100%(2)100% found this document useful (2 votes) 484 views104 pagesSoviet Military Power 1981
Department of Defense Publication assessing the military strengths of the Soviet Union Forces.
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————
“The more constructive East-West relation-
ship which the Allies seek requires tangible
signs that the Soviet Union is prepared to
abandon the disturbing buildup of its mili-
tary strength, to desist from resorting to
force and intimidation and to cease creat-
1g or exploiting situations of crisis and
instability in the Third World.”
From the Cormmunique of the
NATO Foreign Ministers Meeting
May 19st
ay
CONTENTS
1 SOVIET MILITARY POWER
Il MILITARY RESOURCE ALLOCATION. -
Ill ORGANIZATION OF SOVIET ARMED FORCES.
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCES .
V SOVIET STRATEGIC FORCES.
YI QUEST FOR TECHNOLOGICAL SUPERIORITY .
VII SOVIET GLOBAL POWER PROJECTION
Vill THE CHALLENGE
The illustrations of new Soviet weapons systems introducing
each chapter are derived from various U.S. sources: while not
precise in every detail, they are as authentic as possible.
a a: aPREFACE
‘The Soviet Armed Forces today number more than 4.8 million men, For the past
quarter century, we have witnessed the continuing growth of Soviet military power ata
pace that shows no signs of slackening in the future.
‘All elements of the Soviet Armed Forces— the Strategic Rocket Forces, the Ground
Forces of the Army, the Air Forces, the Navy and the Air Defense Forces~continue to
modernize with an unending flow of new weapons systems, tanks, missiles, ships, ar-
tillery and aircraft. The Soviet defense budget continues to grow to fund this force
buildup, to fund the projection of Soviet power far from Soviet shores and to fund
Soviet use of proxy forces to support revolutionary factions and conflict in an increas
ing threat to international stability, <=
‘To comprehend the threat to Western strategic interests posed by the growth and
power projection of the Soviet Armed Foreés it is useful to consider in detail the com-
position, organization and doctrine of these forces, their ideological underpinning,
and their steady acquisition of new, increasingly capable conventional, theater
nuclear and strategic nuclear weapons systems. It is equally important to examine the
USSR’s industrial base, military resource allocations, and continuing quest for
military/technological superiority which contribute to the effectiveness of its armed
forces and proxy forces, and which support the Soviets’ position as a world leader in
‘arms exports.
—The facts are stark:
‘ The Soviet Ground Forces have grown to more than 180 divisions —motorized rifle
divisions, tank divisions and airborne divisions—stationed in Eastern Europe, in the
USSR, in Mongolia, and in combat in Afghanistan. Soviet Ground Forces have achiev-
‘ed the capacity for extended intensive combat in the Central Region of Europe.
# The Soviets have fielded 50,000 tanks and 20,000 artillery pieces. The Soviet divi-
sions are being equipped with the newer, faster, better armored T-64 and T-72 tanks.
Some artillery units, organic to each division, include new, heavy mobile artillery,
multiple rocket launchers and self-propelled, armored 122-mm and 152-mm guns.
© More than 5,200 helicopters are available to the Soviet Armed Forces, including
increasing numbers of Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopter gunships used in direct support of
ground forces on the battlefield.
® More than 3,500 Soviet and Warsaw Pact tactical bombers and fighter aircraft
are located in Eastern Europe alone. In each of the last eight years, the Soviets have
produced more than 1,000 fighter aircraft.
© Against Western Europe, China and Japan, the Soviets are adding constantly to
deliverable nuclear warheads, with the number of launchers growing, with some 250
mobile, SS-20 Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile launchers in the field, and with
three nuclear warheads on each SS-20 missile.© The Soviets continue to give high priority to the modernization of their Intercon-
tinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) force and their Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile
(SLBM) force stressing increased accuracy and greater warhead throwweight The
Soviet intercontinental strategic arsenal includes 7,000 nuclear warheads, with 1,398
ICBM launchers, 950 SLBM launchers and 156 long-range bombers. This does not in-
clude some 150 nuclear-capable BACKFIRE bombers.
’° The Soviets have eight classes of submarines and eight classes of major surface
warships, including nuclear-powered cruisers and new aircraft carriers, presently
veer construction, This growing naval force emerging from large, modern shipyards
ic designed to support sustained operations in remote areas in order to project Soviet
power around the world.
» The Soviet Air Defense Forces man 10,000 surface-to-air missile launchers at
1,000 fixed missile sites across the Soviet Union
® The growth of the Soviet Armed Forces is made possible by the USSR's military
production base which continues to grow at the expense of all other components of the
Soviet economy. There are 135 major military industrial plants now operating in the
Soviet Union with over 40 million square meters in floor space, a 84 percent increase
Since 1970. In 1980, these plants produced more than 150 different types of weapons
systems for Soviet forces and for export to client states and developing countries.
> Today, the Soviets have more than 85,000 men fighting in Afghanistan. Soviet
naval forces are deployed in the major oceans of the world. The USSR is gaining in-
creased access to military facilities and is supporting proxy conflicts in Africa,
Southwest Asia, Southeast Asia and the Western hemisphere.
‘There is nothing hypothetical about the Soviet military machine. Its expansion,
modernization, and contribution to projection of power beyond Soviet boundaries are
obvious,
se enlear understanding of Soviet Armed Forces, their doctrine, their capabilities,
their strengths and their weaknesses is essential to the shaping and maintenance of ef
fective U.S. and Allied Armed Forces.
“The greatest defense forces in the world are those of free people in free nations well
informed as to the challenge they face, firmly united in their resolve to provide fully
for che common defense, thereby deterring aggression and safeguarding the security of
the world’s democracies
Caspar W. Weinberger
Secretary of Defense‘This document, which is a distillation of briefings
provided to the NATO Ministers of Defense,
Gescribes the totality of the Soviet military buildup
in some detail. Free people can better determine the
challenges they face and the decisions required if
armed with adequate factual knowledge of the
threat. For this reason, the Secretary of Defense has
had this document prepared and published.
Soviet Military Power presents a factual portrayal
of the Soviet Armed Forces, a review intended to be
as informative as possible on an issue of the utmost
importance to the United States and its Allies.
‘The chart “Soviet Military Forces,” on pages six
and seven of Chapter I, depicts the size, composition
‘and deployment of the USSR’s Strategic Nuclear
Forces, Ground Forces, Air Forces, Air Defense
Forces and Naval Forces.
Chapter Il, Military Resource Allocation, ex
amines the Soviet and non-Soviet Warsaw Pact
military industrial base, the world’s largest in
facilities and physical size.
Chapter Ill, Organization of Soviet Armed
Forces, describes the USSR’s strategic command
structure, command and control, logistic support
and combat doctrine
Chapter IV reviews those Soviet Armed Forces
designated for theater operations, nuclear and con-
ventional land, sea and air forces— forces geared to
fast-paced offensive operations, forces arrayed
against the nations of Western Europe.
‘Chapter V describes the increasing capabilities of
the Soviet Strategic Forces, including the $S-17, SS-
18, and S5-19 missiles of the ICBM forces, and the
continuing modernization of the submarine launch-
ed ballistic missile forces.
Chapter VI reports on the Research and Develop-
ment effort behind the USSR’s drive for modern
military technology.
Chapter VII reviews the application of Soviet
military power today, and Chapter VIII summarizes
the challenge posed by the Soviet Armed Forces.
The Tupolev BACKFIRE, swing-wing, turbofan powered
bomber capable of carrying free-fall bombs or air-to-
surface missiles entered service in the mid-1970s. Thirty
now BACKFIRES are being built each year in the contin-
ling expansion and modernization of Soviet military
power.SOVIET
BALTIC FLEET NORTHERN Fle
TOTAL NUMBER W FLEET 545 gs TOTAL NUMBER IN FEET
SoviernavaL AVIATION 260 SOVIET NAVAL AVIATION
‘2 [Link] WARSAW
| "rae Biions
n
ASTERN EUROPE|
carton a
m9 DIVISIONS
CATEGORY | 8%
GateconY 2 — 29%
cayeaony 37%
BLACK SEA FLEET/
CASPIAN FLOTILLA
TOTALNUMBERIN FLEET 547
SOVIETNAVAL AVIATION 380
STRATEGIC NUCLEAR FORCES
icams IRBMs/MRBMs
ssn
Su ‘o
see sss a+ moronieo a Lon RANG
ss ssa a nacxrine |
FRONTA\
1 sone | nas CATEGORY 1. COMBAT READY, 75:100% AUTHORIZED WARTIME STRERMILITARY FORCES
PACIFIC FLEET
TOTAL NUMBERIN FLEET 720
SOVIETNAVALAVIATION 429
——
‘AIR DEFENSE FORCES MAVRUCORGES
ORCES INTERCEPTORS 2500
AVIATION 680 mmmedlinntner sunracecomnarans 1307
angen
bison su manines ”
A MATION 4,800 SAM ABM lee AUXILIARIES 788
LAUNCHERS 10,000 LAUNCHERS 32 ne
SOVIET NAVALAVIATION 1440
7 1 SOVIET MILITARY POWERII MILITARY RESOURCEALLOCATION
In 1980, the first of the Soviets’ TYPHOON-
Class 25,000-ton strategic ballistic missile sub-
marines was launched from a newly completed
construction hall at the Severodvinsk Shipyard
‘on the White Sea. Earlier in the year the same
shipyard launched the first of the extremely
large OSCAR-Class guided missile nuclear sub-
marines, a submarine capable of firing 24 long-
range, antiship cruise missiles while remaining
submerged.
In 1980, some 2,400 kilometers southeast of
Severodvinsk, the mammoth Nizhniy Tagil
Railroad Car and Tank Plant, an industrial fa-
cility covering 827,000 square meters of floor:
space, manufactured 2,500 T-72 tanks.
To support the continuing growth and mod-
ernization of the armed forces, the Soviet Union
over the past quarter century has increased
military expenditures in real terms, devoting an.
average of 12-to-14 percent of its Gross Na-
tional Product each year to the Soviet military.
‘The estimated dollar costs of Soviet military in-
vestment exceeded comparable US spending
by 70 percent in 1979. The defense sector is the
first priority of Soviet industrial production.
‘The Soviet and non-Soviet Warsaw Pact mili-
tary industrial base is by far the world’s largest
in number of facilities and physical size. The
Soviet Union alone produces more weapons sys-
tems in greater quantities than any other country.
‘The Soviet military industry has grown stead-
ily and consistently over the past 20-to-25 years.
Its physical growth and the commitment of
large quantities of financial and human re-
sources is its most dynamic aspect, but its
The TYPHOON 25,000-ton strategic ballistic missile
submarine was launched from the Severodvinsk
Naval Shipyard in 1980. Severodvinsk, one of five
Soviet yards building submarines, has produced
seven different classes in tha last decade.cyclical production is its most important. Pro-
duction plants remain at work. As old weapons
programs are phased out, new ones are begun,
leaving no down times or long periods of layoffs
and inactivity. The cyclical process, the conti
nuing facility growth and the high rates of pro-
duction keep the arms industry in a high state of
readiness to meet any contingency and any de
mand for new weapons. The military produc-
tion industry includes 185 major final assembly
plants involved in producing weapons as end
products. Over 3,500 individual factories and
related installations provide support to these
final assembly plants.
