'SPECIAL FORCES' FROM THE SOVIET UNION

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110104-7
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 5, 2012
Sequence Number: 
104
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 15, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110104-7.pdf95.77 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110104-7 WASHINGTON POST 15 June 1986 Jack Anderson and Daie Tfin Atta FILE ONLY `Special Forces' From the Soviet Union can erence is that,the killers of the the initials GRU. The polkicak orientation of the Spetsnaz has often led to: assignments that are far removed from Western ideas of what military units should be doing in peacetime: from assassinations in Afghanistan to sabotage in El Salvador. The Spetsnaz-or politically reliable units like them-have a history dating back to the first chaotic years following the Bolshevik Revolution. Assassination, deception, disruption and sur- prise attacks in rear areas were used by the fledging Red Army's "special assignment" caval- ry in the civil war against the Whites from 1917 to 1920. And Lenin's dreaded secret police units, the Cheka, discouraged any thought of retreat by the regular army troops by the simple expedient of machine-gunning anyone who ran. Stalin used special police units to enforce the ruinous collectivization of 1929-30 that led to the starvation of millions of peasants in the Ukraine alone. In the early, disastrous stages of the Nazi invasion of 1941, it was the summary execution of field conmrnauders by special forces that kept Soviet conunanders from retreating-and millions of its finest troops were killed or cap? tured in the German blitaieg. R was also during Wald War II that the modern heritage of the Spetsnaz took shape. Soviet partisans carried out a.wide variety of guerrilla attacks, espionage, sabotage and assas- sination behind the Nazi lines. Such successes as "Operation Railway War" in July 1943 were the model for Spetsnaz planning today. Soviet guerrillas derailed 836 German military trains and blew up 184 railway bridges and 556 road bridges at the height of the battle for Kursh-the greatest tank battle in history, which broke the back of Hitler's panaers. Since World War if, however, Soviet Spetsnaz forces have written a less bloody and far less honorable record-from the brutal suppression of revolt in Bulgaria in the mid-1960s to the extinction of the "Prague Spring" in Czecho- slovalda in 1968 and the invasion of Afghan in 1979. The primary Spetsnaz mission in Afghanistan was to assassinate the American-educated Soviet puppet president, Hafiz illah Amin, to make way for someone even more subservient to Moscow. Amin had survived subtler attempts by the KGB to poison him, so the Spetsnaz action in Decem- ber 1979 was a full-scale military assault. Amin was holed up on the top floor of the high-walled Darulaman Palace southwest of Kabul. The pal- ace. guard,6ought desperately against the Spets- naz commandos for more than three hours, but were finally overwhelmed. The Spetsnaz killers found their quarry drink- ing pt a bar with a beautiful courtesan at his side. They killed everyone, so that no witnesses could Must that this was anything but an indigenous Afghan uprising against Amin. Only a few months later, in August 1980-af- ter one American commando raid on Iran had failed and another was considered likely to rescue the embassy hostages in Tehran-Spetsnaz forces were poised with the crack Soviet 105th Airborne Guards to move into northwestern Iran from Baku. The Spetsnaz have been busy in Afghanistan ever since the initial invasion, launching surprise attacks against the mujaheddin. "Spetsnaz units were deployed to Afghanistan prior to the De- cember 1979 invasion," a secret Pentagon report notes. "Its presence has provided the Kremlin a key instrument with which to conduct a variety of tactical and strategic operations designed to counter the Islamic insurgency." There is some evidence that the GRU may be exporting SPetsnaz experts to Central America. Some Pentagon specialists believe the sabotage of the crucial Cuscatlan bridge in El Salvador during the winter of 1984 was too skillfully done to have been the work of native communist guerrillas. There is also the puzzle of the much-headlined (ifbel dly discovered) vi et combat node stationed in Cuba. What is its purpose? Some intelligence analysts think it constitutes a Praeto- man Guard to protect Fidel Castro if things get ,rough. Others think it could be a Spetsnaz unit training for a special operation, such as strikinn against the United States. "Another mission of Petsnaz , secret Pentagon report notes, "ts training and assistance provided to foreign insurgen an errors groups. -__ @ 1986, United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/09/05: CIA-RDP90-00965R000100110104-7