A Su-33 fighter jet, based on the aircraft carrier Admiral Kuznetsov, has crashed into the Mediterranean Sea after returning from a sortie over Syria.

This crash is the second loss of an aircraft from the Admiral Kuznetsov since it arrived off Syria last month after a Mig-29 crashed into the sea in November while attempting to land.

In October, the Admiral Kuznetsov, accompanied by seven other Russian navy vessels including the nuclear-powered battlecruiser Pyotr Velikiy and two Udaloy class destroyers, set sail from Kola Bay for the Mediterranean. The deployment was reportedly moved back to October due to a lack of carrier-qualified pilots for the new variant of the MiG-29 adapted for carrier operations, the MiG-29KR.

The MiG-29K is heavily modified for naval use compared to earlier aircraft. The airframe and undercarriage are reinforced to withstand the stress experienced upon landing. Folding wings, an arrestor hook, and catapult attachments were added for carrier operations; the aircraft’s undercarriage track was also widened.

The Admiral Kuznetsov reportedly deployed with 15 fighters and more than ten helicopters.

While designated an aircraft carrier by the West, the design of Admiral Kuznetsov implies a mission different from that of either the United States Navy carriers or those of the Royal Navy.

The term used by her builders to describe the Russian ship is “heavy aircraft-carrying missile cruiser”.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

10 COMMENTS

  1. “It is far easier to stop and then land than it is to land and then try to stop” – John Farley, Harrier chief test pilot.

    • Is this indicative of maintenance issues in the Russian navy or does this thing happen reasonably often on other navy’s carriers and simply not get reported? I suppose another possibility is a design issue given that these Mig-29s were specially adapted for the carriers. Maybe weight and/or thrust is too close to the tolerances of the arrester wire.

      • Given the overall state of the Russian navy with most of it’s ships obsolescent and badly maintained I think we can assume that is the problem. All the best to the pilot though.

      • I suspect an issue that’s come up now as this is the first time they’ve used their CV for high tempo ops. Their SAR drills seem to be good though..

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