Major Soviet
Manufacturing Areas
(ne nie wn Mee
Es”
neces ae
os see cence
feamesa =
10
Construction at the Severodvinsk Naval Ship-
yard illustrates the growth of Soviet facilities
over time. Over the past decade seven classes of
submarines have been produced, and during
this time, floor space has increased by several
hundred thousand square meters, or approxi
mately three-quarters again the yard’s size ten
years earlier. The new large construction hall
used to assemble the TYPHOON and OSCAR
submarines accounted for about 25 percent of
this increase. Moreover, Severodvinsk is only
one of five Soviet yards producing submarines.
In the aerospace industry, even though there
has been significant construction in recent years
including a number of new large final assembly
buildings at established plants, the Soviets have
revealed that they are constructing a wholly
new, large aircraft plant at Ulyanovsk. This
plant, when completed, will be well-suited for
the fabrication and assembly of large air-
craft—transports or bombers—underscoring
the Soviets’ continuing drive to improve further
their industrial base. Qualitative improvements
in production technology, which typically ac
company new and more sophisticated aircraft,
have paralleled the physical growth of the
industry,
‘The Army's sector of Soviet military industry
is traditionally large to support the growing
Ground Forces. Army industrial floorspace has
‘expanded by over ten percent in the late 1970s.
Alll segments of the Army's industrial base have
been expanded despite their already massive
size. For instance, a major Soviet tank producer
which was already nearly five times as large as
the US manufacturers, has again been expanded.
‘The Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact need all
of these facilities for the large number of major
weapons and support systems currently in pro-
duction —more than 150 in all
The following tables show estimates of pro-
duction by weapon systems type over the pastAREA OF NIZHNIY TAGIL TANK PLANT
(Superimposed on Washington, D.C.)
Say oS! 7 UBM
u I MILITARY RESOURCE ALLOCATIONProduction of Ground Forces Materiel
USSR and Non-Soviet Warsaw Pact
1976 1977 1978 1979 1980
a = USGR NWP USSR NSWP USSR NSWP USSR NSWP USSR NSWP
Tanks 700 8002500 800 2500 © 600 3000600000750
155 500 00500800 500 800500 80780
164 me 5 mm - wo = mw = ww ft
™ a a ae.
Ero ps eS es ial pe Tl
output output
Other Armored Fighting
Vehicle 4500 18004500 19005500 17005500 16005500 1200
‘Towed Field Artillery 900 60 1300 «801500» 1001500 1001300100
Self-Propelled Field Artillery 0 = 50 wD 28D
Multiple Rocket Launche 500-250 550-200 550150450150 30050
SeltPropolled AA Artillery 500 100500100100 80100 81000
Towed-AA Artillery 500 30050250 100 00 m8
Infantry Weapons 250,000 140,000 360,000 120,000 450,000 200,000 450,000 116.000 400.000 100.000
five years. A five year period was selected to a _mew system, or increased orders for
demonstrate the Soviet ability to sustain high helicopters.
rates of production.
Missile Production
USSR
Aircraft Production PED pe he Es
USSR Se
soo 300200200200
Airerate Type 1976 19781979 1860 s 0 a0 100100
a es so 050 D200
Somber so 0 OM 00 6000700700,
es 0755S
Bes eee imo vmmo tao tame 1400
Trainers Bo ae
asw 5 9 0 Missile production shows the wide range of
Holicopters|
125100100
3255 2.690
Total
The most important aspect of aircraft pro-
duction is the sustained high rates of fighter air:
craft production. Helicopter production shows
a decline at midpoint, but then a gradual build
up probably indicating a phase-out/phase-in of
12
missiles in production, Every class of missiles,
from Surface-to-Air to ICBMs, is produced in
significant quantities.
Naval ship construction demonstrates the
USSR’s capability to sustain high rates through-
out. Moreover, the number of auxiliary ships
produced in Eastern Europe has freed Soviet
building ways for other projects.Naval Ship Construction
USSR
197819771978 1980
pee een
2 oe wm Hn on
os 6 2 © 8
Auxiirios ‘ cae cee aa 5
Ground Forces Materiel Production
ussR
1976 1977 197819791980.
Tanks 2500 2500 2.900 3.000
5 ‘500500500800
168 00 500 500800
T™ 11500 1.500 1500 2.000,
“ral
output
45004500 5800 5.500
00850 e602 180
Soviet Army materiel production shows a
jump in the output of tanks and other armored
vehicles in 1979 and 1980. The production of
self-propelled artillery, however, exhibits a
steady decline since 1977. This probably rep:
resents the phasing out of production of an old
weapon and the introduction of a new one.
Such transition is fairly common in Soviet pro
duction practices. The evolutionary introduc:
tion of new systems continues. Overall, Soviet
Ground Forces materiel production has increas:
ced over the past five years
‘An even greater increase is evident when
Soviet Ground Forces materiel production is
combined with that of the Warsaw Pact allies,
These weapons systems are produced to equip
Soviet and Warsaw Pact forces and for export.
In recent years, in addition to being the world’s
largest producer, the USSR has become the
world’s largest exporter of major items of mili-
tary equipment to the Third World.
13
To provide nuclear weapons for their Armed
Forces, the Soviets have an adequate number of
plutonium and uranium production facilities to
ensure a sufficient quantity of necessary materi-
al for those forces, and to ensure the provision
of material for other high priority needs as well.
What impact does this massive dedication of
resources to military products have on the
USSR? The Soviet Union and the countries of
the Warsaw Pact have, over the past decade,
faced deteriorating economies while at the same
time sustaining high levels of military equip
ment production for an across-the-board force
modernization. The Soviets’ own economy is in
difficulty and facing competing priorities for
scarce resources as it begins the 11th Five Year
Plan. The problems include food shortages, low
labor productivity, transportation disruptions
and energy constraints which have all combined
to bring industrial growth to a post-1945 low.
Externally, the high costs of supporting other
communist regimes, also in difficulty, such as
Cuba, Vietnam, Afghanistan and Poland have
created an additional burden. These difficulties
have grown at the end of a decade during which
Moscow's policy has been to stress guns over
butter. Throughout the 1970s the Soviets have
consistently allocated from 12-to-14 percent of
Gross National Product to military programs in
spite of a marked downward trend in the rate of
economic growth. If this trend continues, the
percentage allocated to the military will in.
crease. There are no signs of a deemphasis of
military programs.
‘The economic burden of defense spending, as
viewed in the West, is viewed differently in the
Soviet Union. To the Soviets, defense spending
is a necessity and a priority above all else. Pro:
ductivity might continue to decline and the
Soviets might have to face a negative growth
rate, but the system of fostering massive
military industrial production will continue.
UL MILITARY RESOURCE ALLOCATION
I i eeIll! ORGANIZATION OFOVIET ARMED FORCES
Marshal of the Soviet Union and Warsaw
Pact Commander-in-Chief Kulikov has written
that the traumatic experience of World War II
has taught the Soviets the necessity of having a
fully operational strategic command structure
in being prior to the onset of hostilities. To this
end, the Soviets have created a wartime man.
agement structure which provides a unified sys-
tem of command capable of exerting centraliz-
ed direction, but designed to permit decentral-
ization of functions to lower levels as necessary.
Immediate control of the Soviet land, sea and
air forces is exercised by the Minister of De-
fense. Within the Soviet Government, the Min-
ister of Defense is a member of the Council of
Ministers, appointed by and technically answer-
able to the Supreme Soviet or to its Presidium:
In practice he is responsible to the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of the
Soviet Union (CPSU) and its Politburo. The
current Minister of Defense, Marshal of the
Soviet Union Ustinov, is a member of the Polit-
buro, as was his predecessor. The Defense
Council, a subset of the Politburo chaired by
the General Secretary of the CPSU, in effect
functions as the controlling authority. In 1976,
General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev was award-
ed the highest military rank, that of Marshal of
the Soviet Union, possibly indicating that ulti-
mate operational—as well as policymaking—
control of the Soviet Union’s Armed Forces was
being vested in the Defense Council.
‘The combined arms army, the basic Soviet field ar-
my, includes four motorized rifle divisions, a tank
division, an artillery brigade, missile units, frontal
‘air support, and intelligence, chemical, engineor
‘and signal units. There are more than 180 divisions
in the Soviet Armed Forces today.1 a
\
The key point to understand about the Soviet
military control structure is that the reins of the
instruments of state policy and power—not just
the purely military —are in the hands of a tested
political leadership supported by very experi-
enced and long-established staffs. President
Brezhnev and his key colleagues have been at
the center of power for decades. Ustinov has
guided the Soviet armaments industry since the
early 1940s and has proven to be an able and
decisive leader. These men, aided by such
others as KGB Chief Andropov, Premier Tik
honov, Foreign Minister Gromyko, the ageless
ideologue Suslov, Chief of General Staff Ogar-
kov, Warsaw Pact Commander Kulikov and
lesser but equally experienced subchiefs of the
military and industry, know how the Soviet
military machine runs and what they want to
achieve. They are able to marshal all available
Soviet resources toward their strategic objective.
They exercise absolute control of all instru-
ments of Soviet power.
At the apex of the Soviet wartime strategic
command structure is the State Defense Com-
mittee or GKO. The Defense Committee serves
to unify the highest military and civilian leader-
ship to insure centralized political direction of
the entire war effort. This committee appears to
consist of the permanent members of the peace-
time Defense Council. Just as in World War II,
the Defense Committee and its subordinate
managerial entities would play a critical rol
wartime economic mobilization and in oversee-
ing sustained wartime production. Beneath the
Defense Committee and its component elements
is the vast ministerial structure of the Soviet
government.
Under the guidance of the Defense Commit-
tee, a Supreme High Command (VGK) would
serve as the highest organization of strategic
military leadership. The Supreme High Com:
mand apparently includes the CPSU General
16
Secretary, the Minister of Defense, the first De-
puty Ministers of Defense, the Chief of the Main
Political Directorate, and the Commanders in
Chief of each of the five services. The contribu-
tion of the General Staff, serving as an executive
agent for the VGK, would be to insure the de-
yelopment and execution of a unified military
strategy for the operational commands.
In order to simplify the planning for war, the
Soviets have divided the world into 13 Theaters
of Military Operations, or TVDs. The Theater
of Military Operations is a geographical con-
cept used to denote an area within which their
armed forces would function in wartime. There
appear to be possibly five continental TVDs,
four maritime or naval TVDs, and four inter-
continental TVDs.
Recognizing that the Soviet Supreme High
Command would find it difficult to exercise the
direction of multi-theater operations without an
intermediate command echelon, the Soviets
have apparently established intermediate-level
high commands. This Soviet conceptual frame-
Soviet Military Districts
and Groups of Forces
Tit(work for intermediate-level strategic leadership
is intended to accommodate centralized strategic
planning with decentralized battle management.
The Theaters of Military Operations not only
include the terrain upon which the Fronts
would conduct their operations, but include
those Military Districts that would support such
operations. Thus, while forces may depart a
Military District as battlefield operations pro-
gress, the Military District structure would be
retained to serve as a principal wartime ad-
ministrative entity.
The Soviets have carefully thought out and
continue to develop the details of the system of
strategic leadership. The system required for
war fighting and war survival is now in place.
Central to this system is the establishment of the
means to ensure the survival of state control.
The Soviets have, for years, been building an
infrastructure of facilities and procedures which
is geared to the survival of the means of con-
trol for the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union during even the worst of conflict situa-
tions—a nuclear war. Alternative locations
have been established for virtually the entire
structure of the Soviet leadership —political,
military, security and industrial—from the
highest to the lowest levels. Many of these are
bunkered facilities and certain levels of leader-
ship are provided with mobile equipment as
well.
