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Baltic Fleet

The Baltic Fleet (Russian: Балтийский флот,[1] translit. Baltiyskiy flot) is the fleet of the Russian Navy in the Baltic Sea.

Baltic Fleet
Russian: Балтийский флот
Baltic Fleet Great ensign
Active18 May 1703 – present
Allegiance Tsardom of Russia
(1703–1721)
 Russian Empire
(1721–1917)
 Russian SFSR
(1917–1922)
 Soviet Union
(1922–1991)
 Russian Federation
(1991–present)
Branch Russian navy
RoleNaval warfare;
Amphibious warfare;
Combat patrols in the Baltic;
Naval presence/diplomacy missions in the Atlantic and elsewhere
Sizec. 43 Surface warships (surface combatants, major amphibious units, mine warfare) plus support ships and auxiliaries
1 Submarine
Part of Russian Armed Forces
Garrison/HQKaliningrad (HQ)
Baltiysk
Kronstadt
Anniversaries18 May
EngagementsGreat Northern War Seven Years' War
Russo-Swedish War (1788–1790)
Russo-Turkish Wars
Crimean War
Russo-Japanese War
World War I
Russian Civil War
World War II
Cold war
Decorations Order of the Red Banner (2)
Commanders
Current
commander
Admiral Viktor Liina
Notable
commanders
Rear Adm. Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov
Adm. Samuel Greig
Cpt. Alexey Schastny
Adm. Arseniy Golovko
Vice Adm. Alexander Vekman
Adm. Lev Galler
Fleet Adm. Ivan Isakov
Adm. Vladimir Yegorov
Adm. Ivan Kapitanets
Adm. Konstantin Makarov
Adm. Viktor Chirkov
External video
on RT Documentary Official YouTube Channel(in English)
The Baltic Fleet (E01): Russian stealth corvette and 'black hole' submarine get ready for a face-off on YouTube
The Baltic Fleet (E02): Loading torpedoes on the 'Magnitogorsk' submarine on YouTube
The Baltic Fleet (E03): The challenging task of repainting the whole warship on YouTube
The Baltic Fleet (E04): 'Magnitogorsk' submarine begins its dive on YouTube

Established 18 May 1703, under Tsar Peter the Great as part of the Imperial Russian Navy, the Baltic Fleet is the oldest Russian Navy formation.[2] In 1918, the fleet was inherited by the Russian SFSR which then founded the Soviet Union in 1922, where it was eventually known as the Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet as part of the Soviet Navy, as during this period it gained the two awards of the Order of the Red Banner. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Baltic Fleet was inherited by the Russian Federation and reverted to its original name as part of the Russian Navy.

The Baltic Fleet is headquartered in Kaliningrad[citation needed] and its main base in Baltiysk (Pillau), both in Kaliningrad Oblast, and another base in Kronstadt, Saint Petersburg, in the Gulf of Finland.

Imperial Russia

The Imperial Russian Baltic Fleet was created during the Great Northern War at the initiative of Tsar Peter the Great, who ordered the first ships for the Baltic Fleet to be constructed at Lodeynoye Pole in 1702 and 1703. The first commander was a recruited Dutch admiral, Cornelius Cruys, who in 1723 was succeeded by Count Fyodor Apraksin. In 1703, the main base of the fleet was established in Kronshtadt. One of the fleet's first actions was the taking of Shlisselburg.

In 1701 Peter the Great established a special school, the School of Mathematics and Navigation (Russian: Школа математических и навигацких наук), situated in the Sukharev Tower in Moscow. As the territory to the west around the Gulf of Finland was acquired by Russia for a "warm-water" port giving access for its merchantmen and the buildup of a naval force, the city of St. Petersburg was built and developed an extensive port. The School of Mathematics and Navigation was moved to St. Petersburg and in 1752 it was renamed the Naval Cadet Corps. Today it is the St. Petersburg Naval Institute – Peter the Great Naval Corps.

 
A modern replica of the fleet's first vessel, the 24-gun three-masted frigate Shtandart

The Baltic Fleet began to receive new vessels in 1703. The fleet's first vessel was the 24-gun three-masted frigate Shtandart. She was the fleet's flagship, and is a prime example of the increasing role of the frigate design.

By 1724, the fleet boasted 141 sail warships and hundreds of oar-propelled vessels (galleys).

During the Great Northern War, the Baltic Fleet assisted in taking Viborg, Tallinn, (Estonia), Riga, (Latvia), the West Estonian archipelago (Moonsund archipelago), Helsinki, (Finland), and Turku. The first claimed victories of the new Imperial Russian Navy were the Gangut (Swedish: Hangöudd) in 1714 and, arguably, the Grengam (Swedish: Ledsund) in 1720. From 1715, the English Royal Navy intervened in the Baltic Sea on behalf of the German principality of Hanover, (dynastic home of the current British monarchy) and more or less in a tacit alliance with Russia.

During the concluding stages of the war, the Russian fleet would land troops along the Swedish coast to devastate coastal settlements. However, after the death of King Charles XII, the Royal Navy would rather protect Swedish interests after a rapprochement between the Kingdom of Sweden and King George I. A Russian attempt to reach the Swedish capital of Stockholm was checked at the Battle of Stäket in 1719. The losses suffered by the Russian Navy at the Grengam in 1720, as well as the arrival of a Royal Navy squadron under Admiral John Norris, also prevented further operations of any greater scale before the war ended in 1721.

During the "Seven Years' War", (1756–1763), the Russian Baltic Sea fleet was active on the Pomeranian coast of northern Germany and Prussia, helping the infantry to take Memel in 1757 and Kolberg in 1761. The Oresund was blockaded in order to prevent the British Navy from entering the Baltic sea. During the Russo-Swedish War (1788–1790) the fleet, commanded by Samuel Greig, checked the Swedes at Hogland (1788) and the Viborg (1790). An impetuous Russian attack on the Swedish galley flotilla on 9 July 1790 at the Second Battle of Svensksund resulted in a disaster for the Russian Navy who lost some 9,500 out of 14,000 men and about one third of their flotilla. The Russian defeat in this battle effectively ended the war.

During the series of Russo-Turkish Wars, (1710–1711, 1735–1739, 1768–1774, 1787–1792, 1806–1812, 1828–1829), the fleet sailed into the Mediterranean Sea on the First and Second Archipelago Expeditions and destroyed the Ottoman Imperial Navy at the sea Battles of Chesma (1770), the Dardanelles (1807), Athos (1807), and Navarino (1827). At about the same time, Russian Admiral Ivan Krusenstern circumnavigated the globe, while another Baltic Fleet officer – Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen – discovered the southern ice-covered continent, Antarctica.

In the Crimean War, (1853–1856), the fleet – although stymied in its operations by the absence of steamships – prevented the British and French Allies from occupying Hangö, Sveaborg, and Saint Petersburg. Despite being greatly outnumbered by the technologically superior Allies, it was the Russian Fleet that introduced into naval warfare such novelties as torpedo mines, invented by Boris Yakobi. Other outstanding inventors who served in the Baltic Fleet were Alexander Stepanovich Popov (who was the first to demonstrate the practical application of electromagnetic (radio) waves[3]), Stepan Makarov (the first to launch torpedoes from a boat), Alexei Krylov (author of the modern ship floodability theory), and Alexander Mozhaiski (co-inventor of aircraft).

Age of iron

As early as 1861, the first armor-clad ships were built for the Baltic Fleet. In 1863, during the American Civil War, most of the fleet's ocean-going ships, including the flagship Alexander Nevsky were sent to New York City. At the same time ten Uragan-class monitors based on the American-designed Passaic-class monitors were launched.

It was the policy of the Tsar and his government to show support for the Northern Union Army in the United States during their Civil War, observing and exchanging naval tactics and cooperation. In 1869, the fleet commissioned the first turret on a battleship in the world – Petr Veliky. Furthermore, in the second half of the 19th and early 20th Century a strong network of coastal artillery batteries was created to cover the approaches to St. Petersburg, Riga, and other important bases.

Russo-Japanese War

 
Sailors of the Baltic Fleet ashore at Nossi Bé, December 1904.

By 1900, decades of modernization on the Baltic as well as the Pacific Fleet made Russia the fourth strongest country in the world in terms of naval forces after the UK, France and Germany, ahead of the US and Japan.[4] The Baltic Fleet, re-organized into the Second Pacific Squadron (route around Africa) and the Third Pacific Squadron (Suez route, under the command of Admiral Nebogatov), took a prominent part in the Russo-Japanese War. After the defeat of earlier Siberian Military Flotilla vessels, in September 1904, the Second Squadron under the command of Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky was sent on a high-speed dash[citation needed] around South Africa.

They stopped in French, German and Portuguese colonial ports: Tangier in Morocco, Dakar in Senegal, Gabon, Baía dos Tigres, Lüderitz Bay, and Nossi Be (Madagascar). They then formed a single fleet under the command of Rozhestvensky with the Third Pacific Fleet, across the Indian Ocean to Cam Ranh Bay in French Indochina and then northward to its doomed encounter with the Japanese fleet at the Battle of Tsushima off the east coast of Korea in May, 1905, ending the Russo-Japanese War.

The Imperial German civilian passenger Hamburg-Amerika Line provided 60 colliers to supply the Baltic Fleet on its journey. During its passage through the North Sea the fleet mistook a fleet of British fishing boats for Japanese torpedo boats and opened fire, killing three sailors in what is known as the Dogger Bank incident.

The decision to send the fleet to the Pacific was made after Russia had suffered a string of naval defeats in the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan off the coast of China and Korea near its Far East naval base and colony, at the hands of the newly emergent Imperial Japanese Navy and Army in Manchuria. The one-sided outcome of the Tsushima naval battle broke Russian strength in East Asia. It set the stage for the uprising in the abortive Russian Revolution of 1905. That propelled the decline that would see the Romanov dynasty monarchy eventually brought down with the strains of World War I, in the Russian Revolutions of 1917.

World War I

 
The naval St. Nicholas Cathedral in St. Petersburg is the main church of the Russian Navy. Its outside is covered with plaques to Russian sailors/officers lost at sea.

Following the catastrophic losses in battleships during the Russo-Japanese War, Russia embarked on a new naval building program which was to incorporate a number of the most modern dreadnought-type battleships into the fleet along with other vessels and practices adopted from the Western navies. In late 1914, four dreadnoughts of the Gangut class entered service with the fleet: Gangut; Poltava; Petropavlovsk; and Sevastopol. Four more powerful battlecruisers of the Borodino class were under construction, but were never completed. On the whole the heavy units of the fleet remained in port during the war, as the Imperial German Navy's superiority in battleships and other vessels was overwhelming and it was difficult to communicate with Great Britain's Royal Navy forces further west in the North Sea even though they had the Germans bottled up after the Battle of Jutland in 1916.

