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Defence & Security News - Russia
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Monday, September
9, 2013 11:24 PM |
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The
new generation of Russian main battle tank Armata ready to be tested in
November. |
The
prototype of Russia’s next generation Armata
main battle tank is ready for testing, which will begin by November, the
head of the Russian Tank Forces said Saturday. “The prototypes will
be unveiled soon at an exhibit in Nizhny Tagil, and their tests will kick
off within a month or two, I believe,” Lt. Gen. Alexander Shevchenko
said on Echo Moskvy radio. |
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Scale model of Armata
project main battle tank
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The biannual Russian Arms
Expo will run in the Urals city in September 25-28 this year. Deputy
Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said in July that the country’s
leadership will get a sneak preview of the new tank during the arms
fair.
An unmanned version of the Armata
main battle tank is also on the cards, Shevchenko said.
Armata
is a universal combat platform that is to be utilized for production
of various armored vehicles. Shevchenko said on Friday that prototypes
are already created for an Armada-based main battle tank, heavy infantry
fighting vehicle and armored recovery vehicle.
The combat platform, named after a 14-century Russian cannon, is being
designed since 2009 by the state-run corporation Uralvagonzavod, headquartered
in Nizhny Tagil.
Armata-based vehicles will be a match for their existing NATO counterparts
and even excel them in certain areas, Shevchenko said Friday, without
elaborating.
Not much is known about the upcoming Armata
battle tank, tentatively scheduled to enter military service in the
Russian army in 2015. Media reports and military officials said earlier
said that its turret would be unmanned, with three-man crew residing
in the better protected chassis area, and that the main gun may utilize
either shells or missiles.
Shevchenko also said Saturday that all standing alert units of the Russian
army will switch to two types of main battle tanks – the T-72
and the T-90
– by early 2015. The move will complete the tank unification program
in the Russian military, which utilized 40 models of 10 different battle
tanks in 2008, he said.
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