COMMAND AND CONTROL
Utilizing the General Staff of the Ministry of
Defense as its agent, the Soviet Defense Com.
mittee controls its military commands. To
achieve this goal the Soviets have developed ex-
tensive and modern command, control and
communications (C*) systems. Soviet doctrine
emphasizes centralized control, survivability,
redundancy and flexibility within the system.
Survivability is achieved through dispersal,
redundancy, hardness, concealment and mobil-
ity. Survivability is also enhanced by airborne
command posts, which can be deployed to dif-
ferent locations to serve as alternate communi-
cations hubs in the event of war, hedging
against the destruction of groundbase facilities.
Redundancy includes multiple command
centers to assure continuity of the control of
armed forces, and a wide variety of communi
cations means and modes. Redundancy of
Soviet C? facilities is also achieved through the
establishment of main and alternate command
posts.
In the Soviet Union, the strategic command
and control system maintains contact with
widespread civil and military authorities. The
system includes extensive networks of cable and
open-wire lines, radio-relay links, radio-com-
munications stations, and communications
satellites. Modern Soviet telecommunications
engineering concepts stress the flexibility, sur-
vivability and reliability of the system to meet
national military command and control re
quirements for continuous telecommunications
operations. The major national telecommuni-
cations complex is known as the unified com.
munications system, In the event of war, the en
tire system could be readily converted into a na-
tionwide military communications network.
Automation of Soviet command and control
is evolving. The Soviet Air Defense Forces and
the Moscow antiballistic missile system employ
automation most extensively. The major
strength of the Soviet/Warsaw Pact automation
program is that systems are being developed
specifically for military requirements rather
than adapting other systems to military use.
Soviet satellites provide communications sup:
port to military, diplomatic, intelligence, and
civilian organizations. The predominant com-
munications satellite used in support of military
command and control has been the MOLNIYA
18Si
I system. Since the mid-1960s, when the first
MOLNIYA I was launched, the Soviet Union
has continued to improve its communications
satellite program. The Soviet Union has launch
ed the improved MOLNIYA II and MOLNIYA
Ill systems which can be used for military com:
mand and control. The MOLNIYA I and Il
military ground sites are deployed at major
headquarters throughout the Soviet Union, and
stations are beginning to be deployed in Eastern
Europe.
The Soviets are maintaining vigorous re-
search and development programs to upgrade
their C? systems emphasizing the use of cable as
the primary means of communication when
practicable, and increasing use of satellite and
point-to-point systems operating in a number of
frequency ranges.
The Soviets can be expected to increase their
use of automated systems which will increase
their data handling capabilities as well as in
crease reaction times. As in the past, Soviet
command and control systems will continue to
employ redundancy, hardness and mobility to
enhance survivability.
LOGISTIC SUPPORT OF THE
SOVIET ARMED FORCES
The Deputy Defense Minister who is Chief of
the Rear of the Soviet Armed Forces (NTVS)
has management responsibility for the overall
system of rear service support to the armed forces.
‘The Deputy Minister and his staff are located
at Ministry of Defense Headquarters in Mos.
cow. The first deputy to the NTVS serves as
Chief of the Main Staff of the Rear, which plays
a key role in the logistic establishment. From
the Ministry headquarters, the Staff administers
the fuel, food, clothing, military trade and
technical supply organizations, the military
medical and veterinary organizations, and
other directorates and departments. This cen-
tralized system also includes a large number of,
Rear Services brigades, regiments and battal
ions as well as installations, bases, depots, ar-
senals, repair plants and other support assets for
all armed forces components. All aspects of the
movement of military supplies received from
the national economy are managed by the Rear
Services staff. In this management capacity, the
Rear Services staff coordinates the activities of
the deputy commanders for Rear Services of
each of the branches as well as at the Military
District, groups of forces and tactical levels.
Soviet wartime logistic planning is carried on
at three general levels: strategic, operational
and tactical. The NTVS is the principal con-
troller of the numerous and diverse logistic
organizations and assets comprising what Soviet
planners call the “central Rear Services.” There
is a Rear Services counterpart at each subor-
dinate echelon down to regiment. This officer,
who is designated a deputy commander as well
as the Chief of the Rear, is directly subordinate
to his unit or formation commander, and in
addition carries out the policies and guidelines
of Rear Service representatives at higher levels.
The entire Rear Services establishment is
designed to support military operations of all
the Armed Forces with consumable supplies,
weapon system stocks, maintenance assets,
transportation resources, local security and a
variety of logistic services deemed integral to the
successful conduct of combat operations, In
wartime, central logistic units, resources and
command /control entities, in addition to serv-
ing as a USSR-based resource pool, may be
moved into Theaters of Military Oper:
directly to support operational formations and
organize the use of theater resources. Military
command post complexes are present at all tac
tical and operational echelons.
‘The Soviets, and their Warsaw Pact military
allies, conceived a system for automating Pact
19
HL ORGANIZATION OF Si
FORCESRear Service command and control in the early
1960s, Variations of this system have been field
tested over the last decade. The system is de
signed principally to enable the Chief of the
Rear at operational/strategic levels rapidly to
evaluate his resources and assets in light of an
envisioned operation; to formulate a Rear Ser-
vice plan which optimally supports the com
mander’s concept of operations; and to respond
to the support requirements generated by
rapidly changing battlefield situations.
Today, in the European Theater, for exam
ple, the Rear Services of the Soviet Armed
Forces already have in place vast stocks of all
the logistic supplies—from fuel, to ammuni-
tion, to weapon systems stocks—required for
sustained combat.
COMBINED ARMS WARFARE
At the heart of Soviet combat doctrine is the
concept of combined arms operations. To the
Soviets, combined arms operations are more
than the joint use of weapon systems and forces.
The concept involves the bringing to bear of all
systems and forces as needed in a unified and
effective manner.
The Soviet Union’s concept of combined
arms operations, particularly at Front or
theater levels, is much broader and more struc:
tured organizationally than the Western com-
bined arms concept envisioning the joint and
cooperative employment of ground, air and, if
applicable, naval forces to achieve an objective.
The operational definitions as provided by the
Soviets in their combat doctrine permit a fuller
understanding of the combined arms warfare
concept
* The Combined Arms Battle is a bat-
tle fought by a combined arms formation
or unit together with attached formations
or units of other service branches and
aviation; and in maritime sectors, with
naval forces as well. The use of nuclear
weapons and the participation of the
various service branches or forces, in con-
junction with the great mobility of the
troops, impart an especially decisive and
maneuver-oriented character to combined
arms battle.
* The Combined Arms Commander is
the sole commander of a combined arms
formation, unit, or subunit. He organizes
the combined arms combat of the forces
subordinated to him, and leads them in
battle. He makes the decision to engage
the enemy, assigns combat missions to
subunits, coordinates the actions of his
own combined armed troops with those
of neighboring troops, and directs his
staff, and the commanders of the service
branches and Services.
© The Combined Arms Staff is the staff
of a major field force or of a formation
or unit which includes formations, units
or subunits of various service branches.
‘The combined arms staff ensures coordi-
nation between the staffs of the subor-
dinated and cooperating troops, and
those of the service branches, special
troops, services and rear. The combined
arms staff takes all measures necessary to
ensure the comprehensive preparation of
the troops for their combat missions, and
to ensure constant command and control
of the troops during the course of battle
(or operation).
At the Front level the Soviets are organized
to control and employ coordinated ground, air,
missile, air defense and, if appropriate, naval
formations. The combined military power of all
‘weapon systems is applied in a fully integrated
plan. To insure the control of activities, the
Front has a combined arms commander who is
responsible for carrying out missions approved
20Combined Arms Warfare, at the heart of Soviet
‘combat doctrine, brings units from the different
services, such as the tank, infantry, solf-
propelled artillery and missile units shown here,
under one Combined Arms Commander.
21
MIL ORGANIZATION OF SOVIET ARMED
FORCES:Va
by the General Staff Plan. It is his responsibility
to oversee and coordinate the operations of his
subordinate units and the commanders of the
other services subordinated under his com-
mand. If the Front is operating near or in a
maritime sector, naval forces will be under his
command. As stated in the definition, he must
also coordinate his activities with neighboring
troops, most probably another Front.
‘The Front is the largest field formation in
wartime. It is a tactical and administrative unit
with size and composition subject to consider-
able variation depending upon the situation. A
Front could be composed of three-to-five com:
bined arms armies, one or two tank armies, plus
aviation, air assault, diversionary, artillery,
missile, air defense, engineer, signal, intel:
ligence, reconnaissance and rear service units.
A combined arms army might include three
or four motorized rifle divisions and a tank divi
plus artillery, missile, air defense,
engineer, chemical defense, signal, intelligence,
reconnaissance and rear service units.
‘The role of the tank army, a heavily armored
force of tanks and motorized rifle troops, is to
rupture and penetrate enemy defenses and to
exploit breakthroughs deep into the enemy's
rear areas. This army is a tactical and ad-
ministrative unit capable of independent opera-
tions, although its normal employment, like
that of the combined arms army, is as a compo-
nent of a Front. The size of the army and its
force composition are dependent upon the mis
sion, the situation and the area of operations.
There are three different types of maneuver
divisions in the field forces: motorized rifle,
tank, and airborne. The motorized rifle and
tank divisions are the major combat and ma:
neuver elements of the ground combat forces.
Divisions are organized on a triangular basis.
The motorized rifle division has three motorized
rifle regiments, one tank regiment, one artillery
22MI24/HIND A Assault Helicopter
regiment, one air defense regiment and other
support elements. The tank division forms
around three tank regiments, one motorized ri:
fle regiment, one artillery regiment, one air
defense regiment and other support elements.
Three airborne rifle regiments are the nucleus
of the airborne division.
As few as one Front and as many as five may
exist in a Theater of Military Operations
(TVD). A High Command of Forces in a TVD
is commanded by at least a three star general
who is directly responsible to the Soviet General
Staff. The commander is supported by a com-
bined arms staff with the responsibility for over:
seeing and coordinating the activities of the
various strategic formations. At the theater
level the commander insures that the plans of
the General Staff for his forces in the theater are
carried out
23
The General Staff controls the operations of
the five services, while individual service chiefs
are responsible for the training and support of
troops, the development of tactics and the ac:
quisition of weapons systems for their respective
services. The services function under the Gen.
eral Staff to assure the mutual supportiveness of
their training, tactics, and weapons acquisi
tions. In a wartime situation, the same system.
would apply, but the General Staff would
operate as the executive agent of the national
leadership and would adopt plans for control of,
the forces. The Soviets have organizationally
structured their forces to form a unified com.
mand structure under the General Staff. This
provides the Soviets with the command struc:
ture to apply the totality of their military power
in warfare so that the whole of the operation is
greater than the sum of its parts.
MI ORGANIZATION OF SOVIET ARMED
FORCEIV SOVIET THEATER FORCES
Over the past 15 years the Soviets have stead
ily expanded and upgraded their military forces
designated for theater operations with partic
ular attention directed toward the European
theater, During this period, the Soviet objective
for this modernization has been the conversion
of the Red Army from a balanced offensive-
defensive force to one geared to fast-paced of-
fensive operations. A key aim appears to have
been the provision in peacetime of a standing
Army at the leading edge of the potential
battlefield such that it could begin operations
with minimal mobilization and, thereby, with
little warning.
