Russian commando frogmen
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- For other nations' commando frogmen, and information about frogmen in general, see Frogman.
- Scout diver (Russian: Водолаз разведчик, tr: Vodolaz razvedchik) is a Russian term for members of a special purpose unit of Russian or Soviet Naval Spetsnaz - SpN VMF (Russian: СпН ВМФ).
- Сombat swimmer (Russian: Боевой Пловец, tr: Boyevoy plovets) is a Russian term meaning members of special purpose anti-sabotage divers' units. The public media, and others who do not serve in the Russian and/or Soviet Naval Spetsnaz, sometimes use this term unofficially with meaning (1).
- Marine spetsnaz man ( Russian: Морской спецназовец, tr: Morskoy spetsnazovets) is a Russian unofficial term for meaning (1).
The Soviet Union started frogman operations during World War II. In 1941 the first unit of combat divers (or RON team) was formed in Leningrad.
Nowadays Russian combat swimmers (formerly called "combat divers") are part of the Naval Spetsnaz. Naval Spetsnaz is a branch of Intelligence.
[edit] Organization
SpN PDSS (Противо-Диверсионные Силы и Средства, Protivo-Diversionnye Sily i Sredstva; Anti-diversionary forces and means) are units of a special purpose anti-sabotage divers, which appeared in the Soviet Navy in the end of the 1960s to counter possible attacks of frogmen. Their name in full is (о) СпН ПДСС, [отряды] Специального назначения по борьбе с подводными диверсионными силами и средствами ((o) SpN PDSS, [otryady] Spetsial'nogo naznacheniya po bor'be s podvodnymi diversionnymi silami i sredstvami; Special-purpose combat [forces] with underwater diversionary forces and facilities).
Before 2001/2000 they were called ОБ ПДСС, Отряды по борьбе с подводными диверсионными силами и средствами (OB PDSS, Otryady po bor'be s podvodnymi diversionnymi silami i sredstvami; Combat forces with underwater diversionary forces and facilities).
Officially there are no Naval Spetsnaz units in any of the former Soviet states. They are all officially referred to by cover-up false names and numbers called "Legends", which the Spetsnaz men must tell to everybody (including the Defence Minister). For example, Naval Spetsnaz Unit in the Baltic Fleet officially is Аварийно-спасательная школа №49 (Avariyno-spasatel'naya shkola nomer 49; Diving Rescue School No. 49).
All Russian military units have their own five-digit number. For example, Naval Spetsnaz Unit in the Baltic Fleet officially has military unit No. 10617.
Among Navy and Army Intelligence servicemen, all Naval Spetsnaz units are called ОМРП (OMRP, Отдельный морской разведывательный пункт (Otdel'nyy morskoy razvedyvatel'nyy punkt; Detached Naval Reconnaissance Point) and have their own numbers. For example, Naval Spetsnaz Unit in the Baltic Fleet officially is the 561st OMRP.
The Naval Spetznaz units have unofficial names. For example, Naval Spetsnaz Unit in the Baltic Fleet are unofficially called by themselves and other servicemen Парусники (Parusniki; Sailing Ships), because this unit is based in a settlement called Парусное (Parusnoye), whose name means "sail place". But in the 1950s and 1960s they were unofficially called Потехинцы (Potekhintsy) after their first commander Colonel Potekhin.
This link gives details of training and actions of Soviet combat frogmen, and says that they are in a KGB OSNAZ organization called Delfin. Other sources mention units called "Dolfin", "Omega", "Barrakuda", etc. But another source says that Naval Spetsnaz units have never used such names, but that the name Delfin arose as false information sold to a journalist, who published information about this unit in the early 1990s.[citation needed]
Every PDSS unit has around 50-60 combat swimmers. There are PDSS units in all major Naval Bases.[citation needed]
Every OMRP has about 120-200 combat divers. There are now four OMRP's in Russia, one for each Fleet: Northern Fleet, Baltic Fleet, Black Sea Fleet, Pacific Ocean Fleet.[citation needed]
"Riding on Proton" by Afonchenko (in Russian) seems to describe in passing some Russian frogman-type operations and techniques including an infiltration into the sea round South Korea. (This "Proton" is a one-man submerged diver-carrier similar to a Protei-5.)
[edit] Equipment
Russian frogmen use this equipment among others:-
- Rebreathers of type IDA: see IDA71 for an example.
- Midget submarine of type "Piranha", can carry 6 frogmen and their equipment.