The Imperial Russian Navy's Baltic Fleet included a submarine division that had about 30 submarines of several classes and various auxiliary vessels, the largest of which were the transport and mother ships Europa, Tosno, Khabarovsk, Oland and Svjatitel Nikolai.[5][6] Some of the fleet's 355-ton submarines were made by Electric Boat Company of Groton, Connecticut in the United States, main supplier and builder of subs for the U.S. Navy. Five of these "AG (Holland)" class submarines were prefabricated by the British Pacific Engineering & Construction Company at Barnet (near Vancouver), in Canada's British Columbia, also under contract to the Electric Boat Company. These Canadian-built subs were shipped to Russia, a fellow Ally in the First World War in December 1915.,[7][8]

Four of these submarines, AG 11, AG 12, AG 15 and AG 16 were scuttled in the harbour of Hanko on 3 April 1918, just before the 10,000-strong Imperial German Baltic Sea Division landed in support of the "Whites" forces in the little known Finnish Civil War. During the war the fleet was aided by a detachment of British Royal Navy submarines. These subs were later scuttled by their crews near the Harmaja lighthouse outside Helsinki, Finland, on 4 April 1918.[9]

Soviet era

October Revolution and Russian Civil War (1917–22)

During the October Revolution the sailors of the Baltic Fleet (renamed "Naval Forces of the Baltic Sea" in March 1918)[10] were among the most ardent supporters of Bolsheviks, and formed an elite among Red military forces. The fleet was forced to evacuate several of its bases after Russia's withdrawal from the First World War, under the terms of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. The "Ice Cruise" of the Baltic Fleet (1918), led by Alexey Schastny who was later executed on Trotsky's orders, saw the evacuation of most of the fleet's ships to Kronstadt and Petrograd.

Some ships of the fleet took part in the Russian Civil War, notably by clashing with the British navy operating in the Baltic as part of intervention forces.[11] Over the years, however, the relations of the Baltic Fleet sailors with the Bolshevik regime soured, and they eventually rebelled against the Soviet government in the Kronstadt rebellion in 1921, but were suppressed and executed, and the fleet de facto ceased to exist as an active military unit.

1922–1941

The fleet, renamed the Red-Banner Baltic Fleet on 11 January 1935,[10] was developed further during the Soviet years, initially relying on pre-revolutionary warships, but adding modern units built in Soviet yards from the 1930s onwards. Among the fleet's Soviet commanders were Gordey Levchenko in 1938–39 and Arseniy Golovko in 1952–56. Ships and submarines commissioned to the fleet included Soviet submarine M-256, a Project 615 short-range attack diesel submarine of the Soviet Navy. The fleet also acquired a large number of ground-based aircraft to form a strong naval aviation force.

In September 1939, the fleet threatened the Baltic states as part of a series of military actions staged to encourage the Baltics to accept Soviet offers of "mutual assistance."[12][13] Subsequently, in June 1940, the fleet blockaded the Baltics in support of the Soviet invasion.

Winter War

Finland, which had refused to sign a "pact of mutual assistance", was attacked by the USSR. The fleet played a limited role in the Winter War with Finland in 1939–1940, mostly through conducting artillery bombardments of Finnish coastal fortifications. Many fleet aircraft were involved in operations against Finland, however. Its operations came to a close with the freezing of the Gulf of Finland during the exceptionally cold winter of that year.

World War II

In the beginning of the German invasion the Baltic Fleet had 2 battleships (both of World War I vintage), 2 cruisers, 2 flotilla leaders, 19 destroyers, 48 MTBs, 65 submarines and other ships, and 656 aircraft. During the war, the fleet, commanded by the Vice-Admiral Vladimir Tributz, defended the Hanko Peninsula, Tallinn, several islands in Estonian SSR, and participated in the breakthrough breach of the Siege of Leningrad. 137 sailors of the Baltic Fleet were awarded a title of the Hero of the Soviet Union.

For most of the war the fleet was trapped by German and Finnish minefields in Leningrad and nearby Kronstadt, the only bases left in Soviet hands on the Baltic coast. Another key factor was that the Finns had recaptured outer islands of the Gulf of Finland, Suursaari being the most important of them. Many of the fleet sailors fought on land as infantry during the siege.

Only submarines could risk the passage into the open sea to strike at German shipping. They were particularly successful towards the end of the war, sinking ships like Wilhelm Gustloff, Steuben and Goya, causing great loss of life.

The fleet carried out the Soviet evacuation of Tallinn in late August 1941.

Grouping in June 1941

  • Battleship squadron/division
  • 1st destroyer division/1 Flotilla
  • 2nd destroyer division/2 Flotilla
  • 3rd destroyer division/3 Flotilla
  • Guards division/Naval Guards Squadron
    • Burya
    • Sneg
    • Taifun
    • Tsiklon
    • Tucha
    • Vihr
  • Minesweeper Division/Task Group
    • Minelayer Marti
    • Minesweepers T-201, T-202, T-203, T-204, T-205, T-206, T-207, T-208, T-209, T-210, T-211, T-212, T-213, T-214, T-215, T-216, T-217 and T-218
    • 15 auxiliary minesweepers
  • 1st submarine brigade/1 Submarine Battle Fleet
  • 2nd submarine brigade/2 Submarine Battle Fleet
    • Shch-309, Shch-310, Shch-311, Shch-317, Shch-318, Shch-319, Shch-320, Shch-322, Shch-323, Shch-324, M-90, M-94, M-95, M-96, M-97, M-98, M-99, M-102, M-103
  • Support vessels
    • transport Eestirand (VT 532)
    • Oka (named after the river of Oka)
    • Polyarnaya Zvezda (Polar Star)
  • Training Task Group/Division of the Navy
    • M-72, M-73, M-74, M-75, M-76, Shch-303, Shch-304, K-3, K-21, K-22, K-23, L-1, L-2, S-11, S-12, Shch-405, Shch-406
  • Training Task Group
    • Shch-301, Shch-302, Shch-305, Shch-306, Shch-307, Shch-308, P-1, P-2, P-3[14]

Cold War

During the Immediate post-war period the importance of the Red-Banner Baltic Fleet increased despite the Baltic being a shallow sea with the exits easily becoming choke points by other countries. The Baltic Fleet was increased to two Fleets, the 4th Red-Banner Baltic Fleet and the 8th Red-Banner Baltic Fleet on 15 February 1946. However, during the post-Stalinist period and general reforms and downsizing in the Soviet Armed Forces the two fleets of the Baltic were again reduced, with many vessels, some built before the Revolution, were scrapped, and the fleet was again renamed Red-Banner Baltic Fleet on 24 December 1955.[10]

In Liepāja the Baltic Fleet's 14th submarine squadron, call sign "Kompleks" ("Комплекс") was stationed with 16 submarines (613, 629a, 651); as was the 6th group of rear supply of Baltic Fleet, and the 81st design bureau and reserve command center of the same force.

Far from being reduced in importance, operations of the Red-Banner Baltic Fleet during the early-Cold War period earned it a great amount of prestige and profile, with the second awarding of the Order of Red Banner being presented on 7 May 1965 when the fleet was again renamed to Twice Red-Banner Baltic Fleet.[10] Although the Soviet Union poured resources into building up the Northern Fleet and the Pacific Fleet, both of which had easy access to the open ocean, the Twice Red-Banner Baltic Fleet assumed the very important position of supporting the northern flank of the European Theatre in case of a confrontation with NATO.

This role was under-rated from the blue water navies perspective, but was seen as a highly valuable one from the strategic perspective of the Soviet General Staff planning. The Twice Red-Banner Baltic Fleet remained a powerful force, which in the event of war was tasked with conducting amphibious assaults against the coast of Denmark and Germany, in cooperation with allied Polish and East German naval forces.

A notable incident involving the fleet occurred in 1975 when a mutiny broke out on the frigate Storozhevoy. There were also numerous allegations by Sweden of Baltic Fleet submarines illegally penetrating its territorial waters. In October 1981, the Soviet Whiskey-class submarine U 137 ran aground in Swedish territorial waters, near the important naval base of Karlskrona, causing a serious diplomatic incident. Swedish naval vessels pulled the submarine into deeper water and permitted it to return to the Soviet fleet in early November.[15]

Commanders

 
Russian small missile ships Zyb' and Passat
Name[16] Period of command
Nikolai Ottovich von Essen 3 December 1909 – 7 May 1915
Vasilii Aleksandrovich Kanin [ru] 14 May 1915 – 16 September 1916
Adrian Ivanovich Nepenin 16 September 1916 – 4 March 1917
Andrei Semyonovich Maksimov [ru] 4 March 1917 – 1 June 1917
Dmitry Nikolayevich Verderevsky 1 June 1917 – 5 July 1917
Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov 7 July – 5 December 1917
Aleksandr Antonovich Ruzhek 7 December 1917 – 13 March 1918
Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov 13–20 March 1918
Aleksey Mikhaylovich Shchastnyy 22 March – 26 May 1918
Sergey Valeryanovich Zarubayev [ru] 27 May 1918 – 18 January 1919
Aleksandr Pavlovich Zelenoy 18 January 1919 – 2 July 1920
Fedor Fedorovich Raskolnikov 2 July 1920 – 27 January 1921
Vladimir Andreyevich Kukel [ru] (Acting) 27 January – 3 March 1921
Ivan Kuzmich Kozhanov [ru] 3 March – 4 May 1921
Mikhail Vladimirovich Viktorov 4 May 1921 – 6 May 1924
Aleksandr Karlovich Vekman 1924–1926
Mikhail Vladimirovich Viktorov 1926–1932
Lev Mikhaylovich Galler 22 August 1932 – 25 January 1937
Aleksandr Kuzmich Sivkov [ru] 25 January – 15 August 1937
Ivan Stepanovich Isakov 15 August 1937 – 9 January 1938
Gordey Ivanovich Levchenko 10 January 1938 – 27 April 1939
Vladimir Filippovich Tributs 28 April 1939 – 15 February 1946

