Here's more because I went to bed last night:
Tanks of the 81st Mechanised Brigade (81ya Mekhanizirovaniy Korpus) on the Krasnyy Luki Combat Grounds, Siberia, 2019.
The Tanks of the USSR are both numerous and effective, the most common being the T-90. The T-90 is a so-called 'heavy tank' compared to the Western doctrine (excluding the Combined Syndicates) of lighter, stealthier tanks. In response, almost all Soviet tanks have RADAR packages in the turret along with thermal and night vision scopes.
T-14 In Manchuria, 2019
The latest Soviet Beast is the T-14 Universal Combat Platform. Sporting a 130mm gun and heavy armor, it is the largest tank both by dimension and by weight on earth. It's turret is completely automated, while all three crew members are situated in an even more heavily armored 'pod' in the hull. The tank has a 1,330 HP gas-turbine engine that is reliable and powerful, but with a short range if not for the gargantuan fuel tanks.
There are estimated to be several hundred in service by the time of the Manchurian War
T-95 Red Star Tank on a Testing Ground, 2001
The T-95 was an experimental tank developed as a successor to the T-80, which was quickly growing outdated after the Ottoman Crisis, when it was discovered that the Kontakt 1 ERA was outdated against Syndicalist HEAT shells. A new armor type was quickly added to the drawing board, where it was calculated that the T-80 just wouldn't be powerful enough to mount the desired amount of armor on the vehicle, and so a new tank was designed, in parallel to the T-90, which was considered a stopgap measure. And so, the T-95 was born. in 2001, it entered trials, but the long design period, massive costs in both design and production, and incompatibility in technologies eventually killed the project.
Ideas from it were included in the T-14, which was of superior design anyway, which 'avenged' it's legacy.
British soldiers of the "Universal Battalion" of the Revolutionary Marines in training at Smedley Butler Combat Testing Grounds, Michigan, 2019
The Union of Britain, one of only two nations in the SyndIntern which practices Totalism, is known for their elite marines. Revolutionary Marines, much like the old Royal Marines, are deadly shock troops, well supplied, well trained, and fanatically devoted to Syndicalism and the SyndIntern, to the extent that a massive scandal was caused when a French General remarked that they were "almost a sort of nationalist."