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810th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade

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810th Separate Guards Order of Zhukov Naval Infantry Brigade named for the 60th Anniversary of the Soviet Union
810-я отдельная гвардейская ордена Жукова бригада морской пехоты имени 60-летия образования СССР
Brigade insignia
Active1967–present
Country
Branch
TypeNaval infantry
Size2,500 marines,
36 T-80 or T-55 tanks[1][better source needed]
Part ofBlack Sea Fleet
Garrison/HQKazachya Bay, Sevastopol
EngagementsSecond Chechen War

Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation
Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War
Russian invasion of Ukraine

Decorations
Honorifics60th Anniversary of the Soviet Union

The 810th Separate Guards Order of Zhukov Naval Infantry Brigade named for the 60th Anniversary of the Soviet Union (810 gv. obrmp) (Russian: 810-я отдельная гвардейская ордена Жукова бригада морской пехоты имени 60-летия образования СССР (810 гв. обрмп); Military Unit Number 13140) is a brigade of the Russian Naval Infantry. Based in Sevastopol with one battalion in Temryuk, the brigade is the naval infantry brigade of the Black Sea Fleet.[2]

The brigade was formed as the 810th Separate Naval Infantry Regiment at Sevastopol in 1967 during the expansion of the Soviet Naval Infantry. It was expanded into the 810th Separate Naval Infantry Brigade in 1979, and remained stationed in Sevastopol as one of the Russian units based there under an agreement with Ukraine after the Soviet Union collapsed. In 1998, the brigade was reduced to a regiment again. It was expanded into a brigade again in 2008 and participated in the 2014 seizure of Crimea by Russia. It received Guards status in 2018.

Cold War

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The history of the unit began with the formation of the 309th Separate Naval Infantry Battalion of the Black Sea Fleet in accordance with a 30 April 1966 Ministry of Defense directive. The battalion was formed from the 1st Naval Infantry Battalion of the 336th Separate Guards Naval Infantry Regiment of the Baltic Fleet and also included personnel from the 135th Motor Rifle Regiment of the 295th Motor Rifle Division of the Transcaucasian Military District. Under the command of Colonel I. I. Sysolyatin, the battalion was the only naval infantry unit of the Black Sea Fleet. The battalion was expanded into the 810th Separate Naval Infantry Regiment on 15 December 1967, a date celebrated as the unit anniversary, with the absorption of the 1st Naval Infantry Battalion of the 336th Regiment and an amphibious tank company from the 61st Separate Naval Infantry Regiment of the Northern Fleet.[2]

In 1967, naval infantry from the unit were first deployed to Egypt as a reinforced landing force under the command of Major N. Dobrynin. A reinforced naval infantry battalion departed for Egypt in May 1969 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel I. Orekhov. A reinforced naval infantry battalion participated in exercises with the Syrian Navy in 1972 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel A. Sapko. The regiment participated in the Okean maneuvers in May 1969 in Egypt and Syria, the mid-1971 Yug exercises, and in the fleet exercises Bereg-77 and Bereg-79. A tactical group participated in a mock amphibious landing in the Caspian Sea in July 1980.[2]

The 810th completed its reorganization into the 810th Separate Naval Infantry Brigade on 20 November 1979, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Viktorovich Rublyov. As a separate naval infantry brigade, it was tasked with capturing and holding a beachhead, landing before the main forces, and assisting ground forces operating on the coast. A reinforced battalion from the brigade under the command of Major V. I. Rudenko participated in Exercise Zapad-81 in the Baltic Sea during July 1981, while another battalion group under the command of Lieutenant Colonel V. N. Abashkin participated in joint exercises with Syria. The brigade participated in the Shchit-82 strategic exercises and in June 1983 for the first time in the Black Sea Fleet the brigade conducted a live fire night airborne landing exercise.[2]

A naval infantryman and PT-76 tank from the brigade during an American naval goodwill visit, 1989

