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Russian Naval Infantry

The Russian Naval Infantry (Russian: Морская пехота России, romanized: Morskaya pekhota Rossii, lit.'Russian sea infantry'), often referred to as Russian Marines in the West,[4] operate as the naval infantry of the Russian Navy. Established in 1705, they are capable of conducting amphibious operations as well as operating as more traditional light infantry.

Russian Naval Infantry
Морская пехота России
Morskaya Pekhota Rossii
Unofficial emblem of the Russian Naval Infantry
Founded1696 (1696)–1917 (1917), 1992 (1992)–present
CountryRussia[a]
BranchRussian Navy
TypeNaval infantry and Naval special forces
Size12,000 personnel, incl. 800 commando frogmen[1][2]
Part ofCoastal Defense Forces
Garrisons/HQs
Nickname(s)"Черная смерть", "Черные береты"
(English: "Black Death", "Black Berets")
Motto(s)Там, где мы, там — победа!
(English: Where We Are, There is Victory!)
Color of BeretBlack  
March
  • "Экипаж—Одна семья" (English: The Crew—One Family)
  • "Марш морской пехоты" (English: March of the Marines)
AnniversariesNovember 27
Equipment
Engagements
Commanders
Current
commander
Lt. Gen. Alexander Kolpachenko
Notable
commanders
  • Maj. Gen. Vladimir Romanenko
  • Maj. Gen. Vladislav Chernomurov
Insignia
Flag of the Naval Infantry

The Naval Infantry also fields the Russian Navy's only special operations unit, known as the ‘commando frogmen’. Frogmen are typically drawn from the Naval Infantry's ranks, and they are capable of a wide range of special operations tasks and missions. Colloquially, Russian-speakers may refer to Naval Infantrymen using the abbreviation морпехи (morpekhi (plural), singular form: морпех (morpekh)).

The first Russian marine force formed in 1705, and since that time it has fought in the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War (1853-1856), the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905), the First World War (1914-1918) and the Second World War (1939-1945). Under Admiral Gorshkov (Soviet Navy Commander-in-Chief from 1956 to 1985), the Soviet Navy expanded the reach of the Naval Infantry and deployed it worldwide on numerous occasions.

Since 2009 Lieutenant General (NI) Aleksandr Nikolaievich Kolpachenko [ru] (Lieutenant General (NI) since 2014) has commanded the Naval Infantry in his capacity as the Deputy Commander for Coastal Troops/Commandant of the Coastal Troops of the Russian Navy.

The Naval Infantry, alongside the Coastal Defense Missile Artillery Forces, form part of a larger institution—the Coastal Troops of the Russian Navy (Russian: Береговые войска ВМФ России, Beregovye voyska VMF Rossii).

History edit

Little is known about the Russian Naval infantrymen during the Imperial era of Russia because many of the units formed consisted of supernumerary ship crews of destroyed or immobilised Russian warships.[5]

The history of the Russian Navy could be traced back to the 16th century with Ivan the Terrible with the formation of his special team of Streltsy "sea soldiers" as part of his crew of flotilla ships.

The official history of the Naval Infantry could be traced back to the creation of the Russian ship Oryol (lit., Eagle), which launched in 1668 & sailed with a crew of 23 sailors & 35 soldiers, with the soldiers duties of boarding & capturing enemy ships & providing sentinel service under the command of Ivan Domozhirov.[6]

During the Azov campaign of the Russo-Turkish War, under Peter the Great, the soldiers in these units; many of whom were recruited by the Preobrazhensky & the Semyonovsky Regiments of the later-to-become Imperial Guards, were shown to be particularly effective in carrying out those duties. Those soldiers would later on form the Russian Navy's very first infantry regiment consisting of 4300 men.[7]

The first admiral of the regiment was appointed by no less than Tsar Peter I himself, General Admiral Fyodor Golovin, who later gave the respective order to Vice Admiral Cornelius Kruys on November 16, 1705, marking the glorious years following for the Russian Naval Infantry.[8]

Official formation edit

In November 16 (27), 1705, following a decree of Peter I, the first regiment "of naval equipage" (морской экипаж) (or in other words, equipped and supplied by the Russian Imperial Navy) was formed for boarding and landing operations, on the ships of the Baltic Fleet. The regiment had 1200 men (two battalions of five companies; 45 officers, & 70 non-commissioned officers), and from this original regiment began the long history of Naval Infantry within Russia.

Great Northern War edit

In 1714, the regiment won a victory against the Swedes during the Battle of Gangut. However, after the war, a review of the Regiment's performance during the war concluded that the regimental organization of the unit did not work with the organizational structure of the Navy's fleet and did not allow it to be correctly utilized in combat conditions. As a result, the naval regiment was disbanded, and in replace of it, five naval battalions of consisting of men drawn from the army was created in 1712-1714 & attached to the fleet:

"Vice Admiral Battalion" - for service in the vanguard squadrons on the ships of the squadron's avant-garde;
"Admiral's Battalion" - for service on ships of the squadron center;
"Rear Admiral Battalion" - for service on the ships of the rear guard of the squadron;
"Galler Battalion" - for service on combat ships of the Galere fleet;
"Admiralty Battalion" - for guard duty and other tasks.[9]

Russo-Turkish Wars edit

The Russian naval infantry were involved in a series of victories against the Ottoman Empire including the rout of the Turkish Navy at the Battle for Cesme Harbor in 1770, and the taking of Izmail Fortress on the Danube, in 1790.

Napoleonic War edit

During the prelude to the war, in 1799 the Russian naval infantry took the French fortress at Corfu after a four-month siege. In 1806, a Russian landing force took Naples by storm and entered the Papal States. During the War of the Sixth Coalition, the Russian naval infantry distinguished itself against La Grande Armée at the Battle of Borodino (1812), Battle of Kulm (1813) and the Siege of Danzig.

Crimean War edit

By 1813, significant parts of the naval infantry were transferred to the Army & subsequently lost naval connections. For almost 100 years, there were no large infantry units in the Russian Navy. Nevertheless, in 1854–1855, during the Siege of Sevastopol against British, French and Turkish troops, there were renewed calls for revival of the military's Naval Infantry units. 17 separate sea battalions were formed and they participated in the defense of Sevastopol.

Early 20th century edit

Russo-Japanese War edit

During 1904 Russo-Japanese War, the naval infantry defended Port Arthur against Japanese forces. Personnels were recruited from regular sailors & naval crews to make up the numbers. Seven separate naval rifle battalions, a separate landing squad of sailors, three separate sea rifle companies and several machine-gun teams were formed.

World War I edit

The question of the formation of permanent Naval Infantry Units were raised only in 1910 and in 1911, projects were underway under the Chief Naval Staff for the development of permanent infantry units in the main naval bases of the country: an infantry regiment under the Baltic Fleet, an infantry battalion in the Black Sea Fleet and the Vladivostok Battalion for the Pacific Fleet.

In August 1914, two separate battalions from the personnel of the Guards Fleet Crew and one battalion of personnel from the 1st Baltic Fleet Crew were created in Kronstadt. In March 1915, a separate naval battalion of the 2nd Baltic Fleet Crew was transformed into the Marine Regiment of Special Purpose. It included a mine company, a machine-gun team, a communications team, regimental artillery, a technical workshop, a convoy, and individual commands of the steamer Ivan-town and boats.

At the end of 1916 and the beginning of 1917, the first two divisions of naval infantry were formed; the Baltic Division and Black Sea Division.

The naval infantry was deployed to the Baltic to defend the homeland against German attack as well as the Caspian Sea for operations against Ottoman forces.

Post-Russian Revolutions and the Russian Civil War edit

These naval infantrymen, who served under the Navy of the Imperial State, would later on form the core of the naval infantry service of the young Soviet Navy in 1918, which distinguished itself during the long Russian Civil War (1918-1922). Many of their fellow servicemen though supported the White movement and distinguished themselves as part of anti-Soviet military operations during those years. Many were shot upon capture by Soviet authorities. Others were tortured and killed.

The Soviet Naval Infantry's major force during the civil war was the Baltic Fleet Naval Infantry, the ex-Imperial fleet division's Communist servicemen would provide much of the fighting power during those years following the Revolution.

Soviet era edit

Kronstadt rebellion edit

Following the winding down of the Russian Civil War by 1920, the following year, many Soviet Naval Infantrymen stationed in Kronstadt mutinied against the Soviet government in 1921. The mutiny was quickly put down by Soviet forces with the mutinying Naval Infantrymen facing retribution by the Soviet government leading to their eventual execution.

World War II edit

 
Soviet naval infantry uniform of the Great Patriotic War

During World War II about 350,000 Soviet Navy sailors fought on land operations. At the beginning of the war, the navy had only one naval infantry brigade in the Baltic Fleet, but began forming and training other battalions. These eventually were:

  • six naval infantry regiments, comprising two 650 man battalions each,
  • 40 naval infantry brigades of 5–10 battalions, formed from surplus ships' crews. Five brigades were awarded Gvardiya (Guards) status,
  • On November 1, 1944, the greatly understrength Red Army 55th Rifle Division was converted into a garrison formation for the Porkkala Naval Base after the Finnish capitulation in late September 1944.[10]
  • plus numerous smaller units

Many of the new units were raised as part of the Black Sea, Pacific and Northern Fleets. The military situation demanded the deployment of large numbers of naval infantry on land, so the Naval Infantry contributed to the defense of Odessa, Moscow, Leningrad, Sevastopol, Stalingrad, Novorossiysk and Kerch.

The Naval Infantry conducted over 114 landings, most of which were carried out by platoons and companies. In general, however, Naval Infantry served as regular infantry, without any amphibious training. They conducted four major operations: two during the Battle of the Kerch Peninsula, one during the Caucasus Campaign and one as part of the Landing at Moonsund, in the Baltic.