- 2-man Manned torpedo of type "Siren" that can be launched through an ordinary submarine's torpedo tube. It is longer than a British or Italian Chariot because it has 2 warheads.
- Electric diver-tug of type "Akula" (= Shark). See http://www.therebreathersite.nl/Zuurstofrebreathers/Russian/photos_ida-71.htm (bottom of page).
- Midget submarine of type "Triton-1", which can carry 2 combat divers.
- Midget submarine of type "Triton-2", which can carry 6 combat divers.
- APS Underwater Assault Rifle
- SPP-1 Underwater Pistol
- Protei-5 and similar one-man underwater diver-carriers.
[edit] Operations
- 1938 October 22: During a wargaming between units of the Russian Pacific Fleet in Vladivostok, a group of Soviet military divers exited an SCH-112 military submarine through a torpedo tube, entered the naval base and completed certain acts of sabotage. Those combat divers were equipped with oxygen rebreathers, dry suits, handguns and grenades. However, this did not lead to a permanent combat diver unit being set up. This is the beginning of the history of combat divers.
- 1941 August 11: RON (рота особого назначения, Rota Osobogo Naznacheniya; Company of Special Designation), a Soviet combat frogman unit, was set up on Goloday Island (which is now called Dekabristov Island) near Leningrad. Its commander was Ivan Vasilyevich Prokhvatilov.
- 1941 August: 2 RON frogmen towing a sea mine demolished a bridge over the river Narva which German forces had reached.
- 1941 September: During Finland's army's re-invasion of the area around Lake Ladoga which had been lost to the USSR, Finnish forces took an island south of Vyborg, isolating 23 Soviet units who were in Vyborg port. Two RON frogmen swam to the island, laying a guide cable. 50 RON frogmen followed this cable and landed and found that the Finns had removed parts from their guns and abandoned the island, perhaps because the Finns had seen the Soviet preparations.
- See these images of early RON frogmen on site http://www.vrazvedka.ru :-
- frogmen entering water
- early Russian frogman's breathing set
- early Russian frogmen standing waist deep in water
- early Russian frogman
- early Russian frogman
- In these early days RON made its own equipment, including adapting army breathing sets for underwater use; they did not use fins until the end of the 1950's.
- 1941 September 23: 270 German aircraft attack the Soviet naval base at Kronstadt near Leningrad. During this they sank a transport vessel "Barta" opposite Peterhof. It sat on the seabed but remained partly out of the water.
- 1941 September: Prokhvatilov decides to use the Barta wreck as an observation post. They saw that the Germans had built a big pier at Staraya Peterhof, and piles of naval mines by it. RON frogmen towed two naval mines to the pier and destroyed it. The Germans did not rebuild it.
- (Date not stated): The Germans had built V1 rocket launching pads in the Strelna area to bombard Leningrad. The diver-intelligence officer Vladimir Borisov swam to the area and changed into German clothes and reconnoitered in the plant and returned and reported what he had found. Soviet aircraft and artillery destroyed the V1 launching pads.
- 1941, first part of October: start of frogman training in the Soviet Pacific Fleet.
- 1941-1943, winters: RON men patrol the supply road over the ice of frozen Lake Ladoga.
- 1943 September: During the long siege of Leningrad, a group of Soviet Underwater Spetsnaz troopers (combat swimmers of RON unit) entered a German naval base at Strelna and destroyed Italian combat boats of the Decima Flottiglia MAS.
- 1944 April: ROON (a unit like RON) was formed in the Soviet Black Sea fleet.
- 1944 July: Combat swimmers of RON completed underwater work onboard of the German submarine U-250, which had been sunk by a Soviet anti-submarine MO-103 Hunter-killer. Some secret documents and a new type of acoustic torpedo were found. Later some key components of this T-5 G7es torpedo were given to British naval specialists by the Soviet forces. German aircraft and torpedo boats tried to interrupt the diving operation. The negotiations between Soviet and British sides about the T-5 acoustic torpedo are depicted in the book "The Way to Victory" written by Soviet admiral N.G. Kuznetsov.
- 1945 October: RON and ROON and all similar organizations were officially disbanded.
- 1946 July; 1950 start; 1952 May 29: discussions in the USSR about need for combat frogmen.
- 1953 January 24: A conference in the USSR confirmed that combat frogmen were needed.
- 1953: The first naval combat divers' unit, the 6th OMRP, was established in the Black Sea.
- 1954: Scuba divers' or frogmen's footprints were found on a beach near a sanatorium used by Soviet state party elite. This caused a security alarm and pushed the USSR towards forming a combat frogman unit.
