevant codes so they would be able to punish hazers. The world is a strange place indeed.

  8. #788
    Senior Member TheArmenian's Avatar
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    Can anyone please give me the English translation for the Russian word (used in a military context): DISLOKATSIA
    Thanks in advance.

  9. #789
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheArmenian View Post
    Can anyone please give me the English translation for the Russian word (used in a military context): DISLOKATSIA
    Thanks in advance.
    http://translate.google.de/translate...5BB%25D0%25BE)

  10. #790
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    Quote Originally Posted by artjomh View Post
    They say Morfei will have the 9M338 missile (same as Tor-M2).
    I believe the Tor-M2 missile is the 9M331. The 9M338 no doubt is a derivate of this but different. Morfei is said to have an extremely short operational range of 5-6 kilometres - half of the Tor system.

    Btw a 'bit' confusing: the new Igla-S has the designation 9K338 - so it's often said the attendant missile is the 9M338 which isn't true.

    Quote Originally Posted by artjomh View Post
    Morfei's AESA radar looks completely different.

    The last time I saw something comparable was at Star Trek.

    Last edited by BroCalFur01; 07-19-2011 at 01:38 PM.

  11. #791
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    Quote Originally Posted by owais.usmani View Post
    I know what Energomash is

    But other than that russianforces blog, I haven't read anywhere else that they would infact be a part of this project. Some more sources would be highly appreciated
    Who else makes liquid fuel rocket engines in Russia other than Energomash?

  12. #792
    Senior Member artjomh's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by void View Post
    Who else makes liquid fuel rocket engines in Russia other than Energomash?
    KB Khimavtomatika, Proton-PM, NPO Energomash are the three main producers of liquid fuel engines.

    KBKhA made second stage engines for SS-18, first stage engines for Sineva and both engines for SS-19.

    Just FYI, KB Arsenal and NPO Iskra are the primary designers of solid fuel rocket engines.
    Last edited by artjomh; 07-19-2011 at 08:59 PM.

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    Trade unions demand to ban the Defense Ministry to buy arms abroad
    http://ria.ru/defense_safety/20110719/404145264.html

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    Russian military to introduce "virtual battlefield" by 2013

    The Russian military intends to move towards "virtual battlefield" military training by 2013, Chief of the General Staff Gen. Nikolai Makarov said on Wednesday.
    He said the news system would be "comparable and in some aspects even superior to those implemented in countries with the most advanced military forces."
    The general said the new system should be based on the latest achievements in computer simulation technology and reflect the reality of modern conflicts.
    "We must adopt quickly...and figure out as soon as possible how to train our soldiers and the military as a whole," he said.
    Makarov highly praised "virtual battlefield" simulations, developed by the Russian Transas New Technologies Company, where battle actions are modeled with 3-D computer graphics, computational geometry and artificial intelligence.
    A source in the Western military district told RIA Novosti on Wednesday that the new system of combat training would be initially implemented on the strategic command/army level and "gradually bought down to the brigade level."

    http://en.rian.ru/mlitary_news/20110720/165297515.html

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    Senior Member artjomh's Avatar
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    Zelenodolsk Shipyard is going to lay down a new Buyan-M missile corvette on Friday.

    The name is going to be Uglich. The first ship of the class, Grad Sviyazhsk, has been under construction since last year.

    http://flotprom.ru/news/?ELEMENT_ID=83308

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