Spetsnaz
During the 1970s, when the Cold War was at its height,
the West became aware
of the existence of Soviet Spetsnaz troops, which
were grouped into what
were known as "diversionary brigades." Today, although
the Cold War is long
since ended, Spetsnaz units are still part of the
Russian order-of-battle,
although their missions have changed.
Spetsnaz (Spetsialnoye nazranie = troops of special
purpose) were raised as
the troops of the Glavnoe razvedyvatel'noe upravlenie
(GRU) (= main
intelligence directorate [of the General Staff]) and
in the 1980s numbered
some 30,000. These were deployed: one Spetsnaz company
per Army; one
Spetsnaz regiment in each of the three "theaters of
operations"; one
Spetsnaz brigade in each of the four Soviet Fleets;
and an independent
Spetsnaz brigade in most military districts of the
USSR. There were also
special Spetsnaz intelligence units, one to each Front
and Fleet: total 20.
A Spetsnaz company was 135 strong, normally operating
in 15 independent
teams, although they could also combine for specific
missions. A Spetsnaz
brigade was 1,000-1,300 strong and consisted of a
headquarters, three or
four parachute battalions, a communications company,
and supporting troops.
It also included an anti-VIP company, composed of
some 70-80 regular troops
(ie, not conscripts) whose mission was to seek out,
identify and kill enemy
political and military leaders. A naval Spetsnaz brigade
had a headquarters,
two to three battalions of combat swimmers, a parachute
battalion,
supporting units, and an anti-VIP company. It also
had a group of midget
submarines designed to deliver combat swimmers to
distant targets.
The existence of Spetsnaz was a closely guarded secret
within the Warsaw
Pact and individual troops were not allowed to admit
membership, to the
extent that army Spetsnaz wore standard airborne uniforms
and insignia,
while naval Spetsnaz wore naval infantry uniforms
and insignia.
Spetsnaz in 1999
Some of the republics which broke away from the old
Soviet Union took over
the Spetsnaz units within their borders or have converted
parachute units to
the Spetsnaz role. Within the Russian Federation Spetsnaz
units are less
well trained and equipped, at a lower strength, and
at a lesser degree of
readiness than during the 1970s and 1980s. Despite
that, they continue to
exist, although their numbers are not known for certain.
Naval Spetsnaz also continue to serve in the Northern,
Baltic, Black Sea,
and Pacific fleets. Most of these are subordinate
to the Fleet commanders,
but some are under the direct control of the Naval
Commander-in-Chief in
Moscow. Again, their manning levels are not known
and it may be that, like
other areas in the Russian armed forces, they are
seriously under strength.
Russian naval special-designation forces, or spetsnaz,
have been less visible in the wake of the USSR's dissolution.
Recently, however, the Russian navy's commander in
chief, Admiral Vladimir Kuroyedov, reaffirmed that
naval special-operations units – which have a long,
active history in the Soviet armed forces – remain
assigned to the Russian Baltic, northern, Pacific
and Black Sea fleets. Although the admiral provided
few specifics on the size and capabilities of the
units, he did indicate that they were elite, that
they were equipped with special weapons (including
small submarines), and that they were comparable to
U.S. Navy SEALS or the Israeli Navy's 13th Flotilla.
Stating that these units have no special name beyond
their "combat swimmer" or "naval spetsnaz"
designations, the admiral indicated that most of the
units are directly subordinate to their respective
fleet commander. Of particular note, Kuroyedov said
that he retains naval spetsnaz subunits under his
direct control as well, "for resolving fleet
tasks and rendering assistance.
Missions
Although Spetsnaz units may be used for other purposes
during peacetime,
their primary role is to carry out strategic missions
during the final days
prior to war breaking out and in war itself. These
wartime tasks would
include: deep reconnaissance of strategic targets;
the destruction of
strategically important command-control-and-communications
(C3) facilities;
the destruction of strategic weapons' delivery systems;
demolition of
important bridges and and transportation routes; and
the snatching or
assassination of important military and political
leaders. Many of these
missions would be carried out before the enemy could
react and some even
before war had actually broken out.
Uniforms
The Russian Federation now acknowledges the existence
of Spetsnaz units and,
as a result special badges and berets are now worn,
identifying such troops.
Weapons
On operations the majority of Spetsnaz soldiers would
carry a 5.45mm AKS-74
rifle and a 5.45mm PRI automatic pistol. All would
also carry combat knives,
which are specially designed for Spetsnaz troops.
