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Russian victory day parade 2021
Russian victory day parade 2021










The Real Storm Clouds: Moscow’s Security Fears With reports that fly-overs were cancelled at a number of other Russian Victory parades, critical supply shortages or some other systemic failure cannot be discounted. And with the fuel-hungry fighter set to represent more than a quarter of the Moscow’s parade aircraft, any supply shortage would have been difficult to mask. But, under less-than-perfect conditions, if the war is sucking away Russia’s best pilots, the second stringers on parade fly-over duty may not have been quite ready to strut their ragged gear and skills before a global audience.įuel may have been a problem too. Russian aircraft have conducted ceremonial flights in far worse conditions. Though conditions were windy, the weather appeared to be perfectly fine for a fly-by. Russian pilots may be facing strain as well, and the weather may, simply, have been too much for them. Shutting the entire parade down over “weather” concerns may have been far easier an option. Putin’s hold on power may turn on the respect others offer to Russia’s strategic warfighters, and a demonstration of unreliability may have been too much to bear. Alternatively, the aircraft’s abrupt disappearance might suggest that Russia’s vaunted strategic forces are in disarray. Some might seize on the idea that Russia was ramping down their dangerous rhetoric about nuclear war-something that Putting may not want. Had the parade gone forward without the “doomsday” headliner, the aircraft’s absence would have been widely noted and widely discussed. But with only three copies still flying, the 35-year-old derivation of the IL-86 passenger aircraft had little backup in the event the designated parade aircraft broke down. Outside of the “Z” formation flight, the show’s central-and most provocative-attraction was originally to be filled by the Ilyushin IL-80 “Maxdome” command and control aircraft, a “doomsday” plane that ensures Russian leaders remain in contact with their nuclear arsenal during a war. After showing 4 Mig-29s in previous victory parades, Russia was set to use 16 Mig-29s, sending the older fighters out to conduct a “Z” pattern fly-by. Instead, the Moscow parade was set to celebrate Russia’s creaky fleet of Mikoyan Mig-29 fighter jets. Sukhoi Su-30 Flankers and Su-34 Fullback fighter-bombers, facing heavy losses and high demand, were not going to be represented in the Red Square parade, either. The story is no better for Russia’s fixed-wing aircraft. Russia’s helicopter fleet is taking a steady beating, and given battlefield attrition, Moscow parade planners expected to use no more than 15 helicopters, a humiliating reduction from a big contingent of 23 choppers just a year ago.

russian victory day parade 2021 russian victory day parade 2021

It is no secret that Russia’s Air Force is crumbling under the weight of sustained combat operations. The Moscow fly-over, had it occurred, would have been an embarrassment.












Russian victory day parade 2021