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History of Russian Navy

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Ian Allan, 1972. — 185 p. — ISBN: 071100255X. This book is intended to fill a gap in Western naval literature. During the last forty years no reference work has appeared on one of the great war navies of the world the Russian either on its construction or on its rote in the First World War. This book is dedicated to all those who loved and still love the Russian Navy.
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Sea Power Centre Australia, 2007. — 70 p. — (Papers in Australian Maritime Affairs No. 20). This volume is a critical analysis of the evolution of Russian naval power in the Pacific (from 1853), linked to the East–West strategic naval rivalry, aids in understanding why traditional continental powers are developing a strong naval orientation. Traditional continental powers, such...
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University of South Carolina Press, 1994. — 214 p. This study investigates German and Soviet naval activities in the interwar period and is intended to illuminate Soviet and German naval intentions and interface vis-à-vis their defense policies and political systems. In particular, Stalin's ambitions for naval power and his strategy for building Soviet military power and his...
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Naval Institute Press, 2019. — 277 p. Admiral of the Fleet of the Soviet Union Sergei G. Gorshkov (1910-1988) was the product of a tradition unlike those of his Western contemporaries. He had a unique background of revolution, civil war, world wars, and the forceful implementation of an all-controlling communist dictatorship. Out of this background of violence and overwhelming...
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Naval Institute Press, 2012. — 264 p. In early August 1974, despite incredible risks and after six years of secret preparations, the CIA attempted to salvage the sunken Soviet ballistic missile submarine K-129 from the depths of the North Pacific Ocean. The audacious effort was undertaken with the cover of an undersea mining operation sponsored by eccentric billionaire Howard...
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Frank Cass, 2001. — 369 p. This title describes in detail the discussions about the naval strategy and the shipbuilding programs in the Soviet political and military leadership from 1922 to the death of Stalin in 1953. A study of the development of strategic concepts in Stalin's Navy, in the context of his foreign/defence policy, using original archival documents translated...
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Arms and Armour Press, London, 1990. — 195 p. Anthony Watts has brought together an unprecedented collection of photographs and data to provide this new study of a most significant element of military history. Trough his summary of Russian naval evolution, his compendium of technical information and the pictorial coverage, he has provided a most important contribution to naval...
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London: Frank Cass Publishers, 2005. — 265 p. This book, based on extensive work in Russian archives, investigates how strategy, organisational rivalry and cultural factors came to shape naval developments in the Soviet Union, up to the invasion of 1941. Focussing on the Baltic Fleet, the author shows how the perceived balance of power in northern Europe came to have a major...
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