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Pacific Fleet (Russia)

The Pacific Fleet (Russian: Тихоокеанский флот,[1] translit: Tikhookeanskiy flot) is the Russian Navy fleet in the Pacific Ocean.

Pacific Fleet
Russian: Тихоокеанский флот
Russian Pacific Fleet emblem
Active1731–present
Allegiance Russian Empire
(1703–1917)
 Soviet Union
(1922–1991)
 Russian Federation
(1991–present)
Branch Russian Navy
RoleAt sea nuclear deterrence;
Naval warfare;
Amphibious military operations;
Combat patrols in the Pacific/Arctic;
Naval presence/diplomacy missions in the Pacific and elsewhere
Sizec. 46 Surface Warships (major surface units, light corvettes, mine warfare, amphibious) plus support ships/auxiliaries
c. 24-26 Submarines (of which about 2/3 active as of 2022)
Part of Russian Armed Forces
Garrison/HQFokino (HQ)
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
Vilyuchinsk
EngagementsRusso-Japanese War
World War I
October Revolution
Russian Civil War
World War II
Decorations Order of the Red Banner
Commanders
Current
commander
Adm. Viktor Liina
Notable
commanders
Adm. Nikolay Kuznetsov
Adm. Ivan Yumashev
Adm. Zinovy Rozhestvensky

Established in 1731 as part of the Imperial Russian Navy, the fleet was known as the Okhotsk Military Flotilla (1731–1856) and Siberian Military Flotilla (1856–1918), formed to defend Russian interests in the Russian Far East region along the Pacific coast. In 1918 the fleet was inherited by the Russian SFSR, then the Soviet Union in 1922 as part of the Soviet Navy, being reformed several times before being disbanded in 1926. In 1932 it was re-established as the Pacific Fleet, and was known as the Red Banner Pacific Fleet (Краснознамённый Тихоокеанский флот) after World War II as it had earned the Order of the Red Banner. In the Soviet years, the fleet was also responsible for the Soviet Navy's operations in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Red Banner Pacific Fleet was inherited by the Russian Federation as part of the Russian Navy and its current name was adopted.

The Pacific Fleet's headquarters is located in Fokino, formerly Vladivostok with numerous facilities within the Peter the Great Gulf in Primorsky Krai, and Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and Vilyuchinsk in Avacha Bay on the Kamchatka Peninsula in Kamchatka Krai. Following the APEC Russia 2012 summit, it was announced that the main naval base of the Pacific Fleet in the Russian Far East will be moved to the town of Fokino, Primorsky Krai. The current commander is Admiral Viktor Liina, who has held the position since April 2023.[2]

History Edit

In 1731, the Imperial Russian Navy created the Okhotsk Military Flotilla (Охотская военная флотилия, Okhotskaya voyennaya flotiliya) under its first commander, Grigoriy Skornyakov-Pisarev, to patrol and transport government goods to and from Kamchatka. In 1799, 3 frigates and 3 smaller ships were sent to Okhotsk under the command of Rear-Admiral I. Fomin to form a functioning military flotilla. In 1849, Petropavlovsk-na-Kamchatke became the Flotilla's principal base, which a year later would be transferred to Nikolayevsk-on-Amur and later to Vladivostok in 1871. In 1854, the men of the Flotilla distinguished themselves in the defense of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy during the Crimean War, (1853–1856). In 1856, the Okhotsk Military Flotilla changed its name to the "Siberian Military Flotilla" (Сибирская военная флотилия, Sibirskaya voyennaya flotiliya).

In 1860, the provisions of the Convention of Peking ceded parts of Russian Manchuria in northeastern China, including the modern day Primorsky Krai to the Russian Empire. A large squadron under Rear Admiral A. A. Popov was sent from the Baltic Fleet to the Pacific Ocean. During the American Civil War ships of the squadron visited San Francisco while the Baltic Fleet visited New York City. Parts of the squadron, including the Finnish corvette Kalevala, returned to the Baltic in 1865.

At the turn of the 20th century, the Flotilla was still small in numbers. Owing to a gradual deterioration in Russo-Japanese relations, the Imperial Russian government adopted a special shipbuilding program to meet the needs of the Russian Far East region, but its execution dragged on and in addition there were several clashes and defeats between Russian and Imperial Japanese Navy vessels. In response, the Naval headquarters in St. Petersburg ordered the Baltic Fleet to the Pacific to reinforce Russian naval forces, primarily the First Pacific Squadron on the east coast of Asia and its naval base at Port Arthur.

By the beginning of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905, Imperial Russian naval forces in the Far East consisted of the 1st Pacific Squadron (7 battleships, 7 cruisers, 13 torpedo boats, 2 gunboats) and a number of ships from the "Siberian Military Flotilla" (2 minelayers, 12 torpedo boats and 5 gunboats), based in Port Arthur. Other ships of the "Siberian Military Flotilla" (4 cruisers, 10 torpedo boats) were stationed in Vladivostok.

During the Russo-Japanese War, most of the Russian Navy in the Pacific was destroyed. The Russian Baltic Fleet under Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky, renamed the Second Pacific Squadron, was defeated at the Battle of Tsushima.

 
The headquarters of the Pacific Fleet in Vladivostok

During the Russian Revolution of 1905, the sailors of the Pacific Fleet were actively engaged in the revolutionary movement, participating in armed revolts in Vladivostok in January 1906 and October 1907. During the October Revolution of 1917, the sailors of the Siberian and Amur military flotillas fought for the establishment of Soviet authority in the Far East and against the White army and interventionists. During the Russian Civil War, almost all of the ships of the Pacific Fleet were seized by the White army and the Japanese. After the departure of the interventionists in 1922, the Soviets created the Naval Forces of the Far East, under commander Ivan Kozhanov, as a part of the Vladivostok unit, and the Amur Military Flotilla (Амурская военная флотилия, or Amurskaya voyennaya flotiliya). In 1926, these were disbanded: the Vladivostok unit was transferred to the command of the frontier troops in the Far East, and the Amur flotilla became a flotilla of its own.

Establishment in 1932 Edit

Owing to Japanese aggression in Manchuria in 1931, the Central Committee and the Soviet government decided to create the Naval Forces in the Far East on 13 April 1932. In January 1935, they were renamed the Pacific Fleet, under commander M. Viktorov. The creation of the fleet entailed great difficulties. The first units were formed with small ships delivered by railroad. In 1932, the torpedo boat squadron and eight submarines were put into service. In 1934, the Pacific Fleet received 26 small submarines. The creation of the naval aviation and coastal artillery was underway. In 1937, they opened the Pacific Military School.

By the beginning of World War II, the Pacific Fleet had two surface ship subdivisions, four submarine subdivisions, one torpedo boat subdivision, a few squadrons of ships and patrol boats, airborne units, coastal artillery and marines.

World War II Edit

 
Light cruiser Lazar Kaganovich

During the Great Patriotic War (the Soviet World War II campaign against Germany from 1941 to 1945) the Pacific Fleet was in a permanent state of alert and ready for action, although the Soviets remained neutral with respect to the Empire of Japan, the only Axis power in the Pacific, even after Japan entered World War II. At the same time, the Soviets transferred a destroyer leader, two destroyers, and five submarines from the Pacific Fleet to the Northern Fleet. More than 140,000 sailors from the Pacific Fleet were incorporated in the rifle brigades and other units on the Soviet front against Germans in Europe. By August 1945, the Pacific Fleet consisted of two cruisers, one destroyer leader, ten destroyers, two torpedo boats, 19 patrol boats, 78 submarines, ten minelayers, 52 minesweepers, 49 "MO" anti-submarine boats (MO stands for Малый Охотник, or "little hunter"), 204 motor torpedo boats and 1459 war planes.

During the Soviet–Japanese War of 1945, the Pacific Fleet participated in the removal of the Empire of Japan from Northern Korea (a part of the Manchurian Operation of 1945), in the Invasion of South Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands Landing Operation the same year.

Thousands of sailors and officers were awarded orders and medals for outstanding military service; more than fifty men received the title Hero of the Soviet Union. Eighteen ships and fleet units received the title of the Soviet Guards, and sixteen were awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

 
Ships of the Soviet Pacific Fleet at Vladivostok in 1990

Cold War Edit

On 5 May 1965, the Pacific Fleet itself was awarded with the Order of the Red Banner.

The Pacific Fleet started deploying forces to the Indian Ocean, and established the 8th Operational (Indian Ocean) Squadron in 1968,[3] after the British government announced its intention to withdraw its military forces east of the Suez Canal by 1971. In addition to the defensive function of balancing the naval strength in the Indian Ocean against that of the United States Navy, the 8th Squadron played a role in promoting Soviet foreign policy. Regular visits and port calls were made in the Indian subcontinent, the Persian Gulf, and the East African coast.

