Soviet Cold War Weaponry: Aircraft, Warships, Missiles and Artillery
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Anthony Tucker-Jones
ANTHONY TUCKER-JONES spent nearly twenty years in the British Intelligence Community before establishing himself as a defence writer and military historian. He has written extensively on aspects of Second World War warfare, including Hitler’s Great Panzer Heist and Stalin’s Revenge: Operation Bagration.
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Soviet Cold War Weaponry - Anthony Tucker-Jones
Preface:
Modern Warfare Series
Pen & Sword’s Modern Warfare Series is designed to provide a visual account of the defining conflicts of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. These include Operations Desert Storm, Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. A key characteristic of all three, fought by coalitions, is what has been dubbed ‘shock and awe’, whereby superior technology, air supremacy and overwhelming firepower ensured complete freedom of manoeuvre on the ground in the face of a numerically stronger enemy. The focus of this series is to explain how military and political goals were achieved so swiftly and decisively.
Another aspect of modern warfare is that it is conducted in the full glare of the international media. This is a trend that started during the Vietnam War and to this day every aspect of a conflict is visually recorded and scrutinised. Such visual reporting often shapes public perceptions of conflict to a far greater extent than politicians or indeed generals.
All the photographs in this book, unless otherwise credited, were issued by the US Department of Defense at the time of the conflict. The author and the publishers are grateful for the work of the various forces combat photographers.
Introduction:
The Cold War
At its height the Cold War saw the armies of NATO and the Warsaw Pact standing toe-to-toe in an armed stand-off that at the time seemed to indicate but one outcome – a third world war. The confrontation was characterised by a terrible fear that any escalation in hostilities would inevitably lead to a devastating nuclear war. To get to this stage it would have first witnessed terrible conventional fighting not only in central Europe but also on the high seas.
The main fault line for the Cold War was the border between communist East and capitalist West Germany. On one side lay the combined might of the Eastern bloc (comprising the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies) and on the other the Western bloc (comprising the United States and the other NATO allies). Thanks to the Second World War and their growing nuclear arsenals, both the US and the Soviet Union were elevated to superpower status. Their military might became unparalleled.
After the Second World War the authorities in Moscow were determined to learn from their hard-won experiences. In particular, the Red Army and the Red Air Force had lost almost all of their equipment in the latter half of 1941 at the hands of the Nazi invasion. Moscow was determined to ensure that its strategic reserves could cope with all contingencies, and that Eastern Europe would act as a security buffer for the Russian heartland.
As a result of this mindset, and the growing tensions that led to the Cold War, there was no peace dividend for the Soviet Union’s weapons factories. All sorts of equipment was churned out in vast quantities and either issued to the Soviet armed forces or placed in strategic reserve. Most notably, the Soviet Union sought to defend its strategic influence by developing its submarine and surface fleet.
Likewise, Moscow’s commitment to jet and space technology and its development of long-range weaponry, particularly its nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles, gave it an initial lead in the arms race with the West. The latter concentrated its efforts on aircraft carriers, bombers, submarines and strategic weapons. By the 1980s the Soviet Union had gained the nuclear upper hand both on land and at sea.
In Europe attention was focused on the massed ground forces of the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact members stationed beyond the Iron Curtain in Eastern Europe. These forces were supported by an array of fighter aircraft and bombers, while on the flanks lurked the menace of Soviet warships and submarines. Western planners knew that if the Cold War turned hot, Moscow would move its air and maritime fleets to cut off Western Europe from outside help. Not only would NATO’s armies have found themselves under attack, but so would have vessels in the English Channel, North and Irish Seas and the Atlantic Ocean. In particular, the Battle for the Atlantic would be key in settling the fate of Europe.
Soviet aviation design bureaus were very good at developing easy-to-produce and robust fighter and interceptor aircraft for air defence and ground attack roles. Key features of Soviet Cold War aircraft were their simplicity, toughness, excellent thrust-to-weight ratio, good dog-fighting capabilities and devastating firepower. During the 1970s expansion of Soviet tactical air strength kept NATO ever-vigilant for new aircraft developments.
