Tuesday, December 25, 2018

World

Study This Picture: This Deadly Warship Is the Future of Russia's Navy

Mark Episkopos
Mark Episkopos
Security, Europe

Coming in 2019. 

Study This Picture: This Deadly Warship Is the Future of Russia's Navy
Russia’s Gromky corvette has undergone a rapid series of back-to-back tests over the past months, an indication that the Russian Navy is pushing to make it fully combat-ready by 2019.
Gromky is the seventh vessel to be constructed as part of Russia’s new Steregushchiy-class series, specially commissioned to serve in Russia’s Pacific Fleet. The Russian Navy plans to lay down a total of thirteen Steregushchiy-class corvettes through 2021, with the inaugural model launched in 2001.
On November 15, Gromky conducted a live artillery fire test in the Sea of Japan: "The advanced corvette ‘Gromky,’ that has to join the Pacific Fleet soon, has conducted live firing for the first time during sea trials. The structural testing of ship weapons was carried out with live firing in the Sea of Japan. An A-190 100-mm multipurpose shipborne automatic gun mount and AK-630 six-barreled automatic gun mounts were tested in various modes," according to spokesman of the Pacific Fleet Captain Nikolai Voskresensky.
Several weeks later, Gromky fire-tested the Kh-35 Uranus anti-ship missile system. According to a statement by the Russian Ministry of Defense: “In the course of state trials, the latest corvette ‘Gromky’ has fired the ‘Uran’ cruise missile against naval targets. The missile successfully destroyed a surface ship dummy at a distance of 40 km from the launch point.” 
In late november, Gromky was tested in a large-scale anti-air exercise. According to Captain VoskresenskyGromky successfully fended off eight aircraft including four Tu-22M3 strategic bombers, the MiG-31 interceptor, and the Su-35 fighter multi-purpose fighter jet. Details of the exercise remain unknown, aside from the aircraft unsuccessfully attempting various electronic countermeasures (ECM) to scramble Gromky’s onboard communications system.
Finally, Gromky accommodated several trial helicopter landings in Peter the Great Gulf on the coast of Primorsky Krai, Russia: “In the context of ongoing test, the [Gromky] corvette accomodated the landing of carrier aircraft. In Peter the Great Gulf, two Ka-27PL crews worked with the ship’s onboard aircraft support team to execute landings and takeoffs from the ship deck both in motion and at standstill,” Captain Voskresensky told Russian state news.  The Ka-27PL is a variant of the Kamov Ka-27 military helicopter, adapted for anti-submarine operations.
With this last wave of tests completed, the Amur-based manufacturer tellsRussian news that Gromky will be formally accepted into the Russian Pacific Fleet in the final week of December: “Gromky” will be given from the Russian Navy to the Pacific Fleet on December 25-26. On that day, the flag will be raised as per the commander’s orders, signifying the ship’s transfer to the [Pacific] fleet.”
Gromky will be joining the similarly-equipped Sovershennyy corvette, added to the Pacific Fleet in the prior year. The fleet has grown to consist of a Slava-class cruiser flagship, four Udaloy-class destroyers, two corvettes including Gromky, and scores of submarines from the Kilo, Akula, Oscar, and recent Borei classes.
The Pacific Fleet, one of Russia’s four naval subdivisions (five counting the Caspian fleet), was particularly gutted in the aftermath of the Soviet collapse. Gromkiy’s rapid development and deployment is the latest addition in the Kremlin’s concerted effort to rebuild the Pacific fleet and thereby bolster its Naval presence in the East Asia region.
Mark Episkopos is a frequent contributor toThe National Interest and serves as research assistant at the Center for the National Interest. Mark is also a PhD student in History at American University
Image: Creative Commons. 
World

N. Korea blasts UN resolution on rights abuse

Korean People's Army soldiers leave after bowing before the statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il during National Memorial Day in Pyongyang (AFP Photo/KIM Won Jin)
North Korea on Tuesday hit back at a latest UN resolution that condemned Pyongyang's rights abuses, calling it a "serious... provocation" that would undermine peace efforts on the Korean peninsula.
The UN General Assembly adopted last week a resolution -- which passed by consensus without a vote -- condemning the "systematic, widespread and gross" human rights violations in the isolated North.
The impoverished but nuclear-armed nation, ruled by the Kim family through three generations, has been accused of state-sanctioned abuses including torture, rape and extrajudicial killings.
It marked the 14th consecutive year the UN has passed such a document. The North has constantly denied any rights abuses in the country and labelled the UN criticisms as smear campaigns aimed at undermining its leadership.
The North's state-run Rodong newspaper slammed the latest resolution as a "serious political provocation against the (North) and a vicious move to tarnish its international image".
"The wicked intention of the US... in getting vocal about the non-existent 'human rights issue' of the DPRK is to broaden the scope of the sanctions and pressure and escalate them," it said in an editorial, using the North's official name.
The editorial also lashed out at a "thoughtless" South Korea for backing the UN bill -- a move that would be "tarnishing the atmosphere of improving the north-south ties".
Washington had separately sought to organize a Security Council meeting on human rights in the North but gave up on the option earlier this month because it was unsure of the support it would get from partners.
But the US hopes to hold the meeting next month with the arrival of new non-permanent council members that could be more favourable to doing so.
The South's President Moon Jae-in has advocated dialogue with the North to nudge it to denuclearisation negotiations and has met with its leader Kim Jong Un three times this year.
Kim also met with US President Donald Trump in a historic summit in June but progress has stalled with both sides accusing each other of dragging their feet and acting in bad faith.

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