The 8th Operational Squadron grew quite substantial at times; in 1980, a Soviet flotilla of 'about ten guided missile cruisers, destroyers and frigates and more than a dozen support ships' was juxtaposed to the U.S. Navy's Task Force 70 in the region.[4] There were also 23 other Soviet ships in the South China Sea, at the same time. In addition, Soviet Ilyushin Il-38 reconnaissance planes, based in Aden or Ethiopia, maintained a close watch on U.S. vessels, as did Ka-25 Hormone helicopters from Soviet warships. In 1981 the fleet suffered the loss of many of its senior officers, including its commander in chief, Admiral Emil Spiridonov, when the Tupolev Tu-104 transporting them back to Vladivostok after meetings in Leningrad crashed shortly after takeoff from Pushkin Airport. A total of 16 admirals and generals, and 38 lower ranking officers, were killed.[5][6][7]

 
Sailors of the aircraft carrier Novorossiisk, Red Banner Pacific Fleet (1984)

In the 1980s, Soviet naval strategy shifted to an emphasis on bastion defense, fortifying the Sea of Okhotsk for that purpose.[citation needed] By the mid-1980s, the Pacific Fleet had constituted 32% of all Soviet naval assets, up from 28% in 1975 and 25% in 1965. It included approximately 800 ships, over 120 submarines, and 98 surface combatants.[8] Two of the ships were aircraft carriers Minsk and Novorossiysk, which served from the 1970s and 1980s to the 1990s. The battlecruiser Admiral Lazarev of the Kirov class served with the fleet in the 1980s and 1990s as well.

In 1988 the Primorskiy Flotilla (Military Unit Number 20885) comprised the 165th Missile Ship Brigade (Uliss Bay (Vladivostok)); the 202nd Anti-Submarine Warfare Brigade (Abrek Bay (Fokino), Primorskiy Kray); the 4th Brigade of Constructed and Overhauled Submarines (Vladivostok, Primorskiy Kray); the 72nd Brigade of Constructed and Overhauled Submarines (Bolshoy Kamen, Primorskiy Kray); the 45th and 47th Coastal Defence Brigades; the 7th Minesweeper Brigade (Razboynik Bay (Vladivostok), Primorskiy Kray); and the 19th Submarine Brigade (Uliss Bay, Vladivostok.[9]

Recent events Edit

In the 1990s and 2000s, the Pacific Fleet lost many of its larger units. Within a few years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Fleet lost all its aircraft carriers, and by early 2000 only one cruiser remained active with the Fleet. By the end of the 2010s, the Fleet consisted of one large missile cruiser, five destroyers, ten nuclear submarines, eight diesel-electric submarines plus numerous light units, amphibious ships and auxiliaries.

May 1992 saw the first of five large ammunition explosions at Paific Fleet storage depots, 1992-2003.[10] The blast rocked the city of Vladivostok.

Between 5–12 July 2013, warships from the Russian Pacific Fleet and the North Sea Fleet of the People's Liberation Army Navy participated in Joint Sea 2013, bilateral naval maneuvers held in the Peter the Great Bay. Joint Sea 2013 was the largest naval drills yet undertaken by the PRC's navy with a foreign navy.[11] In 2021, a joint Russian-Chinese squadron sailed around Japan, passing between Japanese islands through the Tsugaru Strait and then the Osumi Strait. The Russian ships in the squadron included the destroyers Admiral Panteleyev and Admiral Tributs, the corvettes Aldar Tsydenzhapov and Gromkiy as well as auxiliaries.[12]

Plans for deployment of new large units to the Fleet were announced in the early 2010s. Several new ballistic missile submarines, and large cruisers were projected to join the Fleet.[13][14] However, these plans evolved over the course of the decade with a changed focus by 2020 on light units and submarines to renew the fleet. In this regard, the focus is now on new general purpose frigates (Gorshkov-class), multi-role and missile corvettes (Steregushchiy-class, Gremyashchiy-class and Karakurt-class) as well as on a full range of new submarines (the Borei, Yasen and Improved Kilo classes). Vessels of these classes are all projected to enter service through the 2020s.[15][16] In addition, the Pacific Fleet's amphibious capabilities will be modernized in the mid-latter 2020s through the acquisition of one or more of the Ivan Gren-class landing ships and possibly one of the new Priboy-class helicopter assault ships.[17][18]

While existing ballistic-missile submarine production will fully replace and increase numbers of SSBNs in the Pacific Fleet, it is unclear that the production of the Yasen-class vessels, and potential follow-on models, will be sufficient to replace aging older nuclear attack and cruise missile submarines on a one-for-one basis. Reports suggest that Russian third-generation nuclear submarines have not been modernized to a level to avoid block obsolescence before 2030.[19] The 2016 decision to add six new "Improved Kilo"-class conventionally-powered submarines to the fleet may be partly designed to mitigate such a gap.[20]

2008 submarine accident Edit

An accident aboard Nerpa, a nuclear-powered attack submarine doing a test run during sea trials in the Sea of Japan on 8 November 2008, killed more than 20 people,[21] marking the worst submarine disaster since Kursk sank in 2000. Nerpa was an Akula-class submarine belonging to the Pacific Fleet. Its construction began in 1991, but was delayed due to lack of funding.[22]

Order of Battle Edit

The Pacific Fleet is one component of the Russian Eastern Military District established in 2010. Other components of the Eastern District include the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army (providing both aviation and air defence units in the District) as well as four ground force army headquarters (the 5th, 29th, 35th and 36th Combined Arms Armies) and one independent corps HQ (the 68th) on Sakhalin island.[23]

The Russian Coast Guard provides additional armed patrol capabilities in the Pacific, including two Krivak-class frigates.[24]

Surface Warships Edit

Major surface combatants of the Russian Pacific Fleet
# Type Name Class Year Notes
011 Cruiser Varyag Slava 1989 Active;[25] Flagship of the Pacific Fleet;[26][27] deployed in the Mediterranean May to October 2022[28][29][30]
543 Destroyer Marshal Shaposhnikov Udaloy I 1985 Active as of 2022[31][32][27]
564 Destroyer Admiral Tributs Udaloy I 1985 Active; deployed in the Mediterranean May to October 2022[28][29][33][25]
572 Destroyer Admiral Vinogradov Udaloy I 1988 Refit as of 2020; upgrading to Marshal Shaposhnikov standard;[34] expected to return to service in 2024-5[35][36]
548 Destroyer Admiral Panteleyev Udaloy I 1991 Active as of 2022[31][37]
474 Destroyer Burnyy Sovremennyy 1988 Inactive since 2005 and still reported in refit as of 2019.[38]
333 Multi-role Corvette Sovershennyy Steregushchiy 2017 Active as of 2022[31][39]
335 Multi-role Corvette Gromkiy Steregushchiy 2018 Active as of 2022[31][40]
339 Multi-role Corvette Aldar Tsydenzhapov Steregushchiy 2020[41] Active as of 2022[31][37][39]
343 Multi-role Corvette Rezkiy Steregushchiy Projected 2023[42] Sea trials as of April 2022[43][44]
337 Multi-role Corvette Gremyashchiy Gremyashchiy 2020 Active as of 2022[31][45]
Small Anti-Submarine and Missile Ships (Light ASW & Missile Corvettes) of the Russian Pacific Fleet
# Type Name Class Year Notes
354 ASW Corvette MPK-221 Grisha 1987 Active as of 2022[46]
390[47] ASW Corvette Koryeyets Grisha 1989 Active as of 2022[48]
369 ASW Corvette Kholmsk Grisha 1985 Active as of 2022[49][50]
350 ASW Corvette Sovetskaya Gavan Grisha 1990 Active as of 2021[40]
332 ASW Corvette MPK-107 (former Irkutskiy komsomolets) Grisha 1990 Active as of 2022[49]
323 ASW Corvette Metel (Snowstorm) Grisha 1990 Active as of 2022[51]
375 ASW Corvette MPK-82 Grisha 1991 Active as of 2022[51]
362 ASW Corvette Ust-Ilimsk Grisha 1991 Active as of 2022[49][40]
423 Missile Corvette Smerch (Tornado) Nanuchka III 1984 Active as of 2022;[49] upgraded with new AK-176MA 76mm main gun and 16x Uran anti-ship missiles[52][53]
418 Missile Corvette Iney? Nanuchka III 1987 Active as of 2022;[54] scheduled for upgrade as of 2020;[55] reported as possibly to be decommissioned in 2021[56] but still active off Japan as of early 2022[51]
450? Missile Corvette Razliv? Nanuchka III 1991 Status unclear;[40] originally scheduled for upgrade[55] may now have decommissioned in 2021[56]
991 Missile Corvette R-261 Tarantul 1988
951 Missile Corvette R-297 Tarantul 1990
971 Missile Corvette R-298 Tarantul 1990
940 Missile Corvette R-11 Tarantul 1991 Active as of 2022[46]
924 Missile Corvette R-14 Tarantul 1991 Active as of 2022[46]
937 Missile Corvette R-18 Tarantul 1992 Active as of 2022[46]
978 Missile Corvette R-19 Tarantul 1992 Active as of 2022[46]
921 Missile Corvette R-20 Tarantul 1993
946 Missile Corvette R-24 Tarantul 1994
916 Missile Corvette R-29 Tarantul 2003
Amphibious Warfare Ships of the Russian Pacific Fleet
# Type Name Class Year Notes
066 Landing Ship Oslyabya Ropucha 1981 Active as of 2022[57][58]
055 Landing Ship Admiral Nevelskoy Ropucha 1982 Active as of 2022[51][59]
077 Landing Ship Peresvet Ropucha 1991
081 Landing Ship Nikolay Vilkov Alligator 1974 Active as of 2022[51][59]

