With Ukraine’s counteroffensive in full swing, Russia will need its best weapons to support its frontline positions.
Over the last 18 months of warfare, Russian forces have turned to a variety of homegrown systems, but many of the weapons in Moscow’s stockpiles have fallen short of expectations. Russia has lost nearly half of its arsenal of more advanced main battle tanks, as well as some of its best airframes.
However, Russia still possesses five weapons of war that are quite formidable and could lend to the country’s aggression against Kyiv.
The S-400
Touted by the Kremlin as the best on the planet, Russia’s S-400 Triumf air defense system is a mobile surface-to-air missile system (SAM) designated by NATO as the SA-21 Growler. This SAM was first conceptualized in the late 1980s, although budget restrictions following the collapse of the Soviet Union hampered the Russian Federation’s attempt to design a new system from scratch. The S-400 is largely derived from its predecessor, the S-300, and the two systems share many design features such as missile storage containers and radars. Capable of engaging a variety of targets, including unmanned aerial vehicles, cruise missiles, and airframes, the Triumf is a coveted system.
S-400 Triumf air defence system transporter erector launcher
Russia’s Hypersonic Kinzhal Missile:
The Kinzhal is one of the half-dozen next-generation weapons debuted by Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2018. With a reported range of up to 1,240 miles, a maximum speed of Mach-10, and a payload potential of 480 kg, Russia claims the Kinzhal is an invincible weapon. Details surrounding the missile are murky, but analysts believe the Kinzhal is derived from the ground-launched 9K720 Iskander-M short-range ballistic missile. Kinzhals were first deployed to Syria in 2021 and have been used in Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Kyiv has claimed to shoot down many of these supposedly invincible missiles, but they are nonetheless some of Moscow’s most advanced projectiles.