In 1946 the Baltic Fleet was split into two commands, the 4th and 8th Fleets

4th Fleet 8th Fleet
Gordey Ivanovich Levchenko February 1946 – March 1947 Vladimir Filippovich Tributs February 1946 – May 1947
Vladimir Aleksandrovich Andreyev March 1947 – August 1952 Fyodor Vladimirich Zozulya May 1947 – February 1950
Arseniy Grigoriyevich Golovko August 1952 – December 1955 Nikolay Mikhaylovich Kharlamov February 1950 – December 1954
Vladimir Afanasyevich Kasatonov December 1954 – December 1955

In 1956 the two fleets were reunited into a single Baltic Fleet command

Name[16] Period of command
Arseniy Grigoryevich Golovko 27 January – 24 November 1956
Nikolay Mikhaylovich Kharlamov 24 November 1956 – 29 May 1959
Aleksandr Evstafyevich Orel [ru] 29 May 1959 – 27 January 1967
Vladimir Vasilyevich Mikhaylin 27 January 1967 – 1 September 1975
Anatoliy Mikhaylovich Kosov 1 September 1975 – 2 June 1978
Vladimir Vasilyevich Sidorov [ru] 2 June 1978 – 12 February 1981
Ivan Matveyevich Kapitanets 12 February 1981 – 25 February 1985
Konstantin Valentinovich Makarov 25 February 1985 – 30 December 1985
Vitaliy Pavlovich Ivanov [ru] 30 December 1985 – December 1991
Vladimir Grigoryevich Yegorov 13 December 1991 – 2000
Vladimir Prokofyevich Valuyev [ru] 11 April 2001 – May 2006
Konstantin Semenovich Sidenko May 2006 – 6 December 2007
Viktor Nikolayevich Mardusin 6 December 2007 – 8 September 2009
Viktor Viktorovich Chirkov 8 September 2009 – May 2012
Viktor Petrovich Kravchuk [ru] May 2012 – 29 June 2016
Aleksandr Mikhailovich Nosatov 29 June 2016 (acting), confirmed 17 September 2016 – 5 October 2021
Viktor Nikolayevich Liina 5 October 2021

Under the Russian Federation

 
The Baltic Fleet headquarters building, Kaliningrad

The breakup of the Soviet Union deprived the fleet of key bases in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, leaving Kaliningrad Oblast as the fleet's only ice-free naval outlet to the Baltic Sea. However, the Kaliningrad Oblast between Poland and Lithuania is not contiguous with the rest of the national territory of the Russian Federation.

In the immediate post-Soviet period, the capabilities of the Baltic Fleet were significantly reduced. From 1991/1992 to 1994/95, vessels in the Baltic Fleet declined from 350 at the beginning of the decade to 109 available vessels.[17] At the same time, with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, the formerly allied East German Navy was absorbed by West Germany and the Polish Navy no longer supplemented the strength of the Baltic Fleet.

Russian Land forces in the region were also sharply reduced. In 1989 3rd Guards Motor Rifle Division at Klaipeda was transferred to the fleet as a coastal defence division. It was disbanded on 1 September 1993. In the late 1990s the 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade and the remnant of the 11th Guards Army of the Baltic Military District were subordinated to a single command named the Ground and Coastal Forces of the Baltic Fleet under a deputy fleet commander.[18]

The 11th Guards Army remnant included the 7th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment and the brigade that was the former 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division, plus several Bases for Storage of Weapons and Equipment, holding enough vehicles and weaponry for a division but only having a few hundred men assigned to maintain the equipment and guard the bases. "warfare.be" listings in 2013 report that the staff of the Ground and Coastal Defence Forces of the fleet may have been disbanded in November 2007.[18] In 2007, according to the IISS, the fleet's aviation units were equipped with a total of 23 Su-27, 26 Su-24, 14 An-12/24/26, 2 An-12 Cub (MR/EW), 11 Mi-24 Hind, 19 Ka-28 Helix, 8 Ka-29 Helix assault helicopters, and 17 Mi-8 Hip transport helicopters.[19] As of 2020, the 18th Guards Motorized Rifle Division was reconstituted, serving within the 13th Army Corps, headquartered in Kaliningrad.

As of 2008 the Baltic Fleet included about 75 combat ships of various types.[20] The main base is in Baltiysk and a second operational base is in Kronstadt. The Leningrad Naval Base is an administrative entity that is not a discrete geographic location but comprises all of the naval institutions and facilities in the St. Petersburg area.

During the 2010s renewed emphasis was placed on modernizing Russian naval capabilities.[21] In the Baltic, this process has proceeded slowly though there has been particular emphasis on acquiring new light units. New corvettes (of the Steregushchiy, Buyan-M and Karakurt classes) have been incrementally added to the fleet with additional vessels from the Karakurt, and potentially the Steregushchiy-class, anticipated in the 2020s - though not necessarily at a rate that will be sufficient to replace the fleet's older Soviet-era corvettes and missile boats on a one-for-one basis.[22] Nevertheless, utilizing Russia's internal waterways, additional cruise missile-armed light units, drawn from Russia's other Western fleets or from the Caspian Flotilla, have the capacity to reinforce the Baltic Fleet as may be needed.[23][24] A further aspect of modernization has focused on the build-up of Russian shore-based anti-ship and air defence capabilities in the Kaliningrad region.[25]

In contrast to the three other Russian fleets, the Baltic Fleet's submarine capabilities are extremely modest with just one older Kilo-class boat deployed in 2020, largely for training purposes. Nevertheless, a strengthening of these capabilities in the 2020s was being considered with various options (including both Improved Kilos and/or new Lada-class submarines) apparently on the table.[26]

Training and readiness levels have also been emphasized to be of key importance. In June 2016, fleet commander Vice Admiral Viktor Kravchuk and his chief of staff, Vice Admiral Sergei Popov, were dismissed for "serious training shortcomings and distortion of the real situation". N. G. Kuznetsov Naval Academy commander Vice Admiral Alexander Nosatov was made acting commander of the fleet, a position in which he was confirmed on 17 September.[27]

Analysis undertaken by Anders Nielsen of the Royal Danish Defence College in 2019 concludes that the Russian Baltic Fleet is oriented to contributing to Russian global deployment and expeditionary operations in peacetime. However, it is also the smallest of the Russian Navy's four principal fleets (in terms of surface warships and submarines combined) and therefore, due to its limited strength, would play primarily a defensive role in the Baltic Sea in most conflict or wartime scenarios.[28]

On Russia's "Navy Day" on July 31, 2022, President Putin reportedly indicated that the Baltic Fleet was to be prioritized for modernization in the coming years. The pending entry of Sweden and Finland into NATO - in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine - would significantly strengthen NATO naval forces in the Baltic, particularly taking into account the strength of the Swedish Navy's submarine fleet. Russian commentators suggested that a modernization and expansion of Russian submarine forces in the Baltic would therefore likely be a priority in the coming years.[29]

An artillery regiment was said to have reinforced Russian ground troops in Kaliningrad on 1 December 2022.[30] Deployed in Ukraine since the start of the invasion, the Baltic Fleet's 11th Army Corps is reported to have sustained heavy losses.[31]

Order of Battle

The Baltic Fleet is subordinate to Russia's Western Military District (headquartered in St. Petersburg) which also incorporates Russia's strongest ground and air formations. The Kaliningrad region serves as the principal base area for the Baltic Fleet and therefore hosts significant land and air forces, both to defend Kaliningrad and to extend Russian shore-based air and sea denial capabilities (A2/AD) into the Baltic Sea and region.[32]

Surface Vessels and Submarines

class=notpageimage|
Ground Combat formations of the Baltic Fleet and nearby Polish Army formations
Prior to the Ukraine war, the 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division reportedly fielded 10 Motor Rifle Battalions[33]
Another brigade of the Polish 16th Mech Division is to the east of the 15th Mech Bde

12th Surface ship Division

Leningrad Naval Base

Baltyysk Naval Base (Kaliningrad)

Other Vessels:

Patrol/Anti-Saboteur Boats

Intelligence Vessels

Training Vessels

Fleet Oilers/Support Vessels

  • Altay-class: 2 vessels (Elnya and Kola;[94] Kola active as of 2021)[48]
  • Project 304-class Repair Ships: 3 vessels (PM-30, PM-86, PM-82 - PM-82 deployed to the Mediterranean as of March 2022)[95][96]

Hydrographic Survey Vessels

  • Yug-class (Project 862): 1 vessel (Nikolay Matusevich)[97]

Aviation and Air Defence Forces

  • 132nd Mixed Aviation Division: (HQ: Kaliningrad)[36][98] (Information on fixed-wing fighter units updated to October 2019; helicopter/transport aircraft data may be older unless indicated)
 
The Russian Baltic Fleet Naval Infantry Forces
  • 44th Air Defence Division[36][105]
    • 183rd Guards Air Defence Missile Regiment (Two battalions with S-300P SAMs; four battalions with S-400 SAMs; six Pantsir-S1 SAM systems), in Gvardeysk[71]
    • 1545th Air Defence Missile Regiment (Two battalions with S-400 SAMs), in Znamensk (both 183rd and 1545th Air Defence Regiments were equipped with S-400 SAM systems starting in 2019.[100])

Baltic Fleet Coastal Forces

In 2022, elements of the 11th Army Corps and the 18th Mortor Rifle Division were reportedly heavily engaged in combat in from the start of the invasion of Ukraine.[120][121][122] They are also reported to have sustained heavy losses.[31]

