
In
early October, the Russian Deputy Minister of Defense Vladimir Popovkin
announced the decision to take two heavy nuclear-powered missile
cruisers (TAKR) out of conservation and restore them to the active
fleet. This decision coming just one year after the Petr Velikii (Peter
the Great), the fourth ship of its class and the only one then in
service, set out on a long-range cruise that took it from Severomorsk,
the home port of the Northern Fleet to the Mediterranean, Caribbean,
South Atlantic, and the Indian Oceans. On this voyage, which lasted
from September 22, 2008, to March 10, 2009, the Petr Velikii exercised
naval presence –taking part in naval maneuvers with friendly powers
(Venezuela and India), making port calls and even engaging in
antipiracy operations off the coast of Somalia. The arrival of the Petr
Velikii at the port of La Guaira, Venezuela, in late November coincided
with the state visit by President Dmitry Medvedev shortly afterwards
(Interfax, October 2).
This voyage announced the reappearance of
Russian naval power on a global scale. Commissioned in 1996 in time for
the 300th anniversary of the Russian Navy, Petr Velikii had a sad fate
over the next few years. In August 2000, she took part in the naval
exercise of the Northern Fleet that led to the explosion and sinking of
the nuclear missile-attack submarine Kursk. In March 2004, Admiral
Vladimir Kuroyedov the then Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the Russian
Navy, declared her unseaworthy because of engineering problems. The
ship went into dry-dock for repairs and rejoined the Northern Fleet in
August 2004. In 2008-2009, she became the symbol of Russia's naval
presence. She and her sister ships are the largest, nuclear-powered
non-carrier surface warships in the world and are often classified by
the archaic term “battle cruisers.”
The navy judged the cruise
to be such a success that the defense ministry unveiled plans to
modernize and re-commission two other vessels from this class: Admiral
Lazarev and Admiral Nakhimov. The fourth ship in this class, Admiral
Ushakov (originally the Kirov, which was the first built in the 1970’s
at the Baltic shipyards in Leningrad) has remained at Severodvinsk
since 1999 undergoing modernization and may also rejoin the fleet.
Deputy Minister Popovkin spoke of deploying the re-commissioned heavy,
nuclear-powered, missile cruisers to the east and west to protect
Russian maritime commerce.
Andrei Kokoshin, the former First
Deputy Minister of Defense, sees a different potential in these ships
once they have been modernized. In an interview with Sergei Viktorov
for Krasnaya Zvezda, Kokoshin called the measure “necessary, timely,
and extremely important.” He made specific reference to the long-range
cruise of the Petr Velikii in demonstrating the military capability and
political-military influence of such ships in various regions of the
globe (Krasnaya Zvezda, October 3). When originally built, the TAKRs
were intended to be the flagships for Russian task forces conducting
anti-carrier operations during the Cold War. In the 1990’s Kokoshin
supported the funding for the completion of the Petr Velikii under very
difficult financial and material conditions. The project kept intact
key components of the naval ship building capacity in the St.
Petersburg area at a time when the Ukrainian shipyards were in decline
and those linked to the Northern and Pacific Fleets were overburdened
with the decommissioning of nuclear submarines. Preserving this not
only maintained the Baltic ship-building base, but it also provided
expertise in terms of skilled workers, naval engineers, and architects
for the revival of the shipyards of the Northern Fleet.
Under
the new financial conditions, Kokoshin now envisions the modernized
TAKR’s as “strike cruisers” with super-structures of new materials,
modern anti-ship missiles, and “Aegis-quality” anti-aircraft and
missile defense systems as well as incorporating the latest Command,
Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and
Reconnaissance (C4ISR) and electronic warfare capabilities. Assigned to
the Northern and Pacific Fleets, these vessels will be key elements in
the restoration of the strategic bastion concept in the Arctic and Sea
of Okhotsk, where the Russian navy can protect its nuclear deterrent
forces operating on Russian SSBN’s. Similarly, these vessels and their
support ships represent “a free naval force to protect Russian national
interests in the world’s oceans. Kokoshin particularly highlighted the
need for two such large surface combatants in the Asia-Pacific region,
where they could contribute to an enhanced political-psychological
atmosphere in the Russian Far East and permit a greater naval presence
in that region and in the Indian Ocean (Krasnaya Zvezda, October 3).
However,
the original TAKR’s were intended to be flagships and command and
control platforms for carrier battle groups. And currently, Russia has
only one carrier –Admiral Kuznetsov– which operates with the Northern
Fleet. Last year, the C-in-C of the Russian Navy Admiral Vladimir
Vysotsky outlined a plan to create six such carrier battle groups;
three with the Northern Fleet and three with the Pacific Fleet
(Interfax, July 27, 2008).
Nonetheless, no shipyards have
started the construction of such ships. The Russians are, however,
moving forward with the long-delayed conversion of the former
Kiev-class heavy aircraft-carrying ship Admiral Gorshkov for the Indian
Navy as the INS Vikramaditya. The Vikramaditya will be a radically
different ship from the original Kiev class, with her forward armaments
removed and replaced by a ski-jump bow, and arresting gear on the rear
of its angled deck; which will allow it to conduct short-take-off but
arrested recovery (STOBAR) operations. Modernization measures will
include new European designed electronic systems and enhanced
habitability for the crew. This work is being done at Severodvinsk,
which will permit this shipyard to develop the necessary industrial
base to support future carrier construction. Last month, test pilots
conducted carrier operations off the Admiral Kuznetsov, practicing
take-offs and landings with the MiG-29K/KUB, which were ordered by the
Indian defense ministry for the Vikramaditya. Commenting on the
successful tests, Mikhail Pogosian the CEO of the MiG Corporation said
that the Russian defense ministry would find the aircraft attractive
because of its advanced avionics, including the Zuk-ME phase-array
radar (Izvestiya, October 1).
These developments, taken
together, suggest that Russia’s commitment to an oceanic navy built
around the Northern and Pacific Fleets is real, and it is making
progress along non-traditional lines. Source: The Jamestown Foundation
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