Uran-9


The Uran-9 is a tracked unmanned combat ground vehicle developed and produced by JSC 766 UPTK, and promoted and offered by Rosoboronexport for the international market. According to a release by Rosoboronexport, the system designed to deliver combined combat, reconnaissance and counter-terrorism units with remote reconnaissance and fire support. The armament consists of a 2A72 mod ABM M30-M3 autocannon from Impul's 2 along Russian artillery and other producers, four ATGMs of the Ataka or other type, also Igla or Strela SAMs, FCS, cam IR sensors, laser rangefinder and other means for detection.

Operational history

The Uran-9 was first deployed during the Syrian Civil War, though according to a performance report of the 3rd Central Research Institute of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation, the tank functioned poorly, and was unable to perform many of the missions assigned to it. On the other hand, an industry source claimed that “the vehicle has been tested in Syria and demonstrated high performance in an operational environment,” also noting that industry is now working to increase the Uran-9's range, response time, and data bandwidth. Uran-9 was also used in the large-scale Vostok 2018 drills. The Uran-9 robotic armed vehicle finally entered military service in January 2019.

Literature