See also

References

  1. ^ Baltic fleet official site
  2. ^ "Baltic Fleet turns 307". RusNavy.com. 18 May 2010. from the original on 19 December 2010. Retrieved 17 May 2011.
  3. ^ "Early Radio Transmission Recognized as Milestone". IEEE. from the original on 16 January 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2006.
  4. ^ Crisher & Souva. (PDF). p. 17,30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  5. ^ During 1915–1917 the Estonian Master Mariner Johann Kalmar had command of Svjatitel Nikolai and then "Oland". Kalmar had been forcibly conscripted into the Tsar's Navy in 1914. He managed to evade the Bolsheviks ("Reds") communists during the second upheaval of 1917, the "October Revolution" and was later one of the founders of the merchant shipping firm Merilaid & Co.
  6. ^ "Sotasurmat/ Helsinki maaliskuussa 1917/ Itämeren laivaston alukset". www.helsinki.fi. from the original on 24 September 2015.
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External links

baltic, fleet, musical, group, band, russian, Балтийский, флот, translit, baltiyskiy, flot, fleet, russian, navy, baltic, russian, Балтийский, флот, great, ensignactive18, 1703, presentallegiance, tsardom, russia, 1703, 1721, russian, empire, 1721, 1917, russi. For the musical group see Baltic Fleet band The Baltic Fleet Russian Baltijskij flot 1 translit Baltiyskiy flot is the fleet of the Russian Navy in the Baltic Sea Baltic FleetRussian Baltijskij flotBaltic Fleet Great ensignActive18 May 1703 presentAllegiance Tsardom of Russia 1703 1721 Russian Empire 1721 1917 Russian SFSR 1917 1922 Soviet Union 1922 1991 Russian Federation 1991 present BranchRussian navyRoleNaval warfare Amphibious warfare Combat patrols in the Baltic Naval presence diplomacy missions in the Atlantic and elsewhereSizec 43 Surface warships surface combatants major amphibious units mine warfare plus support ships and auxiliaries 1 SubmarinePart ofRussian Armed ForcesGarrison HQKaliningrad HQ BaltiyskKronstadtAnniversaries18 MayEngagementsGreat Northern War Battle of Staket Battle of GangutSeven Years War Russo Swedish War 1788 1790 Russo Turkish WarsCrimean War Russo Japanese WarWorld War IRussian Civil War World War IICold warDecorations Order of the Red Banner 2 CommandersCurrentcommanderAdmiral Viktor LiinaNotablecommandersRear Adm Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov Adm Samuel GreigCpt Alexey SchastnyAdm Arseniy GolovkoVice Adm Alexander Vekman Adm Lev GallerFleet Adm Ivan IsakovAdm Vladimir Yegorov Adm Ivan KapitanetsAdm Konstantin Makarov Adm Viktor Chirkov External videoon RT Documentary Official YouTube Channel in English The Baltic Fleet E01 Russian stealth corvette and black hole submarine get ready for a face off on YouTubeThe Baltic Fleet E02 Loading torpedoes on the Magnitogorsk submarine on YouTubeThe Baltic Fleet E03 The challenging task of repainting the whole warship on YouTubeThe Baltic Fleet E04 Magnitogorsk submarine begins its dive on YouTubeEstablished 18 May 1703 under Tsar Peter the Great as part of the Imperial Russian Navy the Baltic Fleet is the oldest Russian Navy formation 2 In 1918 the fleet was inherited by the Russian SFSR which then founded the Soviet Union in 1922 where it was eventually known as the Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet as part of the Soviet Navy as during this period it gained the two awards of the Order of the Red Banner Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the Baltic Fleet was inherited by the Russian Federation and reverted to its original name as part of the Russian Navy The Baltic Fleet is headquartered in Kaliningrad citation needed and its main base in Baltiysk Pillau both in Kaliningrad Oblast and another base in Kronstadt Saint Petersburg in the Gulf of Finland Contents 1 Imperial Russia 1 1 Age of iron 1 2 Russo Japanese War 1 3 World War I 2 Soviet era 2 1 October Revolution and Russian Civil War 1917 22 2 2 1922 1941 2 2 1 Winter War 2 3 World War II 2 3 1 Grouping in June 1941 2 4 Cold War 3 Commanders 4 Under the Russian Federation 5 Order of Battle 5 1 Surface Vessels and Submarines 5 2 Aviation and Air Defence Forces 5 3 Baltic Fleet Coastal Forces 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksImperial Russia EditThe Imperial Russian Baltic Fleet was created during the Great Northern War at the initiative of Tsar Peter the Great who ordered the first ships for the Baltic Fleet to be constructed at Lodeynoye Pole in 1702 and 1703 The first commander was a recruited Dutch admiral Cornelius Cruys who in 1723 was succeeded by Count Fyodor Apraksin In 1703 the main base of the fleet was established in Kronshtadt One of the fleet s first actions was the taking of Shlisselburg In 1701 Peter the Great established a special school the School of Mathematics and Navigation Russian Shkola matematicheskih i navigackih nauk situated in the Sukharev Tower in Moscow As the territory to the west around the Gulf of Finland was acquired by Russia for a warm water port giving access for its merchantmen and the buildup of a naval force the city of St Petersburg was built and developed an extensive port The School of Mathematics and Navigation was moved to St Petersburg and in 1752 it was renamed the Naval Cadet Corps Today it is the St Petersburg Naval Institute Peter the Great Naval Corps A modern replica of the fleet s first vessel the 24 gun three masted frigate Shtandart The Baltic Fleet began to receive new vessels in 1703 The fleet s first vessel was the 24 gun three masted frigate Shtandart She was the fleet s flagship and is a prime example of the increasing role of the frigate design By 1724 the fleet boasted 141 sail warships and hundreds of oar propelled vessels galleys The Battle of Gangut During the Great Northern War the Baltic Fleet assisted in taking Viborg Tallinn Estonia Riga Latvia the West Estonian archipelago Moonsund archipelago Helsinki Finland and Turku The first claimed victories of the new Imperial Russian Navy were the Gangut Swedish Hangoudd in 1714 and arguably the Grengam Swedish Ledsund in 1720 From 1715 the English Royal Navy intervened in the Baltic Sea on behalf of the German principality of Hanover dynastic home of the current British monarchy and more or less in a tacit alliance with Russia During the concluding stages of the war the Russian fleet would land troops along the Swedish coast to devastate coastal settlements However after the death of King Charles XII the Royal Navy would rather protect Swedish interests after a rapprochement between the Kingdom of Sweden and King George I A Russian attempt to reach the Swedish capital of Stockholm was checked at the Battle of Staket in 1719 The losses suffered by the Russian Navy at the Grengam in 1720 as well as the arrival of a Royal Navy squadron under Admiral John Norris also prevented further operations of any greater scale before the war ended in 1721 During the Seven Years War 1756 1763 the Russian Baltic Sea fleet was active on the Pomeranian coast of northern Germany and Prussia helping the infantry to take Memel in 1757 and Kolberg in 1761 The Oresund was blockaded in order to prevent the British Navy from entering the Baltic sea During the Russo Swedish War 1788 1790 the fleet commanded by Samuel Greig checked the Swedes at Hogland 1788 and the Viborg 1790 An impetuous Russian attack on the Swedish galley flotilla on 9 July 1790 at the Second Battle of Svensksund resulted in a disaster for the Russian Navy who lost some 9 500 out of 14 000 men and about one third of their flotilla The Russian defeat in this battle effectively ended the war During the series of Russo Turkish Wars 1710 1711 1735 1739 1768 1774 1787 1792 1806 1812 1828 1829 the fleet sailed into the Mediterranean Sea on the First and Second Archipelago Expeditions and destroyed the Ottoman Imperial Navy at the sea Battles of Chesma 1770 the Dardanelles 1807 Athos 1807 and Navarino 1827 At about the same time Russian Admiral Ivan Krusenstern circumnavigated the globe while another Baltic Fleet officer Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen discovered the southern ice covered continent Antarctica In the Crimean War 1853 1856 the fleet although stymied in its operations by the absence of steamships prevented the British and French Allies from occupying Hango Sveaborg and Saint Petersburg Despite being greatly outnumbered by the technologically superior Allies it was the Russian Fleet that introduced into naval warfare such novelties as torpedo mines invented by Boris Yakobi Other outstanding inventors who served in the Baltic Fleet were Alexander Stepanovich Popov who was the first to demonstrate the practical application of electromagnetic radio waves 3 Stepan Makarov the first to launch torpedoes from a boat Alexei Krylov author of the modern ship floodability theory and Alexander Mozhaiski co inventor of aircraft Age of iron Edit As early as 1861 the first armor clad ships were built for the Baltic Fleet In 1863 during the American Civil War most of the fleet s ocean going ships including the flagship Alexander Nevsky were sent to New York City At the same time ten Uragan class monitors based on the American designed Passaic class monitors were launched It was the policy of the Tsar and his government to show support for the Northern Union Army in the United States during their Civil War observing and exchanging naval tactics and cooperation In 1869 the fleet commissioned the first turret on a battleship in the world Petr Veliky Furthermore in the second half of the 19th and early 20th Century a strong network of coastal artillery batteries was created to cover the approaches to St Petersburg Riga and other important bases Russo Japanese War Edit Sailors of the Baltic Fleet ashore at Nossi Be December 1904 By 1900 decades of modernization on the Baltic as well as the Pacific Fleet made Russia the fourth strongest country in the world in terms of naval forces after the UK France and Germany ahead of the US and Japan 4 The Baltic Fleet re organized into the Second Pacific Squadron route around Africa and the Third Pacific Squadron Suez route under the command of Admiral Nebogatov took a prominent part in the Russo Japanese War After the defeat of earlier Siberian Military Flotilla vessels in September 1904 the Second Squadron under the command of Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky was sent on a high speed dash citation needed around South Africa They stopped in French German and Portuguese colonial ports Tangier in Morocco Dakar in Senegal Gabon Baia dos Tigres Luderitz Bay and Nossi Be Madagascar They then formed a single fleet under the command of Rozhestvensky with the Third Pacific Fleet across the Indian Ocean to Cam Ranh Bay in French Indochina and then northward to its doomed encounter with the Japanese fleet at the Battle of Tsushima off the east coast of Korea in May 1905 ending