Russia’s Awesome Military Power

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-by- Stephen Lendman

Except for Turkey’s Erdogan ordering the downing of a Russian bomber, complicit with Washington, Moscow’s campaign has been casualty-free after conducting 5,240 sorties since September 30.

Pantsir-S1

Pantsir-S1, one of Russia’s formidable and highly original weapons. Originally Soviet strategic missile systems had been placed in fixed, hardened sites. Newer systems such as the S-300PS/PM (SA-10/20) on the other hand was much more mobile which reduced its vulnerabilities to attack, However, once the S-300 unit was found by enemy forces it was still very vulnerable to precision weapon systems. One of the roles for the Pantsir-S is to provide air defence to the S-300 missile systems.[21] It was also decided that a wheeled chassis would be better suited for the Pantsir-S rather than a tracked chassis. The reasoning being that wheeled vehicles are faster, less prone to breakdowns, easier to maintain, and cheaper to produce. (Click on image)


 

Russia’s military is a formidable force to be reckoned with, matching America’s best at a small fraction of the cost, using its resources judiciously, prompting US Air Forces in Europe commander General Frank Forenc to call its qualitative and quantitative capability “alarming.”

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu salutes as he takes part in a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade on Moscow's Red Square on May 7, 2015. Russia celebrated the 70th anniversary of the 1945 victory over Nazi Germany on May 9. AFP PHOTO / KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/Getty Images)

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu salutes as he takes part in a rehearsal for the Victory Day military parade on Moscow’s Red Square on May 7, 2015. Russia celebrated the 70th anniversary of the 1945 victory over Nazi Germany on May 9. Shoigu is an extremely capable man. AFP PHOTO / KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/Getty Images)

Its competency is exceptional, using powerful state-of-the-art weapons with precision accuracy, including from hundreds of miles away.

They’re able to launch them from aerial, ground, sea and subsurface locations, maybe space, with ability to destroy what’s aimed at. 

Pentagon commanders are forced to admit respect, perhaps with second thoughts on ever confronting a force equalling or exceeding its own capability.

Russia’s effective Syrian anti-terrorism campaign enters its fourth month this week, devastating ISIS positions, facilities, operations and personnel – Putin proving his longterm commitment to combat a common scourge.

He wants ISIS and other takfiri terrorists groups battled abroad, preventing them from gaining a foothold on Russian territory, his main reason for getting involved, intent on staying the course, no matter the duration.

Obama initially mocked him disgracefully, saying “(a)n attempt by Russia and Iran to prop up Assad and try to pacify the population is just going to get them stuck in a quagmire and it won’t work.”

Since the end of the Cold War, notably post-9/11, the Pentagon consistently underestimated Russia’s military capabilities – no longer. Its navy once derisively called “more rust than ready,” now commands respect – as do its formidable air and ground forces, structured for defense, able to effectively counter any offensive threat.

He’s waging real war on terror, polar opposite Obama’s phony campaign, supporting the scourge he claims to oppose, aiming for regional hegemonic control, Russian influence shut out – a losing strategy after three months of Moscow successes.

Except for Turkey’s Erdogan ordering the downing of a Russian bomber, complicit with Washington, Moscow’s campaign has been casualty-free after conducting 5,240 sorties since September 30.

rus-Sukhoi_T-50_in_2011_(4)

The Sukhoi_T-50_in_2011. Russia’s fifth-generation PAK FA T-50 fighter jet is a “flying robot, a smart plane,” advisor to Director General of Radio Electronic Technology Concern, Vladimir Mikheyev said.

Moscow-based analyst Vasily Kashin notes the relatively moderate $1 – 2 billion annual cost, easily sustainable indefinitely, as long as it takes to get the job done.

A newly released Pentagon report reveals its astonishment at the success of Moscow’s campaign, saying:

“Russia has begun, and over the next decade will make large strides in fielding a 21st century navy capable of a dependable national defense (and) an impressive but limited presence in more distant global areas of interest…”

Its current aerial and naval prowess is awesome, proved effective in combat. Pentagon commanders are worried. Have they met their match? Will they dare confront an adversary able to defeat them, humiliating the world’s self-styled sole super-power?

Since the end of the Cold War, notably post-9/11, the Pentagon consistently underestimated Russia’s military capabilities – no longer.

Its navy once derisively called “more rust than ready,” now commands respect – as do its formidable air and ground forces, structured for defense, able to effectively counter any offensive threat.

Pentagon commanders are awestruck. America’s NATO allies can’t match its impressive Syrian campaign. 

Moscow continues proving its critics wrong. The best strategy against it is waging peace, not war, anathema to US imperial objectives. An eventual showdown increasingly looms, the devastating possibility of nuclear war.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
 Stephen-LendmanStephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.  His new book as editor and contributor is titled "Flashpoint in Ukraine: US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III." (http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html ) Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com. 


 

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