DRAWING UPON SOVIET SOURCES, THIS BOOK ASSESSES THE EVOLVING
ORGANIZATION, UNIFORMS, INSIGNIA, WEAPONRY AND PERSONAL EQUIPMENT OF
SOVIET NAVAL INFANTRY UNITS FROM 1917 TO 1991.
Featuring eight plates of specially commissioned artwork alongside
carefully chosen archive photographs, this study charts the history
and appearance of the Soviet Union's naval infantry, from the October
Revolution to the end of the Soviet era.
Although Russian naval infantry achieved fame during the October
Revolution they were quickly disbanded, only being re-established in
1939. Following the Axis invasion of 1941 some 500,000 Soviet Navy
personnel served on land, fighting in the defence of Leningrad, Odessa
and Sevastopol and the recapture of the Crimea in 1943–44; Soviet
naval troops also participated in the invasion of Manchuria in 1945.
During the Cold War era the Soviet Union developed an amphibious
assault capability that had a vital strategic role – to capture an
aggressor's geographical exits to the oceans and thereby forestall
threats to Soviet submarine bases. Naval infantry forces could deploy
a wealth of firepower assets, while the use of amphibious ships,
hovercraft and helicopters aided their rapid deployment, even amid
ice-bound terrain in the Arctic. All of these developments are
described and illustrated in absorbing detail in this study.
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Product details
ISBN
9781472851635
Published
2022
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Bloomsbury UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author