Submarines Edit

Submarines of the Russian Pacific Fleet
# Type Boat Class Year Notes
K-551 SSBN Vladimir Monomakh Borey 2014
K-550 SSBN Aleksandr Nevskiy Borey 2013 Active as of 2021[60]
K-552 SSBN Knyaz Oleg Borey 2021 Active; arrived in the Pacific September 2022[61][62][63]
K-553 SSBN Generalissimus Suvorov Borey 2022 Active; reported on crew training operations in the Northern Fleet operational area as of early 2023[64][65]
K-44 SSN Ryazan Delta III 1982 Active as of 2020;[66] reported converted from SSBN role to SSN as of 2021[67]
K-150 SSGN Tomsk Oscar II 1996 Active as of 2022[68]
K-456 SSGN Tver Oscar II 1991
K-442 SSGN Chelyabinsk Oscar II 1990 Being upgraded to carry up to 72 3M-54 Kalibr cruise missiles.[19]
K-132 SSGN Irkutsk Oscar II 1988 Projected to complete refit in 2023;[69] being upgraded to carry up to 72 3M-54 Kalibr cruise missiles.[70][19][35]
K-186 SSGN Omsk Oscar II 1993 Active as of 2022[68][71]
K-573 SSGN Novosibirsk Yasen 2021 Active; arrived in the Pacific September 2022[61][72][62][63]
K-571 SSGN Krasnoyarsk Yasen Projected 2023 Sea trials in Northern Fleet operational area as of June 2022[73][74]
K-329 SSGN/Special Operations Submarine Belgorod Oscar II-class variant 2022[75] Deployed in initial experimental role in the Northern Fleet area of operations, then projected to transfer to the Pacific Fleet.[76][77][78]
K-331 SSN Magadan? Akula I 1990 In refit originally scheduled to complete in 2022; status unknown; name may change post-refit given same name assigned to "Improved Kilo"-class boat also assigned to the Pacific Fleet[79][80]
K-419 SSN Kuzbass Akula I 1992 Active as of 2022[68]
K-152? SSN Nerpa? Akula I 2009 Leased to India as INS Chakra 2012 to 2021; returned to Russia, status unclear [81]
K-295 SSN Samara Akula II 1995 Inactive; Scheduled for major life extension refit as of 2020.[82][83]
B-445? SSK Svyatoy Nikolay Chudotvorets? Kilo 1988 Status unclear; listed as possibly decommissioned in 2020[80]
B-394 SSK Nurlat Kilo 1988
B-464 SSK Ust'-Kamchatsk Kilo 1990
B-494 SSK Ust-Bolsheretsk Kilo 1990
B-187 SSK Komsomolsk-na-Amure Kilo 1991
B-190 SSK Krasnokamensk Kilo 1993
B-274 SSK Petropavlosk-Kamchatsky[84] Improved Kilo 2019 Arrived in the Pacific November 2021.[45]
B-603 SSK Volkov Improved Kilo 2020 Arrived in the Pacific in November 2021.[45]
B-602 SSK Magadan Improved Kilo 2021 Arrived in the Pacific in October 2022.[85]
B-588 SSK Ufa Improved Kilo 2022 Deployed in the Baltic as of November 2022[86][87][88]

Other Surface Units Edit

  • Mine Countermeasures Ships:
  • Patrol/Anti-Saboteur Boats:
  • Intelligence/Tracking Vessels:
  • Fleet Oilers:
  • Hydrographic Survey Vessels: 4 Yug-class (Project 862) vessels[116]
    • Vice-Admiral Vorontsov (formerly Briz)
    • Gals
    • Marshal Gelovani
    • Pegas
  • Icebreakers:
  • Other Support Ships:
    • Project 304-class Repair Ships: 6 vessels (PM-5, PM-15, PM-52, PM-59, PM-92, PM-97, PM-156)[120]

Naval Aviation Edit

Naval Aviation of the Pacific Fleet:[121][122]

  • 568th Independent Composite Aviation Regiment – HQ at MongokhtoTu-142MR/MZ/M3 (Bear-F) maritime-patrol/ASW aircraft[123] (M3 (Bear-F) variant reported delivered as of 2020[124]);
  • 317th Mixed Aviation Regiment – HQ at Yelizovo – One Squadron with Il-38/N ASW aircraft (upgrading with N-model variant of the aircraft as of 2017);[125] One Squadron reported deploying upgraded MiG-31BM fighters (2020).[126]
  • 71st Independent Military Transport Air Squadron – HQ at Nikolayevka, Primorskaya – An-12, An-24, An-26;
  • 175th Independent Shipborne Anti-submarine Helicopter Squadron – HQ at Yelizovo – Ka-27 ASW helicopters;
  • 289th Independent Anti-submarine Air Regiment – HQ at Nikolayevka – Il-38/N ASW aircraft; Ka-27 ASW and Ka-29 attack helicopters.

Additional aviation and air defence assets in the Eastern Military District are deployed as part of the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army, including Su-35s at Yelizovo on the Kamchatka Peninsula (deployed there on rotation as of 2021).[132][133]

Tu-95MS and Tu-22M3 bombers (including with Kh-47M2 Kinzhal hypersonic and Kh-32 long-range supersonic anti-ship missiles)[134] deployed as part of Russian Long-Range Aviation, including in the Eastern Military District.[135][136]

Ground Forces Edit

According to a report from the Institute for the Study of War, in March 2018 the Fleet contained two naval infantry brigades, a coastal brigade, and coastal regiment.[137] However, an expansion of these capabilities, introducing new units and formations, was underway as of 2020/21. In 2022, both of the Pacific Fleet's naval infantry brigades were transferred to Ukraine for operations as part of the Russian invasion. Up to the end of 2022, both brigades have reportedly experienced heavy losses.[138] In April 2022, the 155th Brigade was reportedly awarded the "Guards" title for its service.[139][140]

Commanders of the Pacific Fleet Edit

In January 1947, the Pacific Fleet was divided into the 5th and 7th fleets:

5th Fleet:

7th Fleet:

  • Ivan Ivanovich Baykov (from January 1947)
  • Georgy Kholostyakov (November 1951 – May 1953)

In April 1953, the Fleets were once again combined under one Pacific Fleet command:

See also Edit

References Edit

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Further reading Edit

  • Muraviev, Alexey D. (2007). (PDF). Papers in Australian Maritime Affairs No. 20. Canberra: Seapower Centre – Australia. ISBN 978-0-642-29667-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 27, 2009.

