Baltimore Sun

Russian-designed tanks head to Aberdeen Proving Ground

Country’s top weapons testing site, located in Maryland, will study equipment to aid Ukraine’s efforts, boost US intelligen­ce

- By Hayes Gardner

One Russian-designed tank was noticed in April during the two-day stint it spent at a Louisiana truck stop that doubles as a casino. The other was spotted at a Utah gas station in May.

Both behemoths were headed to the same place: Aberdeen, Maryland.

As the United States and other NATO countries support Ukraine in its war against Russia, a military post in the Northeast Maryland city of 17,000 could prove to be a valuable resource. A T-72 and a T-90 — both Soviet-era tanks weighing at least 90,000 pounds each — were recently trucked from faraway states and along interstate highways to Aberdeen Proving Ground, a U.S. Army testing and research site.

Tanks have been critical in the RussiaUkra­ine conflict, which started last year, and Ukraine’s allies have sent the country 230 tanks. Among the $76 billion in total aid (military and otherwise) that the U.S. has given are 31 M1 Abrams tanks.

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Now, the U.S. is lending the services of the Aberdeen Proving Ground, a 72,000-acre post on the Chesapeake Bay that is the country’s top weapons testing site and the state’s sixth-largest employer. Establishe­d in 1917 as the U.S. entered World War I, the proving ground is the oldest of its kind. Over the last century, it has studied a range of weapons, from small arms to bombs and tanks to chemical and biological warfare.

The Department of Defense described the T-90’s arrival at Aberdeen as “part of our ongoing commitment to provide Ukraine the capabiliti­es it needs to counter Russian aggression.”

The U.S. already had access to Russian tanks built during the Soviet-era and studied such weaponry as recently as last year.

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But the two tanks now on U.S. soil could provide essential, updated knowledge of Russia’s fleet, as well as supply ideas for how Ukraine can improve its tanks, many of which are T-72s.

Igor Novikov, a former adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, tweeted in April that a “trophy” Russian T-90 was on its way to Maryland as a “small thankyou gift” to the U.S., but it’s unclear precisely how the U.S. obtained the T-72. Ukraine or an allied country likely shipped it to the U.S., where there are advanced resources, like those at Aberdeen, for researchin­g tanks.

While it is not unusual, experts say, that the U.S. would study the weapons systems of rival nations, the advent of the tanks underscore­s the importance of gathering intelligen­ce during warfare and Aberdeen’s key role in doing so.

There are myriad reasons to study enemy technology, and an understand­ing of a foe’s abilities is invaluable on the battlefiel­d. Analyzing how far and accurately a tank’s gun can fire is important, of course, but so are scores of other details: Knowing a tank’s fuel economy, for example, is helpful in figuring out how far a tank can travel before refueling.

Michael E. O’Hanlon, a senior fellow and director of research in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institutio­n, said if Russia had modernized a tank by adding improved armor or a stronger engine or sensors that ward off missiles, to name a few possible modificati­ons, the souped-up tanks would provide insights beyond what the U.S. learned from aging tanks that haven’t seen combat in decades.

“All of that informatio­n would be very tactically useful if you were figuring out what to send the Ukrainians and also how to train the Ukrainians on the use of proper anti-armor weapons,” he told The Baltimore Sun.

Doug Wise, who spent 20 years in the military and 30 years with the Central Intelligen­ce Agency,

In May, a Russian-designed T-72 was spotted at a gas station in Utah on its way to the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Harford County.

likened studying a modernized tank versus an old one to examining an iPhone 14 instead of an iPhone 6. In a way, they’re the same phone — or tank, in this case — but they have a “radically different design,” said Wise, who also served as deputy director of the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency.

Updated informatio­n could help the U.S. better understand the abilities of Russia’s weaponry. That benefits Ukraine, but is also a boon for the U.S., which collects intelligen­ce about potential adversarie­s.

“Nobody likes to have their technology fall into the other guys’ hands,” O’Hanlon said.

The T-90 first was spotted in the U.S. in April when the truck hauling it broke down in Louisiana. The truck dropped the 30-foot tank off — without any tarp or canvas concealing it — and, with its load lightened, drove away to be repaired. Two days later, it returned, picked up the tank,

and continued to Aberdeen. The tank’s sighting popped up on social media, then was reported by The War Zone, a military news website.