Presented the Honorary Banner of the Military Council of the Soviet Navy and Komsomol Central Committee in 1983 and the Transferable Red Banner of the Military Council of the navy in 1985, for its training performance, the 810th was inspected by Marshal Viktor Kulikov in 1987. The brigade was praised by the Minister of Defense for its performance in the Osen-88 exercises. Elements of the brigade were involved in special combat missions from 10 July to 9 September 1989, 20 June to 16 August 1990, January to April 1990, October 1992, 23 September to 7 October 1993 and 2 to 20 November 1993 under the general command of Black Sea Fleet commander-in-chief Admiral Igor Kasatonov.[2] During the 1991 August coup, the Black Sea Fleet command like much of the military leadership supported the coup of the State Emergency Committee, dispatching more than 500 naval infantrymen from the brigade with full combat gear to the Belbek airport on 20 August in order to prevent President Mikhail Gorbachev from being rescued from house arrest at his dacha in Foros.[3] The naval infantrymen returned to their base after the failure of the coup and arrival of Vice President Alexander Rutskoy to free Gorbachev on 21 August.[4]

Following the Black January 1990 repression of Azerbaijani nationalists in Baku, 525 naval infantrymen from the brigade, including the 880th and 882nd Separate Naval Infantry Battalions and a company of the 888th Separate Reconnaissance Battalion of the brigade, were sent into the city to enforce martial law, replacing Caspian Flotilla sailors manning checkpoints and guarding government buildings and military installations on 26 January; they returned to Sevastopol in early April.[5][6] This deployment had a lasting impact on the Ukrainian commander of the 880th Battalion, Major Vitaily Rozhmanov, who explained that it was during the intervention in Baku that "we realized we were abandoned to fight with the Azerbaijani people, to perform police duties, to do everything to intimidate people, kill their national spirit and all faith and desire for freedom" when he and the 880th Battalion swore allegiance to Ukraine on 22 February 1992. In response, Kasatonov, determined to keep the fleet under Russian control, disbanded the battalion and dispersed its personnel.[7] Those who chose Ukrainian allegiance would form the first Ukrainian Naval Infantry unit, the 1st Separate Naval Infantry Battalion, when the Ukrainian Navy was created on 1 July 1993.[8][9]

Russian service

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The brigade participated in joint exercises with Georgia and joint exercises with Ukraine Si-Briz and Farvater mira in June 1994. That year, the authorities of Saratov Oblast signed a patronage agreement with the unit. It was reorganized as the 264th Separate Naval Infantry Regiment on 30 April 1998 but in response to unit veterans, it was renumbered as the 810th to preserve its old designation on 1 February 1999.[10] A landing reconnaissance company of the brigade departed to fight in the Second Chechen War on 11 September 1999. Eight soldiers were killed during the war. 217 personnel were decorated for their actions, including Captain V. V. Karpushenko, made a Hero of Russia. A monument to the soldiers killed in Chechnya was unveiled at the base of the regiment on 25 November 2000.[2]

A reinforced amphibious battalion from the brigade was deployed to Syria during the Russian military intervention in the Syrian civil war from July 2015 to January 2016 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel P. Klimenko, succeeded by Lieutenant Colonel Yan Sukhanov. The battalion was engaged in guarding and defending the Khmeimim Air Base. More than 600 personnel of the brigade were sent to Syria. Brigade sailor Aleksandr Pozynich was killed in action in November 2015 during a rescue mission for downed Russian pilots and posthumously awarded the Order of Courage.[11] For its performance in Syria, the brigade was awarded the Order of Zhukov on 3 March 2016.[12] In 2017, several officers from the brigade were sent to Syria as military advisers. Among these were brigade commander Colonel Dmitry Uskov and Major Sergey Bordov. Bordov was killed in action in April of that year and posthumously awarded the Order of Courage.[13] The brigade was awarded the Guards title on 29 January 2018.[14]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

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After the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, some service personnel of the brigade refused to fight against Ukraine.[15] The majority fought in the Siege of Mariupol that started on 24 February, in which the brigade was involved in the Battle of Azovstal. The brigade suffered heavy losses in Mariupol, with over 40 obituaries published in the Russian press and social media. The losses included brigade commander Colonel Aleksey Sharov, killed on 22 March.[16] The Ukrainian General Staff on 17 April claimed the that the brigade's losses were at 158 killed, about 500 wounded, and 70 missing. As such the Russian ministry of defense had to reconstitute the Brigade to be combat effective. At least three naval infantrymen of the brigade were killed in the shelling of Russian landing ships in Berdyansk on 24 March, including one confirmed aboard the landing ship Tsezar Kunikov.[17] Black Sea Fleet sailors, including some from the Project 1164 Atlant class cruiser Moskva, sunk on 14 April 2022, were used as replacements for brigade losses in Mariupol.[18][19]