External links Edit

  Media related to Pacific fleet of Russia at Wikimedia Commons

pacific, fleet, russia, first, pacific, squadron, redirects, here, confused, with, pacific, squadron, pacific, station, pacific, fleet, pacific, fleet, russian, Тихоокеанский, флот, translit, tikhookeanskiy, flot, russian, navy, fleet, pacific, ocean, pacific,. First Pacific Squadron redirects here Not to be confused with Pacific Squadron Pacific Station or Pacific Fleet The Pacific Fleet Russian Tihookeanskij flot 1 translit Tikhookeanskiy flot is the Russian Navy fleet in the Pacific Ocean Pacific FleetRussian Tihookeanskij flotRussian Pacific Fleet emblemActive1731 presentAllegiance Russian Empire 1703 1917 Soviet Union 1922 1991 Russian Federation 1991 present BranchRussian NavyRoleAt sea nuclear deterrence Naval warfare Amphibious military operations Combat patrols in the Pacific Arctic Naval presence diplomacy missions in the Pacific and elsewhereSizec 46 Surface Warships major surface units light corvettes mine warfare amphibious plus support ships auxiliaries c 24 26 Submarines of which about 2 3 active as of 2022 Part ofRussian Armed ForcesGarrison HQFokino HQ Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky VilyuchinskEngagementsRusso Japanese War World War I October Revolution Russian Civil War World War IIDecorationsOrder of the Red BannerCommandersCurrentcommanderAdm Viktor LiinaNotablecommandersAdm Nikolay Kuznetsov Adm Ivan YumashevAdm Zinovy Rozhestvensky Established in 1731 as part of the Imperial Russian Navy the fleet was known as the Okhotsk Military Flotilla 1731 1856 and Siberian Military Flotilla 1856 1918 formed to defend Russian interests in the Russian Far East region along the Pacific coast In 1918 the fleet was inherited by the Russian SFSR then the Soviet Union in 1922 as part of the Soviet Navy being reformed several times before being disbanded in 1926 In 1932 it was re established as the Pacific Fleet and was known as the Red Banner Pacific Fleet Krasnoznamyonnyj Tihookeanskij flot after World War II as it had earned the Order of the Red Banner In the Soviet years the fleet was also responsible for the Soviet Navy s operations in the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the Red Banner Pacific Fleet was inherited by the Russian Federation as part of the Russian Navy and its current name was adopted The Pacific Fleet s headquarters is located in Fokino formerly Vladivostok with numerous facilities within the Peter the Great Gulf in Primorsky Krai and Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky and Vilyuchinsk in Avacha Bay on the Kamchatka Peninsula in Kamchatka Krai Following the APEC Russia 2012 summit it was announced that the main naval base of the Pacific Fleet in the Russian Far East will be moved to the town of Fokino Primorsky Krai The current commander is Admiral Viktor Liina who has held the position since April 2023 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment in 1932 1 2 World War II 1 3 Cold War 1 4 Recent events 1 4 1 2008 submarine accident 2 Order of Battle 2 1 Surface Warships 2 2 Submarines 2 3 Other Surface Units 2 4 Naval Aviation 2 5 Ground Forces 3 Commanders of the Pacific Fleet 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditThis section includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this section by introducing more precise citations September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1731 the Imperial Russian Navy created the Okhotsk Military Flotilla Ohotskaya voennaya flotiliya Okhotskaya voyennaya flotiliya under its first commander Grigoriy Skornyakov Pisarev to patrol and transport government goods to and from Kamchatka In 1799 3 frigates and 3 smaller ships were sent to Okhotsk under the command of Rear Admiral I Fomin to form a functioning military flotilla In 1849 Petropavlovsk na Kamchatke became the Flotilla s principal base which a year later would be transferred to Nikolayevsk on Amur and later to Vladivostok in 1871 In 1854 the men of the Flotilla distinguished themselves in the defense of Petropavlovsk Kamchatskiy during the Crimean War 1853 1856 In 1856 the Okhotsk Military Flotilla changed its name to the Siberian Military Flotilla Sibirskaya voennaya flotiliya Sibirskaya voyennaya flotiliya In 1860 the provisions of the Convention of Peking ceded parts of Russian Manchuria in northeastern China including the modern day Primorsky Krai to the Russian Empire A large squadron under Rear Admiral A A Popov was sent from the Baltic Fleet to the Pacific Ocean During the American Civil War ships of the squadron visited San Francisco while the Baltic Fleet visited New York City Parts of the squadron including the Finnish corvette Kalevala returned to the Baltic in 1865 At the turn of the 20th century the Flotilla was still small in numbers Owing to a gradual deterioration in Russo Japanese relations the Imperial Russian government adopted a special shipbuilding program to meet the needs of the Russian Far East region but its execution dragged on and in addition there were several clashes and defeats between Russian and Imperial Japanese Navy vessels In response the Naval headquarters in St Petersburg ordered the Baltic Fleet to the Pacific to reinforce Russian naval forces primarily the First Pacific Squadron on the east coast of Asia and its naval base at Port Arthur By the beginning of the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 Imperial Russian naval forces in the Far East consisted of the 1st Pacific Squadron 7 battleships 7 cruisers 13 torpedo boats 2 gunboats and a number of ships from the Siberian Military Flotilla 2 minelayers 12 torpedo boats and 5 gunboats based in Port Arthur Other ships of the Siberian Military Flotilla 4 cruisers 10 torpedo boats were stationed in Vladivostok During the Russo Japanese War most of the Russian Navy in the Pacific was destroyed The Russian Baltic Fleet under Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky renamed the Second Pacific Squadron was defeated at the Battle of Tsushima The headquarters of the Pacific Fleet in VladivostokDuring the Russian Revolution of 1905 the sailors of the Pacific Fleet were actively engaged in the revolutionary movement participating in armed revolts in Vladivostok in January 1906 and October 1907 During the October Revolution of 1917 the sailors of the Siberian and Amur military flotillas fought for the establishment of Soviet authority in the Far East and against the White army and interventionists During the Russian Civil War almost all of the ships of the Pacific Fleet were seized by the White army and the Japanese After the departure of the interventionists in 1922 the Soviets created the Naval Forces of the Far East under commander Ivan Kozhanov as a part of the Vladivostok unit and the Amur Military Flotilla Amurskaya voennaya flotiliya or Amurskaya voyennaya flotiliya In 1926 these were disbanded the Vladivostok unit was transferred to the command of the frontier troops in the Far East and the Amur flotilla became a flotilla of its own Establishment in 1932 Edit Owing to Japanese aggression in Manchuria in 1931 the Central Committee and the Soviet government decided to create the Naval Forces in the Far East on 13 April 1932 In January 1935 they were renamed the Pacific Fleet under commander M Viktorov The creation of the fleet entailed great difficulties The first units were formed with small ships delivered by railroad In 1932 the torpedo boat squadron and eight submarines were put into service In 1934 the Pacific Fleet received 26 small submarines The creation of the naval aviation and coastal artillery was underway In 1937 they opened the Pacific Military School By the beginning of World War II the Pacific Fleet had two surface ship subdivisions four submarine subdivisions one torpedo boat subdivision a few squadrons of ships and patrol boats airborne units coastal artillery and marines World War II Edit Light cruiser Lazar KaganovichDuring the Great Patriotic War the Soviet World War II campaign against Germany from 1941 to 1945 the Pacific Fleet was in a permanent state of alert and ready for action although the Soviets remained neutral with respect to the Empire of Japan the only Axis power in the Pacific even after Japan entered World War II At the same time the Soviets transferred a destroyer leader two destroyers and five submarines from the Pacific Fleet to the Northern Fleet More than 140 000 sailors from the Pacific Fleet were incorporated in the rifle brigades and other units on the Soviet front against Germans in Europe By August 1945 the Pacific