During the war, five brigades and two battalions of naval infantry were awarded Guards status. Nine brigades and six battalions were awarded decorations, and many were given honorary titles. The title Hero of the Soviet Union was bestowed on 122 Naval Infantry servicemen.

The Soviet experience in amphibious warfare in World War II contributed to the development of Soviet operational art in combined arms operations. Many members of the Naval Infantry were parachute trained; they conducted more drops and successful parachute operations than the Soviet Airborne Troops (VDV).[citation needed]

The Naval Infantry was disbanded in 1947, with some units being transferred to the Coastal Defence Force.

Cold War edit

 
Soviet marines in 1985
 
Soviet marines during a demonstration in 1990

In 1961, the Naval Infantry was re-formed and became a combat arm of the Soviet Navy. Each Fleet was assigned a Naval Infantry unit of regiment (and later brigade) size. The Naval Infantry received amphibious versions of standard armoured fighting vehicles, including tanks used by the Soviet Army.

By 1989, the Naval Infantry numbered 18,000 troops, organised into the 55th Naval Infantry Division at Vladivostok and at least four independent brigades: the 61st Kirkenneskaya Brigade at Pechenga (Northern Fleet), 175th at Tumannyy in the North, 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade at Baltiysk (Baltic Fleet), and 810th at Sevastopol (Black Sea Fleet).

By the end of the Cold War, the Soviet Navy had over eighty landing ships, as well as two Ivan Rogov-class landing ships. The latter could transport one infantry battalion with 40 armoured vehicles and their landing craft. (One of the Rogov ships has since been retired.)

At 75 units, the Soviet Union had the world's largest inventory of combat air-cushion assault craft. In addition, many of the 2,500 vessels of the Soviet merchant fleet (Morflot) could off-load weapons and supplies during amphibious landings.

On November 18, 1990, on the eve of the Paris Summit where the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE) Treaty and the Vienna Document on Confidence and Security-Building Measures (CSBMs) were signed, Soviet data were presented under the so-called initial data exchange. This showed a rather sudden emergence of three so-called coastal defence divisions (including the 3rd at Klaipėda in the Baltic Military District, the 126th in the Odessa Military District and seemingly the 77th Guards Motor Rifle Division with the Northern Fleet), along with three artillery brigades/regiments, subordinate to the Soviet Navy, which had previously been unknown as such to NATO.[11]

Much of the equipment, which was commonly understood to be treaty limited (TLE) was declared to be part of the naval infantry. The Soviet argument was that the CFE excluded all naval forces, including its permanently land-based components. The Soviet Government eventually became convinced that its position could not be maintained.

A proclamation of the Soviet government on July 14, 1991, which was later adopted by its successor states, provided that all "treaty-limited equipment" (tanks, artillery and armoured vehicles) assigned to naval infantry or coastal defence forces, would count against the total treaty entitlement.

1989 list of units edit

Landing Assault units of the Naval Infantry edit

In addition to the Landing Assault Troops of the Ground Forces similar units were also formed by the Soviet Naval Infantry with the main task to execute airborne landings (by parachute or by helicopters), take over and defend a beachhead for the amphibious landing of the main force. By 1989 these units were organized under their respective Fleet HQs as follows:

Red Banner Northern Fleet (Краснознамённый Северный флот) - ZATO Severomorsk, Murmansk Oblast, RSFSR

  • 61st Separate Kirkenesskaya, Red Banner Naval Infantry Brigade (61-я отдельная киркенесская краснознамённая бригада морской пехоты (61-я обрмп)) - Sputnik, Murmansk Oblast, RSFSR
    • 876th Separate Landing Assault Battalion (876-й отдельный десантно-штурмовой батальон (876-й одшб))

Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet (Дважды Краснознамённый Балтийский флот) - Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad Oblast, RSFSS

Red Banner Black Sea Fleet (Краснознамённый Черноморский флот) - Sevastopol, Crimean ASSR, Ukrainian SSR

  • 810th Separate Naval Infantry Brigade 60th Anniversary of the USSR (810-я отдельная бригада морской пехоты имени 60-летия образования СССР) - Sevastopol, Crimean ASSR, Ukrainian SSR
    • 881st Separate Landing Assault Battalion (881-й отдельный десантно-штурмовой батальон (881-й одшб))

Red Banner Pacific Fleet - Vladivostok, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR

  • 55th Mozyrskaya, Order of the Red Banner 55th Naval Infantry Division (55-я Мозырская Краснознамённая дивизия морской пехоты (55-я кдмп)) - Vladivostok, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR
    • 165th Naval Infantry Regiment (165-й полк морской пехоты (165-й пмп)) - Vladivostok, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR
      • unidentified Separate Landing Assault Battalion (Н-й отдельный десантно-штурмовой батальон)
    • 390th Naval Infantry Regiment (390-й полк морской пехоты (390-й пмп)) - Slavyanka, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR
      • unidentified Separate Landing Assault Battalion (Н-й отдельный десантно-штурмовой батальон)

Russian Federation edit

 
A Russian Naval Infantryman during an exercise in 2003
 
Russian naval infantry marching in the 2008 Victory Day Parade
 
Russian Pacific Fleet paratroopers in training, 2009
Elements of 61st Naval Infantry Brigade conducted amphibious landings since a Ropucha-class landing ship (24-09-2020).
 
Naval Infantrymen conducting anti-piracy tasks for guarding convoy ships in the Gulf of Aden and the Horn of Africa
 
Naval Infantry provide protection for the ships of the permanent task force in the Mediterranean off the coast of Syria.

The Naval Infantry of the Russian Navy includes the 55th Naval Infantry Division of the Russian Pacific Fleet, the independent brigades of the Northern (61st Brigade at Sputnik, Murmansk Oblast) and Baltic Fleets and of the Caspian Flotilla, and the independent regiment of the Black Sea Fleet.

In 1994, Exercise "Cooperation from the Sea" was conducted, in and around Vladivostok, with the U.S. III Marine Expeditionary Force, to foster a closer relationship between the Russian Naval Infantry and the United States Marine Corps. U.S. Marines and Russian naval infantrymen conducted their first exercise on U.S. soil the following year, in Hawaii. "Cooperation From the Sea 1995" was a maritime disaster relief exercise, which included cross training and personnel exchanges, and culminated in a combined U.S. and Russian amphibious landing. The purpose of the exercise was to improve interoperability, cooperation and understanding between U.S. and Russian personnel.

In 1998, the 22nd Motor Rifle Division, Far East Military District, at Petropavlovsk-Kamchatka, was transferred to the Pacific Fleet. In 2000 the division became the 40th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade, and on 1 September 2007 the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade (40 отд. Краснодарско-Харбинская дважды Краснознаменная бригада морской пехоты). In 2013, the regiment became, again, the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade.[12]

From 2000 onwards, the Caspian Flotilla included a new naval infantry brigade, the 77th, based at Kaspiysk. The headquarters and two battalions of the brigade were scheduled to be established by August 1, 2000.[13] It was reported by Agenstvo Voyenniykh Novostyei (AVN) in June 2000 that the new brigade, which may have inherited the lineage of the 77th Motor Rifle Division,[14][15] was to have its troops housed in Kaspiysk and Astrakhan, along with as many as 195 combat vehicles and two hovercraft sent to it from Chukotka and the Northern Fleet, respectively. The brigade was also reported to have had helicopters assigned to it.

 
A Zubr-class LCAC in 2009
 
Russian naval infantrymen during the Zapad 2013 Strategic Exercise in Kaliningrad
 
A joint boarding party of Russian Naval Infantry and MARCOS during Exercise INDRA in 2014
 
Troops of the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade with the Indian military during exercise Indra-2017
 
Troops of the 69th Engineer Regiment of the Baltic Fleet in the Kaliningrad Region, January 12, 2018

Syrian Civil War edit

In early September 2015, it was estimated that approximately 800 Russian Naval Infantrymen had taken up positions all along western Syria with the majority of them being stationed in the mountainous city of Slunfeh in east Latakia – the remaining personnel had been moved to the Homs (Wadi Al-Nasara) and Tartous (Masyaf and Safita) Governorates in preparation for the Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War.[16]

On the night of 19 to 20 September 2015, Russian Naval Infantry engaged in a fight with militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) near the city of Latakia. The militants tried to mount an attack on the airbase there, however, they were ambushed by the Naval Infantry. As a result of the clash, three militants were killed, two were captured, and the rest retreated.[17]

Before dawn of 24 September 2015, Russian Naval Infantry went into battle for the first time since their deployment to Syria, Debka file's military and intelligence sources reveal. The 810th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade fought with Syrian Army and Hezbollah special forces in an attack on ISIL forces at the Kweiris air base, east of Aleppo.[18]

In November 2015, a Russian Naval Infantryman was killed during an operation to rescue the crew of a Russian Sukhoi Su-24M bomber aircraft that was shot down by the Turkish Air Force near the Syria–Turkey border.

In March 2016, the 61st Naval Infantry Brigade conducted operations in which it aided the Syrian Army's liberation of the Syrian city of Palmyra.[19] The 61st also participated in the storming of the city.[19] Sources consider it one of the best trained and most combat experienced units of the Russian forces.[19]

In mid-May 2016, Russian Naval Infantry helped Syrian forces recapture the initiative in east Homs, while also recovering several points near the Al-Sha’ar Gas Fields and T-4 Military Airport.[20]

In September 2016, it was reported that Russian Naval Infantry were conducting operations on Aleppo's Castillo Highway.[21]

Russo-Ukrainian War edit

Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation edit

Russian Naval Infantry participated in the annexation of Crimea in 2014.[22]

War in Donbas (2014–2022) edit

The 61st Naval Infantry Brigade (Russia) participated in the Russo-Ukrainian War in the Luhansk Oblast.