Brigade deputy commander Colonel Alexei Berngard was made a Hero of the Russian Federation on 4 March for his leadership during the Battle of Volnovakha.[20]

Black Sea Fleet deputy commander Major General Dmitry Pyatunin announced on 1 June that the awarding of the brigade with the honorific Mariupol in recognition of its role in the capture of the city was being considered.[21]

Ukrainian Major General Vadym Skibitskyi, deputy head of the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) reported that the unit had a large scale mutiny on 31 July 2022, which saw upwards of 200 personnel refuse to return to front-line combat.[22]

The main training center for the mobilized Crimeans was located at the training grounds of the 810th Brigade in Cossack Bay, Sevastopol

The Ukrainian general staff claimed on 12 September 2022 that the 810th Brigade lost more than 85% of its personnel in the Kherson direction and that many again refused to return to combat. The Russian ministry of defense would largely rebuild the 810th from the ground up with new personnel.[22]

In an interview with The War Zone on 23 September 2023, HUR Chief, Lieutenant general Kyrylo Budanov, claimed that the 810th was “completely defeated” in southern Ukraine as part of the 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive, a claim which would be backed up by the Institute for the Study of War which assessed this was at least the third time the brigade was destroyed and then reconstituted by the Russian armed forces.[22]

On 23 December 2023, the 810th openly confirmed the use of chemical weapons in the Krynky area against Ukrainian forces, in violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention.[23] According to Forbes, by January 2024, the brigade, along with the 104th Guards Air Assault Division and "attached army regiments", had lost at least 157 vehicles, including at least 19 tanks, "dealing the unit its third serious defeat in 20 months… by now, the 810th Brigade probably has lost and replaced, several times, all three dozen or so tanks in its original tank battalion."[24][better source needed]

On 9 May 2024, the commander of the 810th brigade requested that his brigade be reorganized into several groupings, as he claimed that it had over 11,000 troops, and was "overstaffed", to which Vladimir Putin responded that the brigade would be reorganized into a division. The ISW considered these claims to be implausible, as a brigade normally has around 3,000 troops, reporting that "Ukrainian forces have reportedly claimed to have defeated and destroyed significant elements of the 810th Naval Infantry Brigade in southern Ukraine several times during the war thus far, forcing the Russian military command to repeatedly reconstitute the formation… is highly unlikely that the 810th is staffed by over 11,000 troops unless as part of a reformation into a division already underway".[25]

In August 2024, the Brigade was transferred from the Pokrovsk axis in the Donetsk Oblast to the Kursk Oblast along with the Pyatnashka Brigade in order to aid in defending against the Ukrainian inclusion into Kursk.[26]

Commanders

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The following officers have commanded the brigade:[27]

  • Colonel Ivan Ivanovich Sysolyatin (1966–1971)
  • Colonel Lev Mikhailovich Zaytsev (1971–1974)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Valentin Alekseyevich Yakovlev (1974–1978)
  • Colonel Vladimir Viktorovich Rublyov (1978—1984)
  • Lieutenant Colonel Anatoly Nikolayevich Kovtunenko (1984—1987)
  • Colonel Anatoly Fyodorovich Domnenko (1987—1989)
  • Colonel Anatoly Nikolayevich Kocheshkov (1989—1993)
  • Colonel Aleksandr Yevgenyevich Smolyak (1993—1998)
  • Colonel Oleg Yuryevich Roslyakov (1998—2003)
  • Colonel Dmitry Vladimirovich Krayev (2003–2006)
  • Colonel Eduard Aleksandrovich Zhivayev (July 2006–January 2010)
  • Colonel Vladimir Anatolyevich Belyavsky (2010–2014)
  • Colonel Oleg Yuryevich Tsokov (2014–2015)
  • Colonel Dmitry Ivanovich Uskov (2015–2019)
  • Colonel Sergey Nikolayevich Kens (2019–2021)
  • Colonel Yan Aleksandrovich Sukhanov (2021)
  • Colonel Aleksey Nikolayevich Sharov (2021–killed 22 March 2022)
  • Colonel Aleksey Borisovich Berngard (2022–present)