Fleet consisted of two cruisers one destroyer leader ten destroyers two torpedo boats 19 patrol boats 78 submarines ten minelayers 52 minesweepers 49 MO anti submarine boats MO stands for Malyj Ohotnik or little hunter 204 motor torpedo boats and 1459 war planes During the Soviet Japanese War of 1945 the Pacific Fleet participated in the removal of the Empire of Japan from Northern Korea a part of the Manchurian Operation of 1945 in the Invasion of South Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands Landing Operation the same year Thousands of sailors and officers were awarded orders and medals for outstanding military service more than fifty men received the title Hero of the Soviet Union Eighteen ships and fleet units received the title of the Soviet Guards and sixteen were awarded the Order of the Red Banner Ships of the Soviet Pacific Fleet at Vladivostok in 1990Cold War Edit On 5 May 1965 the Pacific Fleet itself was awarded with the Order of the Red Banner The Pacific Fleet started deploying forces to the Indian Ocean and established the 8th Operational Indian Ocean Squadron in 1968 3 after the British government announced its intention to withdraw its military forces east of the Suez Canal by 1971 In addition to the defensive function of balancing the naval strength in the Indian Ocean against that of the United States Navy the 8th Squadron played a role in promoting Soviet foreign policy Regular visits and port calls were made in the Indian subcontinent the Persian Gulf and the East African coast The 8th Operational Squadron grew quite substantial at times in 1980 a Soviet flotilla of about ten guided missile cruisers destroyers and frigates and more than a dozen support ships was juxtaposed to the U S Navy s Task Force 70 in the region 4 There were also 23 other Soviet ships in the South China Sea at the same time In addition Soviet Ilyushin Il 38 reconnaissance planes based in Aden or Ethiopia maintained a close watch on U S vessels as did Ka 25 Hormone helicopters from Soviet warships In 1981 the fleet suffered the loss of many of its senior officers including its commander in chief Admiral Emil Spiridonov when the Tupolev Tu 104 transporting them back to Vladivostok after meetings in Leningrad crashed shortly after takeoff from Pushkin Airport A total of 16 admirals and generals and 38 lower ranking officers were killed 5 6 7 Sailors of the aircraft carrier Novorossiisk Red Banner Pacific Fleet 1984 In the 1980s Soviet naval strategy shifted to an emphasis on bastion defense fortifying the Sea of Okhotsk for that purpose citation needed By the mid 1980s the Pacific Fleet had constituted 32 of all Soviet naval assets up from 28 in 1975 and 25 in 1965 It included approximately 800 ships over 120 submarines and 98 surface combatants 8 Two of the ships were aircraft carriers Minsk and Novorossiysk which served from the 1970s and 1980s to the 1990s The battlecruiser Admiral Lazarev of the Kirov class served with the fleet in the 1980s and 1990s as well In 1988 the Primorskiy Flotilla Military Unit Number 20885 comprised the 165th Missile Ship Brigade Uliss Bay Vladivostok the 202nd Anti Submarine Warfare Brigade Abrek Bay Fokino Primorskiy Kray the 4th Brigade of Constructed and Overhauled Submarines Vladivostok Primorskiy Kray the 72nd Brigade of Constructed and Overhauled Submarines Bolshoy Kamen Primorskiy Kray the 45th and 47th Coastal Defence Brigades the 7th Minesweeper Brigade Razboynik Bay Vladivostok Primorskiy Kray and the 19th Submarine Brigade Uliss Bay Vladivostok 9 Recent events Edit In the 1990s and 2000s the Pacific Fleet lost many of its larger units Within a few years after the collapse of the Soviet Union the Fleet lost all its aircraft carriers and by early 2000 only one cruiser remained active with the Fleet By the end of the 2010s the Fleet consisted of one large missile cruiser five destroyers ten nuclear submarines eight diesel electric submarines plus numerous light units amphibious ships and auxiliaries May 1992 saw the first of five large ammunition explosions at Paific Fleet storage depots 1992 2003 10 The blast rocked the city of Vladivostok Between 5 12 July 2013 warships from the Russian Pacific Fleet and the North Sea Fleet of the People s Liberation Army Navy participated in Joint Sea 2013 bilateral naval maneuvers held in the Peter the Great Bay Joint Sea 2013 was the largest naval drills yet undertaken by the PRC s navy with a foreign navy 11 In 2021 a joint Russian Chinese squadron sailed around Japan passing between Japanese islands through the Tsugaru Strait and then the Osumi Strait The Russian ships in the squadron included the destroyers Admiral Panteleyev and Admiral Tributs the corvettes Aldar Tsydenzhapov and Gromkiy as well as auxiliaries 12 Plans for deployment of new large units to the Fleet were announced in the early 2010s Several new ballistic missile submarines and large cruisers were projected to join the Fleet 13 14 However these plans evolved over the course of the decade with a changed focus by 2020 on light units and submarines to renew the fleet In this regard the focus is now on new general purpose frigates Gorshkov class multi role and missile corvettes Steregushchiy class Gremyashchiy class and Karakurt class as well as on a full range of new submarines the Borei Yasen and Improved Kilo classes Vessels of these classes are all projected to enter service through the 2020s 15 16 In addition the Pacific Fleet s amphibious capabilities will be modernized in the mid latter 2020s through the acquisition of one or more of the Ivan Gren class landing ships and possibly one of the new Priboy class helicopter assault ships 17 18 While existing ballistic missile submarine production will fully replace and increase numbers of SSBNs in the Pacific Fleet it is unclear that the production of the Yasen class vessels and potential follow on models will be sufficient to replace aging older nuclear attack and cruise missile submarines on a one for one basis Reports suggest that Russian third generation nuclear submarines have not been modernized to a level to avoid block obsolescence before 2030 19 The 2016 decision to add six new Improved Kilo class conventionally powered submarines to the fleet may be partly designed to mitigate such a gap 20 2008 submarine accident Edit Main article 2008 Russian submarine accident An accident aboard Nerpa a nuclear powered attack submarine doing a test run during sea trials in the Sea of Japan on 8 November 2008 killed more than 20 people 21 marking the worst submarine disaster since Kursk sank in 2000 Nerpa was an Akula class submarine belonging to the Pacific Fleet Its construction began in 1991 but was delayed due to lack of funding 22 Order of Battle EditThe Pacific Fleet is one component of the Russian Eastern Military District established in 2010 Other components of the Eastern District include the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army providing both aviation and air defence units in the District as well as four ground force army headquarters the 5th 29th 35th and 36th Combined Arms Armies and one independent corps HQ the 68th on Sakhalin island 23 The Russian Coast Guard provides additional armed patrol capabilities in the Pacific including two Krivak class frigates 24 Surface Warships Edit Major surface combatants of the Russian Pacific Fleet Type Name Class Year Notes011 Cruiser Varyag Slava 1989 Active 25 Flagship of the Pacific Fleet 26 27 deployed in the Mediterranean May to October 2022 28 29 30 543 Destroyer Marshal Shaposhnikov Udaloy I 1985 Active as of 2022 31 32 27 564 Destroyer Admiral Tributs Udaloy I 1985 Active deployed in the Mediterranean May to October 2022 28 29 33 25 572 Destroyer Admiral Vinogradov Udaloy I 1988 Refit as of 2020 upgrading to Marshal Shaposhnikov standard 34 expected to return to service in 2024 5 35 36 548 Destroyer Admiral Panteleyev Udaloy I 1991 Active as of 2022 31 37 474 Destroyer Burnyy Sovremennyy 1988 Inactive since 2005 and still reported in refit as of 2019 38 333 Multi role Corvette Sovershennyy Steregushchiy 2017 Active as of 2022 31 39 335 Multi role Corvette Gromkiy Steregushchiy 2018 Active as of 2022 31 40 339 Multi role Corvette Aldar Tsydenzhapov Steregushchiy 2020 41 Active as of 2022 31 37 39 343 Multi role Corvette Rezkiy Steregushchiy Projected 2023 42 Sea trials as of April 2022 43 44 337 Multi role Corvette Gremyashchiy Gremyashchiy 2020 Active as of 2022 31 45 Small Anti Submarine and Missile Ships Light ASW amp Missile Corvettes of the Russian Pacific Fleet Type Name Class Year Notes354 ASW Corvette MPK 