The forces are highly mobile, and they are
organized and supplied for a rapid initial push
from a peacetime posture. At the outset of a
war, the Soviets plan to move quickly slicing
through NATO forces in the Central Region
and driving to the English Channel, while con:
currently securing the northern and southern’
flanks. During the initial operations, necessary
additional forces would be mobilized and mov.
ed to the battlefield. All of this the Soviets aim
to accomplish before the full weight of NATO
reinforcements could be brought to bear. The
Soviets have given priority attention to all
elements of their Armed Forces with a role to
play in the sweep across Europe. Modernization
and upgrading is underway in each of the
following elements of Soviet Theater Forces:
Long Range Missile and Air Forces
Ground Forces
Frontal Aviation
Military Transport Aviation
Special Purpose Forces
Navy
Soviet theater nuclear forces are being deployed
jin increasing numbers against Western Europe
and Asia. Some 250 SS-20 mobile, MIRVed nuclear
warhead, Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles
have been deployed. Three warheads per missile
greatly increase Soviet firepower; mobility in-
creases survivability.LONG-RANGE THEATER
MISSILES
Since the advent of the nuclear-tipped bal-
listic missile, the Soviets have dedicated signifi-
cant numbers of nuclear, land-based missiles to
theater warfare missions. No theater has been
neglected, but the European theater has always
commanded the greatest attention. The first
medium-range ballistic missiles (MRBMs—
1,000-to-3,000 kilometers) were fielded in the
late 1950s, followed by improved MRBMs and
new intermediate-range ballistic missiles
(IRBMs—3,000-to-5,000 kilometers) in the ear-
1y 1960s.
Soviet MRBM/IRBM Characteristics
Warhead Range Propellont Mobility
‘Seasanpat 1 2000 guia Ped
om
SSSSKEAN 1 4100 guia Fixed
$520 3 Som Sota Mobile
Greeniand
(en)
More than 700 fixed launchers for these
systems— the SS-3 and SS-4 MRBMs and the SS-
5 IRBM —were operational at peak deployment
in the mid-1960s. All but approximately 100
were directed at targets in or related to the
European theater. The remainder were direct-
ed against the Middle East, South Asia and the
Western Pacific littoral. China was not then a
target. In the late 1960s, the Soviets began to
draw down these, by then, obsolescent missiles,
replacing them with ICBMs and adding cover-
age of the new enemy—China.
This situation remained unchanged until
1977 when the SS-20 IRBM first reached opera-
tional status. Previously, the theater-dedicated
strategic nuclear missiles were based at fixed,
vulnerable sites, and each missile carried only
one warhead—although provisions for force
reconstitution and refire were made. The SS-20
eliminated most of these weaknesses. Its launch-
ers are highly mobile, and each SS-20 is fitted.
with three, very accurate and independently
targetable (MIRVed) warheads. Moreover,
26Soviet Medium and Intermediate
Range Ballistic Missiles
each $$-20 unit is equipped with refire
missiles—one per launcher—and each refire
missile is fitted with three warheads. Thus the
firepower of the theater strategic nuclear missile
forces is being greatly multiplied, even though
the Soviets are withdrawing older SS-4s and SS-
5s from the forces as the $S-20s are deployed.
As of July 1981, some 250 SS-20 launcher/
missile sets equipped with a total of 750 nuclear
warheads had been deployed. Of these, 175
with 525 warheads are deployed opposite the
NATO countries. There is no sign that the de-
ployment is slackening. Since January 1981, the
Characteristics of Primary
US & Soviet Theater Missiles
pace of SS-20 base construction has increased,
particularly opposite the NATO nations. At
bases known to be under construction, another
65 launchers with some 195 warheads will be
deployed. Perhaps as many as 100-to-150 addi-
tional launchers —800-to-450 warheads —could
be fielded before the deployment program
reaches its conclusion. While this modern
nuclear force will continue to exhibit the full
coverage of theater targets around the Soviet
Union's periphery, it will be concentrated
primarily against the European theater.
THE SOVIET GROUND FORCES
The Ground Forces, with a strength of
1,825,000, constitute the largest of the five ma-
jor components of the Soviet Armed Forces.
‘Traditionally, Imperial Russian and Soviet ar-
mies have been characterized by great numbers.
Today, the Ground Forces are highly moderni
ed and well equipped, possessing great fire-
power and mobility. Manpower and materiel
combine to make the present Soviet Ground
Forces the most powerful land army in the world.
Soviet leaders view an upgrading of the Soviet
Ground Forces, in concert with an expanded
Navy and improved strategic air transport
capabilities, as adding a desirable flexibility to
the exercise of Soviet military power on a global
basis. The addition of some 30 divisions since
about 1967 also reflects the Soviet view that war
without resort to nuclear weapons, or at least
without resort to strategic nuclear exchange,
may be possible. To achieve these aims Soviet
doctrine calls for clear-cut superiority at the
outset of a conflict. Increased availability of
helicopters, armored vehicles, amphibious
vehicles, self-propelled artillery weapons and
surface-launched guided missiles has provided
the Ground Forces with unprecedented flexi-
bility, mobility and firepower.
2
27
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESStrength and Disposition: The Soviet Ground
Forces currently contain more than 180 divi-
sions at various stages of combat readiness. Of
this total, 71 percent are motorized rifle divi-
sions, 25 percent are tank divisions and four
percent are airborne divisions.
‘These divisions are disposed as follows:
79 percent of the total are stationed in-
side the Soviet Union.
16 percent are stationed in Eastern
Europe (East Germany, Poland,
Czechoslovakia, and Hungary).
3 percent are stationed in Mongolia.
2 percent are engaged in combat oper-
ations in Afghanistan.
There are four basic deployment groupings:
against NATO, against China, against the Mid-
dle East, and a strategic reserve. The largest,
best-equipped and most combat ready of these
is the Ground Forces group deployed against
NATO.
Modernization Program: The following
graphs show the changes in manpower by type
of division and the changes in the number of
deployed tanks and artillery since 1966, In
creases in personnel to 11,000 men in a tank
division and almost 13,000 men in a motorized
the
number of tanks and mobile combat vehicles
per division.
Since the mid-1960s, the Soviets have engag
ed in a program of modernizing and upgrading
ground forces to ensure a capability for carrying
out offensive doctrine, Comprehensive in scope,
this program has involved large-scale improve
ments in mobility, fire power, shock action,
command and control, obstacle crossing capa-
bility, air defense, electronic warfare and
logistical support. New and advanced equip
ment has been introduced. Highlights of this
program, which has resulted in formidable and
increasingly capable ground forces that now
rifle division have resulted in an increase
Soviet Manpower Soviet Tanks
by Type of Division and Artillery
1966-1980 1966-1980
face NATO Europe and other areas contiguous
to the USSR, include:
* Deployment of T-64 tanks in the
Group of Soviet Forces, Germany
(GSFG); fielding of T-72 tanks into Soviet
units in the Western Military Districts;
introduction of small numbers of T-72s
in most non-Soviet Warsaw Pact armies;
and continued development of a new
tank, designated the T-80.
* Expansion of both division and non-
division artillery units and some replace-
ment of older, towed guns by self.
propelled 122- and 152-mm weapons.
‘© Upgrading tactical capabilities by
deployment of nuclear-capable heavy
artillery brigades equipped with 203-mm
howitzers and 240-mm mortars, and the
introduction of the more accurate,
Jonger-range and more mobile SS-21 and
SS-X-28 tactical surface-to-surface
missiles (SSMs) in ground forces as re-
placements for older FROGs and SCUDs.
‘* Replacement of the 900 kilometer
SS-12/SCALEBOARD tactical missile
with the more accurate SS-22.
* Replacement of older air defense gun
28systems by a new family of surface-to-air
missiles, some of which could have capa-
bilities against enemy tactical ballistic
missiles.
© Introduction of advanced radio sys-
tems and communications satellite equip-
ment, airborne command posts and the
gradual development of automated sys
tems to enhance command, control and
‘communications.
‘Introduction of infantry combat vehi-
cles into Soviet motorized rifle units, and
the use of airborne assault vehicles and
newly identified variants in airborne
units.
© Introduction of Air Assault Brigades
at the Front level
Each of these deployments increases the
Ground Forces’ capability to launch a rapid
thrust through Europe, the central theme of
Soviet military thought.
152mm Self-Propelled Howitzer
1-72 Main Battle Tank
The evolution of Soviet tanks illustrates the
extent of Soviet Ground Forces modernization.
Beginning in the late 1960s, the Soviets fielded
the first and most sophisticated of their modern,
family of main battle tanks, the T-64A incor-
porating a number of unique and innovative
features including:
© A 125-mm smoothbore gun and an auto:
matic loader which allows reduction in crew size
from four to three.
© Unconventional frontal armor and the in:
clusion of movable armored plates along the
side of the hull.
© A compact, turbocharged diesel engine
with a high horsepower-to-ton ratio.
The T-64A began deployment to the Group
of Soviet Forces, Germany in 1976, and, since
1980, has been deployed to the Southern Group
of Forces in Hungary.
The T-72, a high production tank comple-
mentary to the T-64A, entered operation in the
29
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IV SOVIET THEATER FORCIMain Battle Tanks
weir roxs) * a = “
‘SPEED (HR) » = » ©
IN ARMAMENT so0nm Sem 1250 250m
cone Fane GUN, SMOOTHEORE SmooTH®ORE ‘siooTHBoRE
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mid 1970s. This tank incorporates many of the
features of the T-64A such as the 125-mm
smoothbore gun and automatic loader and un-
conventional armor in the form of layered or
laminate armor in the upper hull.
The direct fire range for the 125-mm gun is
2,000 meters firing the kinetic energy round.
This means that at all ranges out to 2,000
meters, the gunner merely places a crosshair on
the target and fires. In the 125-mm gun the
automatic loader allows a rate of fire up to eight
rounds per minute. For mobility, the 41 metric
ton T-72 is powered by a 780 horsepower diesel
which allows a top road speed of 60 kilometers
per hour, and a cross country trail speed of up
to 45 kilometers per hour.
While the T-64A and T-72 are formidable
systems, the Soviets are nearing production of
an even newer tank, the T-80.
Simultaneously with modernization activities,
Soviet ground divisions also are undergoing a
personnel and equipment expansion program
Major aspects involve the addition of an arti
lery battalion to the tank regiments of tank and
motorized rifle divisions; expansion of the
motorized rifle company to a battalion within
tank regiments of tank divisions; and the addi:
tion of medium tanks to the reconnaissance bat
talions of both types of divisions. The expansion
program has included the Group of Soviet
Forces, Germany.
TACTICAL NUCLEAR WEAPONS
The Soviets have deployed large numbers of
tactical nuclear delivery systems, and we believe
they have stockpiled reloads for these systems.
The Soviets rely on dual-capable systems for
most of their shorter-range theater nuclear de
livery capability and have adapted some of their
203-mm and 240-mm artillery pieces deployed
in the USSR to fire nuclear projectiles. Towed
203-mm and 240-mm weapons are being re-
FROG Tactical Nuclear Surface-to-Surface
Missileplaced with self-propelled models. Their
medium-range launchers are capable of firing
nuclear, conventional, or chemical munitions,
and consist of the FROG (and its SS-21 replace-
ment), the SCUD B (and its $S-X-23 replace-
ment), and the $S-12/SCALEBOARD (and its
8-22 replacement). An increase in the number
of nuclear-capable systems combined with mod-
ernization of these systems give the Warsaw
Pact improved nuclear options. A Front nor-
mally has tactical rockets, such as the free-
rocket-over-ground (FROG), and operational
tactical missiles (SCUDs) to complement
nuclear-capable artillery, aviation and other
longer-range missiles.
Long-Range Theater Nuclear Weapons
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‘The follow-on to the FROG, the $S-21, has
improved accuracy and range. Initial opera-
tional capability for the SS-21 was attained in
1976; however, only a few have been deployed.
