Year: 1971 Language: English Author: Breyer S. Genre: Historical Publisher: United States Naval Institute ISBN: 0-87021-237-0 Format: PDF Quality: eBook Pages count: 376 Description: The most interesting, the most innovative, and the second most powerful navy in the world is that of the Soviet Union. In this volume Siegfried Breyer, one of the Western world’s few authorities on the subject, provides a guide to almost every aspect of the Soviet Navy, from the organization of its hierarchy to the details of the industry which builds its ships. In the chapter on ships, the author names every ship type the Soviet Navy is known to possess, describes them, and discusses their development. He also lists the number of Soviet ships which have been transferred to other nations. The section on details and profiles of Soviet warships is probably the most complete record that anyone outside the Soviet Union (and a few intelligence agencies) could construct. It contains profiles of all the ship types and classes, from the helicopter carrier Moskva, through nuclear-powered submarines and missile-range instrumentation ships, to seagoing tugs.
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum You cannot attach files in this forum You cannot download files in this forum
Guide to the Soviet Navy
Language: English
Author: Breyer S.
Genre: Historical
Publisher: United States Naval Institute
ISBN: 0-87021-237-0
Format: PDF
Quality: eBook
Pages count: 376
Description: The most interesting, the most innovative, and the second most powerful navy in the world is that of the Soviet Union. In this volume Siegfried Breyer, one of the Western world’s few authorities on the subject, provides a guide to almost every aspect of the Soviet Navy, from the organization of its hierarchy to the details of the industry which builds its ships.
In the chapter on ships, the author names every ship type the Soviet Navy is known to possess, describes them, and discusses their development.
He also lists the number of Soviet ships which have been transferred to other nations.
The section on details and profiles of Soviet warships is probably the most complete record that anyone outside the Soviet Union (and a few intelligence agencies) could construct. It contains profiles of all the ship types and classes, from the helicopter carrier Moskva, through nuclear-powered submarines and missile-range instrumentation ships, to seagoing tugs.
Contents
Screenshots
Breyer S. Guide to the Soviet Navy, 1971.pdf
Download [18 KB]
Share