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Spetsnaz: The Inside Story of the Soviet Special Forces

Page 27

by Viktor Suvorov


  Chesnokov's physical qualities were noticed very early and as soon as he

  finished school he was taken into the Academy of Military Engineering,

  although he was not an officer. From that time he was closely involved in

  the theory and practice of using explosives. Apart from an Olympic gold

  medal he has another gold medal for his work on the technique of causing

  explosions. Chesnokov is now a spetsnaz colonel.

  Valentin Yakovlevich Kudrevatykh. He joined the para-military DOSAAF

  organisation when he was still at school. He took up parachute jumping,

  gliding and rifle shooting at the same time. In May 1956 he made his first

  parachute jump. Two years later, at the age of eighteen, he had reached a

  high level at parachute jumping and shooting. In 1959 he was called into the

  army, serving in the airborne forces. In 1961 he set five world records in

  one week in parachute sport, for which he was promoted sergeant and sent to

  the airborne officers' school in Ryazan. After that he was sent to spetsnaz

  and put in command of some special women's units. He had under his command

  the most outstanding women athletes, including Antonina Kensitskaya, to whom

  he is now married. She has established thirteen world records, her husband

  fifteen. He made parachute jumps (often with a women's group) in the most

  incredible conditions, landing in the mountains, in forests, on the roofs of

  houses and so forth. Kudrevatykh took part in practically all the tests of

  new parachute equipment and weapons. Along with a group of professional

  women parachutists he took part in the experimental group drop from a

  critically low height on 1 March 1968. Then, as he was completing his

  5,555th jump, he got into a critical situation. Black humour among Soviet

  airborne troops says that, if neither the main nor the reserve parachute

  opens, the parachutist still has a whole twenty seconds to learn to fly.

  Kudrevatykh did not learn to fly in those last seconds, but he managed with

  his body and the unopened parachutes to slow his fall. He spent more than

  two years in hospital and went through more than ten operations. When he was

  discharged he made his 5,556th jump. Many Soviet military papers published

  pictures of that jump. As usual Kudrevatykh jumped in the company of

  professional women parachutists. But there are no women in the Soviet

  airborne divisions. Only in spetsnaz.

  After making that jump Kudrevatykh was promoted full colonel.

  --------

  Appendix F

  The Spetsnaz Intelligence Point (RP-SN)

  Imagine that you have graduated from the 3rd faculty (operational

  intelligence) of the Military-Diplomatic Academy of the General Staff. If

  you have passed out successfully you will be sent to one of the twenty

  Intelligence directorates (RUs), which are to be found in the headquarters

  of military districts, groups of forces and fleets.

  On the first day I spent at the Military-Diplomatic Academy I realised

  that diplomacy is espionage and that military diplomacy is military

  espionage. Successful completion of the 3rd faculty of the

  Military-Diplomatic Academy means serving in one of the Intelligence

  directorates, or in subordinate units directly connected with the

  recruitment of foreign agents and managing them.

  Imagine you have been posted to the Intelligence Directorate of the

  Kiev military district. Kiev is without doubt the most beautiful city in the

  Soviet Union, and I have heard it said more than once by Western journalists

  who have visited Kiev that it is the most beautiful city in the world.

  So you are now in the enormous building housing the headquarters of the

  Kiev military district. At different times all the outstanding military

  leaders of the Soviet Union have worked in this magnificent building:

  Zhukov, Bagramyan, Vatutin, Koshevoi, Chuikov, Kulikov, Yakubovsky and many

  others. The office of the officer commanding the district is on the second

  floor. To the right of his office are the massive doors to the Operational

  Directorate. To the left are the no less massive doors to the Intelligence

  Directorate. It is a symbolic placing: the first directorate (battle

  planning) is the commanding officer's right hand, while the second

  directorate (razvedka) is his left. There are many other directorates and

  departments in the headquarters, but they are all on other floors.

  Your first visit to the Intelligence Directorate at the district

  headquarters takes place, of course, in the company of one of the officers.

  Otherwise you would simply not be admitted.

  Before entering the headquarters you must call at the permit office and

  produce your authority. You are given a number to phone and an officer comes

  to escort you. The permit office examines your documents very carefully and

  issues you with a temporary pass. The officer then leads you along endless

  corridors and up numerous stairs. You must be ready at every turn to produce

  your permit and officer's identity card. Your documents are checked many

  times before you reach the district's head of razvedka.

  Now you are in the general's huge office. Facing you is a

  major-general, the head of razvedka for the Kiev military district. You

  introduce yourself to him: `Comrade general, Captain so-and-so reporting for

  further duty.'

