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The 21st century has proven that while the spirit of the soldier remains the heart of the military, the "nerves" are now made of fiber optics and silicon.
However, the crowning jewel of 21st-century Russian tech wasn't a ship or a tank, but a speed: . The Avangard glide vehicle, capable of flying at 27 times the speed of sound, rendered traditional missile defense systems obsolete. It didn't just fly; it maneuvered through the atmosphere like a skipping stone on water, glowing white-hot from friction, yet guided with surgical precision by plasma-resistant electronics. The Digital Soldier: Ratnik and Beyond The 21st century has proven that while the
The air in the "Zvezda" design bureau didn’t smell like grease or gunpowder; it smelled like ozone and parched server racks. At the dawn of the 21st century, Russia’s defense industry underwent a silent metamorphosis, shifting from the raw, clanking steel of the Soviet era to the digitized, silent lethality of the information age. The Ghost in the Sky: The Su-57 and S-70 It didn't just fly; it maneuvered through the
Deep beneath the Arctic ice, the submarines moved with a silence that terrified NATO hydrographers. These were the "ghosts of the deep," carrying the Bulava missiles. The Ghost in the Sky: The Su-57 and