The Russian Navy doesn’t intend to use its two newest Borey-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) without their Bulava missiles in a multipurpose role. Not even temporarily. At least according to one source.
On 1 November, a Navy Main Staff source told ITAR-TASS that operating the new SSBNs without 16 Bulava (SS-NX-30) submarine-launched ballistic missiles would be analogous to employing Tu-160 strategic bombers like fighter aircraft.
Earlier, however, RIA Novosti reported the Navy might accept the two Borey SSBNs for “experimental” use without Bulava missiles, citing a highly-placed General Staff source.
A submarine in such a status would not technically be in the order-of-battle. Russia’s first Lada-class (proyekt 677) diesel submarine Sankt-Peterburg currently operates ”experimentally” in the Northern Fleet.
The General Staff source said, without their primary armament, Borey hull 2 Aleksandr Nevskiy and hull 3 Vladimir Monomakh could serve temporarily as multipurpose submarines. Their crews could fulfill non-strategic combat training missions until problems with Bulava are resolved.
Both new SSBNs were ready for fleet acceptance before the end of 2013. Vladimir Monomakh just completed sea trials in early October.
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