the Russo Japanese War The Imperial German civilian passenger Hamburg Amerika Line provided 60 colliers to supply the Baltic Fleet on its journey During its passage through the North Sea the fleet mistook a fleet of British fishing boats for Japanese torpedo boats and opened fire killing three sailors in what is known as the Dogger Bank incident The decision to send the fleet to the Pacific was made after Russia had suffered a string of naval defeats in the East China Sea and the Sea of Japan off the coast of China and Korea near its Far East naval base and colony at the hands of the newly emergent Imperial Japanese Navy and Army in Manchuria The one sided outcome of the Tsushima naval battle broke Russian strength in East Asia It set the stage for the uprising in the abortive Russian Revolution of 1905 That propelled the decline that would see the Romanov dynasty monarchy eventually brought down with the strains of World War I in the Russian Revolutions of 1917 World War I Edit The naval St Nicholas Cathedral in St Petersburg is the main church of the Russian Navy Its outside is covered with plaques to Russian sailors officers lost at sea Following the catastrophic losses in battleships during the Russo Japanese War Russia embarked on a new naval building program which was to incorporate a number of the most modern dreadnought type battleships into the fleet along with other vessels and practices adopted from the Western navies In late 1914 four dreadnoughts of the Gangut class entered service with the fleet Gangut Poltava Petropavlovsk and Sevastopol Four more powerful battlecruisers of the Borodino class were under construction but were never completed On the whole the heavy units of the fleet remained in port during the war as the Imperial German Navy s superiority in battleships and other vessels was overwhelming and it was difficult to communicate with Great Britain s Royal Navy forces further west in the North Sea even though they had the Germans bottled up after the Battle of Jutland in 1916 The Imperial Russian Navy s Baltic Fleet included a submarine division that had about 30 submarines of several classes and various auxiliary vessels the largest of which were the transport and mother ships Europa Tosno Khabarovsk Oland and Svjatitel Nikolai 5 6 Some of the fleet s 355 ton submarines were made by Electric Boat Company of Groton Connecticut in the United States main supplier and builder of subs for the U S Navy Five of these AG Holland class submarines were prefabricated by the British Pacific Engineering amp Construction Company at Barnet near Vancouver in Canada s British Columbia also under contract to the Electric Boat Company These Canadian built subs were shipped to Russia a fellow Ally in the First World War in December 1915 7 8 Four of these submarines AG 11 AG 12 AG 15 and AG 16 were scuttled in the harbour of Hanko on 3 April 1918 just before the 10 000 strong Imperial German Baltic Sea Division landed in support of the Whites forces in the little known Finnish Civil War During the war the fleet was aided by a detachment of British Royal Navy submarines These subs were later scuttled by their crews near the Harmaja lighthouse outside Helsinki Finland on 4 April 1918 9 Soviet era EditOctober Revolution and Russian Civil War 1917 22 Edit Main article Baltic Fleet during the October Revolution and Russian Civil War During the October Revolution the sailors of the Baltic Fleet renamed Naval Forces of the Baltic Sea in March 1918 10 were among the most ardent supporters of Bolsheviks and formed an elite among Red military forces The fleet was forced to evacuate several of its bases after Russia s withdrawal from the First World War under the terms of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk The Ice Cruise of the Baltic Fleet 1918 led by Alexey Schastny who was later executed on Trotsky s orders saw the evacuation of most of the fleet s ships to Kronstadt and Petrograd Some ships of the fleet took part in the Russian Civil War notably by clashing with the British navy operating in the Baltic as part of intervention forces 11 Over the years however the relations of the Baltic Fleet sailors with the Bolshevik regime soured and they eventually rebelled against the Soviet government in the Kronstadt rebellion in 1921 but were suppressed and executed and the fleet de facto ceased to exist as an active military unit 1922 1941 Edit The fleet renamed the Red Banner Baltic Fleet on 11 January 1935 10 was developed further during the Soviet years initially relying on pre revolutionary warships but adding modern units built in Soviet yards from the 1930s onwards Among the fleet s Soviet commanders were Gordey Levchenko in 1938 39 and Arseniy Golovko in 1952 56 Ships and submarines commissioned to the fleet included Soviet submarine M 256 a Project 615 short range attack diesel submarine of the Soviet Navy The fleet also acquired a large number of ground based aircraft to form a strong naval aviation force In September 1939 the fleet threatened the Baltic states as part of a series of military actions staged to encourage the Baltics to accept Soviet offers of mutual assistance 12 13 Subsequently in June 1940 the fleet blockaded the Baltics in support of the Soviet invasion Winter War Edit Finland which had refused to sign a pact of mutual assistance was attacked by the USSR The fleet played a limited role in the Winter War with Finland in 1939 1940 mostly through conducting artillery bombardments of Finnish coastal fortifications Many fleet aircraft were involved in operations against Finland however Its operations came to a close with the freezing of the Gulf of Finland during the exceptionally cold winter of that year World War II Edit Main article Baltic Sea Campaigns 1939 1945 In the beginning of the German invasion the Baltic Fleet had 2 battleships both of World War I vintage 2 cruisers 2 flotilla leaders 19 destroyers 48 MTBs 65 submarines and other ships and 656 aircraft During the war the fleet commanded by the Vice Admiral Vladimir Tributz defended the Hanko Peninsula Tallinn several islands in Estonian SSR and participated in the breakthrough breach of the Siege of Leningrad 137 sailors of the Baltic Fleet were awarded a title of the Hero of the Soviet Union For most of the war the fleet was trapped by German and Finnish minefields in Leningrad and nearby Kronstadt the only bases left in Soviet hands on the Baltic coast Another key factor was that the Finns had recaptured outer islands of the Gulf of Finland Suursaari being the most important of them Many of the fleet sailors fought on land as infantry during the siege Only submarines could risk the passage into the open sea to strike at German shipping They were particularly successful towards the end of the war sinking ships like Wilhelm Gustloff Steuben and Goya causing great loss of life The fleet carried out the Soviet evacuation of Tallinn in late August 1941 Grouping in June 1941 Edit Battleship squadron division battleship Marat named after Jean Paul Marat battleship Oktyabrskaya Revolutsiya named after October revolution destroyer leader Leningrad named after the city of Leningrad destroyer leader Minsk named after the capital of Belarus 1st destroyer division 1 Flotilla cruiser Kirov destroyer Gnevny destroyer Gordyy destroyer Grozyashchiy destroyer Smetlivyi destroyer Steregushchy 2nd destroyer division 2 Flotilla Serdity Silnyi Stoikiy Storozhevoy 3rd destroyer division 3 Flotilla Karl Marx Volodarsky Lenin Yakov Sverdlov Artiom Engels Kalinin Guards division Naval Guards Squadron Burya Sneg Taifun Tsiklon Tucha Vihr Minesweeper Division Task Group Minelayer Marti Minesweepers T 201 T 202 T 203 T 204 T 205 T 206 T 207 T 208 T 209 T 210 T 211 T 212 T 213 T 214 T 215 T 216 T 217 and T 218 15 auxiliary minesweepers 1st submarine brigade 1 Submarine Battle Fleet S 1 S 3 S 4 S 5 S 6 S 7 S 8 S 9 S 10 S 101 S 102 L3 M 71 M 77 M 78 M 79 M 80 M 81 M 83 ex Estonian submarine Lembit ex Estonian submarine Kalev ex Latvian submarine Ronis ex Latvian submarine Spidola 2nd submarine brigade 2 Submarine Battle Fleet Shch 309 Shch 310 Shch 311 Shch 317 Shch 318 Shch 319 Shch 320 Shch 322 Shch 323 Shch 324 M 90 M 94 M 95 M 96 M 97 M 98 M 99 M 102 M 103 Support vessels transport Eestirand VT 532 Oka named after the river of Oka Polyarnaya Zvezda Polar Star Training Task Group Division of the Navy M 72 M 73 M 74 M 75 M 76 Shch 303 Shch 304 K 3 K 21 K 22 K 23 L 1 L 2 S 11 S 12 Shch 405 Shch 406 Training Task Group Shch 301 Shch 302 Shch 305 Shch 306 Shch 307 Shch 308 P 1 P 2 P 3 14 Cold War Edit Navies of RussiaTsardom of Russia Imperial Russian Fleet 1696 1917 Russian Empire Imperial Russian Fleet 1696 1917 Wrangel s fleet 1920 1924 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Naval Forces of the RKKA 1918 1922 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Naval Forces of the RKKA 1922 1937 Military Maritime Fleet of the USSR 1937 1992 Russian Federation Military Maritime Fleet of the Russian Federation 1992 present update During the Immediate post war period the importance of the Red Banner Baltic Fleet increased despite the Baltic being a shallow sea with the exits easily becoming choke points by other countries The Baltic Fleet was increased to two Fleets the 4th Red Banner Baltic Fleet and the 8th Red Banner Baltic Fleet on 15 February 1946 However during the post Stalinist period and general reforms and downsizing in the Soviet Armed Forces the two fleets of the Baltic were again reduced with many vessels some built before the Revolution were scrapped and the fleet was again renamed Red Banner Baltic Fleet on 24 December 1955 10 In Liepaja the Baltic Fleet s 14th submarine squadron call sign Kompleks Kompleks was stationed with 16 submarines 613 629a 651 as was the 6th group of rear supply of Baltic Fleet and the 81st design bureau and reserve command center of the same force Far from being reduced in importance operations of the Red Banner Baltic Fleet during the early Cold War period earned it a great amount of prestige and profile with the second awarding of the Order of Red Banner being presented on 7 May 1965 when the fleet was again renamed to Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet 10 Although the Soviet Union poured resources into building up the Northern Fleet and the Pacific Fleet both of which had easy access to the open ocean the Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet assumed the very important position of supporting the northern flank of the European Theatre in case of a confrontation with NATO This role was under rated from the blue water navies perspective but was seen as a highly valuable one from the strategic perspective of the Soviet General Staff planning The Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet remained a powerful force which in the event of war was tasked with conducting amphibious