Russian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Feb 4, 2018
this thread:
Nuclear Posture Review puts Russia firmly in crosshairs
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now Funding to deter Russia reaches $6.5B in FY19 defense budget request
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funding continues to grow in the fiscal year 2019 defense budget request, this time by $1.7 billion.

The
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released Feb. 12 asks for $6.5 billion. The Pentagon requested $4.8 billion in FY18 and received $3.4 billion in FY17.

The EDI account — initially called the European Reassurance Initiative — was created to help Eastern European allies rest easier and deter Russia from further incursion into Europe following its illegal annexation of Crimea and continued aggression in the region.

The U.S. Army presence at the time of Russia’s move to take Crimea had dwindled from roughly 200,000 troops in Europe in the 1980s to around 33,000 in 2015. The Army had only two permanently stationed brigade combat teams, had closed over 100 sites since 2006 and was concentrated in Italy and Germany, nowhere near NATO’s eastern flank.

Now the Army has another heel-to-toe rotational armored brigade combat team, which first deployed last year, and has already rotated in the next ABCT to take its place.

And the U.S. Army is also part of a network of NATO
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in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and Poland, set up in 2016 to deter Russia.

The increase in EDI funding in FY19 reflects the continued concern over Russian activity and behavior and also reflects the new
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s focus on China and Russia.

The strategy lays out a world where great-power competition rather than counterterrorism will drive the Pentagon’s decision-making and force structure.

The Army has typically held the lion’s share of the funding and this year is no exception. It’s portion in FY19 is $4.6 billion.

Increased funding this year will cover more exercises, more forward presence and more improvement of the equipment that is forward-stationed.

Now that the funding is focused on deterrence of Russian aggression rather than reassuring allies, more will be injected into munitions, improving tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles and priming the pump for a larger rotational presence in Europe that would be episodic and not always predictable, a defense official told Defense News prior to the budget release.

The budget will not contain a request for additional troops in Europe in 2019, but more troops will be funded in 2020 when the Army begins a more dynamic employment of forces, which might include periodic exercises with multiple brigade combat teams and divisional assets, according to the official.

And like the episodic and unpredictable rotational deployments, exercises will take on the same characteristics and will start to test the ability to withdraw and use the Army’s prepositioned stock in Europe, which by 2020 will be fully upgraded and complete, the official said.

The EDI funding, as well as some base budget dollars, in FY19 would include equipment and weapon systems to complete a second set of Army prepositioned stocks in Europe, according to Davis Welch, the deputy director of the Army’s budget office. That equipment includes 40 Abrams tanks for $455 million, 61 Patriot Missile Segment Enhancement missiles for $261 million, 66 Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicles for $230 million, 61 Bradley Fighting Vehicles for $205 million and High-Mobility Artillery Rocket System rockets for $171 million, he said during a budget briefing at the Pentagon on Feb. 12.

According to Pentagon budget documents, $200 million will go toward advising, training and equipping the Ukrainian military so the country can “conduct internal defense operations to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity, while also supporting needed institutional transformation efforts.”
 
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51 minutes ago
Feb 8, 2018
and today the Kremlin said (
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)
there might be five Russians (assuming Contractors, no Active Duty of course) killed
during the attack Saturday at 2:10 PM


here's some background:
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Incredible implications here. Russia's own mercenaries are acting independently of Russian armed forces command. Not only can Russia not control regime/Iranian-led forces, it can't control its own contractors. Unprecedented and deeply disturbing.

10:08 AM - 14 Feb 2018
in other words,
Analysis: Russian ‘expendables’ further complicate Syrian war
Analysis
A battle in eastern Syria involving a large force of Russian mercenaries may have exposed Moscow's inability to control events on the ground. Alternatively, it could have been a high-risk test of the United States’ commitment to defend its Syrian allies that highlighted Russia's disregard for its deniable soldiers.

The battle took place on 7 February, when the US-led coalition reported that it had launched strikes to repel an unprovoked attack by pro-government forces against a well-established Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) headquarters where coalition personnel were present. It did not reveal the location of the SDF position, other than it was 8 km east of the Euphrates River deconfliction line that divides US-backed SDF and pro-government forces.

...
... the rest is behind paywall at Jane's
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Jan 4, 2018
...
time to repeat I've repeatedly said Russians are bogged down in Syria
 

FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Finaly unusual deal Indonesia pay in part with exotic products LOL replace 9 F-5E/F

Indonesia finalises contract to procure Su-35 fighter Aircraft

The Indonesian Ministry of Defence (MoD) has signed a contract with Russia to procure the Sukhoi Su-35 'Flanker-E' multirole combat aircraft, it has been confirmed. The contract was signed on 14 February and features the acquisition of 11 aircraft.

The Indonesian MoD has made no official announcement about the contract but a Jane’s source in the MoD confirmed the development. The official spokesperson of the Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI) was also quoted as confirming the contract signing in local media.