- 1954 October 15: The naval combat divers' unit, the 561st OMRP, was established in the Baltic Sea.
- 1956 April: The Lionel Crabb underwater spying incident at the Soviet warship Ordzhonikidze caused a security alarm and pushed the USSR towards forming a combat frogman unit.
- According to Jan Willem Bech's site, of Soviet oxygen rebreathers whose make codes end in two digits, the lowest such number is 51 (the IDA51). (The characteristic metal backpack-box (like the IDA71 has), seems to be first definitely known of in the LVI-57; the LVI-57 shown on Jan Willem Bech's site was made in 1964.) Sometimes with Soviet products (as with the AK47 rifle) these numbers indicate when that make came into production, e.g. the IDA71 in 1971.
- 1967 June: When the Six-Day War between Israel and Arab nations happened, some Soviet ships were in Port Said. This showed Soviet naval commanders that Soviet ships in the Eastern Mediterranean were well protected from air attack, but were not properly protected from frogman attacks. As a result, afterwards Soviet naval commanders decided to form the PDSS.
- 1967: PDSS (Противо-Диверсионные Силы и Средства, Protivo-Diversionnyye Sily i Sredstva = Anti-diversionary forces and means) started to be developed in the Soviet Black Sea Fleet. PDSS is a complex of special measures developed by the Soviet Navy to counter possible attacks by frogmen. PDSS includes special trained units (teams) of the Soviet Navy, and frogman and anti-frogman training, and special weapons and tactics. According to some historians, Soviet Naval Commanders decided to form PDSS after the Lionel Crabb incident. PDSS includes special trained units (teams) of the Soviet Navy, and special weapon and tactics.
- 1968: The 6th OMRP was transformed into the 17th Отдельная бригада специального назначения, OBrSpN, Otdel'naja brigada spetsial'nogo naznacheniya = Detached Brigade for Special Purpose).
- 1969: PDSS units were formed in the Soviet Pacific and Baltic and Northern fleets.
- 1970 and after: frogmen from the OB PDSS operated in Angola, Vietnam, Egypt, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Ethiopia, etc, often on request of the nation that they operated in. They went to Angola and Nicaragua to protect Soviet ships and to consult with local armed forces men.
- (date unknown): Soviet frogmen were protecting a USSR trade commission who were visiting a place on the coast of Africa, and they saw and fought against and drove off a group of 6 or 8 South African combat frogmen in an underwater fight. No deaths.
- (date unknown): See Anti-frogman_techniques#Trained animals for an incident when Soviet frogmen killed some trained anti-frogman dolphins in an incident off Nicaragua.
- 1989: Mihail Gorbachev and George H. W. Bush met onboard the Soviet ship Maksim Gorkiy near the coast of Malta, and for 3 days frogmen from the Baltic Fleet (including spetsnazmen from the 561 OMRP) and Osnaz protected it.
- 1990: The 17th OBrSpN was transformed into the 1464th OMRP.
- 1995, January-May: Several seamen, midshipmen, warrant officers, and officers from different OMRPs as volunteers took part in the 1st Chechen War. They were included into the Naval Infantry units, and operated as average Marines in Naval Infantry's reconnaissance units, not as a separate Spetsnaz unit.
- 2004: The Russian State-controlled Channel One showed a documentary film dedicated to some operations of Spetsnaz which were not known by the general public. The film is called "Spetsnaz: the Operations". Among other stories, the film depicted an episode about tactics of Russian combat swimmers from a PDSS unit. The episode was based on a real incident that occurred a few years earlier in a Russian naval base. Agents of a Russian PDSS team detected activity of foreign frogmen inside a naval base. According to the film's narrator, those frogmen were well-trained professionals and they planned to accomplish a terrorist action inside the Russian base as a Russian battleship was arriving in a harbour. The intruders had recruited a local man as a source of information. They planned to destroy a pier together with relatives of naval officers and sailors by remote explosion of a special mine. During fast and bloody combat all the foreign frogmen were killed, and their weaponry and explosive devices and diving equipment were captured by a PDSS team.
[edit] External links
- (Russian) Divers of Special Purpose
- (Russian) The Foundation of Underwater Spetsnaz: Strelna operation
- About Russian frogmen (uses the name Delfin)
- (English) (Russian) Extracts from a book about Soviet and Russian combat divers by Alexander Rzhavin Senior who served in Soviet Naval Spetsnaz in 1973-1976. With photographs.