Soviet Actions In Afghanistan And Initiative At The Tactical Level: Are There Implications For The US Army?

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Soviet Actions In Afghanistan And Initiative At The Tactical Level: Are There Implications For The US Army?

Military history Military history: post-WW2 conflicts Military history: post-WW2 conflicts

Author: John D. Frketic

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Language: English

Published by: Tannenberg Publishing

Published on: 6th November 2015

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 954 Kb

ISBN: 9781786253088


Introduction

This monograph examines the Soviet experience in Afghanistan (1979-1988) in terms of Soviet Army tactics and organization for combat. Throughout the decade of the 1970’s, U.S. perceptions of Soviet ground force tactics stressed a general lack of initiative and flexibility in their military doctrine. In the 1980’s a re-evaluation of Soviet thinking occurred which saw greater flexibility at the operational and strategic levels. If the experience in Afghanistan has shown that set-piece tactics will not work in all types of warfare, and the Soviets are able to incorporate higher levels of initiative and flexibility into their tactical doctrine, then the U.S. may be required to refocus its training away from the stylized Soviet enemy.

Background and Invasion

This study begins with a background discussion of Soviet historical involvement in Afghanistan to include counter-insurgency experience in their southwestern border area. It then covers the actual invasion and units employed with emphasis on their pre-deployment status and subsequent performance.

Phases of the War

The following section divides the war into four phases to ease understanding. The monograph subsequently looks at lessons learned and principles reaffirmed from both the Soviet and U.S. perspective.

Lessons and Principles

A key feature is the need the Soviets apparently feel for Western style initiative and flexibility at lower command levels (battalion, company and platoon), and how this is inconsistent with their culture and system of command and control.

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