The Arkhangelsk was handed over to the Navy from
the Sevmash shipyard in Severodvinsk on December 27. Photo: United
Shipbuilding Corporation
Northern
Fleet's newest Yasen-M class submarine will be based 60 km from NATO Norway
The Arkhangelsk will now sail north to Zapadnaya Litsa, Russia's westernmost submarine base on the Kola Peninsula.
27 December 2024
- 19:14
“Today is a significant day for the entire Navy,”
Commander-in-Chief Admiral Aleksandr Moiseev said at the official ceremony that took place on Friday.
The Arkhangelsk is
the forth of the Yasen-M class built in Severodvinsk. Two are already sailing
for the Pacific Fleet, while the third, the Kazan,
belongs to the Northern Fleet. Including the prototype vessel of the Yasen
class, the Severodvinsk, the new Arkhangelsk will
be the third of the class deployed with the Northern Fleet.
Yasen and Yasen-M class are 4th generation
multipurpose nuclear-powered submarines in the Russia navy.
The Arkhangelsk (K-562)
was rolled out of the ship hall at Sevmash in late November last year and has spent the last 13 months on sea trials, including navigation and weapons
testings in the White Sea and Barents Sea.
Tsirkon missile
Admiral Moiseev praised the onboard weapons
systems and said they are “capable of hitting both sea and coast targets.”
The Yasen-M class can carry Kalibr and Oniks
cruise missiles, but more important for the navy is arming these new submarines
with the Tsirkon hypersonic cruise missiles, a weapon key for Russia in the
ongoing naval arms race with NATO.
It is not clear if the Arkhangelsk has tested the Tsirkon missile yet.
A Tsirkon was first time tested from the Yasen-class submarine Severodvinsk in October 2021, from a submerged position
at a depth of 40 meters in the Barents Sea.
The scramjet maneuvering wing anti-ship cruise
missile is said to be capable of accelerating up to Mach 9 (nine times the
speed of sound) and has a range of up to 1,000 kilometers. That means a launch
from inside Russia’s bastion defense area in the Barents Sea can reach enemy
warships practically anywhere in the part of the Norwegian Sea north of the
Arctic Circle.
Although Russia is bragging loudly about the
Tsirkon missile's invulnerability to modern air-defenses, reports came earlier
this year that Ukraine had shot-down two of the
missiles. Those missiles were allegedly launched from land-based
launchers.
Soviet era torpedoes
An important
role for the Russian Northern Fleet's multi-purpose submarines is hunting for
enemy submarines that can threaten the ballistic missile submarines sailing
with the country's second-strike nuclear weapons capability.
In a longer
article on Thursday in state-controlleed Izvestia newspaper, questions are asked about the torpedo
armament.
Yasen-M submarines
are currently armed with torpedoes from Soviet times and the new torpedoes have
not yet been fully tested.
"... there is work to do, something to
improve," Izvestia writes.
It was a Soviet era torpedo that in August 2000
exploded inside the Kursk submarine, triggering a larger explosion in
the torpedo compartment blowing off the front of the vessel so it sank, killing
all 118 onboard.
Six Yasen-M to Zapadnaya Litsa
Construction of the Arkhangelsk started on March
19, 2015 and took nearly 10 years.
Russia is planning to expand its fleet of the
Yasen-M class to 12 vessels. Half of them could be based in the Northern Fleet.
After Arkhangelsk follow the Perm, Ulyanovsk, Voronezh and Vladivostok, all currently under construction at the Sevmash
yard in Severodvinsk.
The Northern Fleet has chosen the piers in
Nerpitcha at the submarine base in Zapadnaya Litsa as home port for the Yasen
and Yasen-M class vessels. Located a short 60 kilometers from the border to
NATO country Norway, Nerpitcha is the westernmost of all naval bases in
northern Russia.
Third named Arkhangelsk
Nerpitcha was originally built for the Cold War
giant Typhoon submarines sailing the Arctic waters in the 1980s and
1990s.
One of the Typhoons, the TK-17 was also
named Arkhangelsk. The first Oscar-class submarine, the K-525, was
also named Arkhangelsk when she was in operation from 1980 to 2005.
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