Russia's Largest Naval Fleet is Holding Drills in the Atlantic
The exercises included a guided missile cruiser, modern Russian frigates, and other ships and aircraft.
Russia’s Northern Fleet held large-scale drills in the Norwegian Sea amid mounting military tensions with NATO.
"As part of the drills with the Arctic expeditionary task force, a group of the Northern Fleet’s combat ships and support vessels practiced anti-submarine assignments in the Norwegian Sea,” the Russian naval press office said, according to Russian state-backed news outlet TASS. “The crews of the missile cruiser Marshal Ustinov and the frigate Fleet Admiral Kasatonov hunted down the notional enemy’s submarines with the help of an anti-submarine warfare helicopter.”
Ka-27M helicopter crews took off from the frigate Admiral Kasatonov, practicing surveillance missions “using radio-technical equipment and an onboard sonar.” These drills followed closely on the heels of rapid deployment and live-fire exercises reportedly conducted last week at a training ground in northwestern Russia.
Marshal Ustinov is the second Slava-class guided missile cruiser, commissioned in 1986 and refitted in the mid-2010s. The vessel is armed with sixteen P-500 supersonic cruise missiles, sixty-four S-300F long-range surface-to-air missiles, and forty OSA-M short-range surface-to-air missiles.
Admiral Flota Kasatonov, commissioned in 2020, is the second of the more modern Admiral Gorshkov-class frigates. Kasatonov is armed with a complement of Kalibr and Oniks anti-ship cruise missiles; the frigate will also support Russia’s upcoming 3M22 Tsirkon winged, anti-ship hypersonic cruise missile. The Tsirkon is capable of maneuvering mid-flight and reaching speeds of up to Mach 9 (around 6900 miles per hour) with a reported operational range of up to 1,000 km. It can potentially pose a credible threat against U.S. and NATO carrier strike groups (CSGs) and impede carrier air wings from operating effectively.
The Northern Fleet is one of Russia’s five principal naval formations-- with the others being the Baltic, Pacific, and Black Sea Fleets, as well as the Caspian Flotilla. Headquartered in the northwestern town of Severomorsk in the Murmansk region, the Northern Fleet is commonly considered Russia’s most powerful naval grouping. The Northern Fleet is home to Russia’s two remaining Kirov-class battlecruisers, Petr Velikiy and Admiral Nakhimov, as well as a slew of modern submarines from the flagship nuclear-powered Borei ballistic missile submarine and Yasen cruise missile submarine classes.
TASS reports that the Northern Fleet’s Norwegian Sea drills are part of a broader set of Russian naval exercises slated for the January-February period. These drills will cover vast swaths of Russian maritime territory and will include the Mediterranean, the Northeastern Atlantic, and the Pacific Ocean. The exercises will reportedly draw sixty aircraft, one thousand pieces of military hardware, and about ten thousand troops in total.
Mark Episkopos is a national security reporter for the National Interest.
Image: Reuters.