A
very savvy move on the part of Putin – keep up the pressure.
Russia’s
‘carrier-killer’ Moskva enters Mediterranean
Russia’s Moskva missile cruiser, dubbed a “carrier-killer” by NATO, has passed through the Straits of Gibraltar and is now heading toward the eastern Mediterranean to assume command of the Russian naval force there
26
January, 2013
.
The
Russian Navy said in a statement that the Moskva cruiser passed
through the Straits of Gibraltar on September 10.
Interfax
news agency added that the Moskva cruiser, “commanded
by Sergey Tronev, Captain 1st Rank of the Guards… has enough room
for maneuver now.”
“The Black Sea
flagship entered the Russian Navy's area of responsibility in the
Mediterranean at 11:00 pm Moscow time yesterday,"
the agency reported a military source as saying.
The
missile-carrying cruiser is expected to join its final destination in
eastern Mediterranean on September 15 or 16.
Upon arrival, the
command of the Russian Navy unit in the Mediterranean, currently
stationed onboard the Admiral Panteleyev anti-submarine ship, will be
relocated to the Moskva.
"The
armaments and technical equipment of the missile cruiser are in
working condition. The crew is ready to perform combat missions,”
the source said.
The
missile cruiser, initially known to Western naval intelligence as
“Slava” (Glory), was launched in 1979 and entered service in
1983. It was later renamed the “Moskva” in 1995. Designed to be
carrier-killers, the cruisers of Class 1164 are equipped with 16
anti-ship launchers P-1000 Vulkan, or Volcano (SS-N-12 Sandbox
anti-ship missiles, according to NATO classification).
‘Moskva’
weaponry
-16x SS-N-12 Sandbox anti-ship missiles
- 8x8 (64) S-300PMU
Favorit (SA-N-6 Grumble) long-range surface-to-air missiles
-2x20
(40) OSA-MA (SA-N-4 Gecko) SR SAM
-1x twin AK-130 130mm/L70
dual-purpose guns
-6xAK-630 close-in weapons systems
-2x
RBU-6000 anti-submarine mortars
-10x (2 quin) 533mm torpedo tubes
Armor:
Splinter plating
Aircraft
carried:
1 Ka-25 or Ka-27 helicopter
Another
two vessels, the landing ship Nikolay Filchenkov and the guard ship
Smetlivy, will join the Russian naval unit later. They will be pass
through the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits by September 12-14 and
will then head to the eastern Mediterranean.
Russia’s Defense
Ministry has said the maneuvers are part of the “stage-by-stage
rotation of warships and support ships of the standing naval force in
the Mediterranean.”
The recent deployments are aimed at “complex
monitoring”
of the situation around Syria, military sources told Interfax
earlier.
Russia’s standing naval force in the Mediterranean
now involves landing craft carriers “Aleksandr Shabalin,”
“Admiral Nevelskoy,” “Peresvet,” “Novocherkassk” and
“Minsk” of Russia’s Black and Baltic Sea Fleets, as well as
escort vessel “Neustrashimy,” and the anti-submarine ship
“Admiral Panteleyev.”
Russian
naval maneuvers in the Mediterranean come amid growing tension in the
region, which sparked speculation that Russia was boosting its naval
presence ahead of a possible US strike against Syria.
Previously,
Russia’s defense officials cautioned against making connections
between the relocation of warships and the Syrian crisis, saying the
maneuvers do not depend on the situation and “will
continue after it.”
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