The Russian Federation vows to ‘restart’ its military production and to significantly strengthen its army with new weapons and other equipment.
Politically, the regime in Russia has recently taken a few steps back, again. 12-hour working shifts have been introduced in their military facilities; the government now has the right to take over the control of any company for war purposes; and, anyone who refuses to cooperate is facing a factual risk of getting in jail for at least 10 years.
Meanwhile, Russian media expresses hopes that with such industrial and social reorganization the state will be able to produce a continuous flow of weapons for its army during the invasion of Ukraine.
There are some specific ideas circulating – for example, Russians now are talking about the need to phase out Soviet-era T-62M tanks. T-62M would be replaced with modern models of heavy armored vehicles and tanks, including T-72B3, T-80BVM, and T-90M.
The ideas do not end here. Despite the fact that Russia is facing difficulties with repairing its existing army equipment, Russian media is talking about the possibility of “establishing the production of a dozen or even more tanks in every single day.”
Defense Express notes that “Uralvagonzavod” recently attempted to switch to a 24-hour working mode in order to increase the number of produced T-90M Proryv tanks, but faced a shortage of specialists. The state intends to “fix” this issue by increasing the number of hours in a single shift and by moving more retired or untrained personnel to compensate for the workforce shortages. Such a hasty move may result in lower production quality, especially when aiming to manufacture modern military gear.
Russia also has plans to locally organize serial production of Iranian Shahed-136 kamikaze drones using their own designation Geran-2. The design of these UAVs is relatively simple and they are low-cost, so the Russian Federation may succeed in establishing the required assembly lines, especially considering the fact that Iran was able to accomplish the same task while facing very similar economic sanctions.