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1 |
ID:
149023
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Summary/Abstract |
The authors examine topical issues of employing the Airborne Forces in combat actions, given the progress in armaments and military hardware, changes in organizational and staff makeup, and the practice of using Russia's Aerospace Defense Forces in Syria.
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2 |
ID:
099110
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Publication |
2010.
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Summary/Abstract |
The elite Russian airborne forces, unlike other structures within the conventional armed forces, survived the "new look" reform initiated by Defense Minister, Anatoliy Serdyukov in October 2008, relatively unscathed. How this was achieved, what it meant for reform planning as a whole, as well as the significance of the change to its leadership in 2009 is examined. Problems facing the airborne units are perhaps not as intense as in the ground forces, though its leadership struggled to protect key aspects of its essential requirements in order to conduct adequate combat training. However, its successful preservation of the division-based structure, more than any other development in the past two years, illustrates the enduring potential for the defense ministry to reconceptualize the original reform concept in response to service or branch of service interests.
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3 |
ID:
122035
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4 |
ID:
145848
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Summary/Abstract |
On the basis of analyzing approaches to employing the Airborne Forces in modern conditions in view of military engineering and economic factors that make truck convoys more expedient, the authors prove the expanded applicability of this type of vehicles for solving tasks of comprehensive logistical support of the Airborne Forces.
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5 |
ID:
156125
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Summary/Abstract |
This paper examines issues of using Airborne Forces and their action methods in the context of the new trends in contemporary combined arms combat actions (operations), falling back on the experience of armed conflicts of varying intensity, and also actions of Russia's Aerospace Forces and the Navy in the Syrian Arab Republic.
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