05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...
05 May 2021
by Jeremy Binnie
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing a series of recent visits after Khartoum reportedly halted work on a Russian naval base on its Red Sea coast.
The Russian Amur-class repair ship PM-138 in Port Sudan on 2 May. (Ibrahim Ishaq/AFP via Getty Images)
Russian repair ships typically accompany flotillas on extended deployments, but an Amur class vessel was the Russian Navy’s primary presence at the Syrian port of Tartus until the facility was developed into a more significant base after Moscow began its military intervention in 2015.
Sudanese sources reported that PM-138 is accompanying the Vishnya-class intelligence ship Vassily Tatischev and would remain in Port Sudan for around 48 hours.
A Vishnya class vessel was photographed in Port Sudan on 27 April. That followed a visit by the intelligence ship Ivan Khurs on 10 April, the frigate Stoikiy on 18 March, and the frigate Admiral Grigorovich from 28 February to 1 March. The latter’s visit overlapped with that of the US Navy destroyer USS Winston S Churchill.
The Russian Navy’s Amur-class repair ship PM-138 was photographed in Port Sudan on 2 May, continuing...