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ The Ukrainian Marines Hit The Russian Marines So Hard, They Blew The Russians Back To 1980
  2. ^ a b c d e f "История 810-й отдельной гвардейской ордена Жукова бригады морской пехоты Черноморского Флота". www.kchf.ru. Retrieved 2022-05-01.
  3. ^ ""Ядерная кнопка оказалась в руках группы авантюристов"". Novaya Gazeta (in Russian). 18 August 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  4. ^ Gorbachyov, Sergey (19 November 2021). "Флотораздел: сохранить ЧФ для России! Часть 2-я". Krymskoye Ekho (in Russian). Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  5. ^ Timoshenko 2017a, p. 8.
  6. ^ Timoshenko 2017b, p. 65.
  7. ^ Timoshenko 2017c, p. 34.
  8. ^ "Морська піхота України сьогодні: завдання та структурні трансформації" (in Ukrainian). Ukrainian Navy. 28 December 2017. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  9. ^ Holod, Ihor (3 July 2011). "Дата нон грата. До чого ж приурочено День флоту України?". Istorichna Pravda (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  10. ^ Yukhimchuk, Vladimir (26 November 2005). "Историческая справка". Krasnaya Zvezda (in Russian). Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  11. ^ Колбасин, Виталий (2015-11-26). "Подвиг морпеха. Каким был погибший в Сирии россиянин Александр Позынич?". AiF (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  12. ^ "Шойгу за успехи в Сирии наградил орденом бригаду морской пехоты". Известия (in Russian). 2016-06-16. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  13. ^ "Вдова убитого в Сирии майора Бордова рассказала подробности его гибели". РБК (in Russian). 2017-04-21. Retrieved 2023-07-11.
  14. ^ Timoshenko 2018, pp. 46–47.
  15. ^ "Военные в Крыму отказываются участвовать во вторжении РФ в Украину — Центр оборонных стратегий". Archived from the original on 2022-03-31. Retrieved 2022-03-31.
  16. ^ Istomin, Pavel (23 March 2022). "В боях под Мариуполем погиб командир 810-й бригады ЧФ полковник Алексей Шаров". ForPost (in Russian). Archived from the original on 23 March 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  17. ^ Dorogan, Aleksina (17 May 2022). "Потери 810-й бригады РФ. Что известно о погибших и воюющих?". Krym.Realii (in Russian). Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  18. ^ Slavin, Alexey (16 May 2022). ""Наших ребят, судя по всему, забыли"". Meduza (in Russian). Retrieved 17 May 2022.
  19. ^ "Оперативна інформація станом на 06.00 15.05.2022 щодо російського вторгнення" (in Ukrainian). Генеральний штаб ЗСУ / General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Retrieved 2022-05-17 – via Facebook.
  20. ^ "Бернгард Алексей Борисович". warheroes.ru. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  21. ^ "810-й бригаде морской пехоты Севастополя хотят присвоить наименование Мариупольской" [They want to assign the honorary title Mariupol to the 810th Naval Infantry Brigade]. ForPost (in Russian). 1 June 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2022.
  22. ^ a b c Barros, George; Stepanenko, Kateryna; Harward, Christina; Wolkov, Nicole; Kagan, Frederick W. "Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, September 23, 2023". Institute for the Study of War. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  23. ^ Evans, Angelina; Stepanenko, Kateryna; Hird, Karolina; Harward, Christina; Kagan, Frederick W. "Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, December 23, 2023". Institute for the Study of War. Retrieved 24 December 2023.
  24. ^ The Ukrainian Marines Hit The Russian Marines So Hard, They Blew The Russians Back To 1980
  25. ^ RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE CAMPAIGN ASSESSMENT, MAY 9, 2024
  26. ^ "Russia's offensive on Pokrovsk: Is it possible to stop the invaders in this area?". Television News Service. 12 August 2024. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
  27. ^ Kovalenko, A. N. (15 December 2012). "15 декабря исполняется 45 лет со дня создания 810-й отдельного полка и 810-ой бригады морской пехоты ЧФ" (in Russian). Regional Community Organization of Naval Infantrymen of the city of Saint Petersburg. Archived from the original on 9 February 2017.

Bibliography

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