Zhuk class patrol boat

The Zhuk-class patrol boat, also known as Project 1400M "Grif", is a Soviet border patrol vessel. At least 130 boats built between 1969 and 1996. Exact numbers are unknown, but they were widely exported by the Soviet Union in addition to use in home waters as harbor patrol. The vessels were excellent for this task thanks to a cheap design for mass production. With only a single simple radar unit and manually-aimed machine guns, they made ideal patrol boats. The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, and the abolishment of its primary user the, KGB Maritime Guard, it was taken over by the Russian Federal Coast Guard. By 2007 only 15-20 remained in service with the Russian Navy.

Operators

 * Military of Algeria - One example was procured in 1981. It was quickly discarded.
 * 🇦🇿: Azerbaijani Navy - It is possible that the navy operated a single ex-Soviet Zhuk in the early 1990s.
 * 🇧🇯: Navy of Benin - As of 2004, all four examples were "in commission" but non-operational.
 * Royal Cambodian Navy - In 1975 three units had been transferred from the Soviet Union. In 1988 a fourth example was returned by Vietnam. Used for riverine patrol, they are active.
 * Cape Verde: Coast Guard - Three units transferred, all non-operational as of 2014.
 * Democratic Republic of the Congo: DRC Navy - Three units were transferred by the USSR in 1982 with three more ordered in 1984. None are operational.
 * 🇨🇺: Cuban Navy - Between 1971 and 1989 40 units were transferred to Cuba. By 2007 only a dozen remained in service.
 * Military of Equatorial Guinea - By 1975 three units had been transferred from the Soviet Navy where they served until begin scrapped in 1988-89.
 * 🇪🇪: Estonian Navy - Two examples left behind by the Soviets when they left the Baltic States, two Zhuks were formally commissioned in 1992. They were scrapped in 1996 and replaced by Swedish- and Finnish-built vessels.
 * 🇪🇹: Ethiopian Navy - Four Zhuks were transferred in two batches between 1982 and 1990. Two fled to Yemen during the Yemenese civil war, when the other two examples were destroyed by rebels. They were scrapped in 1995.
 * Military of Guinea - After extensive refurbishment, two units were transferred from the USSR to Guinea in 1987 and remain marginally operational.
 * 🇮🇶: Iraqi Navy - Five Zhuks were transferred by 1975. Relegated to security tasks during the Iran-Iraq War from 1980-88, they took part in the 1990 attack on Kuwait City.  During Operation Desert Storm three were sunk by Coalition aircraft, with the remaining two sunk in 2003 by US planes as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
 * Mauritius: Military of Mauritius - With the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990, two ex-Soviet units were given to Mauritius in 1990. The Rescuer and Retriever have been carefully cared for and by 2007 were in excellent condition and operational.  They have been upgraded with a new radar and civilian GPS receivers.
 * 🇲🇿: Armed Forces for the Defense of Mozambique - Two of five units delivered between 1978 and 1980 were sunk during the civil war. The remainder were decommissioned in 1993.
 * 🇳🇮: Nicaraguan Navy - With eight units transferred by 1986, two more were given by the USSR as replacements for two lost during a 1989 hurricane. All were scrapped by 2000.
 * Seychelles People's Defence Force - Supplied by the USSR in 1982, two vessels remain operational with their "Spin Trough" radar replaced by a different system.
 * 🇸🇴: Somali Navy - One example was transferred, sunk in the civil war of 1991.
 * 🇸🇾: Syrian Navy - Home ported at Tartous, eight units were transferred from 1981-88. They remain operational.
 * Vietnam People's Navy - Between 1978 and 1990, a total of fourteen units were transferred. One example was transferred to Cambodia, and three decommissioned in 1993.  By 2007 the remainder had been decommissioned.
 * 🇾🇪: Yemeni Navy - Following the unification of North and South Yemen, a total of seven examples were in Yemeni possession. Four were modified with the addition of Decca 1226 radar systems.  By 2006, the Zhuks were replaced by new, purpose-built patrol boats from Australia.