Spetsnaz
(Russian: спецназ; IPA: [spʲɪt͜s'nas]), abbreviation for Войска
специального назначения, tr. Voyska spetsialnogo naznacheniya
pronounced [vɐjsˈka spʲɪt͡sɨˈalʲnəvə nəznɐˈt͜ɕenʲɪjə]
(English: Special Purpose Forces or Special Purpose Military Units), is an umbrella
term for special forces in Russian
and is used in numerous post-Soviet states.
Historically,
the term referred to special military units controlled by the military
intelligence service GRU (Spetsnaz GRU). It also describes special purpose
units, or task forces of other ministries (such as the Ministry of Emergency
Situations' special rescue unit) in post-Soviet countries.
As
Spetsnaz is a Russian term, it is typically associated with the special forces
units of Russia; but other post-Soviet states often refer to their special
forces by the term as well since they inherited their special purpose units
from the now-defunct Soviet security agencies. The 5th Spetsnaz Brigade of Belarus or the Alpha Group of the Security Service of Ukraine are both
such examples of non-Russian Spetsnaz forces.
INTERNET
SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spetsnaz
SURPAT wearing OSN "Grom" operator
of the Russian Federal Drug Control Service.
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604th TsSN operator with Stayer parachute
system.
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1
Etymology
The
Russian abbreviations SPETSNAZ, (spetsialnogo
naznacheniya) and OSNAZ (osobogo naznacheniya), both meaning
"special purpose", are general terms used for a variety of special operations (spetsoperatsiya) forces (or
regular forces assigned to special tasks). They are syllabic abbreviations typical of early Soviet-era
Russian, although many Cheka and Internal
Troops units (such as OMSDON) used osobogo naznacheniya in their full names.
Spetsnaz
later referred to special (spetsialnogo) purpose (naznacheniya) or special
operations (spetsoperatsiya) forces, and the word's widespread use is a
relatively recent, post-perestroika development in Russian language. The
Soviet public used to know very little about their country's special forces
until many state secrets were disclosed under the glasnost
("openness") policy of Mikhail
Gorbachev during the late 1980s. Since then, stories about spetsnaz
and their purportedly incredible prowess, from the serious to the highly
questionable, have captivated the imagination of patriotic Russians,
particularly in the midst of the post-Soviet era decay in military and security
forces during the era of perestroika championed by Mikhail Gorbachev and
continued under Boris Yeltsin. A number of books about the Soviet military
intelligence special forces, such as 1987's Spetsnaz:
The Story Behind the Soviet SAS by defected GRU
agent Viktor Suvorov, helped introduce the term to the
Western public.
In
post-Soviet Russia "Spetsnaz" became a colloquial term as
special operations (spetsoperatsiya), from police raids to military
operations in internal conflicts, grew more common. Coverage of these
operations, and the celebrity status of special operations forces in
state-controlled media, encouraged the public to identify many of these forces
by name: SOBR, Alpha,
Vityaz.
The term Spetsnaz has also continued to be used in several other post-Soviet
states such as Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan for their own special
operations forces. In Russia, foreign special operations forces are also known
as "Spetsnaz" (for example, United States special
operations forces would be called "amerikanskiy spetsnaz").
2
Known operations
2.1
The Crabb Affair
Lionel
Crabb was a British Royal Navy frogman and MI6 diver who vanished
during a reconnaissance mission around a Soviet cruiser berthed at Portsmouth
Dockyard in 1956. On 16 November 2007, the BBC and the Daily
Mirror reported that Eduard Koltsov, a Soviet frogman, claimed to have caught
Crabb placing a mine on the Ordzhonikidze hull near the
ammunition depot and cut his throat. In an interview for a Russian documentary
film, Koltsov showed the dagger he allegedly used as well as an Order of the Red Star medal that he claimed
to have been awarded for the deed. Koltsov, 74 at the time of the interview,
stated that he wanted to clear his conscience and make known exactly what
happened to Crabb.
Special forces prepare for mission in
Afghanistan.
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2.2
Soviet war in Afghanistan
Main
article: Operation Storm-333
SPETSNAZ,
or Russian Special Forces were used in the Soviet war in Afghanistan, usually
fighting fast insertion/extraction type warfare with helicopters. Their most
famous operation was Operation Storm-333, in which Soviet Special
Forces stormed the Tajbeg Palace in Afghanistan and killed Afghan
President Hafizullah Amin and his 200 personal guards. The
Soviets then installed Babrak Karmal as Amin's successor.
The
operation was conducted on 27 December 1979, with approximately 660 Soviet
operators dressed in Afghan uniforms, including ca. 50 KGB
and GRU officers from the Alpha
Group and Zenith Group, occupied major governmental, military
and media buildings in Kabul, including their primary target – the Tajbeg
Presidential Palace.