2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit

On 24 February 2022, Russian Naval Infantry started an amphibious assault on the Sea of Azov coast and besieged the city of Mariupol.[23] Ropucha-class landing ship and Ivan Gren-class landing ship capable of landing tanks have reportedly been deployed in the region.[24] The 155th Guards Naval Infantry participated in the Kyiv offensive which was later repelled forcing the Russian forces to retreat to Belarus in April later redeploying to Yehorivka and Pavlivka in the Donbas.[25]

By 9 November 2022, the 155th Guards Naval Infantry and 40th Naval Infantry Brigade participated in an attack on the Ukrainian military garrison in Pavlivka. Members of the unit claimed to have taken roughly 300 casualties, with many of these complaints shared with notable Russian media figures and the unit's garrison. The members went further stating the attacks took place due to their commander's desire to earn bonuses and distinction through awards.[26] On 15 November 2022, a commander of the Russian-proxy Donetsk People's Republic indicated that lower-level commanders within the 155th Guards Naval Infantry disregarded orders in the attack on Pavlivka. [27]

In December, The New York Times reported on the deployment of the 155th Guards Naval Infantry to Pavlivka. Recruits "lacked sufficient food, maps, critical medical supplies, or walkie-talkies, and they were forced to use 1970s-era Kalashnikov rifles — with some members having to resort to using Wikipedia to locate instructions for using certain weapons". There was also a shortage of ammunition. One soldier said, "This isn't war. It's the destruction of the Russian people by their own commanders." Many used their Russian cellphones to call home, enabling Ukraine to track the unit and attack it. Many soldiers were volunteers but had "little experience" regarding the use of firearms.[28]

In January 2023, the 155th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade attempted a breakthrough assault in Vuhledar against the Ukrainian 72nd Mechanized Brigade but failed. The unit saw initial success, however, but according to former FSB colonel Igor Strelkov, their assault stagnated following heavy losses to infantry and lack of ammunition for their organic fire support, despite using their T-80 tanks in an indirect fire role, and ''in general-poor technical support for the attacking units and their low staffing.''[29][30]

Organization edit

 
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev awarding the Order of Courage to Naval Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Oleg Kistanov on July 4, 2010, for his actions during the retaking of the Russian tanker MV Moscow University from Somali pirates
 
DP-64 Anti-saboteur weapon

The largest naval infantry units are brigades or regiments. A Naval Infantry Regiment consists of roughly 2,000 personnel and is equipped with the PT-76 and BRDM-2, consists of 1 Tank Battalion and 3 naval infantry battalions, one motorised with BTR-60-series amphibious vehicles. brigades are somewhat larger. Although, sizes vary depending on mission and specializations.[31]

Naval Infantry Battalions comprise the backbone of the naval infantry fighting force. The battalion is made up of three naval infantry companies, a mortar platoon, an antitank platoon, and supporting supply and maintenance, medical, and communications units. In all, the battalion numbers about 400 men. This unit, reinforced, constitutes the basic amphibious attack force in the assault landing-the battalion assault force (BAF).[31]

At least one infantry battalion of each regiment or brigade is parachute trained, while all of the remaining infantry battalions are trained to be able to carry out air assault missions.

Pacific Fleet edit

 
The structure of the Pacific Fleet Naval Infantry

Baltic Fleet edit

  • 299th Baltic Fleet Coastal Forces Training Center
  • 336th Guards Marine Brigade– Baltiysk
    • 877th Marine Battalion
    • 879th Air-Assault (Desant) Battalion
    • 884th Marine Battalion
    • 1612th Self-Propelled Artillery Battalion
    • 1618th Anti-Aircraft Missile and Artillery Battalion
    • 53rd Marine cargo escort platoon  – Kaliningrad

Northern Fleet edit

  • 61st Marine Brigade – Sputnik, Murmansk Oblast
    • Brigade Headquarters
    • 874th Marine Battalion
    • 876th Air-Assault (Desant) Battalion
    • 886th Reconnaissance Battalion
    • 125th Armored Battalion
    • 1611th Self-propelled Artillery Battalion
    • 1591st Self-propelled Artillery Battalion
    • 1617th Anti-aircraft Missile and Artillery Battalion
  • 75th Naval Hospital
  • 317th Marine Battalion
  • 318th Marine Battalion

Black Sea Fleet edit

  • 810th Guards Marine Brigade – Kazachye Bukhta, Sevastopol (a regiment until 1 December 2008)
    • 880th Marine Battalion
    • 881st Air-Assault Battalion
    • 888th Reconnaissance Battalion
    • 1613th Artillery Battery
    • 1619th Air-Defense Artillery Battery
  • 382nd Marine Battalion

Caspian Flotilla edit

Equipment edit

 
A Soviet naval infantryman stands with his arm rested on his PT-76 amphibious light tank in August 1989. Note the large (opened) oval shaped double hatch, the searchlight on the right hand side of the top of the turret, the radio antenna on the left hand-side of the turret and the headlamps inside steel cages on the left and right front end.

As of 2020 Russian Naval Infantry had been gradually phasing out PT-76 amphibious tanks, and starting to receive a number of T-80s and upgraded BMP-2Ms.[37][38] A full-strength Naval Infantry Brigade may have up to 80 tanks. The Russian Naval Infantry has 50 T-72B, 150 T-72B3, 30 T-72B3 mod. 2016, 50 T-80BV and 50 T-80BVM as of 2021. The APCs used by the Naval Infantry are either wheeled BTR-80s (in Assault Landing Battalions) or tracked MT-LBs (in Naval Infantry Battalions). Naval Infantry units are receiving BMP-3 IFVs; about 40 were delivered in 2021.[39] BMP-3s may equip one company per Naval Infantry battalion.

According to a Defense Ministry statement published by RIA Novosti in November 2009, "All units of Russia's naval infantry will be fully equipped with advanced weaponry by 2015." Included in this upgrade would be T-90 tanks, BMP-3 IFVs, 2S31 120mm mortar/artillery tracks, wheeled BTR-82A armored personnel carriers, air defense equipment and small arms.[40] All Naval Infantry units were equipped with Ratnik infantry combat gear and all Northern Fleet naval infantry units were equipped with BTR-82A APCs as of November 2016.[41]

Naval Infantry and Navy units also receive new-technology binoculars.[citation needed] As of 2017 the Naval Infantry had started to receive a modernized version of Strelets reconnaissance, control and communications system and completed receiving D-10 parachutes.[42][43] All Pacific Fleet and Caspian Flotilla naval infantry units were equipped with BTR-82A APCs as of September 2019.[44][45][46] 40 BTR-82A were delivered for the Black Sea Fleet in early 2021.[47] The Pacific Fleet Naval Infantry were armed with "Sectant" small robotic reconnaissance systems in late 2021.[48]

In late February 2014, at least one Black Sea Fleet assigned unit (at company level) was apparently using Tigr armored cars near Sevastopol during the 2014 Crimean crisis. During the crisis in March 2014 imagery emerged of some Naval Infantry personnel carrying what appeared to be the OTs-14-1A-04 7.62×39mm assault rifle with an under-barrel GP-30 40mm grenade launcher, a bullpup design normally associated with Russian Airborne Troops, as well as Combat Engineering and Spetsnaz units. Naval Infantry of the Caspian Flotilla received modernized 5.45-mm Kalashnikov assault rifles, AK-74M with an "Obves" modernization kit in 2021.[49][50] The newest anti-landing mine PDM-MD passed state tests in 2019-2020.[51]

Heroes of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation edit

Heroes of the Soviet Union edit

  • Seaman Ahmed Dibirovich Abdulmedzhidov (1945)
  • Petty Officer Noah P. Adamia (1942)
  • Junior Sergeant Pavel Petrovich Artemov (1945)
  • Lieutenant Mikhail Ashik (1946)
  • Seaman Mikhail Avramenko (1945)
  • Seaman Yakov Illarionovich Balyaev (1945)
  • Major Mikhail Barabolko (1945)
  • Seaman (Naval Infantry) Pazhden M. Bartsits (1944)
  • Captain Nikolai Belyakov (1943, posthumous)
  • Major General Petr Bordanovisy (1943)
  • Corporal Ivan P. Dementyev (1945, posthumous)
  • Lieutenant Petr Deikano (1943)
  • Chief Petty Officer (Naval Infantry) Pavel Dubinda (1945, also full Cavalier of the Order of Glory)
  • Staff Sergeant Varlam Gabliya (1946)
  • Second Lieutenant Nikolai Kirillov (1943)
  • Seaman 1st Class (Naval Infantry) Aleksandr Komarov (1945)
  • Major Caesar Lvovich Kunikov (1943, posthumous)
  • Gunnery Sergeant Nikolai Kuzhetsov (1943, also Cavalier of the Order of Glory)
  • Petty Officer 1st Class (Naval Infantry) Yuri Lisitsyin (1945)
  • Major Pavel Litvinov (1943)
  • Seaman Kafur Nasyrovich Mamedov (1942, posthumous)
  • Guards Sergeant Viktor I. Medvedev (1945)
  • Lieutenant Nikolai Motshalin (1945)
  • First Lieutenant Konstantin Olyshanskiy (1945, posthumous)
  • Seaman Pavel D. Osipov (1945, posthumous)
  • Lieutenant Pyotr Shironin (1943, shironintsy)
  • Private Andrey Arkadevich Skvortsov (1943, shironintsy)
  • Private Aleksandr Fedorovich Toropov (1943, shironintsy)
  • Midshipman Sergei N. Vasilyev (1942, posthumous)
  • Petty Officer Sergey G. Zimin (1943, shironintsy)

