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SU-25 Frogfoot
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[[File:Frogfoot.jpg|right|300px|thumb|*ribbit*]] ==In Team Yankee== [[File:Frogfoot Star Card.jpg|left|300px|thumb|Stronk tank-destroyer, tovarich.]] By Stalin's glorious mustache, while in previous years of Team Yankee you could leave this parked on some backwater airfield, you ''NEED'' this thing in Team Yankee V2. With competition from the cheaper, but more vulnerable, [[SU-22 Fitter]] in the new Warsaw Pact book the SU-25 may no longer the best choice. Further play testing will be needed. While previously considered the poor man's counterpart to the A-10, the Frogfoot now plays an important role as a tank hunter against the new NATO super tanks. ===Soviet=== Soviet, WARPACT and Oilwar commanders should make ample use of the Frog's heavy anti-tank missiles to keep heavy tanks honest. A flight of 4-6 Frogs are now a practically mandatory investment in order to fight M1a1s and Challengers. Clocking in at 14 or 21 points, these battletoads will watch your back while you rush B for uncle Joe. The main armament of the Frogfoot is the KH-25 ATGM, boasting Guided and HEAT, meaning that it will never take penalties from range. Combined with Brutal, this makes the Kh-25 an excellent choice for turning infantry or (probably) light vehicles such as Chapperals inside out. Otherwise, AT27 ensures an auto penetration against most tanks at any range, and 2+ firepower ensures that anything hit stays dead. The downside to this undeniably powerful missile is simply that the USSR has other FAR more cost-effective options. Other weapons can be effectively ignored unless you're flexing on someone who forgot to bring anti-air. Being unpredictable as all aircraft are, the Frog acts as a sword of Damocles to punish NATO players for getting cocky with their super tanks. While the new tanks still get a 6+ bail save vs the AT27 missiles, Frogs still have great odds of knocking out an 18 point monster head on. In a pinch, the they can instead be used to winkle out dug in infantry in support of an assault, but the 8" safety distance is a bummer. Savvy pilots will learn to chart out weak spots in the opponent's AA umbrella (remember kids, premeasuring is not a war crime) and thread the needle to snipe tanks at maximum range. 28" goes a long way towards hiding your somewhat fragile planes away from AA guns (but probably not missiles). TLDR: Try hard. Get good. Turn tanks inside out. ===Czechoslovakian=== The new Warsaw Pact book includes Czech piloted Su-25s for their forces instead of Soviet ones. These feature improved skill of 4+ in exchange for lower morale, which is irrelevant for aircraft. Cost is the same as the Soviet version. Play testing will be needed to compare these with the [[SU-22 Fitter]]. ==IRL== [[File:Frogfoot IRL.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Powered by vodka, piloted by Gopnik.]] The [[wikipedia:Sukhoi_Su-25|Sukhoi SU-25 "Frogfoot"]] has the distinction of being the only modern ground attack aircraft (meaning that the plane is almost incapable of performing any other missions such as reconnaissance or interception) besides the [[A-10 Warthog]], with the close-air support role being performed by helicopters, drones or multi-role aircraft. The Soviets came to the same conclusions as the Americans when it came to what was needed for such an aircraft; the SU-25 has a heavily armored cockpit and fires a 30mm autocannon, as well as a variety of missiles and bombs. The SU-25 was used in the Soviet-Afghan wars, while its export variants have been used in various conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The SU25 uses a Gast gun mechanism instead of a Gatling gun. Rate of fire is slower but more accurate and the aircraft is more a multi-role aircraft than the A-10. Also, if you're wondering why the hell it's called a 'Frogfoot', it's because that was its NATO reporting name. The idea is that the word is something unlikely to come up in casual conversation so if you said 'frogfoot' everybody would know what you're talking about. The "F" means it was an attack or fighter aircraft, and two-syllable means it was jet powered. Although the "Frogfoot" is depicted (so far) as being exclusively flown by the Soviet Air Force, the Czechoslovakians had some of them, too. After the end of the Cold War and the breakup of Czechoslovakia, the two successor states, the Czech Republic and Slovakia, each took possession of some of their former country's Su-25s. The aircraft has seen heavy use on both sides of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. {{Soviet Forces in Team Yankee}} {{East German Forces in Team Yankee}} {{Polish Forces in Team Yankee}} {{Czech Forces in Team Yankee}} {{Iranian Forces in Team Yankee}} [[Category:Vehicles]]
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