Spetsnaz
units conducted numerous air assault missions that included ambushes and raids
throughout the war. The Spetsnaz were often utilized in missions to ambush and
destroy enemy supply convoys. The Mujahideen
had great respect for the Spetsnaz claiming they were a much more difficult
opponent than the typical Soviet conscript soldier. They said that the Spetsnaz
led air
assault missions had changed the complexion of the war. They also credited
the Spetsnaz with closing down all the supply routes along the Afghan-Pakistani
border in 1986. In April, 1986 the rebels lost one of their biggest bases, at
Zhawar in Paktia Province, to a Soviet Spetsnaz air assault. The Spetsnaz
achieved victory by knocking out several rebel positions above the base, a
mile-long series of fortified caves in a remote canyon. The Spetsnaz were also
able to insert air assault forces into regions in Konar Valley near Barikot which
were previously considered inaccessible to Soviet forces.
2.3
Alleged conflict with Pakistani commandos
Main
article: Operation Magistral
It
is believed that during the war in Afghanistan, Soviet special forces came in
direct conflict with Pakistan's Special Services Group. This unit was
deployed disguised as Afghans, and provided support to the Mujahideen
fighting the Soviets. A battle reported as having been fought between the
Pakistanis and Soviet troops took place in Kunar
Province in March 1986. Soviet sources claimed that the battle was actually
fought between the GRU's 15th Spetsnaz Brigade, and the Usama Bin Zaid regiment
of Afghan Mujahideen under Commander Assadullah, belonging to Abdul Rasul Sayyaf's faction. Fighting is also
alleged to have taken place during Operation Magistral where nearly 200 Mujahideen
were killed in a failed attempt to wrest the strategic Hill 3234 near the Pakistani border from a
39-man Soviet Airborne company.
2.3.1
The Beirut hostage crisis
In
October 1985, specialist operators from the KGB's Group
"A" (Alpha) were dispatched to Beirut, Lebanon. The Kremlin had been
informed of the kidnapping of four Soviet diplomats by the militant group, the
Islamic Liberation Organization (a radical offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood). It was believed that this
was retaliation for the Soviet support of Syrian involvement in the Lebanese Civil War. However, by the time Alpha
arrived, one of the hostages had already been killed. It is alleged that
through a network of supporting KGB operatives, members of the task force
identified each of the perpetrators involved in the crisis; once these had been
identified, the team began to take relatives of these militants as hostages.
Following the standard Soviet policy of not negotiating with terrorists, some
of the hostages taken by Alpha were dismembered, and their body parts sent to
the militants. The warning was clear: more would follow unless the remaining
hostages were released immediately. The show of force worked, and for 20 years,
no Soviet or Russian officials was taken captive, until the 2006 abduction and murder of four
Russian embassy staff in Iraq.
However,
the veracity of this story has been brought into question. Another version says
that the release of the Soviet hostages was the result of extensive diplomatic
negotiations with the spiritual leader of Hezbollah,
Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who appealed
to King Hussein of Jordan and the leaders of Libya and
Iran to use their influence on the kidnappers.
2.4
After the breakup of Soviet Union
After
the collapse of the USSR, Spetsnaz forces of the Soviet Union's newly formed
republics took part in many local conflicts such as the Civil war in Tajikistan, Chechen Wars, Russo-Georgian War and the Crimea
Crisis. Spetsnaz forces also have been called upon to resolve several high
profile hostage situations such as the Moscow theater hostage crisis and the
Beslan school hostage crisis.
2.4.1
Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis
Main
article: Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis
The
crisis took place from 14 June
to 19 June 1995, when a group of 80 to 200 Chechen separatists led by Shamil
Basayev attacked the southern Russian city of Budyonnovsk,
where they stormed the main police station and the city hall. After several
hours of fighting and Russian reinforcements imminent, the Chechens retreated
to the residential district and regrouped in the city hospital, where they took
between 1,500 and 1,800 hostages, most of them civilians (including about 150
children and a number of women with newborn infants).
After
three days of siege, the Russian authorities ordered the security forces to
retake the hospital compound. The forces deployed were elite personnel from the
Federal Security Service's Alpha Group,
alongside MVD militsiya and Internal Troops. The strike force attacked the
hospital compound at dawn on the fourth day, meeting fierce resistance. After
several hours of fighting in which many hostages were killed by crossfire, a
local ceasefire was agreed, and 227 hostages were released; 61 others were
freed by the Russian forces.
A
second Russian attack on the hospital a few hours later also failed and so did
a third, resulting in even more casualties. The Russian authorities accused the
Chechens of using the hostages as human shields.