Until recently, the West relied extensively
upon the qualitative superiority of its forces to
offset the numerical superiority of the USSR
and its allies. That margin of quality is rapidly
diminishing in the face of a massive Soviet effort
to modernize its forces and those of its Warsaw
Pact allies. Modern tanks, armored fighting
vehicles, artillery, rocket launchers, antiaircraft
artillery, surface-to-air and surface-to-surface
31
missiles, and other weapons now being fielded
in large quantities are the direct result of an in-
tensive, multi-year Soviet investment program.
‘This program is expected to continue in spite of
predicted Soviet economic problems. The
Soviet advantage in tanks, presently about three
to one in the European theater alone, will grow
throughout the decade.
THEATER BOMBERS
BADGER, BLINDER and BACKFIRE air-
craft assigned to both Soviet Long Range Avia-
tion and Soviet Naval Aviation could be used to
carry out missions covering all of NATO
Europe. While the BEAR and BISON bombers
also could perform theater roles, they are re-
served primarily for intercontinental strike mis-
sions, The most notable feature of the theater
bomber force is its age: fully three quarters of
the aircraft are over ten years old, and only the
BACKFIRE remains in production.
‘These medium bombers have a primary land
attack role, intended for either a nuclear or a
conventional war scenario. In their nuclear use,
the bombers would complement strikes by the
Soviets’ medium and intermediate range ballis-
tic missiles. The primary objective in either case
would be to free the Strategic Rocket Forces to
concentrate on highest priority, time-urgent
NATO targets.
FRONTAL AVIATION
The Soviet Air Force is separated into three
distinct air arms to include: Long Range Avia-
tion, Frontal or Tactical Aviation and Military
‘Transport Aviation.
Frontal Aviation is the largest component of
the Soviet Air Force and is organized into Tac-
tical Air Armies consisting generally of fighter,
fighter-bombers, transports, helicopters and
reconnaissance units as well as miscellaneous
support units, Tactical Air Armies are located
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESin 12 Soviet Military Districts and with the
Groups of Soviet Forces in East Germany,
Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary. These
tactical air armies account for some 4,800 fixed
wing combat aircraft, 250 transports and 3,500
helicopters.
Since the early 1970s, the introduction of
modern aircraft such as the FENCER, FITTER
C&D, FOXBAT and FLOGGER has steadily
improved the offensive capabilities of Frontal
Aviation, turning the Soviets’ Tactical Air
Forces from a force basically defensively-
oriented to one now with significantly enhanced
offensive capabilities for theater warfare. These
aircraft carry loads of bombs, rockets and guid-
ed munitions, 2,000-to-8,000 kilograms in
weight, to radii between 350 and 1,500 kilo-
meters. The counterair fighters carry improved
air-to-air missiles to ranges in excess of 900
kilometers. These aircraft also incorporate
upgraded avionics. The entire counterair and
about 75 percent of the ground attack force are
MiG-23/FLOGGER B All-Weather Counterair Fighter
comprised of aircraft introduced in the past
decade.
Frontal Aviation possesses five basic aircraft
in support of ground force operations.
FLOGGER
Currently 1,400 FLOGGER B/D/G/J are
operational in Frontal Aviation.
FLOGGER B/G — all weather counterair fighter
FLOGGER D/J — all-weather ground attack air-
craft
FLOGGER E — export version of FLOGGER B
FLOGGER F — export version of FLOGGER D
FLOGGER H — export version of FLOGGER D
Flogger
FLOGGER B/G FLOGGER D/J
Max Payload (ka) 6xAAMs: 3,500
Combat Radius (km) 900-1,200 550.800
Service Ceiling (m) 18,000 16,000FISHBED
Some 1,300 FISHBED can be found in Soviet
units, although the FLOGGER is replacing the
FISHBED as the standard combat fighter in the
Soviet Air Force.
FISHBED E — short-range, clear-air fighter
FISHBED D through N — (except H and
M-—all-weather counterair fighters
FISHBED H — reconnaissance platform
Fishbed
FISHBED E FISHBED L/N
2xAAMs 4xAAMs
380.650 1550-900
Service Ceiling (m) 117,000 18,000
(MiG-21/FISHBED N All-Weather Interceptor
FITTER
‘There are four ground attack and one recon-
naissance variants of the FITTER operationally
deployed with Warsaw Pact Forces, with only
FITTER A and C in the national air arms thus
far
FITTER A — swept wing clear-air ground at-
tack aircraft (200 operational with Soviet units)
FITTER G/D/H — swing-wing all-weather
ground attack aircraft (650 operational in
Soviet units)
33.
Fitter
FITTER A ‘FITTER C/D/H
Max Payload (ka) 2,000 3,800-4,000
Combat Radius (km) 250-350 50.900
Service Ceiling (m) 15,000 18,000
‘Su-17/FITTER C Swing-Wing Ground Support
Fighter
FOXBAT
‘Two variants of the FOXBAT are deployed
in operational service with Soviet frontal avia-
tion; both are reconnaissance platforms.
07
Foxbat B/D
‘Max Payload: Reconnaissance
‘package only
Combat Radius (kr) 1,100
Service Ceiling (m) 27,000
MiG-25/FOXBAT High Altitude Supersonic
Interceptor
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESFENCER
‘The FENCER, operational since 1974, was
the first. modern Soviet designed
specifically for a ground attack role and the first
to carry a weapons system officer. There are 400
FENCERs operational.
aircraft
Fencer
Max Payload (ka) 8,000
‘Combat Radius (km) 1.800
Service Ceiling (m) 17,500
‘$u-24/FENCER Ground Support Aircraft
Replacing the old Yak-28/BREWER tactical
bomber with the FENCER gives Frontal Avia-
tion the ability to strike targets throughout most
of NATO Europe from home bases in the
USSR. The addition of this aircraft along with
the latest ground attack variants of FLOGGER
and FITTER greatly increases the tonnage
which can be delivered over a far greater range.
To complement the growing inventory of
modern aircraft, the Soviets are developing new
types of armament which should greatly in-
crease against
hardened ground targets
the effectiveness of sorties
HELICOPTERS
The majority of the Soviet helicopter forces
are assigned to Frontal Aviation units to be em:
ployed near the forward edge of a battle area.
During the 1950s and early 1960s, Soviet
helicopter design and production was limited to
medium and heavy lift aircraft intended for use
as transports only. During the late 1960s and
early 1970s, the Soviets began to experiment
with the use of the helicopter in the assault and
attack roles. The Soviets installed 128x57 mm
rockets on the Mi-8/HIP C to be employed as
an assault helicopter. Later, the Mi-8/HIP E
was identified. It remains the world’s most
heavily armed helicopter. The HIP E helicopter
has 192x57-mm rockets, four AT-2/SWATTER
Antitank Guided Missiles (ATGM), and a 12.7:
mm nose gun. The Mi-8/HIP F is an export ver-
sion of the HIP E with the major change that six
AT-3/SAGGER ATGMs replace the four
SWATTERs.
While the Mi-8/HIP was undergoing modifi.
cation to improve its assault capabilities, the
Frontal Aviation Ground Attack Aircraft
vets = 080 mic-23 Mic.27
FENCER A FLOGGER 8/G FLOGGER D/J
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FITTER D/H roxnat 8 FISHBED L
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99 0ne0 ne 2(Mi-24/HIND E with Tube-Launched Anti-Tank
Guided Missiles
Soviets were developing the Mi-24/HIND, an
attack helicopter and the first Soviet helicopter
to be produced that has an integral weapon sys-
tem and retractable landing gear. The HIND A
is armed with 128x57-mm rockets, four AT-2/
SWATTER ATGMs, and a 12.7-mm machine
gun in the nose. The helicopter also has a small
cargo bay that is used to transport up to eight
troops. The Mi-24/HIND D is a streamlined
variant of HIND A with the pilot seated above
and behind the co-pilot gunner. The 12.7 mm
nose gun has been replaced with a turreted Gat-
ling-type gun, but other armament remains un.
changed from the HIND A. The latest version
Mi:24/HIND D with Turreted Gatling Gun
of the HIND E is similar to the HIND D except
that it has the tube-launched AT-6/SPIRAL.
TRANSPORT AVIATION
Soviet Military Transport Aviation (VTA) is
charged with the primary responsibility for pro:
viding airlift services for the Soviet Airborne
‘Troops and air assault brigades.
VTA also operates an air logistics system to
supply other deployed Soviet and allied armed
forces and to support other Soviet political and
economic interests.
Over 600 medium and long-range cargo
transports are currently assigned to VTA airlift
units, 11-76/CANDID long-range jet transports,
which are replacing CUBs, now number over
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IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESie
18-76/ CANDID Long Range Jet Transport
180. Over 50 An-22/COCK long-range turbo
prop transports are in the VTA inventory. The
COCK and CANDID units are based in the
western USSR, as are most of the remaining
CUB units, although some VTA CUB units are
stationed along the southern and far eastern
periphery of the Soviet Union. This concentra-
tion in the western USSR places the main VTA
assets near the airborne divisions they would
support, as well as positioning the force op
posite NATO. Nevertheless, VTA is capable of
quickly concentrating its aircraft to support an
operation anywhere along the Soviet periphery,
as demonstrated in the December 1979 Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan.
An-22/COCK Long Range Turboprop Transport
‘The CUB continues to be the mainstay of
VTA. It is a four-engine turboprop which can
carry up to 90-to-100 troops or cargo up to a
maximum payload of 20 metric tons. It first
entered VTA in the late 1950s.
In the mid-1970s, CANDID transports were
introduced to meet VTA’s increasing worldwide
airlift requirements. The CANDID is compar.
able to the U.S. C-141, and can airlift up to 140
troops or 40 metric tons of cargo. Its main asset,
however, is its greatly improved radius/range
over that of the CUB it is replacing. A CANDID
can thus theoretically lift twice the payload
weight to five times the radius/range of the CUB.
During times of military emergency, VTAcan call upon the considerable reserve offered
by Soviet civil aviation, Aeroflot. The civil fleet
is equipped with about 200 CUBs and CAN-
DIDs, about 1,100 medium- and long-range
passenger transports and several thousand
short-range transports and helicopters.
ELECTRONIC WARFARE
The Soviets continue to improve their capa
bility to conduct Electronic Warfare (EW) and
Signals Intelligence (SIGINT). Technical ad-
vancements in both Electronic Counter Mea-
sures (ECM) and Electronic Warfare Support
Measures are noted in all Soviet forces. The air
forces have numerous aircraft devoted to EW as
escort and standoff jammer platforms. Addi-
tionally, since 1979, there has been increased
emphasis on Soviet offensive, penetrating air
forces equipped with ECM and accompanied by
dedicated EW aircraft. The USSR has made a
major investment in Electronic Counter
‘Countermeasures (ECCM), as well as lethal and
nonlethal countermeasures. Ground forces con
tinue to introduce new jammers, as well as a
new series of improved SIGINT vehicles. Stra-
tegic fixed jammers are located throughout the
Soviet Union.
‘The Soviets have developed their EW capa
bilities into an integrated system called Ra
electronic Combat, combining all forms of in-
telligence, direction finding, intensive jam-
ming, deception and suppressive fires from
ground, air and seabased platforms to attack
enemy organization and systems through their
electronic means of control. Its purpose is to
limit, delay or nullify the enemy's use of his
command and control systems while protecting
Soviet systems by ECCM. An estimated goal of
the system is to destroy or disrupt a significant
proportion of the enemy's command, control
and weapon system communications, either by
jamming or by destructive fire.
