Russia has announced plans to build a  new fleet of James Bond style ‘stealth’ boats that will be almost  impossible to detect by radar.
According  to reports Russian engineers will start work on up to 16 of the new  destroyers over the next 20 years which will be outfitted with an  arsenal of weapons.
Russian newspaper Pravda said the fleet will form the backbone of the country’s naval power.
Could the Russian offering by similar? An artist's impression of the  Zumwalt-class destroyer DDG 1000, a proposed class of U.S. Navy  'stealth' ship.
Each boat would be equipped with cruise and anti-aircraft missiles, anti-ship missiles and torpedoes, Fox News reported.So adaptable is the new boat that it could replace three existing kinds of vessel.A  source from the Russian defence industry told Russian language  newspaper Izvestia: ‘It will leave behind large-anti-submarine ships  with the help of state-of-the-art hardware. Its assault and anti-aircraft performance will outstrip present-day destroyers and guided-missile cruisers’.The  announcement comes after Russia unveiled plans for a stealth jet  fighter that will work as its own version of the U.S. F-22 Raptor,  itself a stealth craft.The Sukhoi Tu-50 is being developed jointly by Russia and India and was made public for the first time in August.Experts  have said the latest announcement should be greeted with scepticism as  Russia could merely be touting for business with its new technology.They  also questioned whether or not a destroyer ship - which can have a  displacement of up to 9,000 tonnes - could be actually invisible.‘The vast majority of warships built  today boast stealthy features to one degree or another,’ said James  Holmes, a professor at the U.S. Naval War College.Thomas  Fedyszyn, director of the Europe-Russia Studies Group at the U.S. Naval  War College added: ‘They're trying to sell this to India, Vietnam,  Indonesia … as marketers, they would per force be required to make  statements like this.‘I'm  not persuaded that they will revolutionise surface warfare. It's  probably not a revolutionary stealth technology that makes them  invisible to all things at all times.‘Everyone  who's building ships these days is changing angles so they don't become  radar beacons. We build them stealthier than we used to build them.’Russia  has already taken delivery of the second of the separate Project 20380  or Steregushchy class corvette ships which are designed to be harder for  radar to pick up.
Naval  chiefs plan to have up to 30 of the vessels to patrol its coastal  waters and oil and gas transportation routes thanks to their SS-N-25  Switchblade anti-ship cruise missiles and 100-mm gun.Each  ship can reach a maximum speed of 27 knots and has a crew of 100 which  operate string of air defence and anti-submarine systems.America  has also experimented with stealth ships but its ‘Sea Shadow’ never  went into mass production, despite costing more than £110million to  develop.The  distinctive vessel was the inspiration for the stealth boat used in the  James Bond film 'Tomorrow Never Dies’ by a media mogul intent on world  domination.The Sea  Shadow however is currently housed in a dock in San Diego, California,  with few signs of interests from even naval museums.by "environment clean generations"
   
 
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