Su-33: Russia's Aircraft Carrier Fighter Is a 360 Degree Nightmare

Su-33 Fighter from Russia
May 22, 2024 Topic: Security Region: Europe Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: Su-33RussiaAircraft CarriersMilitaryDefenseNavyRussian Navy

Su-33: Russia's Aircraft Carrier Fighter Is a 360 Degree Nightmare

Russia's long-held ambition to become an aircraft carrier power has faced numerous setbacks, with its carrier-based warplanes, particularly the Su-33, proving problematic.

 

Summary: Russia's long-held ambition to become an aircraft carrier power has faced numerous setbacks, with its carrier-based warplanes, particularly the Su-33, proving problematic.

Su-33 Problems: What You Need to Know 

-Historically a continental power, Russia's naval capabilities have differed significantly from the maritime-focused United States.

 

-Despite upgrades, the Su-33 has struggled with payload capacity, safety issues, and performance, mirroring the failures of the Soviet-era Yak-38.

-The ongoing issues with Russia's sole aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, further highlight the impracticality of maintaining and upgrading the Su-33 fleet, suggesting that retirement may be a more prudent option.

Russia's Su-33: The Troubled Warplane of a Failing Carrier Fleet

Russia's long-held ambition to become an aircraft carrier power has faced numerous setbacks, with its carrier-based warplanes, particularly the Su-33, proving problematic. Historically a continental power, Russia's naval capabilities have differed significantly from the maritime-focused United States.

Despite upgrades, the Su-33 has struggled with payload capacity, safety issues, and performance, mirroring the failures of the Soviet-era Yak-38. The ongoing issues with Russia's sole aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, further highlight the impracticality of maintaining and upgrading the Su-33 fleet, suggesting that retirement may be a more prudent option.

It’s a well-known fact that, going back to the Soviet Union, Russia fantasized about becoming an aircraft carrier power. Yet, they were never able to achieve such lofty goals. Russia’s navy has always been a fundamentally different service from its American rival. 

This is largely because of the fact that Russia is historically a continental power rather than a maritime one (for the US that reality is just the opposite). You’ve read extensively about the failures of Russia’s aircraft carriers over the decades. But it isn’t only the aircraft carriers themselves that were disasters. 

Recent reports about Russia’s Su-33 continue to proliferate indicating that the warplanes originally designed for Russia’s failed aircraft carrier program are themselves failures. My colleague, Maya Carlin, has describedthe Su-33 as a “flying coffin.” Based on reportage coming from the Su-33’s performance in the ongoing Ukraine War, that seems to be the case. 

So, the Su-33, originally designed as a carrier-based warplane by the Russians, is proving itself to be as problematic for Russia’s military as Russia’s original carrier-based plane, the Soviet era Yak-38. 

A Bad History: Russian Aircraft Carrier-Based Warplanes

The Yak-38 was a problem for the Soviet Navy because it had only four external hardpoints and could carry little more than 4,000 pounds of armaments. In fact, the Su-33 has 12 hardpoints to carry many more pounds of weapons than the old, underperforming Yak-38 ever could. In the case of the Su-33, it can carry a much better suite of weapons. 

But reports have come out showing that the Su-33 has struggled to carry the full payload of Russian naval weapons systems.

Russia’s Su-33, even before the Ukraine War erupted, was known for a spotty safety record when flying. In other words, it was highly disaster prone. Infamously, there was one massive crash that occurred years ago at an airshow. The problems were not from user error. They arose from a faulty aircraft. It’s a bad bird. 

Beginning around four years ago, 20 of Russia’s fleet of 30 Su-33s went through what’s known as the “first phase of modernization,” according to a report from the EurAsian Times. These upgrades included GPS-assisted navigation, a new radar warning receiver, and a computing system that helps to accurately drop free-fall bombs over their intended targets (this was a major issue during Russia’s illegal war against Georgia in 2008). Accompanying that change, the Su-33 was upgraded to carry precision-guided munitions, too.

Russia Should Retire the Su-33

Despite these modifications, which the Russian Defense Ministry claimed resolved the underlying problems with the Su-33, the warplane has had such a bad record that Moscow would be better off simply retiring this bird. 

For all the money and resources Russia has spent on this warbird, it has yet to deliver on any of the promise. This is largely because the Su-33 was designed to fly from Russia’s never-built aircraft carrier fleet.

The one flattop that Russia possesses, the Admiral Kuznetsov, is itself a continuing and profound national embarrassment. Since the Su-33 was designed to fly from the Kuznetsov (and struggled doing so because it turned out to be far larger and heavier than what could safely takeoff and land on that flight deck), with the Kuznetsov perennially in drydock, it strains credulity that Russia thinks continuing to operate and upgrade the Su-33 is a worthwhile investment.

About the Author 

Brandon J. Weichert, a National Interest national security analyst, is a former Congressional staffer and geopolitical analyst who is a contributor at The Washington Times, the Asia Times, and The-Pipeline. He is the author of Winning Space: How America Remains a Superpower, Biohacked: China’s Race to Control Life, and The Shadow War: Iran’s Quest for Supremacy. His next book, A Disaster of Our Own Making: How the West Lost Ukraine, is due October 22 from Encounter Books. Weichert can be followed via Twitter @WeTheBrandon.

All images are Creative Commons.