221 Grisha 1987 Active as of 2022 46 390 47 ASW Corvette Koryeyets Grisha 1989 Active as of 2022 48 369 ASW Corvette Kholmsk Grisha 1985 Active as of 2022 49 50 350 ASW Corvette Sovetskaya Gavan Grisha 1990 Active as of 2021 40 332 ASW Corvette MPK 107 former Irkutskiy komsomolets Grisha 1990 Active as of 2022 49 323 ASW Corvette Metel Snowstorm Grisha 1990 Active as of 2022 51 375 ASW Corvette MPK 82 Grisha 1991 Active as of 2022 51 362 ASW Corvette Ust Ilimsk Grisha 1991 Active as of 2022 49 40 423 Missile Corvette Smerch Tornado Nanuchka III 1984 Active as of 2022 49 upgraded with new AK 176MA 76mm main gun and 16x Uran anti ship missiles 52 53 418 Missile Corvette Iney Nanuchka III 1987 Active as of 2022 54 scheduled for upgrade as of 2020 55 reported as possibly to be decommissioned in 2021 56 but still active off Japan as of early 2022 51 450 Missile Corvette Razliv Nanuchka III 1991 Status unclear 40 originally scheduled for upgrade 55 may now have decommissioned in 2021 56 991 Missile Corvette R 261 Tarantul 1988951 Missile Corvette R 297 Tarantul 1990971 Missile Corvette R 298 Tarantul 1990940 Missile Corvette R 11 Tarantul 1991 Active as of 2022 46 924 Missile Corvette R 14 Tarantul 1991 Active as of 2022 46 937 Missile Corvette R 18 Tarantul 1992 Active as of 2022 46 978 Missile Corvette R 19 Tarantul 1992 Active as of 2022 46 921 Missile Corvette R 20 Tarantul 1993946 Missile Corvette R 24 Tarantul 1994916 Missile Corvette R 29 Tarantul 2003Amphibious Warfare Ships of the Russian Pacific Fleet Type Name Class Year Notes066 Landing Ship Oslyabya Ropucha 1981 Active as of 2022 57 58 055 Landing Ship Admiral Nevelskoy Ropucha 1982 Active as of 2022 51 59 077 Landing Ship Peresvet Ropucha 1991081 Landing Ship Nikolay Vilkov Alligator 1974 Active as of 2022 51 59 Submarines Edit Submarines of the Russian Pacific Fleet Type Boat Class Year NotesK 551 SSBN Vladimir Monomakh Borey 2014K 550 SSBN Aleksandr Nevskiy Borey 2013 Active as of 2021 60 K 552 SSBN Knyaz Oleg Borey 2021 Active arrived in the Pacific September 2022 61 62 63 K 553 SSBN Generalissimus Suvorov Borey 2022 Active reported on crew training operations in the Northern Fleet operational area as of early 2023 64 65 K 44 SSN Ryazan Delta III 1982 Active as of 2020 66 reported converted from SSBN role to SSN as of 2021 67 K 150 SSGN Tomsk Oscar II 1996 Active as of 2022 68 K 456 SSGN Tver Oscar II 1991K 442 SSGN Chelyabinsk Oscar II 1990 Being upgraded to carry up to 72 3M 54 Kalibr cruise missiles 19 K 132 SSGN Irkutsk Oscar II 1988 Projected to complete refit in 2023 69 being upgraded to carry up to 72 3M 54 Kalibr cruise missiles 70 19 35 K 186 SSGN Omsk Oscar II 1993 Active as of 2022 68 71 K 573 SSGN Novosibirsk Yasen 2021 Active arrived in the Pacific September 2022 61 72 62 63 K 571 SSGN Krasnoyarsk Yasen Projected 2023 Sea trials in Northern Fleet operational area as of June 2022 73 74 K 329 SSGN Special Operations Submarine Belgorod Oscar II class variant 2022 75 Deployed in initial experimental role in the Northern Fleet area of operations then projected to transfer to the Pacific Fleet 76 77 78 K 331 SSN Magadan Akula I 1990 In refit originally scheduled to complete in 2022 status unknown name may change post refit given same name assigned to Improved Kilo class boat also assigned to the Pacific Fleet 79 80 K 419 SSN Kuzbass Akula I 1992 Active as of 2022 68 K 152 SSN Nerpa Akula I 2009 Leased to India as INS Chakra 2012 to 2021 returned to Russia status unclear 81 K 295 SSN Samara Akula II 1995 Inactive Scheduled for major life extension refit as of 2020 82 83 B 445 SSK Svyatoy Nikolay Chudotvorets Kilo 1988 Status unclear listed as possibly decommissioned in 2020 80 B 394 SSK Nurlat Kilo 1988B 464 SSK Ust Kamchatsk Kilo 1990B 494 SSK Ust Bolsheretsk Kilo 1990B 187 SSK Komsomolsk na Amure Kilo 1991B 190 SSK Krasnokamensk Kilo 1993B 274 SSK Petropavlosk Kamchatsky 84 Improved Kilo 2019 Arrived in the Pacific November 2021 45 B 603 SSK Volkov Improved Kilo 2020 Arrived in the Pacific in November 2021 45 B 602 SSK Magadan Improved Kilo 2021 Arrived in the Pacific in October 2022 85 B 588 SSK Ufa Improved Kilo 2022 Deployed in the Baltic as of November 2022 86 87 88 Other Surface Units Edit Mine Countermeasures Ships Natya class 2 Vessels MT 264 265 89 both active as of 2022 90 Sonya class 7 Vessels BT 100 114 215 232 245 256 325 91 92 Alexandrit class 3 Vessels Yakov Balyaev entered service 2020 93 90 and Petr Ilyichev in November 2022 94 95 96 97 Anatoly Shlemov commissioned 29 December 2022 98 99 vessels reported to be part of the 114th Brigade of the Pacific Fleet 100 Patrol Anti Saboteur Boats Grachonok class anti saboteur ship 6 Vessels P 377 P 417 Yunarmeets Kamchatki P 420 Yunarmeets Primorya P 431 Yunarmeets Chukotki P 445 P 450 Yunarmeets Sakhalina 101 102 Intelligence Tracking Vessels Vishnya class intelligence ship Kareliya 103 assigned to 515th division of reconnaissance ships active as of 2023 104 105 106 Marshal Nedelin class intelligence ship Marshal Krylov active as of 2022 31 107 assigned to the 114th Brigade of the Pacific Fleet 108 Fleet Oilers Boris Chilikin class 1 vessel Boris Butoma deployed in the Mediterranean May to October 2022 28 29 33 25 Dubna class 2 vessels Irkut active as of 2020 2021 Pechanga active as of 2022 109 110 111 112 Uda class 1 vessel Vishera 113 Altay class 2 vessels Ilim and Izhora latter vessel reported active as of 2022 114 115 Hydrographic Survey Vessels 4 Yug class Project 862 vessels 116 Vice Admiral Vorontsov formerly Briz Gals Marshal Gelovani Pegas Icebreakers Project 97 Icebreakers 2 vessels Ivan Susanin active as of 2022 117 and Sadko 118 Yevpaty Kolovrat Project 21180M icebreaker being transferred to the Pacific Fleet as of 2023 119 Other Support Ships Project 304 class Repair Ships 6 vessels PM 5 PM 15 PM 52 PM 59 PM 92 PM 97 PM 156 120 Naval Aviation Edit Naval Aviation of the Pacific Fleet 121 122 568th Independent Composite Aviation Regiment HQ at Mongokhto Tu 142MR MZ M3 Bear F maritime patrol ASW aircraft 123 M3 Bear F variant reported delivered as of 2020 124 317th Mixed Aviation Regiment HQ at Yelizovo One Squadron with Il 38 N ASW aircraft upgrading with N model variant of the aircraft as of 2017 125 One Squadron reported deploying upgraded MiG 31BM fighters 2020 126 865th Red Banner Order of Labour Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Regiment transferred to Pacific Fleet on 1 July 1998 127 disbanded 2010 reported as likely to reform as of 2019 128 but status still unclear as of 2021 HQ at Yelizovo Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Airport MiG 31B M fighters planned as of 2019 129 Pacific Fleet MiG 31s including K variant with Kh 47M2 Kinzhal ASM also reported deployed at Anadyr airport in the Chukotka region December 2020 130 with further potential forward operating locations at Wrangel Island and elsewhere 131 132 71st Independent Military Transport Air Squadron HQ at Nikolayevka Primorskaya An 12 An 24 An 26 175th Independent Shipborne Anti submarine Helicopter Squadron HQ at Yelizovo Ka 27 ASW helicopters 289th Independent Anti submarine Air Regiment HQ at Nikolayevka Il 38 N ASW aircraft Ka 27 ASW and Ka 29 attack helicopters Additional aviation and air defence assets in the Eastern Military District are deployed as part of the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army including Su 35s at Yelizovo on the Kamchatka Peninsula deployed there on rotation as of 2021 132 133 Tu 95MS and Tu 22M3 bombers including with Kh 47M2 Kinzhal hypersonic and Kh 32 long range supersonic anti ship missiles 134 deployed as part of Russian Long Range Aviation including in the Eastern Military District 135 136 Ground Forces Edit According to a report from the Institute for the Study of War in March 2018 the Fleet contained two naval infantry brigades a coastal brigade and coastal regiment 137 However an expansion of these capabilities introducing new units and formations was underway as of 2020 21 In 2022 both of the Pacific Fleet s naval infantry brigades were transferred to Ukraine for operations as part of the Russian invasion Up to the end of 2022 both brigades have reportedly experienced heavy losses 138 In April 2022 the 155th Brigade was reportedly awarded the Guards title for its service 139 140 Fleet Headquarters Vladivostok commanded by Admiral Vladimir Ivanovich Korolev Naval Infantry 40th Separate Naval Infantry Brigade Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 155th Separate Guards Naval Infantry Brigade Vladivostok re equipping with BMP 3F amphibious infantry fighting vehicles as of 2021 141 