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Moscow September 16, 2013 – Press Office of the Russian Black Sea Fleet announced that the Yamal landing ship will head to the Mediterranean in the end of the current month.

Russia Today Website quoted the Office as saying that preparations of journey of the ship anchoring the in Sevastopol Port is about to finish, clarifying that the crew have made many exercises for opening fire on maritime and air targets.

The objective of Yamal’s visit to the Mediterranean is to participate in the Traditional Russian Week in Greece in the 186 anniversary of Navarino battle where Greece got independence from the Ottoman Empire.

The Office did not refer to the possibility that the ship would join the Russian operational military division available in the Mediterranean which contains seven ships.  (SANA-R. Milhem / H. Zain)

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The Moskva missile cruiser sets out in a farewell ceremony to reach Sevastopol

The Moskva missile cruiser (RIA Novosti/Vitaliy Ankov)

Moscow’s “Responsibility to Protect”: Russian Navy Expands Mediterranean Fleet to Ten Warships

By Russia Today -Global Research, September 13, 2013
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The Russian Navy intends to build its presence in the Mediterranean Sea – particularly in the area close to Syrian shores – to up to 10 battleships, announced Admiral of the Fleet Viktor Chirkov.

“The task is crystal clear: to avoid a slightest threat to the security of the state. This is a general practice of all fleets around the world, to be there when a tension level increases. They are all going to act on operational command plan of the offshore maritime zone,” Chirkov told journalists on Friday. “Russia will be building up its Mediterranean fleet until it is deemed sufficient to perform the task set.”

Russia began military build-up in the Mediterranean in 2012, and starting from December last year the Navy established a constant presence in the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea.

On May 1, 2013 all Russian battleships operating in the area were assigned to a single task force under special offshore maritime zone operation command.

Currently there are seven warships deployed in the area: landing craft carriers ‘Aleksandr Shabalin’, ‘Admiral Nevelskoy’, ‘Peresvet’, ‘Novocherkassk’ and ‘Minsk’ from Russia’s Black and Baltic Sea Fleets, as well as the escort vessel ‘Neustrashimy’, and large anti-submarine ship ‘Admiral Panteleyev’.

According to previous reports, the missile-carrying cruiser ‘Moskva’ passed the Straits of Gibraltar on September 10 and is expected to arrive at its final destination in eastern Mediterranean on September 15 or 16.

Two battleships of the Russia’s Black Fleet, guided missile destroyer ‘Smetlivy’ and landing craft carrier ‘Nikolay Filchenkov’ left their bases in Sevastopol and Novorossiysk respectively and early on Friday morning have passed the Bosphorus Strait, heading to the eastern Mediterranean.

The SSV-201 reconnaissance ship ‘Priazovye’ also reportedly joined the group in the Eastern Mediterranean in early September.

Upon the arrival of the ‘Moskva’, its commander, Sergey Tronev, will assume operative command of the task force.

Commander Admiral Viktor Chirkov also informed that more than 80 Russian battleships and support vessels are currently offshore in various parts of the global ocean.

Pacific Fleet's large anti-submarine ship "Admiral Panteleyev" (RIA Novosti/Ildus Gilyazutdinov)

Pacific Fleet’s large anti-submarine ship “Admiral Panteleyev” (RIA Novosti/Ildus Gilyazutdinov)

“In time of peace Navy’s duty and main application is military service, constant naval presence in the zones of military-political tension where interests of the Russian Federation are concentrated,” Chirkov said.

Admiral Chirkov recalled that a group of ships headed by the ‘Moskva’ missile cruiser recently called into ports of Cuba and Venezuela and for the first time ever passed into the Pacific Ocean via the Panama Canal, calling into ports in Nicaragua and Panama.

Chirkov also informed that a group of 10 warships and support vessels accompanied by four nuclear icebreakers right now are training on the Northern Sea Route. This task group is headed by Russia’s most powerful battleship and the flagship of the Northern Fleet, cruiser ‘Pyotr Veliky’ (Peter the Great).

Pyotr Veliky heavy nuclear-powered cruiser standing on roadstead. (RIA Novosti/Grigoriy Sisoev)Pyotr Veliky heavy nuclear-powered cruiser standing on roadstead. (RIA Novosti/Grigoriy Sisoev)

“For the first time ever all Russia’s nuclear surface ships – heavy nuclear missile cruiser ‘Pyotr Veliky’ and nuclear icebreakers ‘Yamal’, ‘Vaigach’, ‘Taimyr’ and ‘50 Let Pobedy’, were combined in to perform a joined task,” Chirkov said, adding that the icebreakers assisted the taskforce to pass the strait between the Taimyr Peninsula and the Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago, and now the group is continuing to move forward to the east, crossing the Laptev Sea.

Chirkov also mentioned that a group of battleships of the Pacific Fleet headed by the missile cruiser ‘Varyag’ is currently deployed in the southern-western Pacific performing an operational readiness exercise.

“This group will take part in international exercises of the naval forces of the countries of the Asia-Pacific region and later will take part in the centenary celebration of the [Royal] Australian Navy,” said Chirkov.

Guided missile cruiser Varyag (RIA Novosti/Vitaliy Ankov)Guided missile cruiser Varyag (RIA Novosti/Vitaliy Ankov)

The Russian Navy also continues to battle maritime piracy, deploying task force groups off the coasts of Somalia. In 2013 two naval task groups, one from the Northern Fleet and another from the Pacific Fleet, have been protecting sea routes near the Horn of Africa.

Russian warships accompanied 19 convoys through the dangerous waters, maintaining security of 105 vessels from 27 countries and once preventing capture of a merchant vessel.

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