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Marshal Shaposhnikov (BPK 543) at sea
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| History | |
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| Name: | Marshal Shaposhnikov |
| Namesake: | Boris Shaposhnikov |
| Launched: | 1985 |
| Identification: | BPK 543 |
| Status: | in active service |
| General characteristics | |
| Class and type: | Udaloy-class destroyer |
| Displacement: |
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| Length: | 163 m (535 ft) |
| Beam: | 19.3 m (63 ft) |
| Draught: | 7.8 m (26 ft) |
| Propulsion: | 2 shaft COGAG, 4 gas turbines, 89,000 kW (120,000 hp) |
| Speed: | 35 knots (65 km/h; 40 mph) |
| Range: | 10,500 nautical miles (19,400 km) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) |
| Complement: | 300 |
| Armament: |
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| Aircraft carried: | 2 x Ka-27 'Helix' series helicopters |
| Aviation facilities: | Helicopter deck and hangar |
Marshal Shaposhnikov is an Udaloy-class destroyer of the Russian Navy laid down in 1985. The vessel serves in the Russian Pacific Fleet. Her namesake is Boris Shaposhnikov.
On 6 April 2003, Marshal Shoposhnikov left port, along with Admiral Panteleyev and the tanker Vladir Koechitsky, to start a deployment to the Indian Ocean, where exercises with the Indian Navy were planned for May 2003. A number of Black Sea Fleet ships, plus, possibly, cruise missile submarines, joined the deployment.
On 6 May 2010, Russian Naval Infantry deployed from Marshal Shaposhnikov rescued the hijacked tanker MV Moscow University. The entire crew escaped unharmed.Moscow University had been hijacked by Somali pirates on 5 May 2010 off Socotra Island. The commandos from Marshal Shaposhnikov detained 10 pirates and killed one during the release of the tanker.
In November 2014, Marshal Shaposhnikov was part of a four-ship deployment to international waters off Australia. The deployment was believed to be linked to the 2014 G-20 Brisbane summit and growing tensions between the two nations.