  The general asks you a few questions, and as he talks with you about

  trivialities he decides your fate. There are a number of possibilities.

  Perhaps he doesn't take to you and so decides not to take you on. You will

  be posted to the district Personnel Directorate and will never again have

  anything to do with Intelligence work. Or he may like you but not very much.

  In that case he will send you for reconnaissance work on lower floors to

  serve in a division or regiment. You will be working in razvedka, but not

  with the agent network.

  If you really please him several paths will be open to you. The

  razvedka of a military district is a gigantic organisation with a great deal

  of work to do. Firstly, he can post you to the headquarters of one of three

  armies to work in the headquarters Intelligence department, where you will

  be sent on to an intelligence post (RP) to recruit secret agent-informers to

  work for that army.

  Secondly, he can leave you in the Intelligence directorate for work in

  the second (agent network) or the third (spetsnaz) department. Thirdly, he

  can post you to one of the places where the recruitment of foreigners to

  work for the Kiev military district is actually taking place. There are two

  such places: the Intelligence centre (RZs) and the spetsnaz Intelligence

  point (RP spetsnaz).

  The general may ask you for your own opinion. Your reply must be short:

  for example -- I don't mind where I work, so long as it is not at

  headquarters, preferably at recruitment. The general expects that sort of

  reply from you. Intelligence has no need of an officer who is not bursting

  to do recruiting work. If someone has got into Intelligence work but is not

  burning with desire to recruit foreigners, it means he has made a mistake in

  his choice of profession. It also means that the people w
ho recommended him

  for Intelligence work and spent years training him at the

  Military-Diplomatic Academy were also mistaken.

  The general asks his final question: what kind of agents do you want to

  recruit -- for providing information or for collaborating with spetsnaz?

  Every intelligence officer at the front and fleet level must know how to

  recruit agents of both kinds. It is, you say, all the same to you.

  `All right,' the general says, `I am appointing you an officer in the

  spetsnaz Intelligence point of the 3rd department of the Second Directorate

  of the headquarters of the Kiev military district. The order will be issued

  in writing tomorrow. I wish you well.'

  You thank the general for the trust placed in you, salute smartly,

  click your heels, and leave the office. The escorting officer awaits you at

  the exit. From here, without any permits, you come out into a little

  courtyard, where there is always a little prison van waiting. The door slams

  behind you and you are in a mousetrap. Facing you is a little opaque window

  with a strong grille over it. No use trying to look out. The van twists and

  turns round the city's streets, often stopping and changing direction, and

  you realise that it is stopping at traffic lights. At last the van drives

  through some huge gates and comes to a halt. The door is opened and you step

  out into the courtyard of the penal battalion of the Kiev military district.

  It is a military prison. Welcome to your new place of work.

  ___

  The ancient city of Kiev has seen conquerors from all over the world

  pass down its streets. Some of them razed the city to the ground; others

  fortified it; then a third lot destroyed it again. The fortifications around

  the ruined and burnt-out city of Kiev were built for the last time in 1943

  on Hitler's orders. On the approaches to Kiev you can come across

  fortifications of all ages, from the concrete pillboxes of the twentieth

  century to the ruins of walls that were built five hundred years before the

  arrival of Batu Khan.

  The place you have been brought to is a fort built at the time of

  Catherine the Great. It is built on the south-west approaches to the city at

  the top of steep cliffs covered with ancient oaks. Alongside are other

  forts, an enormous ancient monastery, and an ancient fortress which now

  houses a military hospital.

  Through the centuries military installations of the most varied kinds

  -- stores, barracks, headquarters -- have been built on the most dangerous

  approaches to the city and, apart from the basic purpose, they have also

  served as fortifications. The fort we have come to also served two purposes:

  as a barracks for 500 to 700 soldiers, and as a fort. Circular in shape, its

  outside walls used to have only narrow slits and broad embrasures for guns.

  These have now all been filled in and the only remaining windows are those

  that look into the internal courtyard. The fort has only one gateway, a

  well-defended tunnel through the mighty walls. A brick wall has been added

  around the fort. From the outside it looks like a high brick wall in a

  narrow lane, with yet another brick wall, higher than the first one, behind

  it.

  Both the inner and outer courtyards of the fort are split up into

  numerous sectors and little yards divided by smaller walls and a whole

  jungle of barbed wire. The sectors have their own strange labels: the

  numbering has been so devised that no one should be able to discern any

  logic in it. The absence of any system facilitates the secrecy surrounding

  the establishment.

  There are three companies of men undergoing punishment and one guard

  company in the penal battalion. The men in the guard company have only a

  very vague idea of who visits the battalion and why. They have only their

  instructions which have to be carried out: the men undergoing punishment can

  be only in the inner courtyard in certain sectors; officers who have a

  triangle stamped in their passes are allowed into certain other sectors;

  officers with a little star stamped in their passes are allowed to enter

  other sectors; and so forth.