According
to official figures, 129 civilians were killed and 415 were injured in the
entire event (of whom 18 later died of their wounds). This includes at least
105 hostage fatalities. However, according to an independent estimate 166
hostages were killed and 541 injured in the special forces attack on the
hospital. At least 11 Russian police officers and 14 soldiers were killed.
Basayev's force suffered 11 men killed and one missing; most of their bodies were
returned to Chechnya in a special freezer truck. In the years following the
hostage-taking, more than 30 of the surviving attackers have been killed,
including Aslambek Abdulkhadzhiev in 2002 and Shamil
Basayev in 2006, and more than 20 were sentenced, by the Stavropol territorial
court, to various terms of imprisonment.
Shamil
Basaev, mastermind behind the Moscow theater hostage crisis, was
killed by FSB operators.
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2.5
Second Chechen war
Russian
special forces were instrumental in Russia's and the Kremlin backed
government's success in the Second Chechen War. Under joint command of Unified
Group of Troops (OGV), GRU, FSB, MVD Spetsnaz operators conducted a myriad
of counter-insurgency and counter-terrorism missions,
including targeted killings of separatist leadership, in the meantime
inflicting heavy casualties among Islamist separatists. Some of the most
infamous of these successful missions were internationally condemned terrorists
and separatist leaders, like Aslan
Maskhadov, Abdul Halim Sadulayev, Dokka
Umarov, Turpal-Ali Atgeriyev, Akhmed Avtorkhanov, Ibn
al-Khattab, Abu al-Walid, Abu Hafs al-Urduni, Muhannad, Ali Taziev,
Supyan Abdullayev, Shamil
Basayev, Ruslan Gelayev, Salman
Raduyev, Sulim Yamadayev, Rappani
Khalilov, Yassir al-Sudani. During these many operators
received honors for their courage and prowess in combat, including with the
title Hero of the Russian Federation. At
least 106 FSB and GRU operators died during the conflict.
2.5.1
Moscow theater hostage crisis
Main
article: Moscow theater hostage crisis
The
crisis was the seizure of the crowded
Dubrovka Theater on 23 October 2002 by 40 to 50 armed Chechens
who claimed allegiance to the Islamist militant separatist movement in
Chechnya. They took 850 hostages and demanded the withdrawal of Russian
forces from Chechnya and an end to the Second Chechen War. The siege was
officially led by Movsar Barayev.
Due
to the disposition of the theater, special forces would have had to fight
through 100 feet of corridor and attack up a well defended staircase, before
they could reach the hall in where the hostages held up. The terrorist also had
numerous explosives, with the most powerful in the center of the auditorium,
that if detonated, could have brought down the ceiling and caused casualties in
excess of 80 percent. After a two-and-a-half-day siege and the execution of two
female hostages, Spetsnaz operators from the Federal Security Service (FSB) Alpha
and Vympel a.k.a.
Vega Groups, supported by the Russian Ministry of Internal
Affairs (MVD) SOBR
unit, pumped an undisclosed chemical agent
into the building's ventilation system and raided it.
During
the raid, all 40 of the attackers were killed, with no casualties among
Spetsnaz, but about 130 hostages, including nine foreigners, died due to
adverse reactions to the gas. Russian security agencies refused to disclose the
gas used in the attack leading to doctors in local hospitals being unable to
respond adequately to the influx of casualties. All but two of the hostages who
died during the siege were killed by the toxic substance pumped into the
theater to subdue the militants. The use of the gas was widely condemned as
heavy-handed, but the American and British governments deemed Russia's actions
justifiable.
Physicians
in Moscow condemned the refusal to disclose the identity of the gas that
prevented them from saving more lives. Some reports said the drug naloxone was
used to save some hostages.
Photos of the victims at Beslan school number
1
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2.5.2
Beslan school siege
Main
article: Beslan school hostage crisis
Also
referred to as the Beslan massacre started on 1 September 2004, lasted
three days and involved the capture of over 1,100 people as hostages (including
777 children), ending with the death of 334 people. The event led to security
and political repercussions in Russia; in the aftermath of the crisis, there
has been an increase in Ingush-Ossetian
ethnic hostility, while contributing to a series of federal government reforms consolidating
power in the Kremlin and strengthening of the powers of the President of Russia.
The
crisis began when a group of armed radical Islamist combatants, mostly Ingush
and Chechen, occupied School Number One (SNO) in the
town of Beslan,
North Ossetia (an autonomous republic in the North
Caucasus region of the Russian Federation) on 1 September 2004. The hostage-takers
were the Riyadus-Salikhin
Battalion, sent by the Chechen terrorist warlord Shamil Basayev, who
demanded recognition of the independence of Chechnya at the
United
Nations and the withdrawal of Russian forces from Chechnya.