One such design is the
NR-2, an ingenious device which in addition to the
blade incorporates a
short 7.62mm caliber barrel in the handle and is fired
by clipping the
scabbard and knife together to give some control.
Quite when such a weapon
would be used instead of a knife or a pistol is open
to question. Spetsnaz
troops are also trained in all types of foreign weapons.
Training
Those joining Spetsnaz with no previous military experience
must be given
the normal recruit's basic training in discipline,
marching, fieldcraft,
weapons handling, and range work. Once the recruit
moves on to proper
Spetsnaz training, however, the pressure intensifies:
* weapons handling, including the use of foreign weapons
and marksmanship;
* physical fitness, with an emphasis on endurance
and strength;
* tracking, patroling, camouflage, and surveillance
techniques, including
survival in a wide variety of harsh environments;
* hand-to-hand combat, both unarmed and with knives
(both hand-held and
throwing), and assassination of designated targets;
* sabotage and demolitions;
* language training and prisoner interrogation;
* infiltration by air, including parachuting for fixed-wing
aircraft, and
exit from helicopters by ropes or parachute.
Naval Spetsnaz must, in addition, learn combat swimmer
techniques, the use
of underwater weapons, canoeing, arrival and exit
over beaches, exit and
entry to submerged submarines. (Note: this is not
all Spetsnaz training,
this is only to give the reader a better understanding
of what Spetsnaz
training is like)
Other Spetsnaz Troops
During the 1970s and 1980s special operations troops
became increasingly the
vogue in various ministries of the (then) Soviet Union.
Further, such was
the large and disorganized nature and wastefulness
of the Soviet system that
similar bodies with similar missions were set up by
different parts of the
same ministry, particularly within the Committee for
State Security (KGB)
and the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD). These
special troops went under
the generic title of Spetsgruppe and were paramilitary
forces which received
special training and indoctrination for a variery
of missions. Many of these
units served in a variety of roles in the war in Afghanistan
but for most of
them a defining moment seems to have been reached
during the 1991 coup, when
they were forced to take sides, or at least to refuse
to take action. After
the coup had been defeated President Yeltsin transfered
most of them to his
personal control but they have since been transfered
yet again back to
various ministries. Many of the groups have been involved
in the recent
conflicts in the Russian Federation, including Chech'nya.
Spetsgruppa "Al'fa" (= special
group A) was set up by the KGB's Seventh
Directorate in 1974 and appears to have been inspired
by the British SAS and
US 1SFOD-D (Delta) as a c ounter-terrorist and hostage-rescue
group. Al'fa
is generally credited with being the unit that attacked
the Presidential
palace in Kabul, Afghanistan, on December 28 1980
and murdered President
Hafizullah Amin and his family. Al'fa is now controlled
by the FSB
(Federal'naia sluzhba bezopasnosti = Federal Security
Service) in general
terms, equivalent to the USA's FBI. Current strength
is estimated to be
about 300, with the main group in Moscow and three
smaller groups elsewhere
in the federation.
Also raised by the KGB, but this time the First Chief
Administration, was
Spetsgruppa Vympel whose
mission was to fullfil the KGB's wartime role of
assassination and snatching. After the collapse of
the Soviet Union it was
transferred to the MVD but is now with the FSB with
a primary responsibility
for a hostage rescue.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs also has at least
two groups of special
troops known as the Omon (=
black berets), which were originally raised to
provide additional security and (if necessary) hostage
rescue at the 1980
Moscow Olympics. Since then they have been used for
counter-terrorist
activities and defeating armed criminals, and are
currently involved in
campaigns against drug cultivation.
Symbolizing the disorganized nature of contemporary
Russia is the GROM
Security Company, which is a quasi-private organization
working under
exclusive contract to the Federal Government. GROM
(thr Russian word for
"thunder" and with no relationship to the Polish group
of the same name) is
manned by former troops of the various KGB special
forces and provides
security for selected government personnel and buildings,
as well as for
trains and aircrafts.
Speznaz UIN is a group of special assignment, which
submits UIN (management on performance of punishment,
UIN submits to the ministry of justice) with tasks:
suppression of the mass disorders and revolts in prisons,
colonies, rescue of the hostages seized and deducted
in prisons and colonies, barricades situation in these
establishments, search and detention run made. The
employees of speznaz UIN carry berets of black colour
with general-army cockade and Russian flag on the
left party of beret.
information provided by John Keller