For the Win - Russia Triumphs in Tank Biathlon
© RIA Novosti/Avrora Yelisaveta Bebeh, Rustam Buzanov
21:45 17/08/2013
http://en.ria.ru/features/20130817/182825523/For-the-Win--Russia-Triumphs-in-Tank-Biathlon.html
Tags: T-72B, tank biathlon, Moscow Region, Russia
Related News
Tank Biathlon Kicks Off Outside Moscow
Russia Challenges US in Tank Biathlon
T-72 Tanks Practice Target Shooting at Indra-2012 Military Exercises
Tank duel of modernized T-72 BM tanks. Video from the firing range
ALABINO FIRING RANGE, Moscow Region, August 17 (Alexey Eremenko, RIA
Novosti) - Russia's latest military invention - a tank biathlon
pitting ex-Soviet states against each other - is an assault on the
senses, especially on hearing.
The racing field dwarfs the 40-ton machines and is clouded by smoke.
The announcer's deep voice struggles to cut through the booming guns
and whistling signal rockets, and the engines' roar is deafening as
brightly-painted killing machines thunder past, each leaving a plume
of dust in its wake.
The idea is pretty simple - just like a regular biathlon, only with tanks.
The Russian military unleashed this new sport on the world this week,
delivering an event that was part sales pitch, part post-Soviet
bonding exercise.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, it won, trouncing rivals from three
post-Soviet countries - Armenia, Belarus and Kazakhstan - in
Saturday's superfinals.
Surprise Victory
`I don't know how we did it. Just sat there in the machine going all
out, thinking, the whole of Russia is watching us,' Pvt. Igor
Artemyev, the Russian team's driver told RIA Novosti after the race.
His left control lever stopped working, and he pulled his machine
through while maneuvering with a single track, the 19-year-old
conscript - a round-faced, sturdy fellow with the wholesome looks of a
rustic fairytale hero - said.
To the spectators however, Russia's crimson T-72B seemed to breeze
through the racing ground like it was a Saturday morning trip to a
supermarket.
The crew commander in Kazakhstan's blue tank sprained his arm handling
the main gun shell. After a replacement was found it bounced back,
coming in second, just under a minute after Russia. Belarus finished
third, Armenia last.
`It was new to us. We've done all these exercises before, but never at
the same training run,' Kazakh gunner Aidyn Kalioldin told RIA Novosti
after the race. `The Russians handled it better. But we would have won
if the race had taken place in Kazakhstan,' Kalioldin added with a
smile.
Pegs & Minefields
All four teams at Alabino training grounds outside Moscow on Saturday
competed in T-72Bs, the staple tank of all post-Soviet armies and a
close relative of the T-90, Russia's main export tank.
Like any good show, it started with a warm-up: Out on the field
several heavy war machines of the same model - though not the
performers - executed elaborate maneuvers. Incongruously, the host
talked like he was at a ballroom dance contest, though there was an
apocalyptic grace to this `tank ballet,' as he put it.
Each lap was 6,100 meters (3.8 miles) long and included a scarp, ford,
minefield and bridge. The tanks must complete the lap without losing
speed or overturning.
During the first lap, each fires its main gun at a target from a
distance of 2,200 meters (7,200 feet), which is close to their maximum
range. Then it is the machine gun that sees action, and then flanking
fire at three consecutive targets. Ammo is loaded onto the tank at the
firing line each time. There is no slack - no extra shots are allowed
and every miss costs the team a 500-meter penalty lap.
Crucially - to keep the event sporting - they are not allowed to fire
at each other.
Culture Clash
The military made an effort to entertain. The superfinals came
complete with fireworks, music and dance shows, and a display of old
Soviet tanks, cars and state-of-the-art military training equipment.
Children and adults jostled to get their picture taken with what
looked like a real rocket launcher.
But the vibe was like that at a pro wrestling match organized by the
Soviet Union
The adrenaline-filled event called for scantily clad cheerleaders,
hard rock, beer and an announcer frothing at the mouth with excitement
but came up short on all counts.
Instead, there were yawning gaps between events, punctuated only by
officials' sleep-inducing speeches.
Any metal band would surely sell their souls for the chance to play
this gig, but the live soundtrack to the event sounded prehistoric.
Some of the Soviet tunes played were so old that one explicitly
praised Stalin.
At times the announcer imitated the booming `this is Moscow calling'
style of World War II-era radio host Yury Levitan, but this inevitably
fell flat when he had to deliver a running commentary on tanks rolling
through obstacles in the haze.
The 3,000 spectators were mostly a hand-picked assortment of former
and currently-serving soldiers who were invited along with their
entire families. No tickets were on sale to the public.
