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Russia to deploy latest air defence systems in Crimea
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) July 15, 2016


Report: Russia to send S-400 to Crimea next month
Moscow (UPI) Jul 15, 2016 - A new regiment set of the Russian S-400 Triumf anti-aircraft missile system will be delivered to Crimea next month, the Russian Tass news agency reports.

After initial live-firing exercises are completed, the system will make its way to the city of Feodosiya, Tass quoted 31st Air Defense Division Lt. Col. Yevgeny Oleinikov as saying on Friday.

The S-400 surface-to-air array has been manufactured and delivered by Almaz-Antey Group under a state defense order for arming the 18th air defense missile regiment, Oleinikov said.

The Triumf, NATO reporting name SA-21 Growler, entered service in 2007 and is the country's newest long-range anti-aircraft missile system.

It can engage aircraft, cruise and ballistic missiles, including medium-range missiles.

The system can also be used on ground targets.

It has a range of about 240 miles and a maximum altitude of 18 miles.

Russia will deploy its most advanced S-400 air defence systems to the annexed Crimea peninsula in August, a military official said Friday.

Russia is currently using its older S-300 systems on the peninsula it annexed from Ukraine in March 2014 in a move condemned by the West that led to the imposition of US and EU sanctions.

"In August 2016 the (S-400) systems are expected to be unloaded in Feodosia where they will be permanently located," Yevgeny Oleinikov, deputy commander of the Russian army's 18th surface-to-air missile regiment, told RIA Novosti state news agency, referring to an eastern Crimean town.

The S-400 "Triumph" systems are Russia's most modern anti-aircraft and missile defence systems. They are being deployed in Syria, where Moscow is conducting a bombing campaign in support of long-time ally Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

The system can track some 300 targets and shoot down around three dozen simultaneously over a range of several hundred kilometres.

Since Crimea's annexation Russia has stepped up its military presence in the peninsula, which is home to its Black Sea fleet.

The move comes as NATO is rolling out the biggest military build-up in eastern Europe since the end of the Cold War in response to a resurgent Russia and the United States has angered Moscow by installing a missile defence shield close to its borders.


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