Penguin
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First Chechen War[edit]
T-80B and T-80BV MBTs were never used in Afghanistan in the 1980s, but they were first used during the First Chechen War. This first real combat experience for T-80 MBTs was unsuccessful, as the tanks were used for capturing cities, a task for which they were not very well suited. The biggest tank losses were suffered during the ill-fated assault on the city of Grozny. The forces selected to capture Grozny were not prepared for such an operation, while the city was defended by, among others, veterans of the Soviet War in Afghanistan. The T-80 tanks used in this operation either did not have reactive armour (T-80B) or they were not fitted before the start of the operation (T-80BV), and the T-80 crews lacked sufficient training before the war.
The inexperienced crews had no knowledge of the layout of the city, while the tanks were attacked by RPG teams hidden in cellars and on top of high buildings. The anti-tank fire was directed at the least armoured points of the vehicles. Each destroyed tank received from three to six hits, and each tank was fired at by six or sevenrocket-propelled grenades. A number of vehicles exploded when the autoloader, with vertically placed rounds, was hit: in theory it should have been protected by the road wheel, but, when the tanks got hit on their side armour, the ready-to-use ammunition exploded. Out of all armored vehicles that entered Grozny, 225 were destroyed in the first month alone, representing 10.23% of all the tanks committed to the campaign.[25] The T-80 performed so poorly that General-Lieutenant A. Galkin, the head of the Armor Directorate, convinced the Minister of Defence after the conflict to never again procure tanks with gas-turbine engines.[26] After that, T-80 MBTs were never again used to capture cities, and, instead, they supported infantry squads from a safe distance. Defenders of the T-80 point out that the T-72 performed just as badly in urban fighting in Grozny as the T-80 and that there were two mitigating factors: after the breakup of the Soviet Union, poor funding meant no training for new Russian tank crews, and the tank force entering the city had no infantry support, which is considered to be suicidal by many major military strategists of armored warfare.[24]
From same page.
Russian army is replacing the obsolete T-80 with the battle proven T-72
All 4500 T-80 are in storage. None are deployed as it is a battlefield failure.
List of main battle tanks by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red indicates poor use, not poor materiel.
Perhaps they are all in storage in 2013 (which is what the ref says). But, Grozny was 1999-2000. You see no withdrawal 2000-2008. Consider less then 10% of russian T-72 are still in use today (1200 out of 10k+ according to your own ref.). By comparison, in 1985 there were 1,900 T-80 MBTs overall, 2,256 T-80 MBTs were stationed in East Germany between 1986 and 1987 and in 1991 when the Soviet Union was breaking up the Soviet Army operated 4,839 T-80 MBTs in several different models. Retaining less than 10% of that boils down to around 450 MBTs today. T-72s have NOT replaced T-80 (if anything, T-80 is replaced by T-90). There were always fewer T-80s than T-72s, which makes their presence in Russian active service in such numbers through 2008 all the more testimony.
Shifts may just as well be explained by preference for one tank factory over another, rather than by tank quality (i.e. politics), given the severe shortage of funding for many years.
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