`Who knows what would happen if we just let anyone in,' army
spokesperson Nikolai Dolyushkin told RIA Novosti.
Endangered Species or Export Opportunity?
Not many saw it coming, since tank forces have hardly been a priority
in Russia over the past two decades. Plans to scale back the tank
force from the current 20,000 to just 2,000 tanks were reported in
2010 by news agencies citing Defense Ministry sources, though never
implemented.
Russia's top brass feel that the tank's golden age is already over,
Voenpens.ru military news website cited military analyst Alexander
Khramchikhin as saying last year, shortly before new Defense Minister
Sergei Shoigu was appointed.
The development of cheap anti-tank weapons and the tendency toward
small-scale conflicts arguably eliminate the need for clashes between
massive tank armadas, Ruslan Pukhov of the Center for Analysis of
Strategy and Technologies told RIA Novosti on Friday.
However, the experience of actual wars of the two past decades in the
post-Soviet space (including two Chechen wars, the clash between
Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh in the early 1990s, and
the Russian-Georgian conflict of 2008) all showed that tanks are still
relevant, Pukhov said.
Russia remains the world's biggest exporter of battle tanks, the
Moscow-based Center for Analysis of Global Arms Trade says. So this
tank biathlon appeared to be an entertaining if unconventional sales
pitch, Pukhov said.
`We'll do our best to ensure that foreign armies buy our tanks in the
future,' Shoigu said, announcing the event last week.
Forty-six military attaches from embassies in Moscow were invited, the
Defense Ministry said, and most showed up, many with their families in
tow.
US, Germany - Bring it On
Shoigu also said that the United States and Germany, Russia's rivals
on the arms exports market, were invited to bring their own tanks to
compete against Russia next year.
After Saturday's race, the US and German military attachés both said
that their respective superiors are still deciding whether to accept
Shoigu's invitation, though the German officer sounded excited about
it.
Shoigu previously claimed that US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel had
approved US participation in 2014, but Colonel R. Taft Blackburn, US
Army Attaché in Russia, said this was not the case.
`It is an interesting idea, but there are many issues at stake,' was
all that Blackburn said when asked by RIA Novosti whether the Pentagon
is considering the risk that Russia could interpret US unwillingness
to take part as weakness.
Blackburn then beat a hasty retreat into the VIP stand, as an Armenian
tank thundered past.
From: Baghdasarian
© RIA Novosti/Avrora Yelisaveta Bebeh, Rustam Buzanov
21:45 17/08/2013
http://en.ria.ru/features/20130817/182825523/For-the-Win--Russia-Triumphs-in-Tank-Biathlon.html
Tags: T-72B, tank biathlon, Moscow Region, Russia
Related News
Tank Biathlon Kicks Off Outside Moscow
Russia Challenges US in Tank Biathlon
T-72 Tanks Practice Target Shooting at Indra-2012 Military Exercises
Tank duel of modernized T-72 BM tanks. Video from the firing range
ALABINO FIRING RANGE, Moscow Region, August 17 (Alexey Eremenko, RIA
Novosti) - Russia's latest military invention - a tank biathlon
pitting ex-Soviet states against each other - is an assault on the
senses, especially on hearing.
The racing field dwarfs the 40-ton machines and is clouded by smoke.
The announcer's deep voice struggles to cut through the booming guns
and whistling signal rockets, and the engines' roar is deafening as
brightly-painted killing machines thunder past, each leaving a plume
of dust in its wake.
The idea is pretty simple - just like a regular biathlon, only with tanks.
The Russian military unleashed this new sport on the world this week,
delivering an event that was part sales pitch, part post-Soviet
bonding exercise.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, it won, trouncing rivals from three
post-Soviet countries - Armenia, Belarus and Kazakhstan - in
Saturday's superfinals.
Surprise Victory
`I don't know how we did it. Just sat there in the machine going all
out, thinking, the whole of Russia is watching us,' Pvt. Igor
Artemyev, the Russian team's driver told RIA Novosti after the race.
His left control lever stopped working, and he pulled his machine
through while maneuvering with a single track, the 19-year-old
conscript - a round-faced, sturdy fellow with the wholesome looks of a
rustic fairytale hero - said.
To the spectators however, Russia's crimson T-72B seemed to breeze
through the racing ground like it was a Saturday morning trip to a
supermarket.
The crew commander in Kazakhstan's blue tank sprained his arm handling
the main gun shell. After a replacement was found it bounced back,
coming in second, just under a minute after Russia. Belarus finished
third, Armenia last.
`It was new to us. We've done all these exercises before, but never at
the same training run,' Kazakh gunner Aidyn Kalioldin told RIA Novosti
after the race. `The Russians handled it better. But we would have won
if the race had taken place in Kazakhstan,' Kalioldin added with a
smile.
