WARSAW PACT JOURNAL: THE NAVIES OF THE FRATERNAL COUNTRIES
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
0001431511
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
15
Document Creation Date:
June 19, 2017
Document Release Date:
June 19, 2017
Sequence Number:
Case Number:
SC-2007-00006
Publication Date:
November 28, 1980
File:
Attachment | Size |
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DOC_0001431511.pdf | 1.08 MB |
Body:
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
WASHINGTON. D.C. 20505
28 November 1980
MEMORANDUM FOR: The Director of Central Intelligence
FROM : John N. McMahon
Deputy Director for Operations
SUBJECT : WARSAW PACT JOURNAL: The Navies of
the Fraternal Countries
1. The enclosed Intelligence Information Special Report is part of a
series now in preparation based on articles from a SECRET Soviet
publication called Information Collection of the Headquarters and the
Technical Committee ol theMmbined Armed Forces. This article is one of
number devoted to the 25th anniversary of the Warsaw Pact. It briefly
surveys trends in the development of US and NATO naval forces and then
outlines the major achievements of the Warsaw Pact maritime countries since
the mid-50s in improving the combat capabilities of their navies, with
special emphasis on current combined operational and combat training
measures designed to strengthen cooperation among the Pact's navies for the
purpose of countering the NATO naval threat. This journal is published by
Warsaw Pact Headquarters in bscow, and it consists of articles by Warsaw
Pact officers. This article appeared in Issue No. 19, which was published
in 1980.
2. Because the source of this report is extremely sensitive, this
document should be handled on a strict need-to-know basis within recipient
agencies. Fpr ease of re!erence, from this publication have been
assigned the Codewor
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Distribution:
The Director of Central Intelligence
The Director of Intelligence and Research
Department of State
The Joint Chiefs of Staff
The Director, Defense Intelligence Agency
The Assistant to the Chief of Staff for Intelligence
Department of the Army
Director of Naval Intelligence
Department of the Navy
The Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence
U. S. Air Force
Director, National Security Agency
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
Director of the National Foreign Assessment Center
Director of Strategic Research
Director of Scientific and Weapons Research
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couNTRYUSSR/WARSAW PACT
DATE OF
INFO. 1980
Intelligence Information Special Report
SUBJECT
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DATE
28 November 1980
WARSAW PACT JOURNAL: The Navies of the Fraternal Countries
SOURCE Documentary
Summary:
The following report is a translation from Russian of an article from
a SECRET Soviet publication called Information Collection of the
Headquarters and the Technical CommEtW'Or'ESE7:5E1Fi?R-7a:iiniTWmces.
This journal is published by Warsaw Pact Headquarters in Moscow, and it
consists of articles by Warsaw Pact officers. This article, part of a
series devoted to the 25th anniversary of the Warsaw Pact, was written by
Admiral V. V. Mikhaylin, Deputy Commander-in-Chief for the Navy of the
Combined Armed Forces. The author briefly surveys recent trends in the
development of US and NATO naval forces and then outlines the main
achievements of the Warsaw Pact maritime countries since the mid-50s in
improving the combat capabilities of their navies. These include a major
ship-building program and the introduction of new naval weapons and combat
equipment. Special emphasis is placed on the operational and combat
training measures being carried out in common by the national navies in
order to strengthen cooperation among them for the purpose of countering
the NATO naval threat. In particular, considerable attention is being paid
by the Pact's navies to training for amphibious landing operations and to
working out methods of repelling an mem/ landing from the sea. This
article appeared in Issue No. 19, which was published in 1980.
End of Summary
Canrent:
Admiral Vladimir Vasilyevich Mikhaylin has served in his current
position since February 1979.
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The Navies of the Fraternal Countries
by
Admiral V. V. MIKRNYLIN
Deputy Ccommander-in-Chief for the Navy
of the Combined Armed Forces of the Warsaw Pact member states
The personnel of the allied navies are greeting the 25th year of the
Warsaw Pact Organization in an atmosphere of high combat and political
activity. This glorious anniversary once again demonstrates to the entire
world the triumph of Lenin's teaching on the defense of the socialist
fatherland and bears witness to the enormous efforts of the communist and
workers' parties in the struggle for peace, socialism, progress, and
independence and security for all peoples.