assaults against the coast of Denmark and Germany in cooperation with allied Polish and East German naval forces A notable incident involving the fleet occurred in 1975 when a mutiny broke out on the frigate Storozhevoy There were also numerous allegations by Sweden of Baltic Fleet submarines illegally penetrating its territorial waters In October 1981 the Soviet Whiskey class submarine U 137 ran aground in Swedish territorial waters near the important naval base of Karlskrona causing a serious diplomatic incident Swedish naval vessels pulled the submarine into deeper water and permitted it to return to the Soviet fleet in early November 15 Commanders Edit Russian small missile ships Zyb and Passat Name 16 Period of commandNikolai Ottovich von Essen 3 December 1909 7 May 1915Vasilii Aleksandrovich Kanin ru 14 May 1915 16 September 1916Adrian Ivanovich Nepenin 16 September 1916 4 March 1917Andrei Semyonovich Maksimov ru 4 March 1917 1 June 1917Dmitry Nikolayevich Verderevsky 1 June 1917 5 July 1917Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov 7 July 5 December 1917Aleksandr Antonovich Ruzhek 7 December 1917 13 March 1918Aleksandr Vladimirovich Razvozov 13 20 March 1918Aleksey Mikhaylovich Shchastnyy 22 March 26 May 1918Sergey Valeryanovich Zarubayev ru 27 May 1918 18 January 1919Aleksandr Pavlovich Zelenoy 18 January 1919 2 July 1920Fedor Fedorovich Raskolnikov 2 July 1920 27 January 1921Vladimir Andreyevich Kukel ru Acting 27 January 3 March 1921Ivan Kuzmich Kozhanov ru 3 March 4 May 1921Mikhail Vladimirovich Viktorov 4 May 1921 6 May 1924Aleksandr Karlovich Vekman 1924 1926Mikhail Vladimirovich Viktorov 1926 1932Lev Mikhaylovich Galler 22 August 1932 25 January 1937Aleksandr Kuzmich Sivkov ru 25 January 15 August 1937Ivan Stepanovich Isakov 15 August 1937 9 January 1938Gordey Ivanovich Levchenko 10 January 1938 27 April 1939Vladimir Filippovich Tributs 28 April 1939 15 February 1946In 1946 the Baltic Fleet was split into two commands the 4th and 8th Fleets 4th Fleet 8th FleetGordey Ivanovich Levchenko February 1946 March 1947 Vladimir Filippovich Tributs February 1946 May 1947Vladimir Aleksandrovich Andreyev March 1947 August 1952 Fyodor Vladimirich Zozulya May 1947 February 1950Arseniy Grigoriyevich Golovko August 1952 December 1955 Nikolay Mikhaylovich Kharlamov February 1950 December 1954Vladimir Afanasyevich Kasatonov December 1954 December 1955In 1956 the two fleets were reunited into a single Baltic Fleet command Name 16 Period of commandArseniy Grigoryevich Golovko 27 January 24 November 1956Nikolay Mikhaylovich Kharlamov 24 November 1956 29 May 1959Aleksandr Evstafyevich Orel ru 29 May 1959 27 January 1967Vladimir Vasilyevich Mikhaylin 27 January 1967 1 September 1975Anatoliy Mikhaylovich Kosov 1 September 1975 2 June 1978Vladimir Vasilyevich Sidorov ru 2 June 1978 12 February 1981Ivan Matveyevich Kapitanets 12 February 1981 25 February 1985Konstantin Valentinovich Makarov 25 February 1985 30 December 1985Vitaliy Pavlovich Ivanov ru 30 December 1985 December 1991Vladimir Grigoryevich Yegorov 13 December 1991 2000Vladimir Prokofyevich Valuyev ru 11 April 2001 May 2006Konstantin Semenovich Sidenko May 2006 6 December 2007Viktor Nikolayevich Mardusin 6 December 2007 8 September 2009Viktor Viktorovich Chirkov 8 September 2009 May 2012Viktor Petrovich Kravchuk ru May 2012 29 June 2016Aleksandr Mikhailovich Nosatov 29 June 2016 acting confirmed 17 September 2016 5 October 2021Viktor Nikolayevich Liina 5 October 2021Under the Russian Federation Edit The Baltic Fleet headquarters building Kaliningrad The breakup of the Soviet Union deprived the fleet of key bases in Estonia Latvia and Lithuania leaving Kaliningrad Oblast as the fleet s only ice free naval outlet to the Baltic Sea However the Kaliningrad Oblast between Poland and Lithuania is not contiguous with the rest of the national territory of the Russian Federation In the immediate post Soviet period the capabilities of the Baltic Fleet were significantly reduced From 1991 1992 to 1994 95 vessels in the Baltic Fleet declined from 350 at the beginning of the decade to 109 available vessels 17 At the same time with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact the formerly allied East German Navy was absorbed by West Germany and the Polish Navy no longer supplemented the strength of the Baltic Fleet Russian Land forces in the region were also sharply reduced In 1989 3rd Guards Motor Rifle Division at Klaipeda was transferred to the fleet as a coastal defence division It was disbanded on 1 September 1993 In the late 1990s the 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade and the remnant of the 11th Guards Army of the Baltic Military District were subordinated to a single command named the Ground and Coastal Forces of the Baltic Fleet under a deputy fleet commander 18 The 11th Guards Army remnant included the 7th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment and the brigade that was the former 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division plus several Bases for Storage of Weapons and Equipment holding enough vehicles and weaponry for a division but only having a few hundred men assigned to maintain the equipment and guard the bases warfare be listings in 2013 report that the staff of the Ground and Coastal Defence Forces of the fleet may have been disbanded in November 2007 18 In 2007 according to the IISS the fleet s aviation units were equipped with a total of 23 Su 27 26 Su 24 14 An 12 24 26 2 An 12 Cub MR EW 11 Mi 24 Hind 19 Ka 28 Helix 8 Ka 29 Helix assault helicopters and 17 Mi 8 Hip transport helicopters 19 As of 2020 the 18th Guards Motorized Rifle Division was reconstituted serving within the 13th Army Corps headquartered in Kaliningrad As of 2008 the Baltic Fleet included about 75 combat ships of various types 20 The main base is in Baltiysk and a second operational base is in Kronstadt The Leningrad Naval Base is an administrative entity that is not a discrete geographic location but comprises all of the naval institutions and facilities in the St Petersburg area During the 2010s renewed emphasis was placed on modernizing Russian naval capabilities 21 In the Baltic this process has proceeded slowly though there has been particular emphasis on acquiring new light units New corvettes of the Steregushchiy Buyan M and Karakurt classes have been incrementally added to the fleet with additional vessels from the Karakurt and potentially the Steregushchiy class anticipated in the 2020s though not necessarily at a rate that will be sufficient to replace the fleet s older Soviet era corvettes and missile boats on a one for one basis 22 Nevertheless utilizing Russia s internal waterways additional cruise missile armed light units drawn from Russia s other Western fleets or from the Caspian Flotilla have the capacity to reinforce the Baltic Fleet as may be needed 23 24 A further aspect of modernization has focused on the build up of Russian shore based anti ship and air defence capabilities in the Kaliningrad region 25 In contrast to the three other Russian fleets the Baltic Fleet s submarine capabilities are extremely modest with just one older Kilo class boat deployed in 2020 largely for training purposes Nevertheless a strengthening of these capabilities in the 2020s was being considered with various options including both Improved Kilos and or new Lada class submarines apparently on the table 26 Training and readiness levels have also been emphasized to be of key importance In June 2016 fleet commander Vice Admiral Viktor Kravchuk and his chief of staff Vice Admiral Sergei Popov were dismissed for serious training shortcomings and distortion of the real situation N G Kuznetsov Naval Academy commander Vice Admiral Alexander Nosatov was made acting commander of the fleet a position in which he was confirmed on 17 September 27 Analysis undertaken by Anders Nielsen of the Royal Danish Defence College in 2019 concludes that the Russian Baltic Fleet is oriented to contributing to Russian global deployment and expeditionary operations in peacetime However it is also the smallest of the Russian Navy s four principal fleets in terms of surface warships and submarines combined and therefore due to its limited strength would play primarily a defensive role in the Baltic Sea in most conflict or wartime scenarios 28 On Russia s Navy Day on July 31 2022 President Putin reportedly indicated that the Baltic Fleet was to be prioritized for modernization in the coming years The pending entry of Sweden and Finland into NATO in response to Russia s invasion of Ukraine would significantly strengthen NATO naval forces in the Baltic particularly taking into account the strength of the Swedish Navy s submarine fleet Russian commentators suggested that a modernization and expansion of Russian submarine forces in the Baltic would therefore likely be a priority in the coming years 29 An artillery regiment was said to have reinforced Russian ground troops in Kaliningrad on 1 December 2022 30 Deployed in Ukraine since the start of the invasion the Baltic Fleet s 11th Army Corps is reported to have sustained heavy losses 31 Order of Battle EditThe Baltic Fleet is subordinate to Russia s Western Military District headquartered in St Petersburg which also incorporates Russia s strongest ground and air formations The Kaliningrad region serves as the principal base area for the Baltic Fleet and therefore hosts significant land and air forces both to defend Kaliningrad and to extend Russian shore based air and sea denial capabilities A2 AD into the Baltic Sea and region 32 Surface Vessels and Submarines Edit 7th Guards Ind Motor Rifle Rgt 336th Guards Naval Infantry Bde 18th Guards Motor Rifle Div Polish 9th Armd Cav Bde Polish 15th Mech Bdeclass notpageimage Ground Combat formations of the Baltic Fleet and nearby Polish Army formations Prior to the Ukraine war the 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division reportedly fielded 10 Motor Rifle Battalions 33 Another brigade of the Polish 16th Mech Division is to the east of the 15th Mech Bde 12th Surface ship Division 128th Surface ship Brigade 34 128 ya brigada nadvodnyh korablej ru Nastoychivy 610 Sovremenny class destroyer 1992 Baltic fleet flagship reported under repair as of 2019 28 Neustrashimy Neustrashimy class frigate Entered service 1993 Rejoined the fleet in January 2023 pursuant to repairs 35 36 37 which were completed as of December 2021 38 39 40 Yaroslav Mudry Neustrashimy class frigate Entered service 2009 active as of 2022 41 Steregushchiy 530 Steregushchy class multi role corvette entered service in 2007 Soobrazitelnyy 531 Steregushchy class multi role corvette active deployed to the Mediterranean as of October 2022 42 43 Boikiy 532 Steregushchy class multi role corvette entered service May 2013 44 active as of 2022 45 46 Stoikiy 545 Steregushchy class multi role corvette 2014 active