both 40th and 155th brigades also re equipped with T 80BVM main battle tanks in 2021 142 Elements of 155th Brigade reportedly deployed to Belarus in the context of the Ukraine crisis in January 2022 143 and actively participated in 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Both Brigades reportedly lost many soldiers near Pavlivka 144 42nd Maritime Recon Point Special Forces battalion Vladivostok Coastal Defence Division sized formation reported being established in Chukotka region as of 2021 145 Coastal Defence Surface to Surface Missile Units 520th Separate Coastal Missile Artillery Brigade Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 2 Battalions Squadrons with K 300 Bastion Surface to Surface Missiles as of 2018 additional units reported forming with the aim of 3 5 Bastion and 1 2 SSC 6 Bal battalions squadrons 146 72nd Separate Coastal Missile Brigade units equipped with Bastion SSM Iturup Island Matua Island and Paramushir Island 147 148 and Bal SSM battalion Kunashir Island 146 149 HQ Vladivostok 150 New Coastal Missile Brigade reported being established in 2021 to defend Sakhalin 151 Commanders of the Pacific Fleet EditMikhail Vladimirovich Viktorov from April 1932 Grigoriy Petrovich Kireyev from August 1937 Nikolay Gerasimovich Kuznetsov from January 1938 Ivan Stepanovich Yumashev from August 1939 In January 1947 the Pacific Fleet was divided into the 5th and 7th fleets 5th Fleet Aleksandr Sergeyevich Frolov from January 1947 Nikolay Gerasimovich Kuznetsov from February 1950 Yuriy Aleksandrovich Panteleyev August 1951 January 1953 7th Fleet Ivan Ivanovich Baykov from January 1947 Georgy Kholostyakov November 1951 May 1953 In April 1953 the Fleets were once again combined under one Pacific Fleet command Yuriy Aleksandrovich Panteleyev from January 1953 Valentin Andreyevich Chekurov from January 1956 Vitaliy Alekseyevich Fokin from February 1958 Nikolay Nikolayevich Amelko from June 1962 Nikolai Ivanovich Smirnov from March 1969 Vladimir Petrovich Maslov from September 1974 Emil Nikolayevich Spiridonov from August 1979 Vladimir Vasilyevich Sidorov from February 1986 Gennadiy Aleksandrovich Khvatov From December 1986 Georgiy Nikolayevich Gurinov from March 1993 Igor Nikolayevich Khmelnov from August 1994 Vladimir Ivanovich Kuroyedov from February 1996 Mikhail Georgiyevich Zakharenko from July 1997 Gennadiy Aleksandrovich Suchkov from July 2001 Viktor Dmitriyevich Fedorov from December 2001 Konstantin Semyonovich Sidenko from December 2007 Sergey Iosifovich Avakyants Acting from August 2010 appointed Commander since 3 May 2012 Viktor Liina From April 2023 See also EditGrigory Pasko former officer of the Russian Navy editor of Boyevaya Vakhta Battle Watch in house newspaper of the Pacific Fleet and prisoner of conscience Bechevinka former submarine base of the fleetReferences Edit Tihookeanskij flot flot com in Russian Archived from the original on 2018 10 13 Retrieved 2018 12 07 Russia names new commanders for Baltic and Pacific fleets www aljazeera com Retrieved 2023 08 24 8th Operational Squadron www ww2 dk Archived from the original on 2018 03 07 Retrieved 2018 03 18 Time Confrontation at Camel Station Archived 2008 12 07 at the Wayback Machine Monday February 18 1980 Koshelev S ChERNYJ FEVRAL in Russian Morskaya Gazeta Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 8 April 2019 Smolyannikov Sergei 7 February 2011 Komandovanie Tihookeanskogo flota pogiblo iz za halatnosti i neostorozhnosti bagnet org in Russian Archived from the original on 2 October 2018 Retrieved 8 April 2019 Sokirko Viktor 8 March 2018 Istoriya tragedii kak Tihookeanskij flot lishilsya rukovodstva v aviakatastrofe 1981 goda tvzvezda ru in Russian Archived from the original on 8 February 2018 Retrieved 8 April 2019 Bernstein Alvin H Gigot Paul Spring 1986 The Soviets in Cam Ranh Bay The National Interest Center for the National Interest 3 19 JSTOR 42894411 Holm Michael Red Banner Pacific Fleet TOF Krasnoznamyonnyj Tihookeanskij flot TOF Military Unit 62665 Soviet Armed Forces organisation and order of battle Retrieved 2022 10 15 Govorushko Yuri 2003 Latest Russian Far East Ammunition Blast Raises Questions Transitions Online 7 21 Minnie Chan 3 July 2013 China to join Russia in joint naval drills in Sea of Japan South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 2 July 2013 and China to join Russia in Beijing s largest ever joint naval exercise with foreign partner Washington Post Associated Press 2 July 2013 Archived from the original on 11 January 2019 Retrieved 2 July 2013 Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 104 18 October 24 October 2021 www gfsis org Missile cruiser Marshal Ustinov moves to Pacific Fleet rusnavy com Archived from the original on 2011 10 15 Retrieved 2011 03 26 Mistral carriers for Russia s Pacific Fleet Voice of Russia Archived from the original on 2012 04 01 Retrieved 2011 03 26 Russia s Pacific fleet to get 15 new vessels in 2020 29 May 2020 Russia s Pacific Fleet is Getting Stronger Here s Why That Matters Russia s Project 23900 LHD to be Able to Operate in the Arctic 28 August 2020 BDK Petr Morgunov peredadut VMF 15 dekabrya a b c Russian Navy postpones upgrade of third generation nuclear submarines 30 September 2020 Russia to Complete Kilo Class Subs Series for Pacific Fleet by 2025 30 March 2019 Gutterman Steve 9 November 2008 Russian navy sub accident kills more than 20 Associated Press Archived from the original on 25 December 2015 Retrieved 9 November 2008 At least 20 die in accident on Russian nuclear sub reuters com 9 November 2008 Archived from the original on 13 November 2008 Retrieved 9 November 2008 Eastern Military District https i imgur com I9BJnAr jpg bare URL image file a b c Russian Flotilla Enters Indian Ocean SeaWaves Magazine Russian Navy Slava class Cruiser Moskva to Return in Service in May 20 April 2020 a b Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 81 29 March 9 May 2021 www gfsis org a b c Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk44 2022 Retrieved Apr 16 2023 a b c Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk21 2022 Russia Sends Slava class Cruiser Ustinov in the Mediterranean 7 February 2022 a b c d e f g Some 20 Russian Pacific Fleet ships begin exercise in Sea of Japan Sea of Okhotsk Upgraded frigate enters service with Russian Pacific Fleet s constant alert forces a b Russian forces in the Mediterranean Wk09 2022 Udaloj fregat tihookeanskie rubezhi zashitit korabl s Cirkonami 10 December 2020 a b Russia to upgrade submarine Irkutsk and destroyer Admiral Vinogradov in 2022 Navyrecognition com 30 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 05 05 SMI uznali o novyh vozmozhnostyah Admirala Vinogradova posle prevrasheniya vo fregat Centralnyj Voenno Morskoj Portal Retrieved Apr 16 2023 a b Russian Navy kicks off large scale drills in Pacific Russia has found money to repair the flagship of the Baltic Fleet 8 February 2019 a b Russia s biggest naval vessels are out at sea The Independent Barents Observer a b c d Russian Navy Pacific Fleet conducts live firing exercise including six warships Newly built corvette Aldar Tsydenzhapov joins Russia s Pacific Fleet Russia to commission Project 20380 corvette Rezky earlier in 2022 30 July 2021 Russian Steregushchiy class corvette Rezky starts sea trials 14 April 2022 Amur Shipyard Begins Mooring Trials of Project 20380 Rezkiy SeaWaves Magazine Archived from the original on 2021 11 20 Retrieved 2021 11 20 a b c New Pacific Fleet Trio Visits Manila on Delivery Voyage SeaWaves Magazine a b c d e JMSDF Monitors Passage of Russian Flotilla SeaWaves Magazine Small anti submarine ships Project 1124 russianships info Japan Again Raises Concern over 10 Warship Russian Navy Surface Group 11 March 2022 a b c d Primorsky Flotilla Trains in Avacha Bay SeaWaves Magazine Russian Ships Train off Kamchatka SeaWaves Magazine a b c d e JMSDF Lists Russian Warships in Nearby Waters SeaWaves Magazine Archived from the original on 2022 02 16 Retrieved 2022 02 16 Pacific fleet receives new warships submarines Part 1 Navy Recognition 25 May 2021 Russia s Nanuchka III class Corvette Smerch Upgraded with new Missiles amp Gun 6 August 2019 The small missile ship of the Pacific Fleet Iney conducted rocket and artillery firing in the Sea of Japan Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation eng mil ru a b Russia to Upgrade All Pacific Fleet s Project 1234 Nanuchka III class Corvettes 16 February 2020 a b Small Missile Ships Project 1234 russianships info https function mil ru news page country more htm id 12405738 egNews bare URL Large landing