On
the third day of the standoff, counter terrorism units stormed the building
using heavy weapons after several explosions rocked the building and children
started escaping. It was in this chaos most of the officers were killed, trying
to protect escaping children from gun fire. At least 334 hostages were killed
as a result of the crisis, including 186 children. Official reports on how many
members of Russia's special forces died in the fighting varied from 11, 12, 16
(7 Alpha and 9 Vega) to more than 20 killed. There are only 10 names on the
special forces monument in Beslan. The fatalities included all three commanders
of the assault group: Colonel Oleg Ilyin, Lieutenant Colonel Dmitry Razumovsky
of Vega, and Major Alexander Perov of Alpha. At least 30 commandos suffered
serious wounds.
The
attack also marked the end to the mass terrorism in the North Caucasus
separatist conflict until 2010, when two Dagestani
female suicide bombers attacked two railway stations in Russia.
After Beslan, there was a period of several years without suicide attacks in
and around Chechnya.
FSB
special forces members during a special operation in Makhachkala,
as a result of which "one fighter was killed and two terrorist attacks
prevented" in 2010.
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2.5.3
Lessons learned
By
the mid 2000s, the special forces gained a firm upper hand over separatists and
terrorist attacks in Russia dwindled, falling from 257 in 2005 to 48 in 2007.
Military analyst Vitaly Shlykov praised the effectiveness of Russia's
security agencies, saying that the experience learned in Chechnya and Dagestan had
been key to the success. In 2008, the American Carnegie Endowment's Foreign Policy magazine
named Russia as "the worst place to be a terrorist", particularly
highlighting Russia's willingness to prioritize national security over civil
rights. By 2010, Russian special forces, led by the FSB, had managed to
eliminate the top leadership of the Chechen insurgency, except for Dokka
Umarov.
From
2009, the level of terrorism in Russia increased again. Particularly worrisome
was the increase in suicide attacks. While between February 2005 and August
2008, no civilians were killed in such attacks, in 2008 at least 17 were killed
and in 2009 the number rose to 45. In March 2010, Islamist militants organised
the 2010 Moscow Metro bombings, which killed
40 people. One of the two blasts took place at Lubyanka station, near the FSB
headquarters. Militant leader Doku
Umarov—dubbed "Russia's Osama
Bin Laden"—took responsibility for the attacks. In July 2010,
President Dmitry Medvedev expanded the FSB's powers in its
fight against terrorism.
In
2011, Federal Security Service exposed 199 foreign spies, including 41
professional spies and 158 agents employed by foreign intelligence services.
The number has risen in recent years: in 2006 the FSB reportedly caught about
27 foreign intelligence officers and 89 foreign agents. Comparing the number of
exposed spies historically, the then-FSB Director Nikolay Kovalyov said in 1996:
"There has never been such a number of spies arrested by us
since the time when German agents were sent in during the years of World War
II." The 2011 figure is similar to what was reported in 1995–1996, when
around 400 foreign intelligence agents were uncovered during the two-year
period.
2.6
Anti terrorist operations prior to 2014 Sochi Olympics
Olympic
organizers received several threats prior to the Games. In a July 2013 video
release, Chechen Islamist
commander Dokka Umarov called for attacks on the Games, stating
that the Games were being staged "on the bones of many, many Muslims
killed ...and buried on our lands extending to the Black Sea." Threats
were received from the group Vilayat
Dagestan, which had claimed responsibility for the Volgograd bombings under the demands of Umarov,
and a number of National Olympic Committees had also received threats via
e-mail, threatening that terrorists would kidnap or "blow up"
athletes during the Games.
In
response to the insurgent threats, Russian special forces began cracking down
on suspected terrorist organizations, making several arrests and claiming to
have curbed several plots, and killed numerous Islamist leaders including Eldar
Magatov, a suspect in attacks on Russian targets and alleged leader of an
insurgent group in the Babyurt district of Dagestan. Dokka Umarov himself was
poisoned on August 6, 2013 and died on September 7, 2013.
The
operations were a success and the Olympics went down without any major
terrorist incident.
2.7
2014 intervention in Ukraine
Main
article: 2014 Russian military
intervention in Ukraine
Spetsnaz
unit of the VDV RF took part in the 2014 Crimean crisis. Several hundred
members of the 45th Detached Guards Spetsnaz
Regiment and the 22nd Spetsnaz brigade were sent in, disguised as
civilians.
2.8
Insurgency in the Caucasus
Although
crime has been markedly reduced and stability increased throughout Russia
compared to the previous year, about 350 militants in the North Caucasus have
been killed in anti-terror operations in the first four months of 2014,
according to an announcement by Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev in the State Duma.
