Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Escalation

Russia Sends Two Marine-Carrying Ships To The Mediterranean


3 September, 2013

If the direct result of today's surprising and unannounced Israeli missile test was to provoke a response by Russia, the Allies have succeeded.

 ITAR TASS reports that Russia’s Black and Baltic Sea Fleets’ Ropucha-class landing ships Novocherkassk (150 marines on board) and Minsk (225 marines) have sailed off for the Mediterranean Sea. What was not reported is that the destination of the two marine carrying ships is the sensitive area around Syria already staked out by the US navy. It is implied.











The Russian Navy continues stage-by-stage rotation of warships and support ships of the standing naval force in the Mediterranean,” the spokesman said. “Having passed through the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits, the big landing ships will reach the designated area in the Mediterranean Sea on September 5 or 6 to start their mission under the command of the remote zone headquartered onboard the big anti-submarine ship of the Russian Pacific Fleet Admiral Panteleyev.”
Currently, one of the key tasks of the Russian standing naval force in the Mediterranean is “comprehensive monitoring over the air, underwater and surface situation in the zone of its deployment,” the Russian defence ministry said, adding that the rotation of Russian warships in the Mediterranean Sea would continue till mid-September.



In other words, more ships will be "rotating" into the Mediterranean for the next two weeks. The last time Russia dispatched one or more squadrons of ships to Syria was last December, when Syria was once again a hot bed of pre-war foreplay. This is what Russia did back then: "The squadron of five ships that sailed from the Baltic Sea base of Baltiysk includes a destroyer, a tugboat, a tanker and two large amphibious vessels that could evacuate hundreds of people... Another group of three navy ships departed Tuesday from Severomorsk, the main base of Russia's Northern Fleet on the Kola Peninsula." Will Russia repeat a comparable pile up of naval powers now as it did then? Most certainly.


Summarizing the balance of power so far:


  • 2 US amphibious assault ships are about to be matched by 2 Russian amphibious assault ships. That's a lot of marines.
  • The US still outnumbers Russia with 5 destroyers including 4 from the strike group surrounding the USS Nimitz carrier which is also slowly approaching Syria.


Our prediction: the next ship to be dispatched in direction Syria will be the missile cruiser Moskva, the "flag ship of the Black Sea fleet" and more of its affiliated warships, which was last deployed in November of 2012 during the 8 day escalation between Israel and Gaza which culminated in Operation Pillar of Defense. That, and a whole lot of submarines.





Finally, for those curious or simply "mocking" Russia's navy, here is a full breakdown of just the Russian Black Sea fleet currently:




And a snapshot of the entire current Russian Navy as of August:


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