deployed to the Mediterranean as of October 2022 47 43 48 71st Red Star Landing Ship Brigade Baltiysk Minsk 122 Ropucha class LST active as of 2022 deployed to the Black Sea and participating in invasion of Ukraine 49 50 51 52 53 Kaliningrad 102 Ropucha class LST active as of 2022 deployed to the Black Sea and participating in the invasion of Ukraine 49 50 51 53 54 Aleksandr Shabalin 110 Ropucha class LST Korolev 130 Ropucha class LST active as of 2022 deployed to the Black Sea and participating in the invasion of Ukraine 49 50 51 52 53 54 Evgeniy Kocheshkov 770 Zubr class LCAC active refit completed 2021 55 Mordoviya 782 Zubr class LCAC active as of 2021 55 56 Other Landing Craft 3 Dyugon class landing craft 2 Ondatra class landing craft 1 Serna class landing craft 2 BK 16 class Project 02510 high speed assault boats entered service 2021 57 Leningrad Naval Base 123rd Submarine Brigade 1 Kilo class submarine Dmitrov reported assigned to the Baltic Fleet as of 2020 28 58 active as of 2021 59 105th Naval Region Protection Brigade 18 144th Tactical Group Kronshtadt ex 109th ASW ships div 308 MPK 99 Zelenodolsk Parchim class corvette 304 MPK 192 Urengoy Parchim class corvette active as of 2022 41 60 311 MPK 205 Kazanets Parchim class corvette active as of 2022 41 60 145th Tactical Group Kronshtadt ex 22nd Red Banner Minesweeper Battalion Pavel Khenov former BT 115 561 Sonya class minesweeper active as of 2021 60 PDKA 89 PDKA 910 firefighting boats 61 2 Lida class inshore minesweepers RT 57 and 248 reported active as of 2021 60 62 Project 97 Icebreaker Buran 63 active as of 2022 64 Baltyysk Naval Base Kaliningrad 64th Maritime Region Protection Brigade 146th Tactical Group former 264th Anti submarine Warfare Battalion Project 1331 218 MPK 224 Aleksin Parchim class corvette active as of 2022 65 66 243 MPK 227 Kabardino Balkaria Parchim class corvette active as of 2022 66 67 232 MPK 229 Kalmykiya Parchim class corvette 147th 148th Tactical Groups former 323rd Minesweeper Division 3 Sonya class minesweepers Sergey Kolbasev former BT 213 Novocheboksarsk former BT 212 active as of 2022 and Leonid Sobolev former BT 230 active as of 2022 68 67 69 3 Lida class inshore minesweepers Vasily Polyakov former RT 252 Leonid Perepech former RT 231 Victor Sigalov former RT 273 latter two both active as of 2022 70 62 71 1 Alexandrit class seagoing minesweeper Alexander Obukhov 507 72 active as of 2022 67 36th Red Banner Order of Nakhimov Missile Ship Brigade 73 3 Buyan M class missile ships assigned to the Kaliningrad region as of 2016 74 75 Serpukhov Zelenyy Dol active as of 2022 76 67 Grad commissioned 29 December 2022 77 78 1st Guards Missile Boat Battalion Karakurt class small missile ships corvettes 79 80 Mytishchi active as of 2022 81 76 Sovetsk active 82 Odintsovo active as of 2022 81 76 106th Small Missile Ship Battalion attached from 1 June 1994 Project 1234 Liven 551 Nanuchka class corvette Geyzer 555 Nanuchka class corvette Zyb 560 Nanuchka class corvette Passat 570 Nanuchka class corvette active as of 2022 76 67 6 Tarantul class corvettes reported based in Kaliningrad region as of 2018 83 six units reported as of 2019 84 2 Project 12411T Molnaya Tarantul II vessels Kuznetsk and R 257 4 Project 12411 Molnaya M Tarantul III vessels Chuvashiya Dimitrovgrad Zarechnyy and Morshansk latter two vessels active as of 2022 67 Other Vessels Patrol Anti Saboteur Boats 3 1 Grachonok class anti saboteur ships P 104 Nakhimovets P 468 P 471 Vladimir Nosov plus 1 name unknown but may have been delivered November 2022 85 86 87 88 9 Raptor class patrol boats P 281 P 280 Yunarmeets Baltiki P 344 P 415 Georgiy Potekhin P 437 Grigory Davidenko P 461 P 462 Evgeny Kolesnikov Yunarmeets Moskvy 89 Intelligence Vessels 2 Alpinist class vessels 90 Syzran Zhigulevsk 2 Vishnya class intelligence ships Fedor Golovin Vasiliy Tatishchev active as of 2022 91 Baklan class intelligence ship KSV 2168 92 Training Vessels Smolnyy class training ship 2 vessels Smolnyy 93 and Perekop Fleet Oilers Support Vessels Altay class 2 vessels Elnya and Kola 94 Kola active as of 2021 48 Project 304 class Repair Ships 3 vessels PM 30 PM 86 PM 82 PM 82 deployed to the Mediterranean as of March 2022 95 96 Hydrographic Survey Vessels Yug class Project 862 1 vessel Nikolay Matusevich 97 Aviation and Air Defence Forces Edit 132nd Mixed Aviation Division HQ Kaliningrad 36 98 Information on fixed wing fighter units updated to October 2019 helicopter transport aircraft data may be older unless indicated 4th Separate Naval Attack Aviation Regiment regiment re established starting 2017 Two Squadrons with Su 24 and 12 Su 30SM SM2 with Kh 61 anti ship missile 99 100 101 102 689th Independent Fighter Aviation Regiment Kaliningrad Chkalovsk 103 Two Squadrons operating Su 27SM 101 to re equip with Su 35S SM 104 125th Independent Helicopter Squadron HQ at Chkalovsk operating Mi 8 Mi 24 this was the former 288th Independent Helicopter Regt of the 11th Guards Army and used to be at Nivenskoye 396th Independent Shipborne Anti Submarine Helicopter Squadron Donskoye Air Base Ka 27 M Ka 29 Ka 27M model ASW helicopters reportedly added October 2018 100 398th Independent Air Transport Squadron HQ at Khrabrovo An 2 An 12 An 24 An 26 Be 12 Mi 8 The Russian Baltic Fleet Naval Infantry Forces 44th Air Defence Division 36 105 183rd Guards Air Defence Missile Regiment Two battalions with S 300P SAMs four battalions with S 400 SAMs six Pantsir S1 SAM systems in Gvardeysk 71 1545th Air Defence Missile Regiment Two battalions with S 400 SAMs in Znamensk both 183rd and 1545th Air Defence Regiments were equipped with S 400 SAM systems starting in 2019 100 Baltic Fleet Coastal Forces Edit 11th Army Corps Gusev 106 107 108 18th Guards Motorized Rifle Division HQ Gusev 109 formed in December 2020 and incorporating existing and new regiments 110 111 As of 2021 ground combat units reported deployed within the 18th Division include 275th Motorized Rifle Regiment 112 280th Motorized Rifle Regiment 112 79th Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment former 79th Independent Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade reformed as a regiment Sovetsk Kaliningrad Oblast 113 11th Tank Regiment Gusev Kaliningrad Oblast 114 Military Unit Number V Ch v ch 41611 Equipped with T 72B Main Battle Tanks upgrades of T 72s to B3M standard underway as of 2019 20 100 115 116 20th Separate Reconnaissance Battalion Sovetsk 106 formed 2020 21 Orlan 10 UAVs and Sobolyatnik 117 and Fara VR reconnaissance radars 118 22nd Guards Air Defence Missile Regiment Tor M1 M2 in Kaliningrad 36 107 119 In 2022 elements of the 11th Army Corps and the 18th Mortor Rifle Division were reportedly heavily engaged in combat in from the start of the invasion of Ukraine 120 121 122 They are also reported to have sustained heavy losses 31 7th Independent Guards Motorized Rifle Regiment Kaliningrad equipped with BMP 3 infantry fighting vehicles as of 2021 regiment reportedly retains independent status outside 18th Motorized Rifle Division 112 113 244th Artillery Brigade 2A36 BM 21 2S7M Malka self propelled howitzers with Zoopark 1 counter battery radars BM 27 Uragan multiple rocket launchers delivery initiated 2020 and 9P157 2 Khrizantema S tank destroyers 111 123 in Kaliningrad Naval Infantry Special Forces 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade Baltiysk 561st Maritime Recon Point Special Forces battalion HQ at Parusnoye 124 69th Guards Naval Engineer Regiment in Gvardeysk Surface to Surface Missile Units 152nd Guards Missile Brigade 9K720 Iskander M at Chernyakhovsk Air Base 36 125 25th Coastal Defence Missile Brigade BAL E K 300P Bastion P Monolit BR coastal defence radars at Donskoye Air Base 36 126 127 128 129 Coastal missile defence unit Bastion Bal systems being established in Kronshtadt Leningrad Oblast under Baltic Fleet command as of 2021 130 299th Training Center of Coastal Forces in Gvardeysk 561st Reconnaissance Center in Parusnoye 742nd Communication Center in Kaliningrad 841st Independent Electronic Warfare Center in Yantarny 313th Special Detachment of Anti Sabotage Forces and Means in Baltiysk 473rd Special Detachment of Anti Sabotage Forces and Means in KronstadtSee also EditBaltic Fleet electoral district Russian Constituent Assembly election 1917 References Edit Baltic fleet official site Baltic Fleet turns 307 RusNavy com 18 May 2010 Archived from the original on 19 December 2010 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Early Radio Transmission Recognized as Milestone IEEE Archived from the original on 16 January 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2006 Crisher amp Souva Power At Sea A Naval Power Dataset 1865 2011 PDF p 17 30 Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2021 Retrieved 22 August 2020 During 1915 1917 the Estonian Master Mariner Johann Kalmar had command of Svjatitel Nikolai and then Oland Kalmar had been forcibly conscripted into the Tsar s Navy in 1914 He managed to evade the Bolsheviks Reds communists during the second upheaval of 1917 the October Revolution and was later one of the founders of the merchant shipping firm Merilaid amp Co Sotasurmat Helsinki maaliskuussa 1917 Itameren laivaston alukset www helsinki fi Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 http naval review cfps dal ca forum pdf 08 02 Shirlaw Submarines Burrard pdf permanent dead link Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies 1718 1990 Polmar N and Noot J Page 63 Naval Institute Press Annapolis 1990 ISBN 0 87021 570 1 Finnish Navy in World War II Archived from the original on 15 May 2007 a b c d VOENNAYa LITERATURA Voennaya istoriya Boevoj put Sovetskogo Voenno Morskogo Flota militera lib ru Archived from the original on 20 February 2008 Bolshevik Navy Campaigns 1918 19 Archived from the original on 6 February 2006 Retrieved 8 April 2006 Moscow s Week Time 9 October 1939 Archived from the original on 27 August 2013 Smith David J 2002 The Baltic States Estonia Latvia and Lithuania p 24 ISBN 0 415 28580 1 Keskinen Kalevi Mantykoski Jorma eds 1991 The Finnish Navy At War in 1939 1945 Suomen Laivasto Sodassa 1939 1945 Espoo Tietoteos Ky p 153 ISBN 951 8919 05 4 OL 1778118M History Sweden issues growth future power policy Sweden and Neutrality www nationsencyclopedia com Archived from the original on 6 August 2006 a b Boevoj put Sovetskogo Voenno morsogo Flota Voennoe Izdatelstvo Moscow 1988 Viitasalo Mikko Osterlund Bo 1996 The Baltic Sea of Changes PDF Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b c Warfare be Navy Archived 3 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine IISS 2007 The Military Balance 2007 London Routledge for the IISS p 197 ISBN 978 1 85743 437 8 Kommersant VLAST No 7 760 25 February 2008 Analysis Baltic Sea Heating up as Friction Point Between U S NATO and Russia 25 April 2016 In 2019 the Baltic Fleet was replenished with ships and latest military