On
September 23, 2014, Russian news agencies marked the 15th anniversary of the
formation of the Unified Group of Troops (OGV, or ОГВ) in
the North Caucasus. The OGV is the inter-service headquarters established at Khankala,
Chechnya to command all Russian defense ministry (MOD, MVD, FSB) operations
from the start of the second Chechen war in 1999.
Since
its inception, the OGV combined operations has conducted 40,000 special
missions, destroyed 5,000 bases and caches, confiscated 30,000 weapons, and
disarmed 80,000 explosive devices and in the process has killed over 10,000
insurgents in the time frame of 15 years. The Ministry of Internal Affairs
(MVD) noted that the decoration Hero of the Russian Federation has
been awarded to 93 MVD servicemen in the OGV (including 66 posthumously).
Overall, more than 23,000 MVD troops have received honors for their conduct
during operations.
Russian
spetsnaz forces participated in the 2014 Grozny clashes.
2.9
Syrian Civil War
Main
article: Russian-led military
intervention in Syria
Unidentified
spetsnaz units are allegedly involved in search and destroy operations, target
acquisition for Russian ground attack aircraft and special reconnaissance.
3
Timeline
The
concept of using special tactics and strategies was originally proposed by
Russian military theorist Mikhail Svechnykov (executed during the Great
Purge in 1938), who envisaged the development of unconventional warfare capabilities to
overcome disadvantages faced by conventional forces in the field. Its
implementation was begun by the "grandfather of the spetsnaz",
Ilya
Starinov.
During
World War II, the Red Army reconnaissance and sabotage detachments were
formed under the supervision of the Second Department of the General Staff of the Soviet
Armed Forces. These forces were subordinate to front commanders. The infamous NKVD internal security and espionage agency also
had their own special purpose (osnaz) detachments, including many saboteur
teams who were airdropped into enemy-occupied territories to work with (and
often take over and lead) the Soviet
Partisans.
In
1950, Georgy Zhukov advocated the creation of 46 military spetsnaz
companies, each consisting of 120 servicemen. This was the first use of "spetsnaz"
to denote a separate military branch since World
War II. These companies were later expanded to battalions and then to
brigades. However, some separate companies (orSpN) and detachments (ooSpN)
existed with brigades until the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
The
special purpose forces of the Armed Forces of the RF included fourteen land
brigades, two naval brigades and a number of separate detachments and
companies, operating under the Main Intelligence Directorate
(GRU) and collectively known as Spetsnaz
GRU. These units and formations existed in the highest possible secrecy,
and were disguised as Soviet paratroopers (Army spetsnaz) or naval infantrymen (Naval spetsnaz) by their
uniforms and insignia.
Twenty-four
years after the birth of Spetsnaz, the first counter-terrorist unit was
established by the Chairman of the KGB gen. Yuri Andropov. From the late 1970s through the 1980s,
a number of special-purpose units were created in the KGB and the Ministry of Internal Affairs
(MVD).
During
the 1990s, special detachments were established within the Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN)
and the Airborne Troops (VDV). Some civil agencies
with non-police functions have created special units also known as Spetsnaz,
such as the Leader special centre in the Ministry of Emergency
Situations (MChS).
2013
saw the creation of the Special Operations Forces of the Russian Federation
encompassing all special military units in the Armed Forces of the Russian
Federation.
Russian honour guard from the 154th
Preobrazhensky ICR perform a pass and review as part of a wreath-laying
ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Moscow, Russia
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4
Soviet and Russian nomenclature
- Soviet (Russian) Ministry of Defence special forces:
- Spetsnaz GRU units (under GRU, later the Russian Ground Forces)
- Naval Spetsnaz units (Russian Navy)
- 45th Guards Spetsnaz Brigade (Russian Airborne Troops)
- State security (KGB-FSB) special forces:
- Special Operations Center (TsSN): A, B, Special Purpose Service
- Regional FSB special forces
- Zaslon (belonging to Foreign Intelligence Service)
- Defunct KGB units such as Cascade, Omega, Zenith
- Special Purpose Regiment (Kremlin Regiment)
- Border Troops special units
- Former Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) special forces, which from 2016 report as part of the National Guard of Russia, including the National Guard Forces Command:
- Internal Troops' Division of Operational Purpose (OMSDON-ODON) and OBRON
- Rus and Vityaz (merged into the 604th Special Purpose Center)
- Other Internal Troops special units
- Militsiya/Politsiya special forces (OMON, SOBR-OMSN, Berkut)
- "Kadyrov's spetsnaz"
- Ministry of Justice special forces:
- Independent regional detachments such as Saturn
3rd Spetsnaz Brigade on parade, 9 May 2011.