Heroes of the Russian Federation edit

  • Starshina (Warrant Officer) Gennadiy A. Azarychev (1995)
  • Lieutenant Vladimir A. Belyavskiy (2006)
  • Senior Lieutenant Vladimir V. Borovikov
  • Colonel Aleksandr Chernov
  • Guards Lieutenant Aleksandr Darkovich (1995)
  • Midshipman (Warrant Officer) Andrey Vladimirovich Dneprovskiy
  • Senior Lieutenant Sergey Firsov
  • Major Pavel Nikolaevich Gaponenko
  • Major Andrey Y. Gushchin (1995)
  • Major Vladimir V. Karpushenko
  • Lt. Col. Dmitriy Nikolayevich Klimenko
  • Guards Captain Yevgeniy N. Kolesnikov (1995, posthumous)
  • Major General Yevgeniy Nikolayevich Kocheshkov
  • Senior Lieutenant Yuriy Gerasimovich Kuryagin
  • Major-General Aleksandr Otrakovskiy (2000, posthumous)
  • Guards Captain Dmitriy Polkovnikov (1995)
  • Guards Major General Sergey Sheiko (1995)
  • Major General Viktor Shulyak
  • Seaman Vladimir Vladimirovich Tatashvili
  • Captain Viktor Vdovkin
  • Senior Midshipman (Sr. Warrant Officer) Gregory Mikhailovich Zamyshlyak
  • Midshipman (Warrant Officer) Andrey N. Zakharchuk

Sealift edit

 
An Ivan Gren-class landing ship
 
A Ropucha-class landing ship
 
A Dyugon-class landing craft
 
A Zubr-class LCAC
 
An Ondatra-class landing craft

The Alligator tank landing ship and more modern Ropucha-class landing ship is a typical amphibious assault ship. Propelled by diesel engines, this ship is relatively small, displacing about 4,500 tons. In 1978, the Soviets launched a new amphibious ship, the Ivan Rogov. The advent of the Ivan Rogov was taken in the West as an indication that the Soviet Navy was planning to strengthen the power projection mission of Naval Infantry.

Twice the size of earlier ships, it can launch amphibious vehicles from its open bow doors. It also carries helicopters. Among the various small assault landing vehicles to launch from the bow are hovercraft, such as the Aist, which can carry the naval infantry ashore at speeds of fifty knots.

The composition and the class of the main ships:

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Russian Empire (until 1917)
    Russian SFSR (until 1922)
    Soviet Union (until 1991)

References edit

  1. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies: The Military Balance 2014, p.185
  2. ^ These are the elite Russian troops that are allegedly fighting some of the most crucial battles in Ukraine, businessinsider.com, 12 February 2015
  3. ^ "ЦАМТО / / На вооружение морских пехотинцев Балтийского флота поступили новейшие автоматы АК-12".
  4. ^ Suciu, Peter (2020-12-15). . The National Interest. USA: Center for the National Interest. Archived from the original on 2021-01-11. Retrieved 2021-04-10. "...Russia's Marines..."
  5. ^ "Russian Naval Infantry (Long Version)".
  6. ^ История морской пехоты Российской Империи до 1917 года.
  7. ^ "Морская пехота России".
  8. ^ "Russian Marines Took Beirut and Paris".
  9. ^ "История морской пехоты Российской Империи до 1917 года".
  10. ^ Feskov et al 2013, 143-44.
  11. ^ IISS Military Balance 1991–1992, p.30–31
  12. ^ "Войсковая часть 10103 (40-я ОБрМП)". 15 July 2015.
  13. ^ AVN Military News Agency, 'Chief of Staff Supervising Marine Brigade formation', 5 June 2000
  14. ^ Agenstvo Voyenniykh Novostyei (AVN) - news agency in Moscow, Russia covering local society and Интерфакс-Агентство Военных Новостей
  15. ^ Feskov et al. 2004
  16. ^ Leith Fadel (8 September 2015). "Russian Marines Position Themselves in Eastern Latakia". Al-Masdar News. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  17. ^ . Fortruss.blogspot.com. 2015-09-21. Archived from the original on 2018-03-17. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  18. ^ osnetdaily. "Russian marines in first Battle against ISIS in Syria". Osnetdaily.com. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  19. ^ a b c "Russian Marines at Palmyra". InformNapalm. 18 April 2016. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  20. ^ Russian marines begin military operations in Syria (2016-05-16). . Mirrorspectrum. Archived from the original on 2017-02-13. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  21. ^ Leith Fadel (13 September 2016). "Russian Marines replace Syrian Army on Aleppo's Castillo Highway". Al-Masdar News. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  22. ^ Galeotti, Mark (2019). Armies of Russia's War in Ukraine. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 11–12. ISBN 9781472833440.
  23. ^ "Russian Navy Carries Out Amphibious Assault Near Mariupol". The Maritime Executive. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  24. ^ "UPDATED: Russian Navy Launches Amphibious Assault on Ukraine; Naval Infantry 30 Miles West of Mariupol". USNI News. 2022-02-25. Retrieved 2022-03-07.
  25. ^ Axe, David. "Buy Artillery Or Buy Coffins: The Russian Marine Corps' Dire Choice As Its Troops Die In Record Numbers". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  26. ^ "Elite Russian naval unit reacts to stunning loss of 300 men: "Baffling"". Newsweek. 2022-11-07. Retrieved 2022-11-11.
  27. ^ "Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, November 15". Institute for the Study of War. 2022-11-15. Retrieved 2022-11-15.
  28. ^ John L. Dorman (2022-12-18). "Russian troops have turned to Wikipedia to find instructions on handling weapons and used 1960s-era maps in the country's invasion of Ukraine: NYT". Yahoo! Canada. Retrieved 2022-12-20.
  29. ^ Axe, David. "Russian Marines Just Attempted Another Frontal Assault On Ukrainian Positions Around Pavlivka. The Result Was Predictably Bloody". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  30. ^ "Russia may have lost an entire elite brigade near a Donetsk coal-mining town".
  31. ^ a b "Naval Infantry - Organization and Equipment".
  32. ^ Moscow Defense Brief #2, 2011 p. 18–22; see also http://www.ww2.dk/new/navy/55dmp.htm
  33. ^ (2009 to regiment)
  34. ^ (2013 back to brigade)
  35. ^ В Каспийске завершено формирование 177-го полка морской пехоты
  36. ^ В новом полку морской пехоты Каспийской флотилии прошло первое занятие по предметам боевой подготовки / mil.ru
  37. ^ "Pacific Fleet Marines receive new T-80BV tanks, Kamchatka region". Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. 6 December 2017.
  38. ^ "Russian upgraded BMP-2M IFVs deployed in Kamchatka". Army Recognition. 16 January 2020.
  39. ^ "ЦАМТО / / Морская пехота ТОФ получила на вооружение современные БМП-3". 2 April 2021.
  40. ^ Russia's naval infantry to be totally re-armed by 2015
  41. ^ "Russian marines get "Ratnik" infantry combat system - Navy". Interfax. 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2017-03-02.
  42. ^ "Морпехи будут наводить "Ониксы" и "Калибры" с помощью "Стрельца" | Еженедельник "Военно-промышленный курьер"".
  43. ^ "ЦАМТО / Новости / Морская пехота России перешла с парашютов Д-6 на Д-10".
  44. ^ "ЦАМТО / Новости / Соединения Морской пехоты ТОФ на Камчатке и в Приморье полностью укомплектованы новыми БТР-82А".
  45. ^ "Russian Caspian Flotilla Marines receive BTR-82A armored personnel carriers | June 2018 Global Defense Security army news industry | Defense Security global news industry army 2018 | Archive News year".
  46. ^ "ЦАМТО / Новости / Морская пехота ТОФ на Камчатке получила более 30 бронетранспортеров БТР-82А".
  47. ^ "ЦАМТО / / Батальон морской пехоты Черноморского флота получил 40 новых БТР-82А".
  48. ^ "ЦАМТО / / Морпехи ТОФ получили на вооружение малогабаритные роботизированные комплексы разведки "Сектант"".
  49. ^ "ЦАМТО / / На вооружение морской пехоты КФл поступили модернизированные автоматы АК-74М с комплектом "Обвес"".
  50. ^ "ЦАМТО / / Морпехи КФл полностью перевооружены на модернизированные автоматы АК-74М "Обвес"".
  51. ^ "ЦАМТО / / На «Армии-2022» впервые покажут новейшую мину против морских десантов".

