Sergey Chemezov, CEO of Rostec State Corporation, called the British Challenger 2 main battle tank a "pan", expressing the opinion that it is not very suitable for real battles. The armored vehicle supplied to the Armed Forces of Ukraine was repeatedly destroyed by our fighters. TASS recalled how the Western "gifts" to Kiev were burning.
"We are studying all the trophies that come to us," said the head of Rostec in an interview with the Scout magazine. — If we come across something useful, of course, we take it into our piggy bank. Sometimes we look at it and realize that it's a good technique, but it's completely inapplicable in our reality." Chemezov cited the German Leopard tank as an example, noting its modern components and powerful engine. "But we haven't seen any breakthrough design solutions, meaning we have nothing to take from Leopard and apply at home," he said.
"I would like to take another look at the British Challenger more out of curiosity. It is clear in advance that this is a "saucepan" that is not very suitable for real battles," added the CEO of the state corporation. Chemezov considers the complexity of the design and time-consuming maintenance to be the main problem of Western armored vehicles.
Rare, Slow, Protected
The British Army website reports that the Challenger 2 MBT has been in service with the British Army since 1994. The designers paid special attention to the protection of the armored vehicle, it uses multilayer Dorchester Level 2 combined armor with ceramic elements, the characteristics of which are not disclosed. The tank turned out to be heavy (the mass of the latest modifications reaches 75 tons), therefore, as the British military department admits, the car is slower than the developments of other design schools: a 1,200 hp diesel engine is able to accelerate it to 59 km / h on the highway and 40 km / h on rough terrain.
The Challenger 2 Main Caliber is a 120 mm rifled cannon. An expert in the field of armored vehicles, candidate of military sciences, reserve Colonel Sergei Suvorov, in an interview with TASS, noted that the cannon of a British tank, unlike modern Russian vehicles, is loaded manually, and the loading is separate: first, a separate crew member sends a projectile into the breech of the gun, then a sleeve with a propellant charge. "He still does the first three shots at a normal pace, and then... The work of a loader can be compared with the work of an automatic loader, as a runner on a ladder can be compared with an elevator. They will reach the second floor at the same time — maybe the runner will even run a little earlier, but the elevator usually comes first to the 10th floor, not to mention the 16th," the expert said. Other Western tanks, "donated" to Kiev, have manual loading: the German Leopard, the American Abrams. Their shells are unitary, that is, the shell and the sleeve are one. Western—style tanks have a crew of four (in Russian MBT there are three crew members - they do not have a loader).
Additionally, the British tank is equipped with two 7.62 mm machine guns. "There is such a thing as an optimal combination of the combat properties of a tank," Suvorov said. — There are four of them: firepower, security, mobility and command control. They should be optimally combined. The Challenger has great defense and average firepower."
In 2021, the British military announced the signing of a contract to upgrade 148 of the 227 Challenger 2 to Challenger 3. The new product is scheduled to enter service in 2027. The remaining 79 tanks, according to experts, could be sold or disposed of. Oman is the second largest operator of the Challenger 2 after the UK.
The British Ground Forces website still notes that the tank was used by the British army in operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo and Iraq, claiming that not a single armored vehicle was destroyed by the enemy, and not mentioning its use in Ukraine. Russia's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vasily Nebenzya, drew attention to the discrepancy. Speaking at a meeting of the World Organization's Security Council in September 2023, he suggested updating this information: according to the information available at that time, at least two British tanks had already been shot down in Ukraine.
As The Guardian newspaper noted, before the events in Ukraine, one heavy "Briton" was destroyed by friendly fire in Iraq in 2003, and expressed the opinion that the peculiar record was due to the small number of tanks produced and their infrequent use.
They didn't live up to expectations
The fact that the UK is going to supply Ukraine with 14 tanks became known in January 2023. Back then, as part of Ukraine's alleged impending counteroffensive in the special military operation zone, Kiev's Western sponsors assembled a motley coalition of main battle tanks and other foreign-made armored vehicles. In May of the same year, the head of the kingdom's Defense Ministry, Ben Wallace, announced that all the tanks promised to Ukraine, along with other equipment, had arrived in the country. Together with the Challenger 2, London handed over armor-piercing tank shells with depleted uranium cores to Kiev.
