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Russia’s T-80 Tanks Are Getting ‘Smoked’ In Ukraine War

T-80 Tank from Russian Army.
T-80 Tank from Russian Army. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

Russian T-80 Tanks Struggling in Ukraine: You would think a Russian T-80 tank would get the best of the Bradley Fighting Vehicle.

After all, the Bradley is lightly armored and not considered a “light tank.” It is armed with a 25mm Bushmaster cannon, not precisely a huge gun that could send a high-explosive anti-tank or sabot round to take out Russian armor.

But the Bradley is performing well against the T-80 using its TOW missiles on board to give Vladimir Putin’s forces a nightmare.

So, what is so wrong with the T-80 tank? As it turns out, quite a bit.

What’s the Problem?

Earlier this year, Ukraine’s elite 47th Mechanized Brigade utilized a Bradley to destroy a Russian T-80 with a TOW missile, showing that once again, Russian armor, specifically the T-80 tank, is not up to the challenge in Ukraine.

Hundreds of T-80s have been eliminated—either destroyed or damaged beyond repair. The cause is a combination of armor weakness, operator error, substandard tactics and techniques, and the T-80s’ simply outdated design for the modern battlefield.

Drones and Anti-tank Missiles Gouge the T-80

The use of drones has limited all tanks’ efficacy in Ukraine. There are no surprise armored attacks these days. Both sides receive alerts from unmanned systems that tanks are on the move. That’s when the anti-tank missiles begin flying, and kamikaze drones attack the turrets where armor is weak.

The Russian army has devised laughingly strange after-market modifications to the tanks’ armor to ward off Ukrainian loitering drones and anti-tank munitions, but these have still been ineffective.

Let’s look at the T-80 to see if there is any hope that the Russians can turn things around and establish armored attacks to reclaim territory in the Donbas region.

T-80 Problems in Chechnya that Foreshadow Difficulties in Ukraine

The T-80 is an outgrowth of the T-64. Made at the Kirov Plant, the Russians in their usual over-confidence, thought that this was the tank that would dominate the battlefield during the Cold War. It was the first Soviet tank with a gas turbine engine. Initial production was in 1976.

T-80 variants were used in battle during the First Chechen War, and the results were disappointing. The T-80 was not designed for urban warfare. Since the Russians were trying to root out Chechen insurgents who were hiding in basements and on rooftops in Grozny, anti-tank missiles and RPGs confounded the T-80.

The T-80 variants had no reactive armor or counter-fire sensors to warn the crews about incoming projectiles.

Many Upgrades and Variants Should Have Solved These Maladies

However, Russia did not give up on the T-80 base model. Designers and engineers at the Kirov Plant went to work to incorporate lessons learned from the Chechen wars to improve the T-80. There are at least 12 variants with numerous upgrades. T-80 improvements included new fire control systems and K ceramic composite armor.

Other T-80s had the Kobra radio-guided anti-tank weapon system or the Shtora-1 countermeasures apparatus. Later variants sported a new 125mm gun with autoloader and a Drozd-1 defensive aids suite.

Weapons Should Have Made the T-80 Stronger

Most T-80s now have the 125 mm above 2A46 smoothbore gun with autoloader. There is a co-axial machine gun and an anti-aircraft machine gun. The latest T-80s are equipped with the Kobra anti-tank guided missile.

Not Bad on Speed and Range

The T-80’s modern gas turbine engine allows it to reach speeds of more than 40 miles per hour on roads. With extra fuel drums, the range is 273 miles.

Principles of Mechanized Warfare: Russia Gets an ‘F’ Grade

Why are T-80s fat targets for Ukrainian troops?

One challenge is inexperienced crew members. Russia has lost thousands of trained crewmen due to the multitude of tanks of all models being destroyed. Putin and his generals are forced to send green soldiers into combat.

The T-80s are also simply victims of evolving weapons and techniques of modern warfare, which have some wondering if the tank is obsolete. That may be true, but the real problem is that Russia is failing on principles of mechanized warfare such as speed, security, surprise, and initiative.

Russia gets a passing grade for mass, meaning it knows how to increase the number of tanks and armored personnel carriers to overwhelm defenders. It excels at these Soviet-era tactics.

