Military & intelligence

Russia’s Akula-Сlass Subs: Silent Giants US Still Can’t Match

The Russian Navy Akula-class SSN Kuzbass alongside at the Zvezda shipyard in the Pacific.The Russian Navy Akula-class SSN Kuzbass alongside at the Zvezda shipyard in the Pacific. - Sputnik International, 1920, 13.10.2025

America’s Navy has nothing sailing right now that can match Russia’s retired Soviet Project 941 Akula-class (lit. Shark) nuclear-powered submarines, writes the National Security Journal.The Akulas (NATO name: Typhoon class) were designed as a response to the US Ohio-class submarines, and first launched from the Russian port of Severodvinsk in 1980. Purpose-built for nuclear war in harsh Arctic conditions, they:Featured dual parallel pressure hulls for survivability Boasted fearsome firepower—20 R-39 submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) with multiple warheads The missiles were capable of carrying up to ten multiple independently-targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) — separate nuclear warheads capable of striking different targets Nearly 173 meters long and 23.3m wide, they were the largest in the world in terms of tonnage (23,200 tons surfaced and 48,000 tons submerged) Could patrol underwater for four months straight — and push even further if required These submarines were a “swift and silent beast” – quieter than the Americans expected, notes the outlet, adding:“The Typhoon-class could have snuck up on the United States undiscovered and let loose a mighty launch.” In 2023, the Russian Navy retired its last Project 941 submarine, the test vessel TK-208 Dmitry Donskoy, which had been upgraded to carry R-30 Bulava-30 ICBMs. Dmitry Donskoy served as an inspiration for Russia’s newer advanced nuclear-powered submarines: the Borei class, each capable of carrying 16 Bulava ballistic missiles, and Yasen-class nuclear submarines with Onyx, Kalibr, and Zircon missiles.One of Russia's largest Soviet-built nuclear submarines, Typhoon (Akula) class, which remains the world's largest with the displacement of about 25,000 metric tons (27,500 tons) heaves ahead in the Barents Sea at Russia's Arctic Coast in this September 2001 photo - Sputnik International, 1920, 23.09.2024MilitaryRussian ‘Atomic Sharks’: What is Known About World’s Largest Nuclear Submarines?23 September 2024, 16:25 GMT

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