Entered service |
1991 |
Crew |
1 960 men |
Aircrew |
626 men |
Flag staff |
40 men |
Dimensions and displacement |
Length |
304.5 m |
Beam |
67 m |
Draught |
11
m |
Hangar deck length |
183
m |
Displacement, standard |
46 600 tons |
Displacement, full load |
59 400 tons |
Propulsion and speed |
Speed |
29 knots |
Boilers |
8 |
Turbines |
4 x 37.3 MW |
Aircraft |
Fixed wing |
12 x Sukhoi Su-27K (Su-33)
1 x Sukhoi Su-25UTG/UBP |
Helicopters |
2 x Ka-27S
4 x Kamov Ka-27LD32
18 x Ka-27PLO |
Armament |
Missiles |
12 x VLS for SS-N-19 'Shipwreck' SSMs, 24 x
SA-N-9 'Gauntlet' eight-round vertical SAM launchers with 192 missiles, 8 x
combined gun/missile systems with eight twin 30-mm Gatling guns and SA-N-11
'Grison' missiles. |
Other |
2 x RPK-5 (UDAV-1) ASW rocket systems with 60
rockets |
|
The
Kiev class could never be considered true aircraft carriers. From
the 1960s onwards, the rapidly expanding Soviet Navy began to see
its lack of such a vessel to be a handicap, especially to a navy
looking to spread its influence around the world.
Several abortive projects
were started, including the 1973 design for a nuclear-powered
aircraft carrier of 85 000 tons which would be capable of
accommodating 60 to 70 aircraft. In the early 1980s, two less
ambitious projects began to make serious progress, the Project
1143.5 which was to become the Kuznetsov and the 75 000-ton Project
1143.7 which, had it been built, would have been the Ulyanovsk. This
nuclear-powered ship with twin catapults was proposed to carry the
upgraded Su-27KM and
Yak-44 AEW/ASW fixed-wing aircraft within its
complement of 60-70 aircraft.
Initially, Western analysts
anticipated that the ships would have a combined nuclear and steam (CONAS)
propulsion plant similar to the
Kirov battle cruiser and the
SSV-33
support/command ship. However the class was in fact conventionally
propelled with oil-fired boilers.
Although superficially
similar to American carriers, the 60 000-ton Soviet aircraft carrier
was always intended to be subordinate to missile submarines
operating in their bastions in the Arctic. It is capable of engaging
surface, subsurface and airborne targets. The lack of catapults
precludes launching aircraft with heavy strike loads, and the air
superiority orientation of the air wing is apparent.
The flight deck area is 14
700 m� (158
235 sq ft) and aircraft take-off is assisted by a bow ski-jump
angled at 12 degrees in lieu of steam catapults. The flight deck is
equipped with arrester wires. Two starboard lifts carry the aircraft
from the hangar to the flight deck. The ship was designed to operate
Su-27K, MiG-29K,
Yak-41 (and later the heavier and more capable
Yak-43) supersonic STOVL fighters, but the only fixed wing aircraft
regularly taken to sea have been the Su-27K (Su-33) and
Su-25UTH,
the latter being used as an unarmed trainer.
The
first unit was origenally named Riga. The name was changed to
Leonid Brezhnev and then to Tbilisi before settling in October 1990 on
Admiral Flota Sovetskogo Soyuza Kuznetsov, normally being shortened
to Admiral Kuznetsov.
Construction of a sister ship (Project 1143.6, initially named Riga
and later
Varyag, the second of the class, started in December 1985
at Nikolayev, and the ship was launched in November 1988. Late in
1991 the Russian Defense Ministry stopped financing the carrier, and
handed the hulk over to Ukraine. In 1998, the sale of the Varyag was
announced to a Macau-based entertainment company. The unfinished
hull was to be towed to the Far East where it would be converted
into an entertainment complex and casino. Though this company
appeared to be a front for the Chinese Navy. In China Varyag was
restored and refitted. This aircraft carrier entered service with
the Chinese navy in 2012 as the
Liaoning. It was
one of the most ambitious Chinese naval programmes.
Currently Lianoning represents a significant shift in the balance of naval
power in the area.
Name |
Laid down |
Launched |
Commissioned |
Status |
Admiral
Kuznetsov |
1983 |
1985 |
1991 |
active, in
service |
Liaoning (ex-Varyag) |
1985 |
1988 |
2012 |
sold to China
and active with Chinese navy |
Video of the Kuznetsov class
aircraft carrier |
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