(VIDEO) Russia Equips T-72B3M with Arena-M APS, Signalling Strategic Pivot in Armour Survivability Amidst Shifting Battlefield Dynamics
(VIDEO) Uralvagonzavod (UVZ), the legendary Russian armoured vehicle manufacturer under the umbrella of the Rostec defence-industrial conglomerate, confirmed the development in a statement reported by state news agency TASS.
(DEFENCE SECURITY ASIA) — As the war in Ukraine enters yet another grinding year of attritional warfare, the Russian Ministry of Defence has begun fielding a significant enhancement to its ageing, yet battle-hardened T-72 tank fleet — the integration of the Arena-M active protection system (APS).
This marks a critical evolution in Russian armoured doctrine, aimed squarely at countering the increasingly lethal anti-tank capabilities flooding Ukrainian forces, particularly from Western-supplied inventories.
Uralvagonzavod (UVZ), the legendary Russian armoured vehicle manufacturer under the umbrella of the Rostec defence-industrial conglomerate, confirmed the development in a statement reported by state news agency TASS.
The upgrade is not limited to the T-72B3M; Russia’s more advanced T-90M ‘Proryv’ main battle tank is also being fitted with the Arena-M system, reflecting a wider strategic push toward hardening its armoured corps against precision-guided munitions.
This announcement follows earlier reports from mid-2023 indicating that production-line T-90M tanks were already being rolled out with the Arena-M, with plans extending to upgraded T-72 variants — long considered the workhorse of Russia’s armoured formations.
Until recently, Russian tanks predominantly relied on the Shtora-1 soft-kill system, a Cold War-era countermeasure that used infrared dazzlers to confuse semi-active missile guidance.
While moderately effective against older-generation threats, Shtora proved largely obsolete against the new wave of top-attack and fire-and-forget munitions deployed across modern battlefields.
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Arena-M represents a significant leap forward. Developed by the Design Bureau of Machine Building (KBM) in Kolomna, this hard-kill APS detects incoming threats using a high-frequency Doppler radar array.
Upon threat detection, it launches interceptor charges to physically destroy or deflect incoming anti-tank projectiles — from RPGs to advanced ATGMs — before impact.
The latest Arena-M variant features major improvements in reaction time, interception reliability, and 360-degree coverage.
It is also believed to have greater resilience against top-attack threats — such as the American Javelin or the Israeli Spike — which have inflicted devastating losses on Russian armour throughout the war.
Though Russia began developing hard-kill APS technologies as early as the 1990s, financial constraints following the Soviet collapse meant most systems were earmarked for export rather than wide domestic deployment.
The Arena-E, a downgraded export model, was among those pitched to international buyers.
In contrast, nations such as South Korea and China moved swiftly. Seoul’s K2 Black Panther MBT is equipped with the sophisticated KAPS system, capable of multi-layered threat neutralisation.