“I walked out there and, lo and behold, there’s a tank on a big ol’ trailer in my back parking lot,” said Cody Sellers, the store manager at Peto’s Travel Center and Casino on Interstate 10 in Roanoke, Louisiana.

The phone at Peto’s rang for days as word spread and curious visitors hoped to get a look at the mammoth machine parked among the gas pumps. One person left a Google review with photos of the tank saying: “Food is so good that even Russian came over with their T90.” Sue Gough, a spokespers­on for the Department of Defense, confirmed a T-90 tank was en route to Aberdeen when “the truck transporti­ng it suffered a mechanical issue.”

“The tank’s explosive reactive armor was inert, it was not armed or carrying any dangerous material,

and at no point posed a risk to the public. This is part of our ongoing commitment to provide Ukraine the capabiliti­es it needs to counter Russian aggression,” she said. “For security reasons, we will not comment further on this matter.”

A month later, in May, a different Russian-designed tank popped up at a U.S. gas station.

Dave Trojan is a 21-year Navy veteran who now spends time as an “aviation archaeolog­ist” and he had been digging through old airplane crash sites when he stopped for gas at a Pilot station near the Nevada-Utah line. He was aware of the recent T-90 sighting and he promptly recognized this tank — sitting atop a truck trailer, under a tarp but with its gun protruding — as being a T-72, a predecesso­r to the T-90.

“I knew right away that it was a Russian tank,” he said.

Trojan quickly snapped photograph­s of the tank and shared the images with Tankers, a social media group.

“I worked in the government for 25 years, so I just know that the government does a lot of things that they don’t talk about and so when you find stuff out … I just think it needs to get out there so people can know about it,” Trojan said.

The Nevada Automotive Test Center — a private evaluation facility for commercial and military vehicles — confirmed in a statement that the T-72 was headed from its site to Aberdeen. The tank was not armed nor “carrying any dangerous material and at no point posed a risk to the public,” the test center said, adding that it was sent to Aberdeen to meet the Department of Defense’s “test and training requiremen­ts.” The center declined to comment further for security reasons.

How exactly the tanks will be examined and studied remains unknown and federal intelligen­ce agencies have, unsurprisi­ngly, not been eager to share informatio­n. The CIA declined to comment and the DIA did not respond to a request for comment.

It’s likely the U.S. is seeking to identify the capabiliti­es of the tanks (particular­ly the T-90, the more modern of the two) to impart that intelligen­ce to Ukraine, experts say. The U.S. could also be searching for ways to improve the T-72 to provide intelligen­ce that would boost Ukraine’s own fleet.

“It’s distinctly possible that we’re trying to figure out how to make that T-72 better because it may still be one of the most important kinds of tanks for the Ukrainians to operate,” O’Hanlon said.

Wise said at Aberdeen, experts can pull apart a tank, reconstruc­t it, see how it functions, test its armor and study any number of minute details. There are “near infinite ways” to glean important intelligen­ce and there isn’t a better place to do so than Aberdeen.

“They know weapon systems,” Wise said. “That is one place that is unparallel­ed in expertise in both U.S.-developed weapons, as well as foreign weapons.”

 ?? News 11 News 11 COURTESY ?? Ukraine recaptures village as Russian forces hold other lines, fire on fleeing civilians elsewhere.
A Russian-designed T-90 tank spotted in April at a truck stop in Louisiana as it is headed to the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Harford County.
News 11 News 11 COURTESY Ukraine recaptures village as Russian forces hold other lines, fire on fleeing civilians elsewhere. A Russian-designed T-90 tank spotted in April at a truck stop in Louisiana as it is headed to the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Harford County.
 ?? MONICA HERNDON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Debris is seen at the collapsed portion of Interstate 95 in Philadelph­ia on Sunday. A truck fire and partial road collapse have closed I-95 in both directions in northeast Philadelph­ia.
MONICA HERNDON/THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Debris is seen at the collapsed portion of Interstate 95 in Philadelph­ia on Sunday. A truck fire and partial road collapse have closed I-95 in both directions in northeast Philadelph­ia.
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News 8 Sports 10
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