As we solemnly celebrate the quarter-century anniversary of the Warsaw
Pact Organization, we look back upon the victorious spring of 1945, when
the final salvos of the great battle against fascism announced to the
entire world that Hitler's Germany had been totally defeated.
Directing all its efforts to assisting the ground forces, the Soviet
Navy made a large contribution to this great victory which took almost four
years to achieve. Forty brigades, six separate regiments, and a large
number of separate battalions of naval infantry -- a total of more than
400,000 officers, petty officers, and sailors of the USSR's Navy -- fought
on the ground fronts. The Navy also conducted an intense struggle against
the enemy at sea and supported the operational stability of the coastal
flanks of the fronts, assisting the troops in defensive and offensive
operations. The Navy smashed the enemy's sea power in all naval theaters
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adjacent to the coast. More than 1,200 combat vessels and over 1,300
transports of the enemy were destroyed by the strikes of ships and naval
aviation in the war years. Throughout the war, the fleets and flotillas
supported 114 amphibious landings in which nearly 250,000 men participated.
In the postwar period, true to their international duty, the sailors
of the Baltic Sea and Black Sea Fleets rendered great assistance to
fraternal maritime countries in eliminating the danger of mines in the
Baltic and Black seas, particularly at the approaches to ports and naval
bases. Tens of thousands of mines were swept up and deactivated by them.*
The Soviet Union rendered invaluable assistance to the people's
democracies also in establishing, forming, and developing their naval
forces. It supplied them with ships and combat equipment, shared its
combat experience, and helped organize the training of line officers and
specialists.
Owing to the selfless assistance of the Soviet Union and the successes
In building socialism, the national navies of the fraternal countries were
reinforced with modern ships and were able in a short time to work out the
organizational structure of units and large units, to prepare cadres of
combat seamen, and to establish a system for the basing and control of
forces.
The first postwar decade, characterized by insignificant evolutionary
changes within the framework of the traditional directions of building
naval forces, gave way during the next two decades to an extensive
introduction into the navies of the newest types of weapons which
fundamentally changed their mission.
The US and its allies have devoted a great deal of attention to the
development of their naval forces. Nowadays they are concentrating
heretofore unprecedented naval power in the world's oceans. Its basis now
consists of a strategic nuclear grouping of naval-based forces which has 49
nuclear missile submarines (the US has 41 and Great Britain and France have
four each) carrying 784 ballistic missiles.
* Throughout World War II, the opposing sides laid out a total of 78,000
mines in the Baltic Sea and 45,000 mines in the Black Sea.
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Unremitting attention is being paid to the development of carrier
forces, which comprise the backbone of the general-purpose forces and the
reserves of strategic nuclear forces. At present, the US and NATO carrier
forces include 15 multipurpose and attack aircraft carriers having nearly
1,300 aircraft and helicopters on board.
The amphibious forces, which are capable of simultaneously
transferring across an ocean and landing up to two expeditionary divisions
of naval infantry on an unprepared shore, are an important component of the
naval power of the probable enemy.
An extensive program is being carried out for constructing new types
of multipurpose submarines and surface ships and for increasing the state
of technical equipping of a navy's forces with the latest systems of
weapons and combat and technical means.
One feature in the development of shipborne weapons is the beginning
of a massive introduction into service in the navies of NATO countries of
the antiship general-purpose Harpoon cruise missiles, with which it is
planned to arm surface ships, nuclear submarines, and strike aviation.
Considerable attention is also being paid to developing and improving
artillery and torpedo weapons, as well as radioelectronic and
communications means. Great efforts are being undertaken also to develop
mines which can be widely used in both the Baltic and Black seas in
offensive and defensive minefields.
The US and NATO are steadily building up their military presence in
the Mediterranean Sea, where the American Sixth Fleet, the principal
instrument of the expansionist policy of imperialism in that region,
continues to play the main role in increasing the danger of war.
Besides the Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea with the straits is
viewed by the probable enemy as a springboard for carrying out aggression
against the Soviet Union and other fraternal socialist countries.
The NATO command attaches great importance to the North Sea, the
Baltic Sea and straits zone, and also the Indian Ocean, considering these
areas extremely important for the US and West European countries from the
military-strategic and economic standpoint.
The training of naval forces is being carried out in accordance with
US and NATO naval policy and has a clearly expressed aggressive orientation
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