  Apart from the officers of the penal battalion, frequent callers at the

  fort are officers of the military prosecutor's office, the military

  commandant of the city, and officers of the commandant's office:

  investigators, lawyers. And there is a sector set aside for you. The

  spetsnaz intelligence point has no connection at all with the penal

  battalion. But if it were to be situated separately in some building, sooner

  or later people in the vicinity would be struck by the suspicious behaviour

  of the people occupying the building. Here in the penal battalion you are

  hidden from curious eyes.

  The spetsnaz intelligence point is a small military unit headed by a

  lieutenant-colonel, who has under him a number of officers, graduates from

  the Military-Diplomatic Academy, and a few sergeants and privates who carry

  out support functions without having any idea (or the correct idea) of what

  the officers are engaged on. Officers of the penal battalion and those

  visiting the battalion are not supposed to ask what goes on in your sector.

  Many years back one of your predecessors appeared to allow himself the

  luxury of `careless talk', to the effect that his was a group reporting

  directly to the officer commanding the district and investigating cases of

  corruption among the senior officers. This is sufficient to ensure that you

  are treated with respect and not asked any more questions.

  Its location in the penal battalion gives the spetsnaz point a lot of

  advantages: behind such enormous walls, the command can be sure that your

  documents will not get burnt or lost by accident; it is under the strictest

  guard, with dozens of guard dogs and machine-guns mounted in towers to

  preserve your peace of mind; no outsider interested in what is going on

  inside the walls will ever get a straight answer; the independent

  organisation does not attract the attention of higher-ranking Soviet

  military leaders who are not supposed to know about GRU and spetsnaz; and

  even if an outsider knows something about you he cannot distinguish spetsnaz

  officers from among the other officers visiting the old fort.

  Spetsnaz has at its disposal a number of prison vans exactly the same

  as those belonging to the penal battalion and with similar numbers. They are

  very convenient for bringing any person of interest to us into or out of

  your fort at any time. What is good about the prison van is that neither the

  visitor nor outsiders can work out exactly where the spetsnaz point is. A

  visitor can be invited to any well guarded place where there are usually

  plenty of people (the headquarters, commandant's office, police station) and

  then secretly brought in a closed van to the old fort, and returned in the

  same way so that he gets lost in the crowd. Fortunately there are several

  such forts in the district.

  A penal battalion, that is to say a military prison, is a favourite

  place for the GRU to hide its branches in. There are other kinds of

  camouflage as well -- design bu
reaux, missiles bases, signals centres -- but

  they all have one feature in common: a small, secret organisation is

  concealed within a large, carefully guarded military establishment.

  In addition to its main premises where the safes crammed with secret

  papers are kept, the spetsnaz Intelligence point has several secret

  apartments and small houses on the outskirts of the city.

  Having found yourself in the place I have described, you are met by an

  unhappy-looking lieutenant-colonel who has probably spent his whole working

  life at this work. He gives you a brief order: `You wear uniform only inside

  the fort and if you are called to the district headquarters. The rest of the

  time you wear civilian clothes.'

  `I understand, comrade lieutenant-colonel.'

  `But there's nothing for you to do here in the fort and even less in

  the headquarters. This is my place, not yours. I don't need any bureaucrats;

  I need hunters. Go off and come back in a month's time with material on a

  good foreign catch.'

  `Very well.'

  `Do you know the territories our district will be fighting on in a

  war?'

  `Yes, I do.'

  `Well, I need another agent there who could meet up with a spetsnaz

  group in any circumstances. I am giving you a month because you are just

  beginning your service, but the time-scale will be stricter later on. Off

  you go, and remember that you have got a lot of rivals in Kiev: the friends

  of yours who have already joined the Intelligence point are probably active

  in the city, the KGB is also busy, and goodness knows who else is recruiting

  here. And remember -- you can slip up only once in our business. I shall

  never overlook a mistake, and neither will spetsnaz. In wartime you are shot

  for making a mistake. In peacetime you land in prison. You know which

  prison?'

  ___

  That was what Kiev was like before the Chernobyl disaster. For hundreds

  of years barbarians from many of the countries of Asia and Europe had been

  doing their best to destroy my great city, but nobody inflicted such damage

  on it as did the Communists. The history of nuclear energy in the Soviet

  Union is one -- very long -- story of crime. The founding father of the

  development of nuclear energy was Lavrenti Beria, the all-powerful chief of

  the secret police and, as later became apparent, one of the greatest

 

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