Putin arrives at the Zapad 2017 war games which triggered wave of hysteria in the West
18
September, 2017
Russian
President Putin is touring a Leningrad region military range where
Belarusian troops are being hosted for the Zapad 2017 drills –
criticized by some neighboring countries despite Moscow and Minsk’s
transparency and invitations given to observers.
The
exercises began last week at several locations in Russia and Belarus
and will be conducted until Wednesday. Russia sent around 3,000
troops to neighboring Belarus, where they are training at six
locations along with 7,000 soldiers and officers of the host nation.
Russia welcomed Belarusian troops at three sites, including the
Luzhsky range in Leningrad region.
Less
than 13,000 troops are taking part in the exercise in total,
according to figures from the defense ministries of Russia and
Belarus. Around 70 aircraft, 680 armored vehicles, including 250
tanks, 200 artillery guns, and 10 warships have been deployed by the
two nations.
The
two nations are working on coordination and interoperability of its
troops in joint operations. Both stressed that the drill is meant to
be purely defensive. They also invited some 90 foreign observers from
60 countries to monitor the exercise.
The
stage of the war games that Putin observed on Monday included a
simulated cross-border incursion of insurgents who, according to the
scenario, hijacked a large number of small planes and drones and
tried to use them to attack targets in Russia. Russian and Belarusian
troops used Pantsir-S1 and Tunguska air defense systems to take out
the improvised enemy air attack. Tanks supported by artillery and
aircraft launched an attack on the hundreds-strong groups of
militants while a group of airdropped paratroopers prevented them
from retreating.
War
games such as Zapad 2017 are conducted by Russia and Belarus on a
regular basis, and the ongoing exercise is among the bigger events.
In the months prior to the launch of the drills, several countries,
including Poland and the three Baltic states, were strongly critical,
calling them a threat to their national security.
Officials
in the countries claimed that Russia would send more troops to
Belarus than it said it would and that the entire event may be a
cover-up for a land grab.
Among
the officials whipping up fears over Zapad 2017 was German Defense
Minister Ursula von der Leyen, who said earlier this month that the
exercises would involve over 100,000 troops. The Russian Defense
Ministry called the claim “astounding.” Earlier, Lithuanian
President Dalia Grybauskaite referred to the event as “aggressive
games directed against the West,” while Lieutenant-General Ben
Hodges, commander of US Army forces in Europe, said they may be a
“Trojan horse” to move troops and weapons.
The
Russian Foreign Ministry blasted critics of the drills in the media,
accusing them of fearmongering.
“The
hype was fanned up artificially and is definitely meant to convince
the Western public that the cost of deploying additional forward
military presence in Poland and the Baltics and increased NATO
military activity is justified,” it said in a statement in August.
“Remarkably, it is these actions that lead to increased military
tension in Europe, which Western ‘pen and microphone warriors’
lament so much.”
NATO
launched massive parallel military exercises in Sweden involving
20,000 troops – the largest in the country in 23 years – which
was touted as deterrence to potential Russian aggression.
The
alliance has been building up a presence near Russia’s borders for
years, with a significant acceleration beginning in 2014, following
the political crisis in Ukraine. Alliance members like Poland and the
Baltic states accuse Russia of having aggressive intentions in
eastern Europe, and claim they need protection. NATO has also staged
dozens of war games in the region over the past three years, some
involving tens of thousands of troops.
Moscow
considers the actions to be provocative and says it must respond
accordingly, deploying additional troops in its western areas. It
denies any plans of aggression against NATO states and says the
organization is fearmongering to persuade European members to spend
more on defense. The majority of NATO members spend less than two
percent of their GDP on their militaries, despite commitments to meet
the benchmark.
So
far, there has been no sign of anything out of order happening at
Zapad 2017.
'Zapad 2017’: Western officials call Russia-Belarus drills ‘invasion’
Russia Test Fires Nuclear-Capable Ballistic Missile During "Zapad 2017" Military Drill
18
September, 2017
As
reported last
Thursday,
Russia’s military is currently conducting its "biggest
display of military power since the end of the Cold War",
called Zapad-2017. The drill involves anywhere between 12,700 and
100,000 troops (depending on whether one believes Russia or NATO), 10
ships, 70 planes and helicopters, 680 equipment units, 250 tanks, and
multiple launch rocket systems and mortars.
And,
as of today, the drill also includes Russia's Iskander-M
theater ballistic system,
which on Monday carried out a successful test-launch of its missile
at maximum range, the Russian defense ministry said adding that the
test-launch was performed at the Kapustin Yar range in Russia’s
southern Astrakhan Region.
"The
increased capacity missile covered 480 kilometers and successfully
hit its target at the Makat range [in Kazakhstan],” the ministry
said.
The
Iskander-M tactical missile system, which
can also carry nuclear warheads,
was first introduced to the Russian military in 2007 and is aimed at
targeting missile systems, rocket launchers, long-range artillery,
command posts, as well as aircraft and helicopters at a distance of
several hundred kilometers. The system, designated SS-26 Stone by
NATO, can fire two types of missiles – the quasi-ballistic 9M723
and the cruise 9M728. Both types can maneuver quickly on their flight
path, complicating interception by enemy anti-missile weaponry.
NATO
has been especially nervous about the deployment of the ballistic
missile ever since November
2008,
when then-Russian president Dmitry Medvedev made a stark warning to
NATO: "Russia
will deploy Iskander missile systems in its enclave in Kaliningrad to
neutralize, if necessary, the anti-ballistic missile system in
Europe."
According to an unconfirmed
2013 Bild report,
Russia had stationed "a double-digit number of SS-26 Stone, aka
Iskander, tactical, nuclear-capable short-range missiles near the
Polish border in a dramatic escalation to merely verbal threats
issued as recently as a year ago."
Several
years later, in November 2016, Moscow
officially deployed S-400
surface-to-air missiles and nuclear-capable Iskander systems in the
exclave of Kaliningrad "in retaliation for NATO deployments",
confirming previous media reports of Russian intentions to once again
blanket central Europe with potential nuclear ICBM coverage.
Meanwhile,
Russia continues to assure NATO that the joint Russia-Belarus drills
are “nothing out of the ordinary” according to Vladimir
Dzhabarov, first deputy chief of the Russian Federal Council’s
Foreign Affairs Committee, said last week.
"We are working out cooperation with our Belarusian allies in the regular mode as no army can exist without training, mobilization and battle readiness checks,” Dzhabarov said, as cited by Parlamentskaya Gazeta. “Americans constantly conduct exercises in the Japanese and East China Seas, but they don’t attack North Korea or China,” he added.
According
to RT,
he also pointed out that NATO states are increasingly building up
military presence close to Russian borders which “raises awareness”
in Russia.
Of
course, Moscow maintains that the drills are “purely defensive,”
saying that the scenarios focus on extremist groups penetrating
Belarus and Russia’s Kaliningrad region. In July, Belarusian
Defense Minister Andrey Ravkov, pointed out that international
organizations, such as the UN and NATO, along with dozens of foreign
observers, were invited to the drills since there is “nothing to
conceal.”
We
doubt that will comfort NATO, especially after news of the launch and
the following
satellite photos showing
recent tests of the nuclear-capable Iskander make tomorrow's
newspapers.
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