Russian armoured train Yenisei

The Russian armoured train Yenisei is an armoured train currently in use by the Russia in their ongoing invasion of Ukraine in 2022. According to Ukrainian sources, Yenisei was constructed out of parts stolen from Ukrainian Railways in the Kharkiv region.[1]

Yenisei
TypeArmoured train
Place of originUkraine
Russia
Service history
In service2022
Used byRussian Federation
Wars2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
Production history
DesignerUkrainian Railways
ManufacturerUkrainian Railways
No. built1
Specifications
Passengers1,000 (claimed)

Main
armament
1x 30 mm autocannon 2A42 (BMP-2)
Secondary
armament
1x ZU-23-2 cannon
Few dozen Machine Gun slots
Engine2x ChME3-type locomotive

Specifications and details

The train is protected by armoured plates of unknown thickness and is designed to transport materials, restore and demine tracks that are damaged, as well as for engineering reconnaissance.[2] However, the train is also suspect for combat operations due to the presence of a ZU-23-2 and a mounted BMP-2,[1] nevertheless, Russian sources dispute Yenisei's role as a combat vehicle, rather, claiming that the train is used for humanitarian purposes such as the delivery of water, medicines and food for civilians in Donbas, as well as evacuating over a thousand people from the combat zones.[3]

The train is currently made up of at least two ChME3-type locomotives plus eight wagons (two of which are platforms from the BMP-2 and ZU-23-2).[4][5] On a whole, Yenisei is made up of two empty platform wagons for cargo, logistical and construction purposes at the front and end of the train, a platform wagon mounting the BMP-2 as the 'head', followed by an anti-air wagon mounting the ZU-23-2 gun alongside an enclosed cabin with six machine-gun slits, the first ChME3-type locomotive, a machinegun wagon with more gun slits, a Goods wagon, another machine-gun wagon and the second ChME3-type locomotive.[6][7]

This is not the first armoured train used in the Russo-Ukrainian War, as a few other armoured trains were recorded transporting logistical and military goods through Crimea in March 2022.[8][9]

See also

References

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