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Russian Naval Infantry at Wikimedia Commons

russian, naval, infantry, russian, Морская, пехота, России, romanized, morskaya, pekhota, rossii, russian, infantry, often, referred, russian, marines, west, operate, naval, infantry, russian, navy, established, 1705, they, capable, conducting, amphibious, ope. The Russian Naval Infantry Russian Morskaya pehota Rossii romanized Morskaya pekhota Rossii lit Russian sea infantry often referred to as Russian Marines in the West 4 operate as the naval infantry of the Russian Navy Established in 1705 they are capable of conducting amphibious operations as well as operating as more traditional light infantry Russian Naval InfantryMorskaya pehota Rossii Morskaya Pekhota RossiiUnofficial emblem of the Russian Naval InfantryFounded1696 1696 1917 1917 1992 1992 presentCountryRussia a BranchRussian NavyTypeNaval infantry and Naval special forcesSize12 000 personnel incl 800 commando frogmen 1 2 Part ofCoastal Defense ForcesGarrisons HQsMoscowSevastopolSputnikKamchatkaBaltiyskKaliningradNickname s Chernaya smert Chernye berety English Black Death Black Berets Motto s Tam gde my tam pobeda English Where We Are There is Victory Color of BeretBlack March Ekipazh Odna semya English The Crew One Family Marsh morskoj pehoty English March of the Marines AnniversariesNovember 27EquipmentOTs 14 1A 04 7 62 39mm assault rifle with an under barrel GP 30 40mm grenade launcher bullpup design AK 74M 5 45 39mm assault rifle AK 12 5 45 39mm assault rifle 3 DP 64 anti saboteur grenade launcher 2S31 Vena 120mm mortar 2S12 Sani 120mm mortar PT 76 amphibious tank T 80 tank T 72 tank BMP 2 infantry fighting vehicle BMP 3 infantry fighting vehicle BTR 80 armored personnel carrier BTR 82A armored personnel carrier MT LB armored personnel carrier GAZ Tigr armored carEngagementsRussian Swedish warsRusso Turkish warNapoleonic WarsRusso Japanese WarWorld War IRussian Civil WarWorld War IIFirst Chechen warSecond Chechen warRusso Georgian WarMV Moscow University hijackingAnti piracy operations2014 Russian military intervention in UkraineRussian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War2022 Russian invasion of UkraineCommandersCurrentcommanderLt Gen Alexander KolpachenkoNotablecommandersMaj Gen Vladimir RomanenkoMaj Gen Vladislav ChernomurovInsigniaFlag of the Naval Infantry The Naval Infantry also fields the Russian Navy s only special operations unit known as the commando frogmen Frogmen are typically drawn from the Naval Infantry s ranks and they are capable of a wide range of special operations tasks and missions Colloquially Russian speakers may refer to Naval Infantrymen using the abbreviation morpehi morpekhi plural singular form morpeh morpekh The first Russian marine force formed in 1705 and since that time it has fought in the Napoleonic Wars the Crimean War 1853 1856 the Russo Japanese War 1904 1905 the First World War 1914 1918 and the Second World War 1939 1945 Under Admiral Gorshkov Soviet Navy Commander in Chief from 1956 to 1985 the Soviet Navy expanded the reach of the Naval Infantry and deployed it worldwide on numerous occasions Since 2009 Lieutenant General NI Aleksandr Nikolaievich Kolpachenko ru Lieutenant General NI since 2014 has commanded the Naval Infantry in his capacity as the Deputy Commander for Coastal Troops Commandant of the Coastal Troops of the Russian Navy The Naval Infantry alongside the Coastal Defense Missile Artillery Forces form part of a larger institution the Coastal Troops of the Russian Navy Russian Beregovye vojska VMF Rossii Beregovye voyska VMF Rossii Contents 1 History 1 1 Official formation 1 2 Great Northern War 1 3 Russo Turkish Wars 1 4 Napoleonic War 1 5 Crimean War 1 6 Early 20th century 1 6 1 Russo Japanese War 1 6 2 World War I 1 6 3 Post Russian Revolutions and the Russian Civil War 1 7 Soviet era 1 7 1 Kronstadt rebellion 1 7 2 World War II 1 7 3 Cold War 1 8 1989 list of units 1 8 1 Landing Assault units of the Naval Infantry 1 9 Russian Federation 1 9 1 Syrian Civil War 1 9 2 Russo Ukrainian War 1 9 2 1 Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation 1 9 2 2 War in Donbas 2014 2022 1 9 2 3 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2 Organization 2 1 Pacific Fleet 2 2 Baltic Fleet 2 3 Northern Fleet 2 4 Black Sea Fleet 2 5 Caspian Flotilla 3 Equipment 4 Heroes of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation 4 1 Heroes of the Soviet Union 4 2 Heroes of the Russian Federation 5 Sealift 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editMain article Military history of the Russian Empire Little is known about the Russian Naval infantrymen during the Imperial era of Russia because many of the units formed consisted of supernumerary ship crews of destroyed or immobilised Russian warships 5 The history of the Russian Navy could be traced back to the 16th century with Ivan the Terrible with the formation of his special team of Streltsy sea soldiers as part of his crew of flotilla ships The official history of the Naval Infantry could be traced back to the creation of the Russian ship Oryol lit Eagle which launched in 1668 amp sailed with a crew of 23 sailors amp 35 soldiers with the soldiers duties of boarding amp capturing enemy ships amp providing sentinel service under the command of Ivan Domozhirov 6 During the Azov campaign of the Russo Turkish War under Peter the Great the soldiers in these units many of whom were recruited by the Preobrazhensky amp the Semyonovsky Regiments of the later to become Imperial Guards were shown to be particularly effective in carrying out those duties Those soldiers would later on form the Russian Navy s very first infantry regiment consisting of 4300 men 7 The first admiral of the regiment was appointed by no less than Tsar Peter I himself General Admiral Fyodor Golovin who later gave the respective order to Vice Admiral Cornelius Kruys on November 16 1705 marking the glorious years following for the Russian Naval Infantry 8 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2018 Official formation edit In November 16 27 1705 following a decree of Peter I the first regiment of naval equipage morskoj ekipazh or in other words equipped and supplied by the Russian Imperial Navy was formed for boarding and landing operations on the ships of the Baltic Fleet The regiment had 1200 men two battalions of five companies 45 officers amp 70 non commissioned officers and from this original regiment began the long history of Naval Infantry within Russia Great Northern War edit In 1714 the regiment won a victory against the Swedes during the Battle of Gangut However after the war a review of the Regiment s performance during the war concluded that the regimental organization of the unit did not work with the organizational structure of the Navy s fleet and did not allow it to be correctly utilized in combat conditions As a result the naval regiment was disbanded and in replace of it five naval battalions of consisting of men drawn from the army was created in 1712 1714 amp attached to the fleet Vice Admiral Battalion for service in the vanguard squadrons on the ships of the squadron s avant garde Admiral s Battalion for service on ships of the squadron center Rear Admiral Battalion for service on the ships of the rear guard of the squadron Galler Battalion for service on combat ships of the Galere fleet Admiralty Battalion for guard duty and other tasks 9 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2018 Russo Turkish Wars edit The Russian naval infantry were involved in a series of victories against the Ottoman Empire including the rout of the Turkish Navy at the Battle for Cesme Harbor in 1770 and the taking of Izmail Fortress on the Danube in 1790 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2018 Napoleonic War edit During the prelude to the war in 1799 the Russian naval infantry took the French fortress at Corfu after a four month siege In 1806 a Russian landing force took Naples by storm and entered the Papal States During the War of the Sixth Coalition the Russian naval infantry distinguished itself against La Grande Armee at the Battle of Borodino 1812 Battle of Kulm 1813 and the Siege of Danzig This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2018 Crimean War edit By 1813 significant parts of the naval infantry were transferred to the Army amp subsequently lost naval connections For almost 100 years there were no large infantry units in the Russian Navy Nevertheless in 1854 1855 during the Siege of Sevastopol against British French and Turkish troops there were renewed calls for revival of the military s Naval Infantry units 17 separate sea battalions were formed and they participated in the defense of Sevastopol Early 20th century edit Russo Japanese War edit During 1904 Russo Japanese War the naval infantry defended Port Arthur against Japanese forces Personnels were recruited from regular sailors amp naval crews to make up the numbers Seven separate naval rifle battalions a separate landing squad of sailors three separate sea rifle companies and several machine gun teams were formed This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 World War I edit The question of the formation of permanent Naval Infantry Units were raised only in 1910 and in 1911 projects were underway under the Chief Naval Staff for the development of permanent infantry units in the main naval bases of the country an infantry regiment under the Baltic Fleet an infantry battalion in the Black Sea Fleet and the Vladivostok Battalion for the Pacific Fleet In August 1914 two separate battalions from the personnel of the Guards Fleet Crew and one battalion of personnel from the 1st Baltic Fleet Crew were created in Kronstadt In March 1915 a separate naval battalion of the 2nd Baltic Fleet Crew was transformed into the Marine Regiment of Special Purpose It included a mine company a machine gun team a communications team regimental artillery a technical workshop a convoy and individual commands of the steamer Ivan town and boats At the end of 1916 and the beginning of 1917 the first two divisions of naval infantry were formed the Baltic Division and Black Sea Division The naval infantry was deployed to the Baltic to defend the homeland against German attack as well as the Caspian Sea for operations against Ottoman forces This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 