37
‘The Soviet ECCM objective is the satisfactory
operation of USSR electronic equipment in the
face of enemy disruption. Thus, physical pro-
tection of the equipment is included as well as
other practices beyond the scope of western
ECCM. Modern ECCM features have been de-
signed into the newer air defense equipment.
‘The greatest emphasis, however, has been on
individual and organizational techniques that
can be applied in the field.
To cite one example, the Soviets use anti-
radar camouflage to conceal military equip:
ment against detection by ground, airborne and
shipborne radars. Depending on the radar vi
bility of the objects to be camouflaged, anti-
radar camouflaging is achieved by the creation
of false targets or by blending into the terrain
background those objects that might serve for
orientation. Equipment may be concealed be
hind local features or by making use of the
camouflaging properties of the ground relief.
In addition to natural cover, timber, brush
wood, metallic nets and angle reflectors are
used by Soviet forces for radar camouflage.
Mockups of military equipment can also be
used as antiradar reflectors.
CHEMICAL WARFARE
‘The armed forces of the Soviet Union in par
ticular and the Warsaw Pact forces in general
are better equipped, structured and trained
than any other military force in the world to
conduct offensive and defensive chemical war
fare operations. Their capabilities are steadily
improving.
The Soviets have deployed a variety of
modern agents and multiple delivery systems,
and have the tactical doctrine for large-scale
employment of chemical weapons. A significant
portion of all Soviet delivery systems— including
missile and rocket systems, aerial bombs and
artillery—are chemical-weapon capable. War-
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCES=
saw Pact forces are well-trained, organized and
equipped for offensive CW operations.
In Soviet military doctrine, toxic chemicals
are associated primarily with theater warfare.
The basic principle is to achieve surprise by us-
ing massive quantities of chemical agents
against unprotected troops or against equip:
ment or on terrain to deny its use.
A large chemical warfare organization is
organic to the Soviet service structure.
‘Throughout the Warsaw Pact each combat unit
down to regimental level has a sizable contin-
gent for chemical defense. Chemical specialists
are also assigned at the company level. All War-
saw Pact combat and combat support forces are
well equipped and realistically trained to insure
their survivability and to increase their opera
tional effectiveness in toxic environments.
SPECIAL PURPOSE FORCES AND
UNCONVENTIONAL WARFARE
In the context of Special Purpose Forces,
Soviet unconventional warfare is defined as a
variety of military and paramilitary operations
including partisan warfare, subversion, and
sabotage, conducted during periods of peace
and war, and including other operations of a
covert or clandestine nature.
The Soviets have used unconventional forces
and methods in the past:
* Bolsheviks employed partisan guer-
rilla units against the Czarists and other
opponents during the Russian Civil War
of 1917 to 1920.
* Soviet partisan forces were extensively
used against the Germans during World
War Il.
* Special purpose troops were used to
crush resistance to Soviet domination over
Eastern Europe.
® Soviet special purpose forces were
used in the Soviet invasion of Czech-
38
oslovakia in 1968 to arrest Czech leader-
ship and secure key objectives in Prague.
© Soviet special purpose forces played
an important role in the invasion of Af
ghanistan and the elimination of Presi
dent Amin.
Soviet unconventional warfare activities are
managed at the highest level of government au-
thority. The Committee for State Security”
(KGB) and the Main Intelligence Directorate
(GRU) of the General Staff can be assumed to
plan and execute Soviet unconventional warfare
operations. These activities are protected by
stringent security measures.
The Soviet leadership has a variety of elite
forces for conducting unconventional warfare
missions: special units of the KGB, GRU,
borne and Ground and Naval Forces. The KGB
special purpose units have a sabotage mission,
and are thought to be targeted primarily
against the civilian sector. Their tasks would be
to create general panic among the civilian pop-
ulation, to disrupt civil government and public
utilities, and to damage or destroy key produc:
tion facilities.
The regular Soviet Armed Forces maintain
clite airborne units, special sabotage/recon-
naissance units and special long-range recon-
naissance units for missions. The most powerful
and numerous are the airborne troops under
the direct control of the General Staff in Mos-
cow. Some of these airborne units are des-
ignated as “special purpose” troops and are in-
tended to operate in small groups against key
political, military, command and control,
transportation and industrial targets in the
‘enemy rear area.
Soviet unconventional warfare units receive
very intensive training. Small groups of men are
trained as teams. Each team has an officer in
charge who speaks the language of the target
country fluently; a senior sergeant serves as sec:ond in command. Other members of the group
are trained as radio operators, weapons and
demolition experts. In addition to the normal
military training, the following special skills are
emphasized:
* tactics of infiltrating and exfiltrating
the target area
© night operational linkups
* sabotage methods using explosives, in-
cendiaries, acids and abrasives
* parachute training
* clandestine communications
* hand to hand combat and silent killing
techniques
* language/customs of target country
* survival behind enemy lines
* identifying and locating targets.
To make training as realistic as possible, the
Soviet training centers are equipped with
realistic models of key targets such as enemy
facilities and weapon systems
Soviet writings point out the effectiveness of
‘UW units and record the accomplishments in
World War II
yuring the war the partisans killed, wound-
ed or took prisoner hundreds of thousands of
German troops, collaborators and officials of
the occupation administration. They derailed
more than 18,000 trains, and destroyed or
damaged thousands of locomotives and tens of,
thousands of railway cars and cisterns. The par-
tisan war affected the morale of the German
Army, keeping the German troops in a constant
state of fear.”
Use of unconventional warfare is a basic ele-
ment of Soviet doctrine, and Soviet capabilities
in this respect constitute a formidable threat.
THE SOVIET NAVY
Over the last two decades the Soviet Navy has
been transformed from a basically coastal de:
fense force into an ocean-going force designed
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to extend the military capability of the USSR
well out to sea and to perform the functions of
tactical, theater and strategic naval power in
waters distant from the Soviet Union. The
Soviets have a larger array of general purpose
submarines, surface warships and combat naval
aircraft than any other nation. The subma:
rines, about 70 of which carry antiship cruise
39 IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESmissiles, constitute the most serious threat to US
and Allied naval forces and the worldwide sea
lines of communication upon which we and our
Allies depend. In the mid-1960s the Soviets had
260 major surface warships and amphibious
ships. Today they have 862.
In the European theater, Soviet naval forces
would have a variety of key missions. These
would include securing vital areas of the sea and
strategic passages such as the waters north of
the Greenland/Iceland/United Kingdom Gap,
the Gap itself, the Baltic Sea, the Gulf of
Finland, the passages on either side of Den-
mark, the Bosporus and Dardenelles and the
Mediterranean Sea. Additionally, the Soviet
Navy would seek to interdict the sea lanes to
Europe, and would mount operations on the
high seas against NATO carrier task forces,
other surface warships and submarines.
The largest Soviet surface warship is the
KIEV-Glass aircraft carrier. At present, two
KIEVs are deployed and two more are under
construction. The KIEVs are armed with anti-
ship cruise missiles, antisubmarine and over-
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Aircraft Carriers and Aviation Cruisers
CVHG —VSTOL Carriers
(KIEV class) 2
CHG Aviation Cruisers
(MOSKVA class)... 2
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Amphibious Ships
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LST Amphibious Vehicle Landing
‘Ships (ALLIGATOR, ROPUCHA,
classes). y 2
LSM Medium Landing Ships
(POLNOCNY/MP-4 classes) ©
Auxiliary Ships
*Mobite Logistics Ships 150
Other Aux Shes 605,the-horizon target acquisition helicopters, anti-
aircraft missiles, anti-submarine rockets and
missiles, believed to be nuclear-capable, and
the FORGER vertical- and short-takeoff and
landing (VSTOL) jet aircraft.
‘The principal surface warships which the
Soviets are building today have greater range,
firepower and electronics capabilities than in
the past. The modern ships of the Soviet Navy
are among the fastest and most heavily armed
in the world.
Present surface warship building programs
include about 12 hulls under construction in
four new classes of large warships, including a
23,000-ton nuclear-powered cruiser as well as
the continued construction of KIEV:Class car-
riers and destroyer and frigate classes. The
Soviet Navy has led the world in the use of
cruise missiles in naval warfare. Since the in-
stallation of the SS-N-1 cruise missile on the
KILDIN and KRUPNYY classes of destroyers in
the late 1950s, the Soviets have extensively
developed and deployed this type of weapon.
Today the Soviet Navy has some 20 cruisers,
carriers, and destroyers, about 70 submarines
and 300 land-based aircraft armed with anti-
ship cruise missiles.
AIRCRAFT CARRIERS
‘The widely publicized KIEV-Class aircraft
carriers are the largest warships ever completed
by the Soviet Union.
With the commissioning of KIEV in 1976,
the Soviets, for the first time, have seabased,
fixed-wing aircraft in operation. The second
KIEV-Class ship, MINSK, is now in the Pacific
Ocean Fleet, a third carrier is fitting out, and a
fourth is under construction. A logical advance
on the KIEV design could be a nuclear-powered
carrier of about 60,000 tons with catapults and
an air wing of some 60 aircraft. Such a ship
could join the fleet late in this decade.
The KIEVs have an unusual design. They
have a full load displacement of about 37,000
tons, are 270 meters long, have an angled flight
deck some 185 meters long and an island super-
KIEV, Lead Ship of the KIEV-Class Guided Missile VSTOL Aircraft Carriers
41
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESIn this view from astern, the nuclearpowered guided missile cruiser KIROV reveals a superstructure
massed with radars and electronic sensors, a stern door for ASW sonar, helicopter deck bordered by
Gatling guns and 100mm dual purpose gun mounts.
42structure to starboard in the tradition of
Western carriers. However, the forward part of
these ships is similar to Soviet missile cruisers,
with antiship, antisubmarine and antiaircraft
missile launchers. They also have a profusion of
more traditional weapons, electronic warfare
systems, and a number of advanced communi-
cations devices.
‘The lack of aircraft arresting wires and cata
pults on the fight deck limits the ships to heli
copters and VSTOL aircraft. A mix of about 20
Ka-25/HORMONE helicopters and 15 Yak
36/FORGER VSTOL aircraft is a nominal air
group, although this mix could be changed to
meet varied mission requirements.
Yak-36/FORGERs on KIEV-Class Carrier
Although the primary mission of the KIEV
Class is stated by the Soviets as antisubmarine
warfare, the ships also have powerful antiship
capability in their cruise missile battery. They
have eight large launching tubes with reloads
for SS-N-12 missiles, which are an improvement
over the older SS-N-3 antiship missiles. The
HORMONE B helicopter, capable of providing,
over-the-horizon targeting information for the
SS-N-12/SANDBOX missiles which have a
maximum range of some 550 kilometers, has
been seen aboard the KIEV Class.
43
KIEV is a second generation class of Soviet
“aviation ship,” following the helicopter
cartier missile cruisers MOSKVA and LEN.
INGRAD, which were completed in 1967 and
1968, respectively. These earlier ships also were
of innovative design, being essentially missile
cruisers forward with a clear flight deck aft for
the operation of up to 18 HORMONE antisub-
marine helicopters. The latter ships are rated as
“antisubmarine cruisers” by the Soviet Navy
and have been used primarily in that role as
well as serving as flagships.
SURFACE COMBATANTS
In May 1980 the Soviets began sea trials of
their first nuclear-powered surface combatant,
the guided missile cruiser KIROV. This is a ship
of 23,000 tons, larger than any surface comba:
tant other than an aircraft carrier built since
World War II. Its primary armament is heavy,
new generation, highly sophisticated surface-to:
air and long-range antiship cruise missiles. The
Soviets have also fitted her with ASW missiles,
two 100-mm dual purpose guns, short-range sur
face-to-air missiles, Gatling guns for close-in de-
fense, and Ka-25/HORMONE ASW helicopters.