Pegs & Minefields
All four teams at Alabino training grounds outside Moscow on Saturday
competed in T-72Bs, the staple tank of all post-Soviet armies and a
close relative of the T-90, Russia's main export tank.
Like any good show, it started with a warm-up: Out on the field
several heavy war machines of the same model - though not the
performers - executed elaborate maneuvers. Incongruously, the host
talked like he was at a ballroom dance contest, though there was an
apocalyptic grace to this `tank ballet,' as he put it.
Each lap was 6,100 meters (3.8 miles) long and included a scarp, ford,
minefield and bridge. The tanks must complete the lap without losing
speed or overturning.
During the first lap, each fires its main gun at a target from a
distance of 2,200 meters (7,200 feet), which is close to their maximum
range. Then it is the machine gun that sees action, and then flanking
fire at three consecutive targets. Ammo is loaded onto the tank at the
firing line each time. There is no slack - no extra shots are allowed
and every miss costs the team a 500-meter penalty lap.
Crucially - to keep the event sporting - they are not allowed to fire
at each other.
Culture Clash
The military made an effort to entertain. The superfinals came
complete with fireworks, music and dance shows, and a display of old
Soviet tanks, cars and state-of-the-art military training equipment.
Children and adults jostled to get their picture taken with what
looked like a real rocket launcher.
But the vibe was like that at a pro wrestling match organized by the
Soviet Union
The adrenaline-filled event called for scantily clad cheerleaders,
hard rock, beer and an announcer frothing at the mouth with excitement
but came up short on all counts.
Instead, there were yawning gaps between events, punctuated only by
officials' sleep-inducing speeches.
Any metal band would surely sell their souls for the chance to play
this gig, but the live soundtrack to the event sounded prehistoric.
Some of the Soviet tunes played were so old that one explicitly
praised Stalin.
At times the announcer imitated the booming `this is Moscow calling'
style of World War II-era radio host Yury Levitan, but this inevitably
fell flat when he had to deliver a running commentary on tanks rolling
through obstacles in the haze.
The 3,000 spectators were mostly a hand-picked assortment of former
and currently-serving soldiers who were invited along with their
entire families. No tickets were on sale to the public.
`Who knows what would happen if we just let anyone in,' army
spokesperson Nikolai Dolyushkin told RIA Novosti.
Endangered Species or Export Opportunity?
Not many saw it coming, since tank forces have hardly been a priority
in Russia over the past two decades. Plans to scale back the tank
force from the current 20,000 to just 2,000 tanks were reported in
2010 by news agencies citing Defense Ministry sources, though never
implemented.
Russia's top brass feel that the tank's golden age is already over,
Voenpens.ru military news website cited military analyst Alexander
Khramchikhin as saying last year, shortly before new Defense Minister
Sergei Shoigu was appointed.
The development of cheap anti-tank weapons and the tendency toward
small-scale conflicts arguably eliminate the need for clashes between
massive tank armadas, Ruslan Pukhov of the Center for Analysis of
Strategy and Technologies told RIA Novosti on Friday.
However, the experience of actual wars of the two past decades in the
post-Soviet space (including two Chechen wars, the clash between
Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno Karabakh in the early 1990s, and
the Russian-Georgian conflict of 2008) all showed that tanks are still
relevant, Pukhov said.
Russia remains the world's biggest exporter of battle tanks, the
Moscow-based Center for Analysis of Global Arms Trade says. So this
tank biathlon appeared to be an entertaining if unconventional sales
pitch, Pukhov said.
`We'll do our best to ensure that foreign armies buy our tanks in the
future,' Shoigu said, announcing the event last week.
Forty-six military attaches from embassies in Moscow were invited, the
Defense Ministry said, and most showed up, many with their families in
tow.
US, Germany - Bring it On
Shoigu also said that the United States and Germany, Russia's rivals
on the arms exports market, were invited to bring their own tanks to
compete against Russia next year.
After Saturday's race, the US and German military attachés both said
that their respective superiors are still deciding whether to accept
Shoigu's invitation, though the German officer sounded excited about
it.
Shoigu previously claimed that US Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel had
approved US participation in 2014, but Colonel R. Taft Blackburn, US
Army Attaché in Russia, said this was not the case.
`It is an interesting idea, but there are many issues at stake,' was
all that Blackburn said when asked by RIA Novosti whether the Pentagon
is considering the risk that Russia could interpret US unwillingness
to take part as weakness.
Blackburn then beat a hasty retreat into the VIP stand, as an Armenian
tank thundered past.
From: Baghdasarian