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Special Forces training during HALO training.
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5 Soviet and Russian military special forces
The
elite units of the Soviet Armed Forces and Armed Forces of the Russian Federation are
controlled, for the most part, by the military-intelligence GRU (Spetsnaz GRU)
under the General Staff. They were heavily involved in secret operations and
training pro-Soviet forces during the Cold War and
in the wars in Afghanistan during the 1980s and Chechnya
during the 1990s and 2000s. In 2010, as a result of the 2008 Russian military reform, GRU
special forces came under the control of the Russian Ground Forces, being "directly
subordinated to commanders of combined strategic commands." However, in
2013, these Spetsnaz forces were placed back under the GRU, under the wings of
the newly formed Special Operations Forces of the Russian Federation.
The Russian Airborne Troops (VDV, a separate
branch of the Soviet and Russian Armed Forces) includes the 45th Guards Spetsnaz Brigade.
Most
Russian military special forces units are known by their type of formation
(company, battalion or brigade) and a number, like other Soviet or Russian
military units. Two exceptions were the ethnic Chechen Special Battalions Vostok
and Zapad (East and West) that existed during the 2000s. Below is a
2012 list of special purpose units in the Russian Armed Forces:
Special Operations Forces of the
Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, subordinate directly to the
MoD/General Staff
- Special Operations Command (KSO)
- TsSN "Senezh"
Combined Arms
- Voennay Razvedka (Military intelligence) personnel/units within larger formations in ground troops, airborne troops and marines. Intelligence battalion in the divisions, reconnaissance company in the brigade, a reconnaissance platoon in the regiment.
- 2nd Special Purpose Brigade in Promezhitsa, Pskov Oblast
- 3rd Special Purpose Brigade in Tolyatti
- 10th Special Purpose Brigade in Mol'kino, Krasnoyarsk Territory
- 14th Special Purpose Brigade in Ussuriysk
- 16th Special Purpose Brigade in Tambov
- 22nd Special Purpose Guards Brigade in Stepnoi, Rostov Oblast
- 24th Special Purpose Brigade in Irkutsk
- Naval Special Operations Units
- 442nd Detached Naval Reconnaissance Spetsnaz Point (omrpSpN – Pacific Fleet)
- 420th Detached Naval Reconnaissance Spetsnaz Point (omrpSpN – Northern Fleet)
- 431st Detached Naval Reconnaissance Spetsnaz Point (omrpSpN – Black Sea Fleet)
- 561st Detached Naval Reconnaissance Spetsnaz Point (omrpSpN – Baltic Fleet)
President Dmitry Medvedev visiting the FSB
Special Forces Centre in Makhachkala, Dagestan on 9 June 2009
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6 KGB of the USSR and FSB of the Russian Federation special forces
The
Center of Special Operations of the FSB (CSN FSB, центр специального
назначения ФСБ) is officially tasked with combating terrorism and
protecting the constitutional order of the Russian Federation. The CSN FSB
consists of estimated 4,000 operators in three operative divisions:
- Directorate "A" (Spetsgruppa Alpha)
- Directorate "B" (Spetsgruppa Vega)
- Directorate "C" (Spetsgruppa Smerch)
- Regional FSB units
CSN
FSB headquarters is a large complex of buildings and training areas, with
dozens of hectares of land and scores of training facilities. The average
training period for a CSN officer is about five years.
Spetsgruppa
'A' (Alpha
Group) is a counter-terrorist unit created in 1974. It is a
professional unit, consisting of about 700 operators and support personnel in
five operational detachments. Most are stationed in Moscow, with the
remainder in three other cities: Krasnodar, Yekaterinburg
and Khabarovsk.
All Alpha operators undergo airborne, mountain and counter-sabotage dive training.
Alpha has operated in other countries, most notably Operation Storm-333 (when Alpha and
Zenith detachments supported the 154th Independent Spetsnaz Detachment—known as
the "Muslim Battalion"—of the GRU on a mission to overthrow and kill
Afghan president Hafizullah Amin).
Spetsgruppa
"B" (Vympel,
also known as "Vega" in period 1993-1995) was formed in 1981, merging
two elite Cold War-era KGB
special units—Cascade (Kaskad) and Zenith (Zenit)—which were
similar to the CIA's Special Activities Division
(responsible for clandestine / covert operations involving sabotage and
assassination in other countries) and re-designated for counter-terrorist and
counter-sabotage operations. It is tasked with the protection of strategic
installations, such as factories and transportation centers. With its Alpha
counterparts, it is heavily used in the North
Caucasus. Vympel has four operative units in Moscow, with branch offices in
nearly every city containing a nuclear power plant.