By the 1970s Soviet submarine technology had gained a lead over many Western designs, making Moscow’s submarine fleet a very real threat to NATO shipping. In Soviet strategic maritime thinking the submarine reigned supreme. In light of the country’s vast coastline, the submarine was considered much better than surface vessels for operating in Arctic waters or in the confines of the Baltic and Black Seas. In addition, if Soviet submarines were to strike out into the North Sea and the Atlantic to attack NATO convoys, they would be much harder to detect and attack. Whatever shortcomings the Soviet submarines had they more than made up for with their speed, operating depths and double hull designs. The Soviet Navy deployed an array of guided missile submarines, such as the Oscar class ballistic missile and attack submarines. The mighty Typhoon class was the largest in the world.
On the ground, the other leg of Moscow’s nuclear triad comprised static (and therefore vulnerable) silo-based intercontinental ballistic missiles plus mobile missiles mounted on great lumbering wheeled vehicles. The latter were able to lurk in Russia’s vast forests to avoid detection and could launch at a moment’s notice. These missiles, together with Moscow’s nuclear missile submarines, provided the Soviet Union’s greatest deterrence and provided a first strike capability.
Soviet strategic thinking dictated that its aircraft, warships and missiles would first help to cut off NATO forces in Europe and then destroy them. There is little reason to believe that they could not have been successful in this mission had a third world war broken out.
Chapter One
Fagot to Forger Fighters
In the air Soviet fighters and bombers presented NATO with a massive threat. At its height in 1980 Soviet aviation, consisting primarily of the air force (VVS) and air defence force (PVO), could easily muster 10,000 aircraft, making it the largest force in the world. A third air force was made up of the AV-MF or Soviet naval aviation. The VVS comprised long-range aviation with responsibility for the bombers, frontal aviation which provided close air support, interdiction and battlefield air defence, and military transport aviation which controlled air lift capabilities. The PVO was tasked with shooting down America’s strategic bomber force and its reconnaissance aircraft. Eventually all fighter aircraft were transferred to the responsibility of the VVS, with the PVO retaining control only of the anti-aircraft missile systems. Prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moscow’s VVS still had 3,530 fighters, 2,135 attack aircraft, more than 1,000 reconnaissance aircraft, 620 transport aircraft and more than 400 bombers. Even at the time of the Soviet Union’s dissolution the PVO could still muster more than 2,400 interceptors.
As the Cold War began to gather pace, the Soviet Union swiftly sought to develop a turbojet fighter. It was not long before jets produced by Mikoyan-Gurevich (MiG) and Sukhoi (Su) were embroiled in the Cold War as it turned hot on the periphery in Korea and Vietnam. Initial attempts in the shape of MiG-9 and La-15 fighters using underpowered engines based on captured Germans designs proved wholly unsatisfactory. Although the MiG-9 (known as Fargo by NATO) entered service, it was quickly replaced by the MiG-15. Moscow was subsequently greatly assisted by Britain’s remarkable decision to supply examples of the Rolls-Royce Nene, its latest and most powerful turbojet. This was used in the MiG-15 fighter and the Il-28 tactical bomber.
MiG-15 Fagot
Moscow, drawing on its experience with the highly flawed MiG-9, first flew the vastly improved MiG-15 in late 1948 and it was accepted into service the following year. It was designated Fagot by NATO, maintaining the ‘F’ prefixed codenames which had started with the Fargo. This aircraft heralded a remarkably successful trend among subsequent Soviet MiG fighters and Sukhoi ground attack aircraft. It was armed with both 23mm and 37mm cannon in order to counter America’s B-29 Superfortress strategic bomber. Moscow was able to conduct valuable air-to-air combat trials using the Tu-4 Bull, a cloned copy of the B-29. The MiG-15 was quickly sold to eager customers, with China receiving the improved MiG-15bis in 1950. These cut their teeth in the first jet-versus-jet dogfights during the Korean War. The MiG-15’s capabilities came as an unpleasant wake-up call for the West and highlighted the threat