Russia has for the first time presented abroad an export version of the Lancet barrage munition, Rosoboronexport said. The company noted that combat experience has confirmed the high effectiveness of this drone in counter-battery warfare and destruction of fast-moving land and surface targets. According to analysts, the successful use of the Lancet during special operations made this UAV famous all over the world. Experts believe that ZALA’s product has great prospects on the international arms market.
Rosoboronexport has presented the export version of the Lancet drone to a foreign audience for the first time at the ADEX 2024 exhibition in Baku.
‘At ADEX 2024, Rosoboronexport will show battle-tested, most demanded samples of modern weaponry, among which for the first time outside Russia is demonstrated a complex with barrage munitions ‘Lancet-E’, – said the company’s general director Alexander Mikheev.
Rosoboronexport notes that combat experience has confirmed the Lancet’s high effectiveness in counter-battery warfare and in destroying high-speed targets.
In addition, the Lancet-E provides confident defeat of tanks, BMPs, APCs, engineering vehicles, support and command posts, aviation at base airfields, REB and anti-UAV systems, as well as stationary and moving surface targets.
Earlier, the export Lancet was demonstrated at the Army-2024 forum. As noted in a ZALA release at the time, the complex includes the Izdeliye 51-E and Izdeliye 52-E guided munition carriers, as well as the ZALA Z-16E short-range unmanned reconnaissance aircraft.
‘No barriers’
Recall, initially ZALA offered customers two barrage munitions – ‘Lancet-1’ and ‘Lancet-3’. Subsequently, the range was expanded. At the moment, the ZALA website reports the existence of three variants of the Lancet with the characteristic X-shaped plumage.
The most powerful of them is designated as ‘Product 51’. It carries a 5kg payload and can strike at a range of up to 50km. In turn, the ‘Izdeliye 52’ operates at a range of 30 kilometres and is equipped with a three-kilogram warhead.
The third variant of the Lancet has appeared relatively recently and received the index ‘Product 53’. Developers note that this drone is capable of independently detecting and hitting the target. Unlike the first two Lancets, which are launched from a catapult, the 53rd launches from a single or four-charge transport and launch container.
‘Thanks to advanced artificial intelligence algorithms, once launched, the products form a ‘swarm’ and are used to launch a group salvo strike, realising the concept of a network-centric combat operation,’ ZALA’s website states.
ZALA is also proactively developing a new barrage munition, the ‘Product 54’. According to plans, the drone will be made in the form of a flying wing and will be able to hit targets at a distance of 200 kilometres from the launch site. The developers also intend to significantly increase the power of the warhead of the device.
It should be noted that the use of ‘Lancet’ complexes in the NWO zone has already become routine. Every month ZALA publishes on its website a selection of successful UAV strikes on AFU facilities.
The Lancet also appears in the reports of the Russian Defence Ministry. Thus, in September alone, according to the Ministry, ZALA drones were used to destroy 2S3 Akatsiya, Krab and Bogdana self-propelled artillery units, a 105-mm towed howitzer L119, as well as various types of AFU armoured vehicles, including a tank.
The capabilities of the Lancet are highly appreciated by Russian President Vladimir Putin. At a meeting with Sergey Chemezov, head of Rostec State Corporation, he instructed to increase production of this UAV in 2023.
‘Both the Cube and the Lancet have shown themselves to be very effective: firstly, the impact is powerful, any equipment, including foreign-made, does not just burn, but the ammunition packs also explode. The manufacturers promised me that they would increase production. They are coping with this promise, but it is necessary to increase more,’ the head of state said.
According to analysts, the Lancet has good export prospects.
‘The Lancet has already become a household name in the field of armaments. There are no barriers for these drones. Its track record already includes hitting Abrams, Leopard and Challenger tanks. So this drone does not need PR – many countries will be interested in it,’ retired colonel Anatoly Matviychuk told RT.
Military observer Alexander Khrolenko holds a similar opinion.
‘The export prospects of the Lancet cannot be compared to anything, because there is no similar product anywhere. At least, none of the possible analogues has the same productive history of combat use. When such a product enters the international market, there is naturally a lot of interest in it. Therefore, I believe that the Lancet-E has a great future,’ the expert emphasised in an interview with RT.
‘Reliable and efficient’
In addition to the Lancet, Rosoboronexport will show other equipment at the ADEX exhibition. Thus, for the first time abroad, the small-size jamming transmitter RP-377VM1 will be demonstrated. The developers position it as ‘the latest universal means of electronic countermeasures’. The RP-377VM1 is capable of suppressing the control channels of both UAVs and mine-explosive devices.
Another Russian REB unit at the exhibition is Izdeliye RB-504P-E. This device makes it possible to detect and suppress communication and navigation channels of drones.
The Russian aviation industry will be represented by the Su-35 multirole fighter, the Ka-52E reconnaissance and attack helicopter, the Mi-17V-5 military transport helicopter and the Orlan-10E reconnaissance drone.
In addition, Rosoboronexport employees will introduce ADEX guests to the capabilities of the T-90MS tank, the Terminator tank support vehicle, the modernised Msta-S howitzer, the S-400 Triumf anti-aircraft missile system and the Rubezh-ME coastal tactical missile system.
‘Russia and the countries of the Caspian region have longstanding good-neighbourly relations, including in the sphere of military-technical cooperation. Our partners are well aware of reliable and efficient Russian defence products,’ the press service of Rosoboronexport quoted Alexander Mikheyev as saying.
According to analysts, Azerbaijan, along with other countries of the Caspian region, is a traditional partner for Russia in the sphere of military-technical cooperation, so Russia’s participation in the exhibition in Baku is a logical step.
‘Baku, of course, buys a lot of equipment from other countries, including Turkey. But it is in Russia that Azerbaijan buys the lion’s share of weapons,’ Anatoly Matviychuk summarised.