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Russia's Tiny Missile Boats Pack Huge Punch
by Staff Writers
Moscow (Sputnik) Oct 13, 2015


The Dagestan is a 335-foot, 1,900-ton Gepard-class frigate.

The 26 cruise missiles launched at terrorist positions in Syria by four small Russian warships of the Caspian Fleet have raised many an admiring eyebrow in the West, including that of US journalist and military expert David Axe.

The raid shocked foreign observers - not the least because the ships involved were so ... tiny," Axe wrote on his War Is Boring website on Saturday.

"One of the biggest surprises for Russia-watchers was the small size of the ships that launched the missiles - 1,000-ton ships. That's really small,"

David Axe cited Eric Wertheim, author of Combat Fleets of the World guidebook. According to Wertheim, "Russian naval design philosophy has always emphasized firepower."

"But it's worth noting that the four ships that launched the cruise missiles are all in the landlocked Caspian Sea. They don't deploy anywhere, so they don't need fuel and living spaces for long voyages," he wrote.

According to the Russian Defense Ministry, the attacking ships were Dagestan, Grad Sviyazhsk, Veliky Ustyug and Uglich.

The latter three are Buyan-class missile boats, 203 feet long and displace 950 tons of water. Dagestan is a 335-foot, 1,900-ton Gepard-class frigate.

All four ships entered service in just the last few years.

"For perspective, bear in mind that the smallest US Navy surface warship to possess an equivalent weapon, the Tomahawk cruise missile, is an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer that's 500 feet long and displaces 9,000 tons. And America's Littoral Combat Ship frigates, which displace 3,000 tons, carry only small, short-range missiles," David Axe wrote in a comment.

Source: Sputnik News


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