No details about the procurement contract have been revealed, although it is understood that Russia will be expected to deliver the first two aircraft to the Indonesian Air Force (TNI-AU) by October 2018 to take part in the Indonesian military’s annual parade.

Russian and Indonesian defence officials have recently confirmed to Jane’s that the USD1.1 billion contract to procure the aircraft has been under intense negotiations. However, Jane’s understands that an important sticking point in recent talks was Indonesia’s complex counter-trade requirements, which are framed by local law.

The Indonesian MoD has maintained that half of the value of the Su-35 contract must be sourced through Indonesian exports of locally produced commodities to Russia. An additional 35% of the value of the contract will be sourced through an offset package, with the Indonesian government to pay the remainder – approximately USD170 million – in cash.

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FORBIN

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Order for T-14 MBTs, T-15 heavy IFVs for extended trials confirmed by Russian MoD

An order placed by the Russian Ministry of Defence (MoD) for two battalions of T-14 main battle tanks (MBTs) and a battalion of T-15 heavy infantry fighting vehicles (IFVs) has been confirmed by the Russian Ministry of Defence (MoD).

“It’s no secret that we already have a contract for trials and combat operations: two battalions of Armata tanks and one battalion of heavy infantry fighting vehicles,” Deputy Defence Minister Yuri Borisov was quoted as saying by the MoD during a tour of the Uralvagonzavod factory in Nizhny Tagil on 9 February.

Reporting on the current status of the Armata programme, which is part of Russia’s State Armaments Programme (SAP) 2012–2020, Borisov said state trials would begin this year and continue until the end of 2019.

By 2020 development and trials of the AFVs will be complete, according to Borisov, after which a decision on substantial series-production contracts will be made. This appears to be good news for the Armata programme, which was previously reported to be in jeopardy after Russian defence funds were diverted into the modernisation of older armoured vehicles.

During his tour of Uralvagonzavod Borisov also commented that work on a new type of ammunition for the T-14 is close to completion. No details were given, but it is possible that this was a reference to the ‘Vacuum’ round, which is a sub-calibre armour-piercing projectile.

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it's all over Twitter now
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Impressive power display by
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! Second Arleigh-Burke class AEGIS guided missile destroyer enters the BlackSea in under 24hrs:
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to Rota & on its 5th patrol in support of regional allies,
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destroyer USS Carney DDG64 transits Bosphorus
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Dizasta1

Senior Member
Ex-CIA operative says US has long meddled in elections, but it’s OK since they are ‘god cops’

As Democrats indict Russians over "election meddling," former CIA officers say the US has been interfering in foreign elections for decades and “hopefully” will keep doing so because it has the moral high ground.

In an
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published in the New York Times on Saturday, former CIA officers and several researchers, who have been studying covert US intelligence operations for years, say that the while methods allegedly used by Russians to meddle into the US elections might slightly differ from the old school CIA operations overseas, there is nothing in the allegations against Russians that Americans haven't done themselves.

If you ask an intelligence officer, did the Russians break the rules or do something bizarre, the answer is no, not at all,” retired CIA veteran Steven Hall told NYT’s Scott Shane.

Hall, who left his job as CIA Chief of Russian Operations in 2015 after 30 years of service, noted that the US has never shunned attempting to meddle in other countries’ elections.

Saying that the CIA had “absolutely” engaged in such operations in the past, Hall added that he hopes “we keep doing it.”

Thirteen Russian nationals and three entities were indicted on Friday as part of the special FBI counsel Robert Mueller's lingering probe into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential elections, and collusion between Moscow and US President Donald Trump's campaign. As proof to support either of the two allegations is still scant, the Russians listed in the indictment were accused of waging “information warfare against the United States of America,”including by sowing discord on social media with “divisive” posts on Facebook and Twitter.

While the social media boom is a recent phenomenon, the US intelligence has a long record of weaponizing information, albeit in a more conventional form, Loch Johnson, a scholar at the University of Georgia, who has been investigating the CIA since the 1970s, told the Times.

“We’ve used posters, pamphlets, mailers, banners — you name it. We’ve planted false information in foreign newspapers. We’ve used what the British call ‘King George’s cavalry’: suitcases of cash,” Johnson said, recounting that in the late 1980s he was told by CIA operatives that they used to plant reports that fit the US agenda or bluntly fake news in foreign newspapers by the dozen. The number of such daily “insertions” ran in as many as 70 to 80 publications, he recounted.

But when the US does it, it's for the greater good, the scholar and the CIA officers claim.

Likening the American operations to what Russia is accused of, “is like saying cops and bad guys are the same because they both have guns — the motivation matters,” Hall said. Because, just like the bloody wars the US is waging around the world, it is being done for the sake of democracy.

 
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