KIROV is designed to provide improved fleet
air defense against attack from Western aircraft
carriers or from long-range cruise missiles. Con.
versely, the KIROV’s new long-range, antiship
cruise missiles will significantly enhance Soviet
abilities to strike opposing surface action
groups. KIROV marks an important develop:
mental step in the technical evolution of Soviet
sea power. A second unit is well along in
construction
In July 1980, the Soviets began sea trials of
their second new class of major surface comba-
tant in 1980, the 7,000-t0-8,000-ton, steam:
powered, guided missile destroyer (DDG)
SOVREMENNYY. While KIROV is clearly a
multipurpose ship, SOVREMENNYY appears
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCES
5)UDALOY, Guided Missile Destroyer
primarily designed for antisurface warfare with
four 30-mm Gatling guns, surface-to-surface
antiship cruise missiles, and new, medium
range, surface-to-air missile systems. The
SOVREMENNYY has a secondary ASW mis-
sion and can carry HORMONE. variant
helicopters in its telescoping hangar. This new
DDG is the first gun ship constructed by the
Soviets since the late 50s and is their first major
combatant since 1970 to deploy without signiti-
cant ASW capability. It is now in series produc-
tion with additional units expected through the
mid-1980s. Ships of the SOVREMENNYY Class
can be expected to support amphibious assault
forces, provide naval gunfire, and oppose
Western air, surface and submarine forces in all
ocean areas.
In November 1980, the Soviets began sea
trials of still another new class of mission-
specific guided missile destroyer, the UDALOY.
This unit is designed primarily for antisub-
marine warfare, displaces about 8,000-t0-9,000
tons, is armed with eight ASW missiles, two
100-mm guns, four Gatling guns for close-in
defense and two hangars for ASW helicopters.
‘The UDALOY appears to be a follow-on class
to previous Soviet large antisubmarine ship pro:
grams and probably will be employed as the
main ASW platform within an integrated Soviet
task force. All available evidence suggests that
the UDALOY program will be a large-scale ef-
fort with a number of units to be deployed
through the 1980s.
Finally in 1980, a fourth major surface com-
batant program was identified in the Soviet
Union. This new class of large, conventionally
powered, multipurpose guided missile cruiser is
being constructed in the Black Sea and has been
temporarily designated “BLACK-COM-
This new cruiser has supplanted KARA-class
cruiser construction and will probably carry
long-range cruise missiles. The new ship dis-
places approximately 11,000-to-13,000 tons
and is further evidence of the Soviet trend
toward larger, more technically sophisticated
combatants. Although BLACK-COM-1 is con-
ventionally powered, it is expected to function
like KIROV as a multipurpose command ship
capable of providing a Soviet battle group with
enhanced air defense and surface strike capa-
bilities. Series production of this new class is
already underway.
44SOVREMENNYY, Guided Missile Destro}
SUBMARINES
The Soviet Navy currently operates some 377
submarines, including 180 nuclear-powered
submarines compared to some 115 in the U.S.
Navy.
‘Attack Submarines: The Soviet Navy
operates about 220 attack submarines. Most are
diesel-electric powered and many are of recent
construction. About 60 of the torpedo attack
submarines are nuclear powered, being of the
NOVEMBER, ECHO, VICTOR, and ALFA
Classes. The last is believed to be the fastest sub-
marine in service today in any Navy. An im-
proved VICTOR Class is now in production and
the small, ALFA Class, which combines deep-
diving capabilities with its high speed, may well
be in series production. The Soviet Navy con
tinues to build diesel-powered submarines, the
FOXTROT Class, for overseas sales, i.e., India,
Libya and Guba, and the new TANGO Class
for use by the Soviet Navy. The prime weapons
of these attack submarines are antisubmarine
VICTOR I-Class Nuclear Powered Attack Submarine
45 IV SOVIET THEATER FORCESee at =
ECHO-Class Nuclear-Powered Attack Submarine
and antiship torpedoes; however, mines also
can be carried. The newer submarines have
rocket-delivered ASW weapons as well.
Cruise Missile Submarines: Even while am-
bitious surface combatant construction pro-
grams were underway, the Soviets continued to
turn out submarines at virtually the same pace
they have maintained through the 1970s. One
new class introduced in 1980, the OSCAR, is an
extremely large SSGN capable of launching up
to 24 long-range, antiship cruise missiles while
remaining submerged. The missile fired by the
‘OSCAR is probably a submarine variant of the
same new antiship cruise missile first deployed
aboard KIROV. This missile has an estimated
range of over 450 kilometers. The Soviets began
their submarine cruise missile programs in the
1950s converting existing submarines to fire the
46
long-range SS-N-8 missile. Then, newer sub
marines designed to carry the SS-N-3 joined the
Soviet fleet, the diesel-powered JULIETT Class
and the nuclear-powered ECHO I and II
Classes.
After producing about 50 submarines of the
JULIETT and ECHO Classes, the Soviets com-
pleted the first CHARLIE I Class SSGN in 1968
with the improved CHARLIE II following sev-
eral years later. These nuclear-powered sub-
marines can fire eight antiship cruise missiles
while remaining submerged at a range of up to
100 kilometers from the intended target. Soviet
cruise missile submarines also carry ASW and
antiship torpedoes.
The Soviet Navy's cruise missile submarines
and their missile-armed bombers form the
greatest threat to Allied naval surface forcesoperating on the high seas. This is especially so
when within range of Soviet air bases where the
Soviets can launch coordinated attacks using
not only reconnaissance aircraft to provide
target data for submarine-launched missiles,
but also their extensive force of naval and air
force missile-equipped bombers.
NAVAL AVIATION
Soviet Naval Aviation is subordinate to the
Soviet Navy, with regiments being assigned to
each of the four fleets under an aviation officer
reporting directly to the fleet commander.
Soviet Naval Aviation consists of some 1,440 air-
craft, most of which are based ashore except for
helicopters assigned to various cruisers and the
helicopters and VSTOL aircraft that fly from
the KIEV-Class aircraft carriers.
Soviet Naval Aviation has four basic missions:
reconnaissance and surveillance, _antiship
strike, antisubmarine and aviation support
Naval aircraft are employed in long-range
reconnaissance and ocean surveillance, with
some aircraft equipped to provide midcourse
target data for antiship missiles launched “over
the horizon” from surface ships, submarines,
and other aircraft. Reconnaissance aircraft now
in use include about 50 of the larger Tu-95/
BEAR D turbo-prop planes; about 100 twin-jet
Tu-16/BADGER aircraft, and Tu-22/
BLINDER jet aircraft that have a supersonic
dash speed. Additionally, the 1I1-38/MAY
maritime patrol aircraft are used for sur-
yeillance and reconnaissance missions.
The prime strike force of Soviet Naval Avia
1n consists of over 300 twin-jet BADGER and
BLINDER aircraft which are fitted to carry one
or two of several types of antiship cruise missiles
with “standoff” ranges varying from 90 to over
300 kilometers. Some missiles have variable
flight paths and various homing techniques to
47
————
Soviet Navy Aircraft
Strike/Bombers
BACKFIRE
BADGER
BLINDER
Fighter/Fighter Bombers
FITTER
FORGER
nce/Electronic Warfare
BADGER
BEAR D
BLINDER
Antisubmarine Aircraft
BEARF HOUND
HAZE A ‘MAIL
HORMONE A may
Tanker -7
BADGER
Transport/Training Aircraft .. 30
help penetrate ship defenses. All these missiles
are assessed to carry either a nuclear or a high
explosive warhead of about 1,000 to 2,000
pounds (450 to 900 kilograms).
Soviet Naval Aviation also flies the twin-jet
BACKFIRE, a supersonic aircraft with vari
able-sweep wings. This plane carries stand-off
missiles and is slowly replacing the BADGER in
strike squadrons. The Navy is receiving this air-
craft at about the same rate as the Soviet Long
Range Aviation strategic bombing force and
IV SOVIET THEATER FORC
iene. 5 | “ee eaeSu-17/FITTER Fighter-Bomber
the inventory has climbed to more than 70 air-
craft. The BACKFIRE greatly increases the
capability and extends the range at which strike
aircraft can attack Western surface forces such
as aircraft carrier or amphibious battle groups.
The introduction of aircraft carriers and
FORGER aircraft gives Soviet Naval Aviation
another dimension of antiship strike. The
FORGER can be fitted with short-range air-to-
surface missiles, rockets, or bombs for use
against ship or shore targets.
The FITTER fighter-bomber has been intro-
duced into Soviet Naval Aviation over the last
several years. These aircraft are assigned to the
Baltic Fleet primarily to provide antiship strike
and support to amphibious operations in the
Baltic
In addition to naval aircraft armed with an-
tiship missiles, certain BEAR and BADGER
bombers of Soviet Long Range Aviation can be
used for attacks against ships, and these aircraft
regularly participate in naval exercises. Most of
these strike aircraft can be refueled in-flight by
naval BADGERs fitted as tankers as well as by
Long Range Aviation tankers.
For antisubmarine warfare the Soviet Navy
has a force of about 400 fixed-wing aircraft and
helicopters configured for submarine detection
and attack. This force currently includes BEAR
F aircraft, MAY turbo-prop aircraft and MAIL
twin-engine flying boat aircraft. Only the
BEAR F appears to be still in production. These
aircraft operate from Soviet land bases to search
out seaward areas for foreign submarines.
An increasing number of antisubmarine
helicopters are being flown by the Soviet Navy.
The HORMONE A, a twin turboshaft heli-
copter, is flown from the newer Soviet cruisers,
as well as from the helicopter carriers MOSKVA
and LENINGRAD and the KIEV-Class aircraft
48carriers. Additionally, an ASW version of the
Mi-14/HAZE helicopter flies from land bases.
Soviet Naval Aviation also operates some 125
transport and utility aircraft of various types.
Although basic and advanced training are pro:
vided by the Soviet Air Forces, maritime opera-
tional training is accomplished within the Navy
Soviet Naval Aviation retains a number of
transports to provide a logistics capability better
to meet the Navy's priority needs.
AMPHIBIOUS FORCES
Another area of continuing development in
the Soviet Navy has been the amphibious as-
sault forces. In April 1980, the recently con-
structed IVAN ROGOV, the Soviets’ newest
amphibious warfare ship, deployed to the In-
dian Ocean. At about 13,000 tons, the IVAN
ROGOV is nearly three times the size of previ-
‘ous Soviet amphibious ships and is designed to
operate both helicopters and high-speed air-cush-
ioned landing craft. The ROGOV can embark
about 550 naval infantry troops and significantly
enhances Soviet amphibious warfare projection to
distant areas, especially the Third World.
Amphibious lift for the naval infantry is pro-
vided primarily by IVAN ROGOV-Class LPDs,
[Link] and ROPUCHA-Class
LSTs, and POLNOCNY-Class LSMs. The
Soviet amphibious forces exercise regularly in
their respective fleet areas and regularly deploy
to the Mediterranean, off West Africa and the
Indian Ocean. The Soviet Navy has about 25
LSTs and some 60 LSMs, plus numerous lesser
landing craft and air-cushion vehicles for am
phibious operations.
‘The Soviet Navy is now the world’s largest
operator of military air-cushion vehicles for
which development continues. There are three
classes currently in use: the GUS, LEBED and
large AIST Class.
Although small by comparison to the U.S.
Marine Corps, the Soviet Naval Infantry is the
second largest marine force in the world. The
potential power of even a few hundred Soviet
marines afloat during a crisis provides the
Soviet Union with a valuable political-military
instrument.
