Why Russia is scrapping its only aircraft carrier


Summary

Carrier down

Russia is scrapping its only aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, after decades of mechanical failures, fires and costly repairs made it no longer worth maintaining.

‘Ship of Shame’

The carrier’s design and performance were deeply flawed, relying on a ski-jump ramp instead of catapults, which limited its aircraft capacity and effectiveness — issues made glaringly obvious during its 2016 Syria deployment.

Behind the pack

The loss marks a major symbolic blow to Russia’s naval power, leaving it without a functioning carrier as China and India — both operating modernized versions of similar Soviet designs — rapidly expand their own carrier fleets.


Full story

Russia’s sole aircraft carrier, the Admiral Kuznetsov, is being decommissioned after nearly four decades of troubled service. The move, confirmed by Andrei Kostin — head of Russia’s state shipbuilding corporation and chairman of VTB Bank — marks the end of Moscow’s long-running attempt to maintain a viable carrier fleet.

“We believe there’s no point in repairing it anymore,” Kostin told the Kommersant Russian media outlet. He added the 40-year-old vessel would likely be “sold or disposed of.” Launched in 1985, the Kuznetsov was Russia’s only carrier capable of launching fixed-wing aircraft. But decades of design flaws, mechanical failures, and costly accidents left it a liability rather than an asset.

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Aging carrier from a different era

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The Russian navy’s fleet totals 290 vessels, just nine fewer than America’s 299.

Unlike U.S. supercarriers that use steam or electromagnetic catapults, the Admiral Kuznetsov relied on a ski-jump ramp to launch aircraft. That design limited what it could carry, both in aircraft types and payloads. Heavier jets, such as airborne early warning and control (AWACS) planes, couldn’t take off from its deck, leaving the ship effectively blind compared to Western carrier strike groups.

The Kuznetsov carried a crew of about 2,600 sailors and could host roughly 26 fixed-wing aircraft and two dozen helicopters. By comparison, a U.S. Navy Nimitz-class carrier typically deploys more than 70 aircraft, including AWACS and support craft.

The carrier’s operational record was equally underwhelming. When deployed to Syria in 2016, the ship belched thick black smoke — signs of problems with its heavy fuel oil engines — and lost two aircraft during the campaign. The remainder of its air wing had to relocate to a land base for the rest of the operation.

Wave of disasters

Over its lifetime, the Kuznetsov spent more than half its 33 years in repairs. A series of mishaps compounded its reputation as a “Ship of Shame.”

In 2018, the floating dry dock where the ship was being refitted sank, dropping a massive crane onto the carrier’s deck. A year later, welders accidentally ignited oil-soaked rags, sparking a fire that caused nearly a billion dollars in damage. Another blaze followed in 2022.

In the last decade, Russia poured more than $1 billion into trying to keep the ship afloat, but sanctions following the invasion of Ukraine made acquiring foreign-made replacement parts nearly impossible. The Kremlin also redirected resources to the war effort, effectively dooming the overhaul.

A blow to Russian naval prestige

Even before the decision to scrap the Kuznetsov, Russia’s naval aviation capability had been in steep decline. The carrier has been out of service since 2017 and played no role in the war in Ukraine. Its demise leaves Moscow without a single operational aircraft carrier — an unprecedented position for a country that once aspired to rival the U.S. Navy.

Former Pacific Fleet Commander Sergei Avakyants downplayed the loss, calling aircraft carriers “a thing of the past.” But that sentiment isn’t shared by other major powers. Both China and India — ironically operating carriers derived from the same Soviet designs — are actively expanding their fleets. China has already launched its third carrier, the Fujian, while India’s domestically built Vikrant joined the Vikramaditya, itself a refitted Soviet ship.

The end of an era

For Russia, the scrapping of the Admiral Kuznetsov is both a practical and psychological setback. Since their introduction in the early 20th century, aircraft carriers have symbolized global reach and national power. Losing its only one signals a retreat from that image.

During this year’s Navy Day celebrations, President Vladimir Putin made no mention of the carrier. Instead, he praised Russia’s submarine fleet as the cornerstone of the country’s nuclear deterrent. His silence spoke volumes: the future of the Russian Navy may now rest beneath the waves rather than on the surface.

The United States Navy currently operates 11 supercarriers, in addition to some amphibious assault ships that can also launch aircraft. As India and China continue to project power through their growing carrier strike groups, Russia’s once-proud flagship now faces the scrapyard, a relic of Cold War ambition and modern economic reality.

Devin Pavlou (Digital Producer) contributed to this report.
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Why this story matters

Russia's decision to decommission its only aircraft carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov, marks the end of the country's ambitions for a carrier-based navy and may shift its naval strategy amid ongoing global changes in military power projection.

Military capability shift

The loss of Admiral Kuznetsov leaves Russia without an operational aircraft carrier, affecting the country's ability to project naval aviation power and compete with other major powers that are expanding their carrier fleets.

Technological and economic challenges

Sustained technical problems, costly repairs, accidents and Western sanctions contributed to the decision, highlighting the economic and logistical difficulties Russia faces in maintaining advanced naval assets.

Changing global naval balance

While Russia abandons its carrier fleet, countries such as China and India are expanding theirs, indicating a possible shift in the balance of maritime power and signaling changes in global naval strategies.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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