Post Russian Revolutions and the Russian Civil War edit These naval infantrymen who served under the Navy of the Imperial State would later on form the core of the naval infantry service of the young Soviet Navy in 1918 which distinguished itself during the long Russian Civil War 1918 1922 Many of their fellow servicemen though supported the White movement and distinguished themselves as part of anti Soviet military operations during those years Many were shot upon capture by Soviet authorities Others were tortured and killed The Soviet Naval Infantry s major force during the civil war was the Baltic Fleet Naval Infantry the ex Imperial fleet division s Communist servicemen would provide much of the fighting power during those years following the Revolution This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 Soviet era edit Kronstadt rebellion edit Following the winding down of the Russian Civil War by 1920 the following year many Soviet Naval Infantrymen stationed in Kronstadt mutinied against the Soviet government in 1921 The mutiny was quickly put down by Soviet forces with the mutinying Naval Infantrymen facing retribution by the Soviet government leading to their eventual execution World War II edit nbsp Soviet naval infantry uniform of the Great Patriotic WarDuring World War II about 350 000 Soviet Navy sailors fought on land operations At the beginning of the war the navy had only one naval infantry brigade in the Baltic Fleet but began forming and training other battalions These eventually were six naval infantry regiments comprising two 650 man battalions each 40 naval infantry brigades of 5 10 battalions formed from surplus ships crews Five brigades were awarded Gvardiya Guards status On November 1 1944 the greatly understrength Red Army 55th Rifle Division was converted into a garrison formation for the Porkkala Naval Base after the Finnish capitulation in late September 1944 10 plus numerous smaller unitsMany of the new units were raised as part of the Black Sea Pacific and Northern Fleets The military situation demanded the deployment of large numbers of naval infantry on land so the Naval Infantry contributed to the defense of Odessa Moscow Leningrad Sevastopol Stalingrad Novorossiysk and Kerch The Naval Infantry conducted over 114 landings most of which were carried out by platoons and companies In general however Naval Infantry served as regular infantry without any amphibious training They conducted four major operations two during the Battle of the Kerch Peninsula one during the Caucasus Campaign and one as part of the Landing at Moonsund in the Baltic During the war five brigades and two battalions of naval infantry were awarded Guards status Nine brigades and six battalions were awarded decorations and many were given honorary titles The title Hero of the Soviet Union was bestowed on 122 Naval Infantry servicemen The Soviet experience in amphibious warfare in World War II contributed to the development of Soviet operational art in combined arms operations Many members of the Naval Infantry were parachute trained they conducted more drops and successful parachute operations than the Soviet Airborne Troops VDV citation needed The Naval Infantry was disbanded in 1947 with some units being transferred to the Coastal Defence Force Cold War edit nbsp Soviet marines in 1985 nbsp Soviet marines during a demonstration in 1990In 1961 the Naval Infantry was re formed and became a combat arm of the Soviet Navy Each Fleet was assigned a Naval Infantry unit of regiment and later brigade size The Naval Infantry received amphibious versions of standard armoured fighting vehicles including tanks used by the Soviet Army By 1989 the Naval Infantry numbered 18 000 troops organised into the 55th Naval Infantry Division at Vladivostok and at least four independent brigades the 61st Kirkenneskaya Brigade at Pechenga Northern Fleet 175th at Tumannyy in the North 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade at Baltiysk Baltic Fleet and 810th at Sevastopol Black Sea Fleet By the end of the Cold War the Soviet Navy had over eighty landing ships as well as two Ivan Rogov class landing ships The latter could transport one infantry battalion with 40 armoured vehicles and their landing craft One of the Rogov ships has since been retired At 75 units the Soviet Union had the world s largest inventory of combat air cushion assault craft In addition many of the 2 500 vessels of the Soviet merchant fleet Morflot could off load weapons and supplies during amphibious landings On November 18 1990 on the eve of the Paris Summit where the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe CFE Treaty and the Vienna Document on Confidence and Security Building Measures CSBMs were signed Soviet data were presented under the so called initial data exchange This showed a rather sudden emergence of three so called coastal defence divisions including the 3rd at Klaipeda in the Baltic Military District the 126th in the Odessa Military District and seemingly the 77th Guards Motor Rifle Division with the Northern Fleet along with three artillery brigades regiments subordinate to the Soviet Navy which had previously been unknown as such to NATO 11 Much of the equipment which was commonly understood to be treaty limited TLE was declared to be part of the naval infantry The Soviet argument was that the CFE excluded all naval forces including its permanently land based components The Soviet Government eventually became convinced that its position could not be maintained A proclamation of the Soviet government on July 14 1991 which was later adopted by its successor states provided that all treaty limited equipment tanks artillery and armoured vehicles assigned to naval infantry or coastal defence forces would count against the total treaty entitlement 1989 list of units edit Landing Assault units of the Naval Infantry edit In addition to the Landing Assault Troops of the Ground Forces similar units were also formed by the Soviet Naval Infantry with the main task to execute airborne landings by parachute or by helicopters take over and defend a beachhead for the amphibious landing of the main force By 1989 these units were organized under their respective Fleet HQs as follows Red Banner Northern Fleet Krasnoznamyonnyj Severnyj flot ZATO Severomorsk Murmansk Oblast RSFSR 61st Separate Kirkenesskaya Red Banner Naval Infantry Brigade 61 ya otdelnaya kirkenesskaya krasnoznamyonnaya brigada morskoj pehoty 61 ya obrmp Sputnik Murmansk Oblast RSFSR 876th Separate Landing Assault Battalion 876 j otdelnyj desantno shturmovoj batalon 876 j odshb Twice Red Banner Baltic Fleet Dvazhdy Krasnoznamyonnyj Baltijskij flot Kaliningrad Kaliningrad Oblast RSFSS 336th Separate Guards Belostokskaya Order of Suvorov and the Order of Alexander Nevski Naval Infantry Brigade 336 ya otdelnaya gvardejskaya brigada morskoj pehoty 61 ya obrmp Baltiysk Kaliningrad Oblast RSFSS 879th Separate Landing Assault Battalion 879 j otdelnyj desantno shturmovoj batalon 879 j odshb Red Banner Black Sea Fleet Krasnoznamyonnyj Chernomorskij flot Sevastopol Crimean ASSR Ukrainian SSR 810th Separate Naval Infantry Brigade 60th Anniversary of the USSR 810 ya otdelnaya brigada morskoj pehoty imeni 60 letiya obrazovaniya SSSR Sevastopol Crimean ASSR Ukrainian SSR 881st Separate Landing Assault Battalion 881 j otdelnyj desantno shturmovoj batalon 881 j odshb Red Banner Pacific Fleet Vladivostok Primorsky Krai RSFSR 55th Mozyrskaya Order of the Red Banner 55th Naval Infantry Division 55 ya Mozyrskaya Krasnoznamyonnaya diviziya morskoj pehoty 55 ya kdmp Vladivostok Primorsky Krai RSFSR 165th Naval Infantry Regiment 165 j polk morskoj pehoty 165 j pmp Vladivostok Primorsky Krai RSFSR unidentified Separate Landing Assault Battalion N j otdelnyj desantno shturmovoj batalon 390th Naval Infantry Regiment 390 j polk morskoj pehoty 390 j pmp Slavyanka Primorsky Krai RSFSR unidentified Separate Landing Assault Battalion N j otdelnyj desantno shturmovoj batalon Russian Federation edit nbsp A Russian Naval Infantryman during an exercise in 2003 nbsp Russian naval infantry marching in the 2008 Victory Day Parade nbsp Russian Pacific Fleet paratroopers in training 2009 source source source source source source source source Elements of 61st Naval Infantry Brigade conducted amphibious landings since a Ropucha class landing ship 24 09 2020 nbsp Naval Infantrymen conducting anti piracy tasks for guarding convoy ships in the Gulf of Aden and the Horn of Africa nbsp Naval Infantry provide protection for the ships of the permanent task force in the Mediterranean off the coast of Syria The Naval Infantry of the Russian Navy includes the 55th Naval Infantry Division of the Russian Pacific Fleet the independent brigades of the Northern 61st Brigade at Sputnik Murmansk Oblast and Baltic Fleets and of the Caspian Flotilla and the independent regiment of the Black Sea Fleet In 1994 Exercise Cooperation from the Sea was conducted in and around Vladivostok with the U S III Marine Expeditionary Force to foster a closer relationship between the Russian Naval Infantry and the United States Marine Corps U S Marines and Russian naval infantrymen conducted their first exercise on U S soil the following year in Hawaii Cooperation From the Sea 1995 was a maritime disaster relief exercise which included cross training and personnel exchanges and culminated in a combined U S and Russian amphibious landing The purpose of the exercise was to improve interoperability cooperation and understanding between U S and Russian personnel In 1998 the 22nd Motor Rifle Division Far East Military District at Petropavlovsk Kamchatka was transferred to the Pacific Fleet In 2000 the division became the 40th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade and on 1 September 2007 the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade 40 otd Krasnodarsko Harbinskaya dvazhdy Krasnoznamennaya brigada morskoj pehoty In 2013 the regiment became again the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade 12 From 2000 onwards the Caspian Flotilla included a new naval infantry brigade the 77th based at Kaspiysk The headquarters and two battalions of the brigade were scheduled to be established by August 1 2000 13 It was reported by Agenstvo Voyenniykh Novostyei AVN in June 2000 that the new brigade which may have inherited the lineage of the 77th Motor Rifle Division 14 15 