However, their armored attacks do not achieve speed and security. Russian dismounted fighters—inexperienced—have not created a level of protection during combined arms attacks. The infantry should be able to clear out enemy soldiers equipped with anti-tank missiles and keep the level of incoming projectiles targeting tanks down. This is not happening. Drones have eliminated the surprise element from Russian attacks.

This is a recipe for disaster. The T-80 tanks have weaknesses, and Russia is failing to maintain and execute the principles of mechanized warfare. Until this is fixed, the Russians will continue to lose T-80 tanks and have difficulty acquiring and holding new territory.

About the Author: Dr. Brent M. Eastwood

Brent M. Eastwood, PhD, is the author of Don’t Turn Your Back On the World: a Conservative Foreign Policy and Humans, Machines, and Data: Future Trends in Warfare, plus two other books. Brent was the founder and CEO of a tech firm that predicted world events using artificial intelligence. He served as a legislative fellow for U.S. Senator Tim Scott and advised the senator on defense and foreign policy issues. He has taught at American University, George Washington University, and George Mason University. Brent is a former U.S. Army Infantry officer. He can be followed on X @BMEastwood.

Brent M. Eastwood
Written By

Dr. Brent M. Eastwood is the author of Humans, Machines, and Data: Future Trends in Warfare. He is an Emerging Threats expert and former U.S. Army Infantry officer. You can follow him on Twitter @BMEastwood. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Science and Foreign Policy/ International Relations.

9 Comments

9 Comments

  1. pagar

    September 5, 2024 at 5:14 pm

    So were (are) t-64s, t-84s, Leo 2s and abrams and strykers. All smoked by drones, missiles and artillery.

    These modeen tanks are all descended from the venerable renault FT tank of ww1.

    Ft tank = engine at the rear.
    driver hatch front.

    Future tank needs to habe engine at the front, exit hatch/door at the rear, overall squarish in shape with an unmanned turret on top sporting numerous fix-on(removable) space armor boxes around it.

    Lastly, such a future tank must be able to release drone(s) through its gun barrel or rear door.

  2. One-World-Order

    September 6, 2024 at 1:52 am

    It’s inevitable somebody one day will make the MBT tank invincible on the battlefield cuz everybody (mostly every waking male neolib woke dude especially in US Congress) now worships war.

    One day that somebody will create a tank turret with a flat top that serves as one plate of an air capacitor.

    That plate will bear or hold a static charge of tens of thousands of volts, and when a projectile comes into close proximity, boom. The charge has jumped onto the second plate.

    However, that device could potentially be dangerous to the crew if an antenna whip comes into proximity with the turret’s top.

    THE crew could get ‘charged’ via an electrified shokku, or shocked with an electric charge.

  3. RTColorado

    September 6, 2024 at 9:21 am

    This is the way of War. One guy shows up with a sword, the other guy invents the spear, then a bow and arrow, then a catapult, etc., ect., etc.. Nothing new here, just the evolution of warfare. It’s sure that we’re not giving up on war…we just need to keep being innovative and adaptable. So enough, it’ll be more robotic and AI. But, c’mon…you can’t tell me this isn’t fun.

  4. siempre

    September 6, 2024 at 11:53 am

    The lessons of WW2 armored combat are not changed. Most important is that tanks are a leading edge of battle weapon so they are destroyed at a huge rate.Across the world, current militaries have forgotten that conventional war destroys combat vehicles at a huge rate. Tanks are not a failure because they are destroyed in combat, the leadership is the failure for not expecting the attrition rate .

  5. Jerome

    September 6, 2024 at 12:49 pm

    Nothing is rarer than a retired tanker.

  6. Simple Horn

    September 6, 2024 at 1:28 pm

    This ignores the role of AirPower. Combined arms isn’t just tanks and infantry. The drones operate as a form of AirPower, but Russia hasn’t used its jets to control the airspace, either in small areas or large. AirPower helps keep ATGMS at bay, keeps drone operators heads down, can do sigint to find the drone control locations, etc. Russia has been using its Air Force as an extension of artillery rather than as an Air Force.

  7. Mikel Drury

    September 7, 2024 at 10:13 am

    To the nationalsecurityjournal.org admin, Your posts are always well written.

  8. Roger Maris

    September 8, 2024 at 12:33 pm

    An inverted fox hole.
    20 of the 31 M-1 tanks we sent are destroyed.

  9. Pingback: Ukraine's T-84 Oplot Tank Is 'Homegrown' and Fighting Russia - NationalSecurityJournal

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