Spetsgruppa
"C", or Smerch, but also known as the Service of Special Operations
(ССО), is a relatively new unit formed in July 1999. Officers from Smerch are
frequently involved with the capture and transfer of various bandit and
criminal leaders who help aid disruption in the North Caucasus and throughout
Russia. Operations include both direct action against bandit holdouts in
Southern Russia as well as high-profile arrests in more densely populated
cities and guarding government officials. Because of its initials, this group
is casually referred to as “Smerch”. With the Center of Special Operations and
its elite units, many FSB special forces units operate at the regional level.
These detachments are usually known as ROSN or ROSO (Regional Department of
Special Designation), such as Saint
Petersburg's Grad (Hail) or Murmansk's Kasatka
(Orca).
7
Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation
The
SVR RF, formerly the First Chief Directorate of the KGB of the USSR, has its
own top secret special force known as Zaslon (Заслон) (meaning Screen, Barrier
or Shield) about which extremely little is known.
Within
the Operations Department of Directorate S, there is the elite Special
Operations Group called Zaslon. Formerly in PGU KGB SSSR called Vympel (e.g.
French counterpart; Division Action). However, mere existence of such
group within SVR is denied by Russian authorities. Nevertheless, there were
some rumors that such group does indeed exist and is assigned to execute very
special operations abroad primarily for protection of Russian embassy personnel
and internal investigations. It is believed that the group is deep undercover
and consists of approximately 300-500 highly experienced operatives speaking
several languages and having extensive record of operations while serving in
other secret units of the Russian military.
Operator from the 604th Special Purpose
Center of the Internal Troops of the MIA of the RF
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8
Soviet and Russian MVD special forces
The
Ministry of Internal Affairs
(MVD) Spetsnaz includes a number of Russian Internal Troops (VV, successor to
the Soviet Internal Troops) paramilitary units to combat
internal threats to the government, such as insurgencies and mutinies. These
units usually have a unique name and official OSN number, and some are part the
ODON (also known as
Dzerzhinsky Division). OBrON (Independent Special Designation Brigade) VV
special groups (spetsgruppa) were deployed to Chechnya.
8.1
Internal Troops
The
following is a list of Internal Troops OSNs (отряд
специального назначения, "special purpose detachment") in 2012:
·
604th
Special Purpose Center
·
7th
OSN Rosich (Novocherkassk)
·
12th
OSN Ural (Nizhny Tagil)
·
15th
OSN Vyatich (Armavir)
·
17th
OSN Edelveys (Mineralnye Vody)
·
19th
OSN Ermak (Novosibirsk)
·
20th
OSN (Saratov)
·
21st
OSN Tayfun (Sosnovka)
·
23rd
OSN Mechel (Chelyabinsk)
·
25th
OSN Merkuriy (Smolensk)
·
26th
OSN Bars (Kazan)
·
27th
OSN Kuzbass (Kemerovo)
·
28th
OSN Ratnik (Arkhangelsk)
·
29th
OSN Bulat (Ufa)
·
33rd
OSN Peresvet (Moscow)
·
34th
OSN (Grozny)
8.2
Police
In
addition to Internal Troops, the MVD has Politsiya
(formerly Militsiya)
police special forces stationed in nearly every Russian city. Most of Russia's
special-police officers belong to OMON units, which are primarily used as riot
police and not considered an elite force—unlike the SOBR (known as the
OMSN from 2002 to 2011) rapid-response units consisting of experienced,
better-trained and -equipped officers. The Chechen Republic has unique and
highly autonomous special police formations, supervised by Ramzan
Kadyrov and formed from the Kadyrovtsy,
including the (Akhmad or Akhmat) Kadyrov Regiment ("Kadyrov's Spetsnaz").
8.3
Other MVD agencies
·
OSN
"Grom"
Internal Troops' 7th OSN with a Russian Orthodox priest and their flag
(also featuring a maroon beret), 2005
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9 Ministry of Justice
The
Ministry of Juctice maintains several
spetnaz organizations:
The
following is a list of Federal Penitentiary Service OSNs:
- OSN "Fakel"
- OSN "Rossy"
- OSN "Akula"
- OSN "Ajsberg"
- OSN "Gyurza"
- OSN "Korsar"
- OSN "Rosomakha"
- OSN "Sokol"
- OSN "Saturn"
- OSN "Tornado"
- OSN "Kondor"
- OSN "Yastreb"
- OSN "Berkut"
- OSN "Grif"
- OSN "Titan"
- OSN "Gepard"
- OSN Saturn.
