The Russian military will acquire long-range, presumably jet-powered
strike drones to help replace its arsenal of decrepit Cold War-era
Tupolev heavy bombers, according to Moscow’s long-range aviation
commander, Lt. Gen. Anatoly Zhikharev.
Just one problem: The new drones won’t be ready for combat until 2040 at the earliest, Zhikharev told Russian news agency RIA Novosti. That’s a full two decades after the U.S. plans to deploy its own jet-propelled, armed unmanned aerial vehicles.
Remember when U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney called Russia America’s “number-one geopolitical foe?” Romney subsequently dialed back that rhetoric. But the two-decade gap between U.S. and Russian drone technology is still a useful reminder that Moscow does not pose a major military threat to any country that isn’t its immediate neighbor.
Zhikharev’s admission of the drone gap comes at a desperate time for the once-mighty Russian aerospace industry. Political pressure is building for the Kremlin to acquire modern weaponry on par with that of the U.S., European and the most advanced Asian militaries. This summer, newly reelected Russian president Vladimir Putin vowed to equip the air force with a new manned bomber, a new early-warning radar plane and several types of drones. “This is a most important area of development in aviation,” Putin said of UAVs.
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Just one problem: The new drones won’t be ready for combat until 2040 at the earliest, Zhikharev told Russian news agency RIA Novosti. That’s a full two decades after the U.S. plans to deploy its own jet-propelled, armed unmanned aerial vehicles.
Remember when U.S. presidential candidate Mitt Romney called Russia America’s “number-one geopolitical foe?” Romney subsequently dialed back that rhetoric. But the two-decade gap between U.S. and Russian drone technology is still a useful reminder that Moscow does not pose a major military threat to any country that isn’t its immediate neighbor.
Zhikharev’s admission of the drone gap comes at a desperate time for the once-mighty Russian aerospace industry. Political pressure is building for the Kremlin to acquire modern weaponry on par with that of the U.S., European and the most advanced Asian militaries. This summer, newly reelected Russian president Vladimir Putin vowed to equip the air force with a new manned bomber, a new early-warning radar plane and several types of drones. “This is a most important area of development in aviation,” Putin said of UAVs.
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