‘The Soviets have in hand, or are developing,
the elements necessary to provide a formidable
IVAN ROGOY, Lead Ship of a New Amphibious Assault
49
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCE:The 13,000-ton amphibious assault transport dock IVAN ROGOV entered service in 1978, the largest
amphibious ship in the Soviet Navy. IVAN ROGOV has two helicopter decks and helicopter hangers,
and a floodable welldeck, behind the large stern gate, which can carry three air-cushion landing craft.
Judging by IVAN ROGOV's characteristics, the amphibious ship can carry a Soviet Naval Infantry Bat-
talion—550 men—30 armored personnel carriers and ten tanks, enhancing the USSR's capability to pro-
Ject naval and military power at great distances from the Soviet homeland.MINSK, Second of the KIEV-Class VSTOL Aircraft Carriers
projection into distant waters. These include
the improvement in assault lift capability, the
expansion of a large administrative lift ability
designed into certain ships of the Merchant
Marine, the retention of a substantial gunfire
support strength in cruisers and destroyers,
development of sea-based tactical air power,
and an improving underway replenishment
capability. The Soviet Navy's ability to project
tactical power ashore at some distance from the
Soviet littoral may be part of Admiral Gorsh-
kov’s grand plan of achieving a “balanced
fleet.”
Soviet naval’ policy and programs for the
1980s can be expected to be directed toward
broadening the range of military and political
options available to the leadership across the
entire spectrum of conflict—from competition
51
in peacetime to hostilities in the event of a
nuclear war. Having achieved rough parity in
general war capabilities, the Soviets can be ex-
pected to increase their emphasis on making
general purpose naval forces more capable in
distant waters, of performing a variety of mis-
sions and of challenging the West's traditional
dominance of the open oceans. We believe that
Soviet naval policies also intend gradually to
achieve greatly improved capabilities for sus-
ed, long-range naval operations, even
against substantial opposition.
IV SOVIET THEATER FORCES
a EeV SOVIET STRATEGICFORCES
Over the past 20 years, the Soviet Union has
devoted substantial resources to the develop-
ment and deployment of intercontinental ballis-
tic missile (ICBM) and submarine launched
ballistic missile (SLBM) forces. Fewer resources
have been allocated to bomber forces, although
new weapons systems—primarily the BACK-
FIRE bomber—have been deployed.
Under Brezhnev, the Soviet missile forces
have moved from a position of clear inferiority
in the early-to-middle 1960s to one in which
they are generally recognized as equal or su
perior in certain measures to those of the West.
In 1964, the Soviets had only a few operational
SLBMs, many of which had to be launched
from surfaced submarines. While the USSR had
more ICBMs than SLBMs, the number was sig
nificantly fewer than US ICBMs. Moreover, the
majority of Soviet ICBMs were inaccurate sys
tems housed in launchers that were clustered to-
gether and unhardened, making them vulner-
able to attack. The USSR then embarked on
high-priority development and deployment pro
grams first focused on increasing single-silo
ICBM deployment to a level greater than that
of the United States. A similar buildup of
SLBM launchers on modern, nuclear-powered
ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) was under
way by the late 1960s. These massive 1960s
ICBM and SLBM deployment programs, large-
ly centered on the SS-9 and SS-11 ICBMs and
the SS-N-6/YANKEE SLBM/SSBN weapons
systems, provided the foundation from which
subsequent strategic nuclear modernization
programs were to grow
Since the mid-1970s the Soviet Union has com-
pletely upgraded its strategic Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile force with the introduction of the
5-17, 8S-18 and $S-19, equipped with multiple, in-
dependently targetable reentry vehicles —missiles
with improved reliability, range, payload accuracy
and survivability.‘The 1970s modernizations, which only now
are reaching a conclusion, were largely tech-
nological in nature, More than half of the 1,398
Soviet ICBM launchers have been rebuilt to
house the $S-17, $8-18 and SS-19 ICBMs in
vastly more survivable, hardened silos. These
ICBMs, all of which are MIRVed, are in the
forefront of ICBM technology. Certain versions
of the $S-18 and $S-19 are among the most ac-
curate ICBMs operational anywhere. Together,
these systems have the capability to destroy a
large percentage of the more than 1,000 US
ICBM launchers, using only part of their total
numbers.
The Soviet SLBM/SSBN modernizations be-
gan in the early 1970s with the introduction of
the long-range SS-N-8 SLBM deployed on
DELTA-Class SSBNs. By the late 1970s, the
Soviets were producing the MIRVed $S-N-18
and deploying it in a modified version of the
[Link] submarines. In 1979, a new
SLBM, the MIRVed SS-NX-20, was first tested.
This SLBM will probably reach operational
status by the mid-1980s, deployed in the new
TYPHOON-Class SSBN submarine
These technological advances in ICBM and
‘SLBM weapons systems have been accompanied
by major improvements in communications sys
tems and in the organization of the forces as
well.
Soviet intercontinental bomber forces retain
most of the BEAR and BISON bombers and re
fueling tankers which were initially produced in
the 1950s and 1960s. Improvements to their
avionics and weapons systems have been made,
however. Since the early 1970s, the USSR has
also deployed over 70 BACKFIRE bombers to
operational LRA units and is producing about
30 more of these supersonic bombers each year.
While BACKFIRE appears to have been given
primarily theater and maritime missions, it has
1 strategic capability and cannot be ignored as
a potential intercontinental bomber threat.
Current force levels of Soviet intercontinental
strategic nuclear forces include 1,398 ICBM
launchers, 950 SLBM launchers and 156 long-
range bombers, excluding BACKFIRE. These
delivery systems are loaded with some 7,000 nu-
clear warheads. Deployment programs now
underway indicate that the number of warheads
will increase over the next few years.
STRATEGIC ROCKET FORCE
‘The Strategic Rocket Force (SRF), the largest
missile force in the world, controls all Soviet
military units in the Soviet Union equipped with
ICBMs, IRBMs and MRBMs. The mission of
the SRF is to destroy an enemy's means of
nuclear attack, military-industrial production
facilities, civil and military command and con-
trol capabilities and logistics and transport fa-
cilities. The SRF's secondary mission is to sup-
port tactical joint forces and naval fleets.
Soviet strategic operational employment
plans, based on Soviet writings, point to seizing
the initiative through preemptive attack. Such
an attack would effectively reduce the impact of
a retaliatory strike, limiting damage to the
USSR. While this is the preferred Soviet scenar-
io, the Soviets also have the capability to launch
on tactical warning if necessary. Regardless of
how a war started, the Soviets view the nuclear
forces and command and control of an enemy
as their first priority targeting objectives. This
would include such targets as ICBM launch
silos, launch control facilities, support and
maintenance facilities, strategic bomber bases,
submarine berths and loading facilities and nu-
clear storage and production facilities. Priority
two targets would be those that would negate
the ability to project military power abroad.
Such targets would include depots, transporta-
tion centers, military stockpiles, conventional
force bases and training centers. Other targetswould be those that limit the capacity of the en-
emy to conduct a protracted war such as mili-
tary industries, refineries and electrical power
plants,
The SRF is under the command of General of
the Army Tolubko. He is responsible for the ad-
ministrative and technical control of the forces
and equipment under his command. The Gen-
eral Staff of the Ministry of Defense has the re-
sponsibility for executing operational decisions
of the Supreme High Command which affect
the SRF. In addition, the General Staff can by
pass the SRF headquarters and exercise direct
operational control of the missile forces. Organ-
ization within the SRF is based on army, divi-
ion, regiment, battalion, and battery. A bat-
tery consists of single ICBM, IRBM, and
MRBM launchers.
The ICBM force of the SRF is deployed in
missile complexes generally located along, and
within access of, the Trans-Siberian Railway. A
typical ICBM complex includes a main base
support area, a facility for transferring missiles
and equipment from rail to roads, and launch
control centers, each with a group of launch
silos it controls. Each complex is comprised of a
number of launch groups, Each launch group is
comprised of either six or ten launch silos.
ICBM DEPLOYMENT
The Soviet ICBM force currently consists of
580 SS-11s, 60 SS-13s, 150 SS-17s, 308 SS-18s,
and about 00 SS-19s. The great majority of the
17s, 18s and 19s are equipped with MIRVs. The
Soviets are expected to complete their current
ICBM modernization program (SS-17, SS-18
and $S-19) in the early 1980s.
Soviet ICBM Deployment
SOVIET MIRVed ICBMs
$S-17; Since it first became operational in
1975, the SS-17 has been deployed in 150 con:
verted SS-11 silos. Both single and multiple re
entry vehicle (RV) versions of the SS-17 have
been developed, but few if any of the single RV
versions are deployed. The maximum range of
a! fit!
At present, there are 1,398 Intercontinental Ballistic Missile launchers in the Strategic Rocket Force. An
'SS-13 ICBM Is seen here during public display in Moscow.
55 V SOVIET STRATEGIC FORCESthe SS-17 is believed to be about 10,000 kilo-
meters. Although much more accurate than its,
predecessor, the $S-11, the $8-17 is not as ac-
curate as the SS-18 and SS-19 ICBMs.
The $S-17 employs a cold-launch technique
which delays main engine ignition until the mis-
sile has exited its hardened silo. This technique
minimizes launch damage to the silo and is con-
sistent with the notion of building in the capa-
bility to reload and refire missiles during a pro-
tracted nuclear conflict.
S5-18: The SS-18, the largest of the current
Soviet ICBMs, is similar in dimensions to the
88-9, which it replaced, and is about twice the
size of the proposed US MX missile. Like the
8-17, the SS-18 also uses a cold-launch tech-
nique. Both single and MIRVed versions of the
$5-18 have been tested. The MIRVed versions
carry eight or ten reentry vehicles. Each
warhead of the ten RV variants has a better
than 50 percent chance of destroying a
MINUTEMAN silo. When used in pairs against
a single target, the warheads are even more
destructive. The single RV versions of the
$8-18, with their large destructive power and
accuracy, are capable of destroying any known
56
fixed target with high probability.
'$5-19: The $S-19 ICBM became operational
in 1974. It uses a hot-launch technique with en-
gine ignition occuring while the missile is in its
silo. The $S-19 is estimated to have three-to-
four times the payload carrying capacity of the
$$-11, and the missile is much larger in volume,
comparable in size to the proposed US MX.
‘There are both single and multiple RV versions
of the SS-19, The MIRVed version, which
makes up most of the SS-19 force, is believed
capable of delivering six RVs to a range of
about 9,000 kilometers.
ICBM RELOAD CAPABILITY
The Soviets could have contingency plans for
reloading and refiring missiles from ICBM
launchers which already have fired an initial
round. The cold-launch technique employed by
the $S-17 and $S-18 lends itself to such a
capability in a protracted nuclear conflict. Ad-
ditionally the Soviets may be able to recon-
stitute a portion of their hot-launched missile
force—SS-11, $S-18 and SS-19—as well. The
Soviets probably cannot refurbish and reload
silo launchers in a period less than several
days— thereby avoiding violation of the SALT
II Agreement which precludes a rapid reload
capability for ICBM launchers.
ICBM PRODUCTION
Four major Soviet design bureaus specialize
in strategic missiles development. These bu-
reaus are supported by activities at main assem-
bly plants, at hundreds of component production
plants, at test ranges, and at launch complexes.
‘The Soviet missile development program shows
no signs of slackening. We expect improve-
ments leading to new missiles and to the modifi-
cation of existing missile systems. These im-
provements are expected to continue the trend
towards greater capabilities against such hard-