shipsof the Pacific Fleet conducted artillery firing in the waters of the Sea of Okhotsk Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation a b Russian Pacific Fleet warships wipe out enemy command post in Sea of Okhotsk drills Na Kamchatke torzhestvenno vstretili moryakov podvodnogo raketonosca Aleksandr Nevskij Ministerstvo oborony Rossijskoj Federacii structure mil ru a b Two new Russian nuclear powered submarines arrive at home 29 September 2022 a b Novye atomnye podlodki Knyaz Oleg i Novosibirsk prinyali v sostav VMF Rossii a b Sevmash hands over two nuclear subs to the navy Nuclear submarine armed with Bulava missiles joins Russian Navy defense chief Project 955A Generalissimo Suvorov at Temporary Home of Severomorsk Sea Waves Magazine January 2023 Nuclear SSBN submarines of Russian Pacific Fleet conduct ASW mission training Kristensen Hans M Korda Matt 2022 Russian nuclear weapons 2022 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 78 2 98 121 Bibcode 2022BuAtS 78b 98K doi 10 1080 00963402 2022 2038907 S2CID 247134744 a b c Three Russian nuclear powered submarines return to Kamchatka from Pacific missions 19 July 2022 Russian Antey class submarine Irkutsk may be back in service in 2023 Navyrecognition com 2022 04 29 Retrieved 2022 05 05 Project 949A Irkutsk in Refit Since 2001 May Return to Service in 2022 SeaWaves Magazine Archived from the original on 2021 04 23 Retrieved 2020 11 04 RFS Omsk Returns to Kamchatka SeaWaves Magazine Russian nuclear powered subs launch missiles during Arctic expedition 19 September 2022 Russian Project 885M submarine Krasnoyarsk starts sea trials Russian Project 885M submarine Krasnoyarsk to begin builders trials 8 February 2022 Russian Navy to receive Project 09852 submarine Belgorod in summer Navy Recognition 27 January 2022 World s longest nuclear submarine handed over to the Russian Navy Belgorod nuclear sub begins its first sea trials source Belgorod nuclear submarine carrier with Poseidon nuke drones to serve in Pacific source Russian Akula class Submarine Magadan to be Operational Again in 2022 2 October 2020 a b Large submarines Project 877 636 Explosion forced Indian Navy to return nuclear submarine to Russia The Week 9 June 2021 First modernized Akula attack submarine returns to Northern Fleet Analysis Latest Russian Navy contracts offer development conclusions 16 September 2020 Russia s Pacific Fleet Commissions First Improved Kilo class Project 636 3 Submarine 26 November 2019 Latest diesel electric sub built for Russian Pacific Fleet arrives in Vladivostok TASS Russian Navy officially commissions Kilo class submarine Ufa Navy Recognition 16 November 2022 Admiralty Shipyards Begins Second Trials for Project 636 Ufa SeaWaves Magazine Russian Improved Kilo class submarine Ufa begins sea trials in Baltic Sea 7 July 2022 Seagoing minesweepers Project 266M russianships info a b Pacific Fleet s ships conduct air defense drills in Russia s Far East Coastal minesweeper Project 1265 russianships info Two tactical groups of ships of the Pacific Fleet practicing planned tasks of combat training in the Sea of Japan Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation eng mil ru Project 12700 Alexandrite class minesweeper Yakov Balyayev completes shipbuilder sea trials Project 12700 Pyotr Ilyichev Under Tow for Pacific Fleet Via Arctic SeaWaves Magazine Mine Defense Ship Pyotr Ilyichev on Sea Trials SeaWaves Magazine Russia Sredne Nevsky shipyard launches Petr Ilyichev minesweeper Navy Recognition 29 April 2021 Tralshik Pyotr Ilichyov popolnil sostav Tihookeanskogo flota Centralnyj Voenno Morskoj Portal Three combat ships join Russia s Navy in special ceremony Dec 29 Russian Alexandrite class minesweeper Anatoly Shlemov starts factory trials Navy Recognition 15 November 2022 The minesweeper Pyotr Ilyichev of project 12700 has been commissioned 18 November 2022 Anti saboteur boats Project 21980 CAMTO Komanduyushij TOF admiral Sergej Avakyanc soobshil ob osnovnyh programmah modernizacii Tihookeanskogo flota armstrade org Vishnya class Intelligence Ship Karelia rejoined the Russian Pacific Fleet US Coast Coast monitors Russia Navy spy ship Kareliya near Hawaii navyrecognition com 19 January 2023 TOF vozvrashaet v stroj SRZK Kareliya foto Novosti Vladivostoka i Primorskogo kraya Vesti Primore Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 83 24 May 30 May 2021 www gfsis org Russian Navy ships deployed in the Pacific for drills Modernization of Russian navy tracking ship Marshal Krylov completed Russian Ships Transit Tsushima Strait Continue to Circle Japan 8 July 2022 Medium seagoing tanker Type Dubna russianships info Vladivostok base welcomes home Russian Navy ships returning from massive Pacific drills Is a Russia India Navy Alliance Brewing 9 December 2020 Medium seagoing tanker Project 577 Russian destroyer Admiral Panteleev trains with Ka 27PS helicopter in East China Sea Navy Recognition Medium seagoing tanker Project 160 Hydrographic survey vessel Project 862 https structure mil ru structure forces navy news more htm id 12409493 egNews bare URL Icebreakers Project 97 russianships info Navy Recognition 24 January 2023 https navyrecognition com index php naval news naval news archive 2023 january 12754 russia project 21180m icebreaker yevpaty kolovrat to go to kamchatka htm Retrieved 26 January 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Floating workshops Project 304 VVS VMF in Russian brinkster com Archived from the original on 7 December 2008 Retrieved 19 November 2010 Air Forces Monthly August 2007 issue Russia Conducts Anti Submarine Warfare Exercise in Asia Russian Navy Pacific Fleet to receive three ships armed with Kalibr cruise missiles Ilyushin Unveils Il 38 ASW Upgrade for Russian Navy Russian Navy Pacific Fleet receives one upgraded MiG 31BM fighter aircraft Michael Holm 865th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Syadut na Kamchatke na Dalnem Vostoke razvernut aviapolk MiG 31 21 February 2019 Russian Military Transformation Tracker Issue 1 August 2018 July 2019 www gfsis org Russia deploys its super fast MiG 31 interceptor aircraft in Chukotka Russia s top General indirectly confirms Arctic deployment of the unstoppable Kinzhal missile a b Suhoj klimat Kamchatki na poluostrove razmestyat manevrennye Su 35 Izvestiya in Russian 29 June 2021 Retrieved 14 July 2021 Russia fighters intercept US strategic bombers over Bering Sea tass 15 July 2021 Retrieved 15 July 2021 The Renewed Backfire Bomber Threat to the U S Navy January 2019 Russia to Set up Heavy Bomber Division to Patrol Japan Hawaii and Guam Russian warplanes drill skills of hitting enemy targets during exercise in Pacific Catherine Harris Frederick W Kagan March 2018 Russia s Military Posture Ground Forces Order of Battle PDF www criticalthreats org Retrieved 30 March 2020 Russian 155th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade Members Issue Plea to Governor Primosrky Krai 6 November 2022 Russian Pacific Fleet s marines participating in Ukraine special operation says commander Guards title for Russia s two naval brigades for protecting Fatherland Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 86 14 June 20 June 2021 www gfsis org Over 20 upgraded T 80BV tanks arrive for Russian Pacific Fleet s coastal defense troops Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 118 24 January 30 January 2022 www gfsis org Retrieved Apr 16 2023 Axe David Russian Marines Are Getting Killed And Wounded By The Hundreds In Ukraine Forbes Nuzhen bereg chukotskij severo vostok Rossii zashitit novaya diviziya 4 February 2021 a b Russian Navy strengthens its coastal missile brigades with BAL and BASTION systems Russia deploys Bastion coastal missile systems in Kuril islands near Japan 7 December 2022 Russian Bastion coastal defense missile systems go on combat alert on Kuril Islands Poberezhe Rossii prikryli raketnye monstry 7 January 2018 Russian Military Forces Interactive Map www gfsis org Russian Navy deploys new coastal missile brigade equipped with Bal and Bastion missile systems www navyrecognition com Further reading EditMuraviev Alexey D 2007 The Russian Pacific Fleet From the Crimean War to Perestroika PDF Papers in Australian Maritime Affairs No 20 Canberra Seapower Centre Australia ISBN 978 0 642 29667 2 Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2009 External links Edit Media related to Pacific fleet of Russia at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pacific Fleet Russia amp oldid 1171990865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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