was to have its troops housed in Kaspiysk and Astrakhan along with as many as 195 combat vehicles and two hovercraft sent to it from Chukotka and the Northern Fleet respectively The brigade was also reported to have had helicopters assigned to it nbsp A Zubr class LCAC in 2009 nbsp Russian naval infantrymen during the Zapad 2013 Strategic Exercise in Kaliningrad nbsp A joint boarding party of Russian Naval Infantry and MARCOS during Exercise INDRA in 2014 nbsp Troops of the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade with the Indian military during exercise Indra 2017 nbsp Troops of the 69th Engineer Regiment of the Baltic Fleet in the Kaliningrad Region January 12 2018Syrian Civil War edit In early September 2015 it was estimated that approximately 800 Russian Naval Infantrymen had taken up positions all along western Syria with the majority of them being stationed in the mountainous city of Slunfeh in east Latakia the remaining personnel had been moved to the Homs Wadi Al Nasara and Tartous Masyaf and Safita Governorates in preparation for the Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War 16 On the night of 19 to 20 September 2015 Russian Naval Infantry engaged in a fight with militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL near the city of Latakia The militants tried to mount an attack on the airbase there however they were ambushed by the Naval Infantry As a result of the clash three militants were killed two were captured and the rest retreated 17 Before dawn of 24 September 2015 Russian Naval Infantry went into battle for the first time since their deployment to Syria Debka file s military and intelligence sources reveal The 810th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade fought with Syrian Army and Hezbollah special forces in an attack on ISIL forces at the Kweiris air base east of Aleppo 18 In November 2015 a Russian Naval Infantryman was killed during an operation to rescue the crew of a Russian Sukhoi Su 24M bomber aircraft that was shot down by the Turkish Air Force near the Syria Turkey border In March 2016 the 61st Naval Infantry Brigade conducted operations in which it aided the Syrian Army s liberation of the Syrian city of Palmyra 19 The 61st also participated in the storming of the city 19 Sources consider it one of the best trained and most combat experienced units of the Russian forces 19 In mid May 2016 Russian Naval Infantry helped Syrian forces recapture the initiative in east Homs while also recovering several points near the Al Sha ar Gas Fields and T 4 Military Airport 20 In September 2016 it was reported that Russian Naval Infantry were conducting operations on Aleppo s Castillo Highway 21 Russo Ukrainian War edit Main article Russo Ukrainian War Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation edit Main articles Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation and List of Russian units which invaded the territory of Ukraine Russian Naval Infantry participated in the annexation of Crimea in 2014 22 War in Donbas 2014 2022 edit Main article War in Donbas 2014 2022 The 61st Naval Infantry Brigade Russia participated in the Russo Ukrainian War in the Luhansk Oblast 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine edit Main articles 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and Siege of Mariupol On 24 February 2022 Russian Naval Infantry started an amphibious assault on the Sea of Azov coast and besieged the city of Mariupol 23 Ropucha class landing ship and Ivan Gren class landing ship capable of landing tanks have reportedly been deployed in the region 24 The 155th Guards Naval Infantry participated in the Kyiv offensive which was later repelled forcing the Russian forces to retreat to Belarus in April later redeploying to Yehorivka and Pavlivka in the Donbas 25 By 9 November 2022 the 155th Guards Naval Infantry and 40th Naval Infantry Brigade participated in an attack on the Ukrainian military garrison in Pavlivka Members of the unit claimed to have taken roughly 300 casualties with many of these complaints shared with notable Russian media figures and the unit s garrison The members went further stating the attacks took place due to their commander s desire to earn bonuses and distinction through awards 26 On 15 November 2022 a commander of the Russian proxy Donetsk People s Republic indicated that lower level commanders within the 155th Guards Naval Infantry disregarded orders in the attack on Pavlivka 27 In December The New York Times reported on the deployment of the 155th Guards Naval Infantry to Pavlivka Recruits lacked sufficient food maps critical medical supplies or walkie talkies and they were forced to use 1970s era Kalashnikov rifles with some members having to resort to using Wikipedia to locate instructions for using certain weapons There was also a shortage of ammunition One soldier said This isn t war It s the destruction of the Russian people by their own commanders Many used their Russian cellphones to call home enabling Ukraine to track the unit and attack it Many soldiers were volunteers but had little experience regarding the use of firearms 28 In January 2023 the 155th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade attempted a breakthrough assault in Vuhledar against the Ukrainian 72nd Mechanized Brigade but failed The unit saw initial success however but according to former FSB colonel Igor Strelkov their assault stagnated following heavy losses to infantry and lack of ammunition for their organic fire support despite using their T 80 tanks in an indirect fire role and in general poor technical support for the attacking units and their low staffing 29 30 Organization edit nbsp Russian President Dmitry Medvedev awarding the Order of Courage to Naval Infantry Lieutenant Colonel Oleg Kistanov on July 4 2010 for his actions during the retaking of the Russian tanker MV Moscow University from Somali pirates nbsp DP 64 Anti saboteur weaponThe largest naval infantry units are brigades or regiments A Naval Infantry Regiment consists of roughly 2 000 personnel and is equipped with the PT 76 and BRDM 2 consists of 1 Tank Battalion and 3 naval infantry battalions one motorised with BTR 60 series amphibious vehicles brigades are somewhat larger Although sizes vary depending on mission and specializations 31 Naval Infantry Battalions comprise the backbone of the naval infantry fighting force The battalion is made up of three naval infantry companies a mortar platoon an antitank platoon and supporting supply and maintenance medical and communications units In all the battalion numbers about 400 men This unit reinforced constitutes the basic amphibious attack force in the assault landing the battalion assault force BAF 31 At least one infantry battalion of each regiment or brigade is parachute trained while all of the remaining infantry battalions are trained to be able to carry out air assault missions Pacific Fleet edit nbsp The structure of the Pacific Fleet Naval Infantry155th Guards Marine Brigade 32 Brigade HQ 390th Marine Regiment 59th Marine Battalion 84th Tank Battalion 263rd Artillery Battery 1484th Signals Battalion Air Defense Battery 40th Krasnodar Harbin Marine Brigade Kamchatka redesignated from 3rd Regiment in 2013 33 34 Baltic Fleet edit 299th Baltic Fleet Coastal Forces Training Center 336th Guards Marine Brigade Baltiysk 877th Marine Battalion 879th Air Assault Desant Battalion 884th Marine Battalion 1612th Self Propelled Artillery Battalion 1618th Anti Aircraft Missile and Artillery Battalion 53rd Marine cargo escort platoon KaliningradNorthern Fleet edit 61st Marine Brigade Sputnik Murmansk Oblast Brigade Headquarters 874th Marine Battalion 876th Air Assault Desant Battalion 886th Reconnaissance Battalion 125th Armored Battalion 1611th Self propelled Artillery Battalion 1591st Self propelled Artillery Battalion 1617th Anti aircraft Missile and Artillery Battalion 75th Naval Hospital 317th Marine Battalion 318th Marine BattalionBlack Sea Fleet edit 810th Guards Marine Brigade Kazachye Bukhta Sevastopol a regiment until 1 December 2008 880th Marine Battalion 881st Air Assault Battalion 888th Reconnaissance Battalion 1613th Artillery Battery 1619th Air Defense Artillery Battery 382nd Marine BattalionCaspian Flotilla edit 177th Marine Regiment 35 36 Equipment edit nbsp A Soviet naval infantryman stands with his arm rested on his PT 76 amphibious light tank in August 1989 Note the large opened oval shaped double hatch the searchlight on the right hand side of the top of the turret the radio antenna on the left hand side of the turret and the headlamps inside steel cages on the left and right front end As of 2020 update Russian Naval Infantry had been gradually phasing out PT 76 amphibious tanks and starting to receive a number of T 80s and upgraded BMP 2Ms 37 38 A full strength Naval Infantry Brigade may have up to 80 tanks The Russian Naval Infantry has 50 T 72B 150 T 72B3 30 T 72B3 mod 2016 50 T 80BV and 50 T 80BVM as of 2021 The APCs used by the Naval Infantry are either wheeled BTR 80s in Assault Landing Battalions or tracked MT LBs in Naval Infantry Battalions Naval Infantry units are receiving BMP 3 IFVs about 40 were delivered in 2021 39 BMP 3s may equip one company per Naval Infantry battalion According to a Defense Ministry statement published by RIA Novosti in November 2009 All units of Russia s naval infantry will be fully equipped with advanced weaponry by 2015 Included in this upgrade would be T 90 tanks BMP 3 IFVs 2S31 120mm mortar artillery tracks wheeled BTR 82A armored personnel carriers air defense equipment and small arms 40 All Naval Infantry units were equipped with Ratnik infantry combat gear and all Northern Fleet naval infantry units were equipped with BTR 82A APCs as of November 2016 41 Naval Infantry and Navy units also receive new technology binoculars citation needed As of 2017 the Naval Infantry had started to receive a modernized version of Strelets reconnaissance control and communications system and completed receiving D 10 parachutes 42 43 All Pacific Fleet and Caspian Flotilla naval infantry units were equipped with BTR 82A APCs as of September 2019 44 45 46 40 BTR 82A were delivered for the Black Sea Fleet in early 2021 47 The Pacific Fleet Naval Infantry were armed with Sectant small robotic reconnaissance systems in late 2021 48 In late February 2014 at least one Black Sea Fleet assigned