10
Spetsnaz units in other post-Soviet countries
10.1
Belarusian Spetsnaz
Main
article: 5th Spetsnaz Brigade
The
5th Spetsnaz Brigade is a special forces brigade of the Armed Forces of
Belarus, formerly part of the Soviet Spetsnaz. In addition, the State Security
Committee (KGB) of Belarus that was formed from the inherited personnel and
operators after the break up of the Soviet Union. KGB of Belarus has its own
Spetsgruppa "A" (Alpha Group), which is the country's primary
counter-terrorism unit.
10.2
Kazakh Spetsnaz
As
with many post Soviet states, Kazakhstan adopted the term Alpha
Group to be used by its special forces. The Almaty territorial unit of
Alpha was turned into the special unit Arystan (meaning "Lions" in Kazakh)
of the National
Security Committee (KNB) of Kazakhstan. In 2006, five members of Arystan
were arrested and charged with the kidnapping of the opposition politician Altynbek Sarsenbayuly, his driver, and his
bodyguard; the three victims were then allegedly delivered to the people who
murdered them.
Kokhzal
(meaning wolf pack in Kazakh language) is a special forces unit of Kazakhstan
responsible for carrying out anti terror operations as well as serving as a
protection detail for the President of Kazakhstan.
10.3
Ukrainian Spetsnaz
Main
article: Special Forces of Ukraine
Like
all post-Soviet states, Ukraine inherited its Spetsnaz units from the remnants of the
Soviet armed forces, GRU and KGB units. Ukraine now maintains its own Spetsnaz
structure under the control of the Ministry of Interior, and under the Ministry
of Defense, while the Security Service of Ukraine maintains
its own Spetsnaz force, the Alpha group. The term "Alpha" is
also used by many other post Soviet states such as Russia, Belarus, and
Kazakhstan as these units are based on the Soviet Union's Alpha Group.
Ukraine's Berkut special police force gained
mainstream attention during the 2014 Ukrainian revolution as it was alleged to
have been used by the government to quell the uprising. However, this is
disputed as many officers were also wounded and killed in the action.
Special missions troops during training.
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11
In popular culture
- A character named Sergei in Andy McNab's 2000 novel Firewall was mentioned as being a former member of Alpha force.
- The 2003 political-simulation video game Republic: The Revolution features the Alpha Squad, first as an instrument of the corrupt president of the fictional post-Soviet state of Novistrana. Later in the game, it becomes an instrument that can be used by the player's character, as long as his level is high enough.
- The video game Alfa: Anti-terror was developed by Russian game developer MiST Land South in 2005.
- In the 2007 film Hitman, the protagonist assassin, Agent 47, fights the Alpha Group guards of his target, the corrupt Russian president. The Alpha troops are also seen using knockout gas in a church full of civilians in an apparent reference to the Moscow theatre hostage crisis.
- In the 2007 real-time tactical video game World in Conflict and its 2009 expansion, World in Conflict: Soviet Assault, there are playable Spetsnaz units.
- In the 2009 tactical shooter ArmA 2, there are several Spetsnaz classes playable and a squad of Spetsnaz make an appearance in the campaign as minor antagonists.
- In the 2010 film Predators, Oleg Taktarov portrays Nikolai, a commando from the Alpha Group who was fighting in the Second Chechen War before finding himself on the alien planet.
- In the 2011 video game Battlefield 3, a spetsnaz squad, including the protagonist Dima Mayakovsky, are deployed into the ERONXT Exchange in Paris to prevent a suitcase nuke from being detonated in the city by a terrorist group. In an another mission, the team was deployed before to interrogate an Iranian arms dealer who sold the weapon to the terrorists in the first place.
- The 2012 video game Medal of Honor: Warfighter focuses on international special mission units, and includes Alfa Group as a playable faction in the game's multiplayer mode.
- Spetsnaz play a prominent role in the Call of Duty franchise, where they are featured as antagonistic foes and friendlies in the campaign and multiplayer of Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, Call of Duty: Black Ops, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, Call of Duty: Black Ops II, Call of Duty: Black Ops: Declassified, and Call of Duty: Strike Team. Ilona from Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare was a former Spetsnaz sniper.
- In the 2015 video game Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege, Spetsnaz are one of the seven playable counter-terrorism units with 4 playable characters: Fuze, Glaz, Kapkan and Tachanka.
- In the 2015 video game, Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain, the protagonist Big Boss must fight against both regular and Spetsnaz troops during operations in 1980s Afghanistan. The Spetsnaz troops prove to be more difficult to battle and more rewarding to capture than their regular army counterpart
- In the 2015 video game Red Crucible, Spetsnaz is featured on its application icon. It is also a bundle that can be purchased with three weapons including AN-94, a Russian 2-round burst battle rifle.
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