In the mid-2010s, the skies over the Akhtubinsk testing grounds witnessed the birth of the . It wasn’t just a plane; it was a flying supercomputer. With its "integrated modular avionics," the jet could track dozens of targets simultaneously while remaining a mere shadow on enemy radar.
On the ground, the rewrote the rules of armored warfare. For a century, tank crews sat in the turret, the most vulnerable part of the vehicle. The Armata changed that. The three-man crew was tucked into an armored capsule in the hull, surrounded by reinforced steel and composite layers. The turret became a robotic ghost, operated by remote sensors and artificial intelligence. If the turret was hit, the crew survived. If an anti-tank missile approached, the Afganit active protection system fired specialized projectiles to destroy the incoming threat in mid-air—a digital shield for a digital age. The Sound of Silence: Hypersonics and Borei In the mid-2010s, the skies over the Akhtubinsk
Deep beneath the Arctic ice, the submarines moved with a silence that terrified NATO hydrographers. These were the "ghosts of the deep," carrying the Bulava missiles. On the ground, the rewrote the rules of armored warfare
As the century progresses, the "Encyclopedia of Russian Weapons" is no longer a book of static blueprints. It is a living record of autonomous AI swarms, directed-energy weapons, and electronic warfare systems like the Krasukha , which can "blind" satellites from hundreds of miles away. The three-man crew was tucked into an armored
The 21st century has proven that while the spirit of the soldier remains the heart of the military, the "nerves" are now made of fiber optics and silicon.