unit at company level was apparently using Tigr armored cars near Sevastopol during the 2014 Crimean crisis During the crisis in March 2014 imagery emerged of some Naval Infantry personnel carrying what appeared to be the OTs 14 1A 04 7 62 39mm assault rifle with an under barrel GP 30 40mm grenade launcher a bullpup design normally associated with Russian Airborne Troops as well as Combat Engineering and Spetsnaz units Naval Infantry of the Caspian Flotilla received modernized 5 45 mm Kalashnikov assault rifles AK 74M with an Obves modernization kit in 2021 49 50 The newest anti landing mine PDM MD passed state tests in 2019 2020 51 Heroes of the Soviet Union and the Russian Federation editHeroes of the Soviet Union edit Seaman Ahmed Dibirovich Abdulmedzhidov 1945 Petty Officer Noah P Adamia 1942 Junior Sergeant Pavel Petrovich Artemov 1945 Lieutenant Mikhail Ashik 1946 Seaman Mikhail Avramenko 1945 Seaman Yakov Illarionovich Balyaev 1945 Major Mikhail Barabolko 1945 Seaman Naval Infantry Pazhden M Bartsits 1944 Captain Nikolai Belyakov 1943 posthumous Major General Petr Bordanovisy 1943 Corporal Ivan P Dementyev 1945 posthumous Lieutenant Petr Deikano 1943 Chief Petty Officer Naval Infantry Pavel Dubinda 1945 also full Cavalier of the Order of Glory Staff Sergeant Varlam Gabliya 1946 Second Lieutenant Nikolai Kirillov 1943 Seaman 1st Class Naval Infantry Aleksandr Komarov 1945 Major Caesar Lvovich Kunikov 1943 posthumous Gunnery Sergeant Nikolai Kuzhetsov 1943 also Cavalier of the Order of Glory Petty Officer 1st Class Naval Infantry Yuri Lisitsyin 1945 Major Pavel Litvinov 1943 Seaman Kafur Nasyrovich Mamedov 1942 posthumous Guards Sergeant Viktor I Medvedev 1945 Lieutenant Nikolai Motshalin 1945 First Lieutenant Konstantin Olyshanskiy 1945 posthumous Seaman Pavel D Osipov 1945 posthumous Lieutenant Pyotr Shironin 1943 shironintsy Private Andrey Arkadevich Skvortsov 1943 shironintsy Private Aleksandr Fedorovich Toropov 1943 shironintsy Midshipman Sergei N Vasilyev 1942 posthumous Petty Officer Sergey G Zimin 1943 shironintsy Heroes of the Russian Federation edit Starshina Warrant Officer Gennadiy A Azarychev 1995 Lieutenant Vladimir A Belyavskiy 2006 Senior Lieutenant Vladimir V Borovikov Colonel Aleksandr Chernov Guards Lieutenant Aleksandr Darkovich 1995 Midshipman Warrant Officer Andrey Vladimirovich Dneprovskiy Senior Lieutenant Sergey Firsov Major Pavel Nikolaevich Gaponenko Major Andrey Y Gushchin 1995 Major Vladimir V Karpushenko Lt Col Dmitriy Nikolayevich Klimenko Guards Captain Yevgeniy N Kolesnikov 1995 posthumous Major General Yevgeniy Nikolayevich Kocheshkov Senior Lieutenant Yuriy Gerasimovich Kuryagin Major General Aleksandr Otrakovskiy 2000 posthumous Guards Captain Dmitriy Polkovnikov 1995 Guards Major General Sergey Sheiko 1995 Major General Viktor Shulyak Seaman Vladimir Vladimirovich Tatashvili Captain Viktor Vdovkin Senior Midshipman Sr Warrant Officer Gregory Mikhailovich Zamyshlyak Midshipman Warrant Officer Andrey N ZakharchukSealift edit nbsp An Ivan Gren class landing ship nbsp A Ropucha class landing ship nbsp A Dyugon class landing craft nbsp A Zubr class LCAC nbsp An Ondatra class landing craftThe Alligator tank landing ship and more modern Ropucha class landing ship is a typical amphibious assault ship Propelled by diesel engines this ship is relatively small displacing about 4 500 tons In 1978 the Soviets launched a new amphibious ship the Ivan Rogov The advent of the Ivan Rogov was taken in the West as an indication that the Soviet Navy was planning to strengthen the power projection mission of Naval Infantry Twice the size of earlier ships it can launch amphibious vehicles from its open bow doors It also carries helicopters Among the various small assault landing vehicles to launch from the bow are hovercraft such as the Aist which can carry the naval infantry ashore at speeds of fifty knots The composition and the class of the main ships 4 units Alligator class landing ship 12 units Ropucha class landing ship 3 improved Ropucha class 2 units Zubr class LCAC 1 in hold in More Feodosiya 5 units Dyugon class landing craft 2 units Ivan Gren class landing shipSee also edit2008 Russian military reform ADS amphibious rifle 2000s New standard underwater rifle for Naval spetsnaz and certain other units APS underwater rifle Soviet and later Russian Navy standard issue for certain units ASM DT amphibious rifle 1990 s not widely issued SPP 1 underwater pistol Soviet and later Russian Navy standard issue for certain units Combat and other types of tactical divers Drozd active protection system Used during the 1980s on the Naval Infantry s T 55AD T 55AD1 tanks IDA71 military and naval rebreather Protei 5 dpv Solo Voyage Battle of Vyborg Bay 1944 Little green men Russo Ukrainian War Malaya Zemlya Vyborg Petrozavodsk Offensive TelnyashkaNotes edit Russian Empire until 1917 Russian SFSR until 1922 Soviet Union until 1991 References edit International Institute for Strategic Studies The Military Balance 2014 p 185 These are the elite Russian troops that are allegedly fighting some of the most crucial battles in Ukraine businessinsider com 12 February 2015 CAMTO Na vooruzhenie morskih pehotincev Baltijskogo flota postupili novejshie avtomaty AK 12 Suciu Peter 2020 12 15 Why Russia s Marines Are Training for War in Kaliningrad The National Interest USA Center for the National Interest Archived from the original on 2021 01 11 Retrieved 2021 04 10 Russia s Marines Russian Naval Infantry Long Version Istoriya morskoj pehoty Rossijskoj Imperii do 1917 goda Morskaya pehota Rossii Russian Marines Took Beirut and Paris Istoriya morskoj pehoty Rossijskoj Imperii do 1917 goda Feskov et al 2013 143 44 IISS Military Balance 1991 1992 p 30 31 Vojskovaya chast 10103 40 ya OBrMP 15 July 2015 AVN Military News Agency Chief of Staff Supervising Marine Brigade formation 5 June 2000 Agenstvo Voyenniykh Novostyei AVN news agency in Moscow Russia covering local society and Interfaks Agentstvo Voennyh Novostej Feskov et al 2004 Leith Fadel 8 September 2015 Russian Marines Position Themselves in Eastern Latakia Al Masdar News Retrieved 2017 03 02 Russian marines clash with ISIS in Syria Fort Russ Fortruss blogspot com 2015 09 21 Archived from the original on 2018 03 17 Retrieved 2017 03 02 osnetdaily Russian marines in first Battle against ISIS in Syria Osnetdaily com Retrieved 2017 03 02 a b c Russian Marines at Palmyra InformNapalm 18 April 2016 Retrieved 2017 03 02 Russian marines begin military operations in Syria 2016 05 16 Russian marines begin military operations in Syria Mirrorspectrum Archived from the original on 2017 02 13 Retrieved 2017 03 02 Leith Fadel 13 September 2016 Russian Marines replace Syrian Army on Aleppo s Castillo Highway Al Masdar News Retrieved 2017 03 02 Galeotti Mark 2019 Armies of Russia s War in Ukraine Oxford Osprey Publishing pp 11 12 ISBN 9781472833440 Russian Navy Carries Out Amphibious Assault Near Mariupol The Maritime Executive Retrieved 2022 03 07 UPDATED Russian Navy Launches Amphibious Assault on Ukraine Naval Infantry 30 Miles West of Mariupol USNI News 2022 02 25 Retrieved 2022 03 07 Axe David Buy Artillery Or Buy Coffins The Russian Marine Corps Dire Choice As Its Troops Die In Record Numbers Forbes Retrieved 2023 02 01 Elite Russian naval unit reacts to stunning loss of 300 men Baffling Newsweek 2022 11 07 Retrieved 2022 11 11 Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment November 15 Institute for the Study of War 2022 11 15 Retrieved 2022 11 15 John L Dorman 2022 12 18 Russian troops have turned to Wikipedia to find instructions on handling weapons and used 1960s era maps in the country s invasion of Ukraine NYT Yahoo Canada Retrieved 2022 12 20 Axe David Russian Marines Just Attempted Another Frontal Assault On Ukrainian Positions Around Pavlivka The Result Was Predictably Bloody Forbes Retrieved 2023 02 01 Russia may have lost an entire elite brigade near a Donetsk coal mining town a b Naval Infantry Organization and Equipment Moscow Defense Brief 2 2011 p 18 22 see also http www ww2 dk new navy 55dmp htm 2009 to regiment 2013 back to brigade V Kaspijske zaversheno formirovanie 177 go polka morskoj pehoty V novom polku morskoj pehoty Kaspijskoj flotilii proshlo pervoe zanyatie po predmetam boevoj podgotovki mil ru Pacific Fleet Marines receive new T 80BV tanks Kamchatka region Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation 6 December 2017 Russian upgraded BMP 2M IFVs deployed in Kamchatka Army Recognition 16 January 2020 CAMTO Morskaya pehota TOF poluchila na vooruzhenie sovremennye BMP 3 2 April 2021 Russia s naval infantry to be totally re armed by 2015 Russian marines get Ratnik infantry combat system Navy Interfax 2016 11 27 Retrieved 2017 03 02 Morpehi budut navodit Oniksy i Kalibry s pomoshyu Strelca Ezhenedelnik Voenno promyshlennyj kurer CAMTO Novosti Morskaya pehota Rossii pereshla s parashyutov D 6 na D 10 CAMTO Novosti Soedineniya Morskoj pehoty TOF na Kamchatke i v Primore polnostyu ukomplektovany novymi BTR 82A Russian Caspian Flotilla Marines receive BTR 82A armored personnel carriers June 2018 Global Defense Security army news industry Defense Security global news industry army 2018 Archive News year CAMTO Novosti Morskaya pehota TOF na Kamchatke poluchila bolee 30 bronetransporterov BTR 82A CAMTO Batalon morskoj pehoty Chernomorskogo flota poluchil 40 novyh BTR 82A CAMTO Morpehi TOF poluchili na vooruzhenie malogabaritnye robotizirovannye kompleksy razvedki Sektant CAMTO Na vooruzhenie morskoj pehoty KFl postupili modernizirovannye avtomaty AK 74M s komplektom Obves CAMTO Morpehi KFl polnostyu perevooruzheny na modernizirovannye avtomaty AK 74M Obves CAMTO Na Armii 2022 vpervye pokazhut novejshuyu minu protiv morskih desantov Further reading editNezavisimoe voennoe obozrenie Sokrashenie i plyus k etomu rasformirovanie Morskaya pehota Sostav i dislokaciya Chast 1 Chast 2 Zhurnal Morskoj pehotinec Tri veka slavnyh del http www flamesofwar com Default aspx tabid 108 amp art id 1197 amp kb cat id 100 https www almasdarnews com article russian marines replace syrian army aleppos castillo highway Archived 2019 02 23 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Russian Naval Infantry at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russian Naval Infantry amp oldid 1191935135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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