Saturday, September 21, 2019

Red Tide: Soviet Naval Infantry - Part 2 Companies, Platoons and Support


Team Yankee is a game, not a simulation. While working on Red Tide, I was forced to make some unpalatable compromises. Each time, I reminded myself that TY is a game. It is OK to include (or exclude) something that would make a professional analyst snicker and a neck-beard huff if the overall gaming experience is preserved. Now, after several revisions, I feel the few remaining compromises are justified. Declassified information concerning Soviet Naval Infantry is incomplete and often contradictory. It is almost as if the Cold War were ongoing. I believe it is more important that Red Tide gives the player the feel of the the SNI rather than focusing on the minutiae of their TO&E that have minimal impact on the game.That does not mean that long hours of research weren't spent to achieve reasonable accuracy based on the available data. What it means is that some inaccuracies were permitted to allow Red Tide to fit within the bounds of TY (exactly like all the other TY armies). Ultimately, I believe Red Tide introduces SNI to TY as a viable and balanced force that is also hopefully enjoyable to play.  

David Dean 
9/21/2019









There are supposedly stories of non-coms telling new recruits that the SNI never venture beyond the range of the 152mm naval guns. This makes a good story, but of course is untrue. However, it does show the dependence on naval guns. Although an SNI battalion does have organic MRL and howitzer support that a motorized rifle battalion lacks, it comes up short compared to the MR battalion when division resources are included in the equation. Naval fire support, provided primary from Sverdlov class light cruisers, brings the SNI back to parity with the MR battalion and arguably gives the SNI battalion the advantage.

  

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Red Tide: Soviet Naval Infantry - Part 1 Brigade and Battalion Structure


“The primary mission of the Soviet Naval Infantry (Morskaya Pekhota) is to seize control of territory adjacent to important straits and other waterways. This can be accomplished by independent amphibious landings, by spearheading combined marine-army operations, or in combined operations with airborne troops. The secondary mission of Soviet marines is to defend captured coastal territory and naval bases.”[1]

The Team Yankee period Soviet Naval Infantry is composed of a single independent infantry division and four independent infantry brigades. The Pacific Fleet’s NI division is based in Vladivostok. The Baltic and Black Sea Fleets each have one brigade and the Northern Fleet has two independent brigades.

The Baltic Fleet’s 336th Naval Infantry Brigade along with the Polish 7th Sea Landing Brigade can be expected to lead the effort to secure the Denmark Straits. The Soviet 7th Guards Airborne Division and the Polish 6th Airborne Brigade would likely coordinate with amphibious operations.







Coming soon... Red Tide: Soviet Naval Infantry - Part 2 Companies, Platoons and Support



[1] The Soviet Navy: Landing Their Landing Force By Norman Polmar, Editor, Guide to the Soviet Navy, January 1987, Proceedings Vol. 113/1/1,007