equipment Analysis Zeleny Dol corvette passes successful trials Russian naval forces start Ocean Shield 2020 drills in Baltic Sea 5 August 2020 Maritime Security Issues in the Baltic Sea Region Foreign Policy Research Institute 22 July 2020 Analysis Latest Russian Navy contracts offer development conclusions Vice admiral Nosatov naznachen komanduyushim Baltijskim flotom Vice Admiral Nosatov appointed Baltic Fleet commander TASS in Russian 22 September 2016 Archived from the original on 25 September 2016 Retrieved 2 October 2016 a b c Nielsen Anders Puck 2019 Somilitaer vurdering af Ruslands Ostersoflade og de militaere implikationer for Danmark Scandinavian Journal of Military Studies 2 148 164 doi 10 31374 sjms 27 Russian shipbuilding program to be modified under new naval doctrine 9 August 2022 Russian forces in Kaliningrad Region reinforced with artillery regiment source 1 December 2022 a b David Axe 27 October 2022 12 000 Russian Troops Were Supposed To Defend Kaliningrad Then They Went To Ukraine To Die Forbes Kalev Stoicescu Henrik Praks 18 April 2016 Strengthening the Strategic Balance in the Baltic Sea Area PDF ICDS ISBN 978 9949 9448 5 9 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Michael Kofman 22 March 2021 Russian Forces in Kaliningrad Implications of the newly formed 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division Russia Military Analysis Russianmilitaryanalysis wordpress com Retrieved 9 March 2022 128th Missile Ship Brigade www ww2 dk Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Russian Neustrashimyy patrol ship to re join Baltic Fleet in April a b c d e f A look at the Baltic Fleet and the defense of Kaliningrad 6 April 2020 Russian Navy s guard ship wraps up Baltic tests after upgrade Russian guard ship to rejoin Baltic Fleet in February after repairs Military amp Defense TASS Retrieved 4 January 2022 Yantar Shipyard has to complete overhaul of Russian Navy Neustrashimy Yastreb class frigate https flot com 2023 D0 91 D0 B0 D0 BB D1 82 D0 B8 D0 B9 D1 81 D0 BA D0 B8 D0 B9 D0 A4 D0 BB D0 BE D1 821 a b c Russian Navy ships deploy to sea for drills as NATO holds massive Baltic maneuvers TASS Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk42 2022 a b Russian Baltic Fleet corvettes embark on long distance deployment TASS Interfax AVN Moscow 0930 and 1250 GMT 16 May 13 Archived from the original on 10 November 2013 Russian Baltic Fleet Deploys 20 Vessels SeaWaves Magazine Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 80 22 March 28 March 2021 Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk42 2022 a b A detachment of ships of the Baltic Fleet performing the tasks of a long distance campaign went to the Atlantic Ocean Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation a b c 6 Russian Warships and Submarine Now Entering Black Sea Towards Ukraine 8 February 2022 a b c Newdick Thomas 21 January 2022 Russia s Landing Ships Are Headed To The Mediterranean To Join A Growing Armada Updated Thedrive com Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b c Thomas Newdick 17 January 2022 Russian Landing Ships Leave Baltic Sea Raising Concerns That Ukraine May Be Their Final Destination Updated Thedrive com Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b Russia builds up forces on Ukrainian border politico com Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b c Baltic Fleet Amphibious Ships Train in Minelaying SeaWaves Magazine a b Foreign Warships on Bosphorus in 2021 22 February 2021 a b Russia Just Repaired the Largest Amphibious Assault Hovercraft Ever 3 March 2021 Malyj desantnyj korabl Mordoviya Baltijskogo flota vypolnil minnye postanovki v morskom poligone Ministerstvo oborony Rossijskoj Federacii Two high speed amphibious assault boats enter service with Russia s Baltic Fleet Russian Baltic Fleet diesel electric sub dives to 190m depth in drills The crew of the DES Dmitrov conducted torpedo firing in the Baltic Sea Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation a b c d Russian Baltic Fleet warships hold artillery firings in Gulf of Finland Firefighting boats Project 364 russianships info a b Inshore minesweeper Project 10750 Icebreakers Project 97 Russianships info Retrieved 9 March 2022 Icebreaker Buran Keep Sea Lanes Open for Baltic Fleet Ships SeaWaves Magazine Russian Parchim class corvettes train fire at air targets in Baltic Sea Navyrecognition com 16 February 2022 Retrieved 9 March 2022 a b Russian Baltic Fleet ships eliminate enemy sub in anti submarine warfare drills a b c d e f Korabli katera i suda obespecheniya Baltijskogo flota vyshli v more v ramkah planovyh meropriyatij boevoj podgotovki Russian Federation Ministry of Defence 24 January 2022 Russian Navy s minesweepers conduct an exercise in Baltic Sea Navyrecognition com Retrieved 9 March 2022 Coastal minesweeper Project 1265 russianships info Russian Navy minesweepers conducts drills in Baltic Sea a b Russian Military Forces Interactive Map Alexandrit Class Project 12700 Mine Countermeasures Vessels Naval Technology 36th Missile Ship Brigade www ww2 dk Archived from the original on 22 May 2013 Russian Navy Moves Guided Missile Ships to Baltic Russian Grad corvette to operate in Baltic fleet www navyrecognition com a b c d Russian Baltic Fleet ships strike enemy air targets with artillery guns in drills Three combat ships join Russia s Navy in special ceremony Dec 29 Russian Buyan class M corvette Grad conducts firing trials in Baltic Sea Analysis Russian Navy Odintsovo corvette to undergo Arctic trials Russian Navy gets lead cruise missile corvette Archived from the original on 18 December 2018 Retrieved 19 December 2018 a b Korabli Baltijskogo flota proveli artillerijskie strelby Russian Federation Ministry of Defence 25 January 2022 BF missile ships destroyed mock coastal and sea targets with Kalibr cruise missiles Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation NATO s Worst Nightmare Russia s Kaliningrad is Armed to the Teeth 25 May 2018 The True Face of the Baltic Fleet 12 October 2019 Anti saboteur boats Project 21980 V sostav Baltijskogo flota voshli dva novyh protivodiversionnyh katera Grachonok Russian Federation Ministry of Defence 23 June 2022 Novyj protivodiversionnyj kater Baltijskogo flota nazvan v chest Geroya Rossijskoj Federacii gvardii kapitana Vladimira Nosova Russian Federation Ministry of Defence 23 June 2022 CAMTO Protivodiversionnyj kater Grachonok popolnil sostav VMF Rossii Patrol boats Project 03160 Bullying in the Baltic Sea 20 July 2017 French Navy Shadows Russian AGI Vasiliy Tatishchev SeaWaves Magazine Project 1388NZ Communication boat Uchebnyj korabl Smolnyj pribyl na Severnyj flot Ministerstvo oborony Rossijskoj Federacii Medium seagoing tanker Project 160 Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk10 2022 Russianfleetanalysis blogspot com Retrieved 9 March 2022 Floating workshops Project 304 Russianships info Retrieved 9 March 2022 Hydrographic survey vessel Project 862 NATO tak nado novye aviadivizii zakroyut nebo nad Baltikoj i Krymom 30 October 2019 Russia Military Analysis Russia Military Analysis a b c d Fortress Kaliningrad Ever Closer to Moscow PDF 7 November 2019 Retrieved 4 January 2022 a b Russian Air Force Today www easternorbat com CAMTO Morskaya aviaciya Baltijskogo flota poluchila zveno novyh istrebitelej Su 30SM2 Armstrade org Retrieved 9 March 2022 CAMTO Novosti Okolo 20 ekipazhej morskoj aviacii Baltflota vypolnyat perelet na aerodrom Chkalovsk posle zaversheniya ego rekonstrukcii Archived from the original on 11 October 2018 Retrieved 11 October 2018 Russia strengthens its forces on the Baltic Sea 30 January 2018 Russian to Deploy S 300V4 Air Defense Missile Systems to Kaliningrad Region a b Russian Military Forces Interactive Map a b Catherine Harris Frederick W Kagan 10 March 2018 Russia s Military Posture Ground Forces Order of Battle PDF Retrieved 4 January 2022 CAMTO Novosti Na vooruzhenie armejskogo korpusa Baltflota v 2020 godu postupilo 30 tankov T 72B3M s uluchshennymi harakteristikami armstrade org Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 77 1 March 7 March 2021 Baltic Fleet to set up new division in response to NATO s build up near Russian borders a b Russian Forces in Kaliningrad Implications of the newly formed 18th Guards Motor Rifle Division 22 March 2021 a b c Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 81 29 March 9 May 2021 a b Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 82 10 May 23 May 2021 Tankovyj polk Baltflota privlechyon k manyovram v Kaliningradskoj oblasti Russia increases number of tanks in Kaliningrad 28 January 2019 Russia adds firepower to Kaliningrad exclave citing NATO threat Reuters 7 December 2020 Retrieved 4 January 2022 Russian Airborne forces receive Sobolyatnik portable radar June 2020 News Defense Global Security army industry Defense Security global news industry army 2020 Archive News year V tylu srazhenij Kaliningrad zashityat sverhdalnie razvedchiki 10 March 2021 Baltic Fleet s Tor M2 missile systems down maneuvering fast speed targets in drills https informnapalm org en russian units of 18th mrd transferred from kaliningrad oblast to the east of ukraine https www understandingwar org backgrounder russian offensive campaign assessment december 12 https www longwarjournal org archives 2022 09 ukraines counteroffensives in kharkiv and kherson and the road ahead php Modernized Artillery for Russian Forces in Kaliningrad 2 October 2019 Russian Military Transformation Tracker Issue 1 August 2018 July 2019 Iskander tactical missile systems strike enemy facilities in Baltic Fleet drills Poberezhe Rossii prikryli raketnye monstry 7 January 2018 Russian Navy strengthens its coastal missile brigades with BAL and BASTION systems Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 90 12 July 18 July 2021 Monolit BR coastal defence radars enter service with Russia s Western Military District Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 90 12 July 18 July 2021 gfsis org Retrieved 4 January 2022 Richard Connaughton 1988 1991 2003 Rising Sun and Tumbling Bear Russia s War With Japan Cassell ISBN 0 304 36657 9 Jurgen Rohwer and Mikhail S Monakov Stalin s Ocean Going Fleet Soviet Naval Strategy and Shipbuilding Programmes 1935 1953 Frank Cass 2001 ISBN 0 7146 4895 7 Gunnar Aselius The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Navy in the Baltic 1921 41 Routledge UK 2005 ISBN 978 0 7146 5540 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baltic Fleet Baltic Fleet Morskoyo Flota Naval Force Russian and Soviet Nuclear Forces Baltic Fleet list March 1917 https russiandefpolicy com 2020 06 02 demobbing corrigenda Manning of the 11th Army Corps 2020 calculations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baltic Fleet amp oldid 1139197229, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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