The origins of the
Orel program dates back to the late 1960s, when the Soviet
Defense Minister Andrei Grechko sponsored a program of constructing large aircraft-carrying cruisers in response to American aircraft carriers. The purpose of this project was to strengthen the Soviet naval aviation capabilities to allow them to operate on the high seas. In fact, the only Soviet carriers at the time, the
Moskva-class, were essentially
helicopter carriers, incapable of carrying fixed-wing aircraft. Thus leaving the Soviet fleet practically without air cover during operations away from the coast and severely limiting its operational capabilities. The
Project 1160 (Codenamed
Orel) was projected as the first Soviet aircraft carrier powered by nuclear reactor. The development began in the early 1970s at the Nevskoye Design Bureau. The project envisaged the construction of three supercarriers with a displacement of 80.000 tons and capable of carrying about 60 carrier-based aircraft. In addition, the ship was installed with 16
P-700 Granit anti-ship missile VLS beneath the flight deck for an offensive abilities and to bypass the
Montreux Convention, which forbade aircraft carriers from crossing the
Dardanelles Strait. However in 1973, the work of the Project 1160 was cancelled for being too expensive.
Project 1153, (based on its predecessor Project 1160) a more
V/STOL-aircraft-oriented, was developed instead. Compared to Project 1160, it is planned to have a displacement of 8.000 tons less while retaining its nuclear powered propulsion system and the VLS for anti-ship missiles. The ship was added four extra VLS, and its aircraft capacity reduced from 60 to 50. It was also planned that two ships will be constructed instead of three due to the insufficient shipyard availability. But in 1976, following the death of the main supporter of the project, Marshal Grechko, He was then succeeded by Marshal
Dmitry Ustinov as the new Minister of Defense. Ustinov found the project being too expensive and so the plans were ordered to be redrawn and reduced to 60.000 tons to minimize the budget spending. Despite the attempts of redrawing and redesigning the plan to satisfy the demands of the Soviet Army, the plan was still too expensive and the entire project was cancelled in 1978. While the
Orel never saw fruition, in the 1980s it influenced the also abortive
Ulyanovsk program. ==See also==