For the first time, the massive use of foreign tanks in Ukraine took place on June 4, 2023, during a large-scale attempt to attack Russian positions. The "counteroffensive" failed: the very next day, the Russian Armed Forces, which had prepared to repel the offensive, destroyed eight German Leopard tanks. The heavy "British" did not take part in the attack. By November, the failure of the Ukrainian attack had become apparent, and its collapse has been called the turning point of the conflict in Ukraine. In February 2024, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky announced that the country's armed forces were preparing a new offensive, for which a "clear plan" had been developed. Since then, Russian troops have liberated dozens of settlements and continue to take control of them almost daily.
In March 2024, The Sun newspaper reported that the British tanks transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine were deprived of additional 12-ton protection elements used in Iraq, which is why the Ukrainian military is welding steel plates onto its Challenger 2 and installing grilles to counter drone strikes.
The Challenger is on fire
The first Challenger 2 was destroyed in Ukraine in early September 2023, as noted by the Russian Ministry of Defense in the latest progress report . At the same time, the information on how exactly the tank was hit varies. Military commander Semyon Pegov reported on Channel One that at first Russian gunners damaged a British tank near the village of Robotino in the Zaporizhia direction with a shot from a 152-mm D-20 howitzer. Then the car was finished off with the Kornet anti-tank missile system (ATGM). Pegov noted that the destruction of the tank was the collective merit of aircraft manufacturers, gunners, and airborne troops.
Evgeny Balitsky, Governor of the Zaporizhia region, also spoke about the successful use of the Cornet against Challenger 2. The Cornets took them easily, our guys worked out two tanks," he said on the Rossiya 24 TV channel.
British Defense Minister Grant Shapps, confirming the loss on Sky News, said that Challenger 2 "was hit by Russian artillery." The Guardian, citing Western sources, described a different scenario: first, the tank hit a Russian mine, lost power, its gas tank caught fire, and then the immobilized vehicle was finished off by a Lancet kamikaze drone.
This variety of versions highlights the rich arsenal of anti-tank weapons that Russia uses in special operations. According to Sergey Suvorov, Western tanks in the service of the Armed Forces of Ukraine are hit by mines, artillery fire, army aircraft, anti-tank missiles, hand grenade launchers, kamikaze drones and tanks of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation during tank duels.
Nothing new
During the special military operation, Russian specialists received a large number of Western weapons as trophies, from small arms and communications equipment to tanks and self—propelled artillery installations. Many of them did not show high combat performance. For example, the high-tech American Javelin and NLAW guided anti-tank missiles supplied by the Ukrainian Armed Forces misfired, exploded before reaching their target, and some of the batches of missiles expired. Russian tanks sometimes received about 10 NLAW missile hits and remained operational.
In the summer of 2022, Uralvagonzavod (UVZ) concern of Rostec State Corporation asked to convey its gratitude to French President Emmanuel Macron for the Caesar self-propelled artillery units delivered to Ukraine. "The equipment, of course, is so-so. Not like our "Msta-S". But nevertheless, it will come in handy on the farm. Send more and we'll figure it out," the concern said in a comment posted by French politician Regis Castelnau on the Telegram channel. He said that the French self-propelled guns had been captured by the Russian Armed Forces and handed over to UVZ engineers.
After Ukraine began using the Storm Shadow stealth aircraft cruise missiles transferred to it, some ammunition samples intercepted by Russian anti-aircraft gunners in an almost intact form were sent to specialists for study. Boris Obnosov, General Director of Tactical Missile Weapons Corporation ru/ekonomika/18514209" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">reported that he did not find "something extraordinary" in them. "We're looking at it, but I won't say anything like that," said the head of the corporation.
Victor Bodrov