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Posted (edited)

On this topic I will start by creating a scenario about the US invasion of Cuba. The time of the scenario is the end of the Cold War.

The year is 1989 and the dark clouds of World War III have loomed over the island...

 

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Edited by Jaroslav
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Posted

Armed Forces Structure


OVERVIEW

The Army of the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR) is organized into three regional army groups (Western, Central, and Eastern) and subdivided into four army corps.

Each army corps contains regular Army units that are supplemented by reserve and territorial militia personnel to bring them up to full strength. The manning level of each Army formation is designated by a Category type. Category A units are manned at 100 percent, while Category B units only have 50-60 percent of their assigned manpower. Category C units are strictly cadre units with only a few active personnel assigned.

The FAR's three regional commands comprise:


     Western Command, with
       1st Armored Division (Category A(-))
       70th Mechanized Infantry division (Cat. A(-))
       78th Mechanized Infantry division (Cat. A(-))
       2nd Army Corps, comprising
           26th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           27th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           28th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       2 security regiments (Ministry of Interior)

     Central Command, with
       66th Armored Division (Cat. B)
       81st Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       84th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       86th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       Las Villas Army Corps, comprising
           6th Armored Division (Cat. C)
           63rd Mechanized Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           69th Mechanized Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           65th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       3 security regiments (Ministry of Interior)

     Eastern Command
       9th Armored Division (Cat. B)
       90th Mechanized Infantry Division (Cat. A)
       97th Mechanized Infantry Division (Cat. A)
       96th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       3rd Army Corps, comprising
           3rd Armored Division (Cat. C)
           32nd Mechanized Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           33rd Infantry Division (Cat. A)
           38th Infantry Division (Cat. A)
       5th Army Corps, comprising
           52nd Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           54th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
           58th Infantry Division (Cat. B)
       3 security regiments (Ministry of Interior)

     Isle of Youth Command
       1 infantry Division (Cat. A)

     Independent Units
       2 special forces battalions (Cat. A)
       1 air assault brigade, with
           2 airborne battalions (Cat. A)
           1 air mobile battalion (Cat. A)
       1 air defense artillery regiment (Cat. A)
       1 commando battalion (Cat. A)
       1 surface-to-air missile brigade

Special Operations Forces are organized along the lines of Soviet-era Spetsnaz forces. Throughout the 1980s, Cuban Special Operations units were active in guerrilla training, especially in El Salvador and Panama. In March 1996, it was reported that Cuban Special Operations officers were receiving specialized instruction and training at facilities located in Vietnam. Many of these officers are trained to infiltrate to the United States to disrupt military staging and supply points should the need arise.

Posted

Equipment


(For additional information on the equipment listed below, search Weapons/Systems/Platforms. Equipment is of Russian origin unless otherwise noted. According to some estimates, roughly 75 percent of Cuba's ground combat equipment is in storage due to a lack of spare parts and maintenance.)


 APR96     MAY98      Ground Combat Vehicles

                      Tanks
 1,100       600(-)    /-55 medium
   400       400(-)     MBT
    75        75(-)    /85 medium
                       (325 in storage for coast defense)
    50        50(-)     light amphibious
     #         #       IS-2 heavy (Reserves only)
     #         #       /55 armored recovery vehicle

                      Armored Reconnaissance
   100       100(-)    / (some with  ATGW)

                      Armored Personnel Carriers
   800       700(-)    //
   400       400(-)     infantry fighting vehicle

                      Air Defense Vehicles
     #         #       BTR-60P w/ twin anti-
                       aircraft gun)
    25        25(-)    
    36        36(-)    

                      ARTILLERY
                      (about 620 towed, 40 SP of the
                       following:)
                      Howitzers
     #         #        towed gun/howitzer
     #         #        towed
     #         #       152-mm M1937 towed gun/howitzer
     #         #        self-propelled
     #         #        towed
    40        40(-)     self-propelled
     #         #        towed

                      Guns
     #         #        towed
     #         #       122-mm M-1931/7 towed
     #         #       122-mm  towed
    15        15       122-mm JS-2 static emplacement
                       (ex-tank guns)
     #         #        static emplacement
                       (ex- SP tank guns)
     #         #       85-mm static emplacement
                       (ex- tank guns)
     #         #       85-mm D48 towed anti-tank
   600       600(-)    76-mm M1942 towed field gun

                      Anti-Tank
                      (200 of the following types:)
     #         #        self-propelled
   350       350(-)     towed

                      Anti-Aircraft Guns
    75        75(-)     towed
   100       100(-)     towed
                       (w/ radar)
   200       200(-)     towed
   300       300(-)    37-mm M1939**
   100(-)    100(-)     twin anti-aircraft
                       (Czech Rep.)
   400       400(-)     towed
     #         #       14.5-mm ZPU 1/-2/-4 towed
     #         #       12.7-mm quad anti-aircraft
                       (reserves)

                      Mortars
                      (1,000 of the following types:)
     #         #       160-mm M43
     #         #       120-mm M43
     #         #        82-mm M41/M43

                      Multiple Rocket Launchers
                      (300 of the following types:)
     #        #        140-mm BM-14
   300      300(-)     122-mm  Grad**

                      MISSILES
                      Anti-Ship
    50(-)    50(-)     ** (missiles)
                       (Russian )
                       (coastal defense)
     2(+/-)   2(-)       ** (launchers)
                       (Russian -A)
                       (coastal defense)

                      Anti-Tank
     #        #        **
                       (Russian 9K15 Shmel)
     #        #        **
                       (Russian )
                       (*Editors note- severe
                         shortages reported in
                         anti-tank missile category)

                      Surface-to-Surface
    30(-)    30(-)      (Russian Luna-1)
                       (possibly non-operational)
    36(-)    36(-)     FROG-7 (Russian )
                       (possibly non-operational)

                      Surface-to-Air
                  (1,600(-) rounds of the following types:)
    12       12(-)     ** launchers
                       (Russian )
     #        #        **
                       (Russian )
     #        #        **
                       (Russian 9K33 Romb)
    60       60(-)     ** launchers
                       (Russian )
    40       40(-)     ** launchers
                       (Russian 9K32 Strela-10)
     #        #        **
                       (Russian )
     #        #        **
                       (Russian  Igla-1)

In 1996, the Cuban TRABAJADORES weekly newspaper reported that a rifle designed and manufactured in Cuba, "capable of shooting down helicopters," was displayed during a military parade held at the Plaza de la Revolucion in Havana. The weekly said that "as part of the weapons modernization program," the industrial military enterprise that manufactures the rifles "has delivered the final batch of heavy rifles for sniper fire, called Mambi 1."

PERISCOPE editors note this weapon most likely fires 12.7 mm or 14.5 mm incendiary ammunition in the anti-helicopter role. The Mambi 1 may be a derivative of the former Soviet ZPU anti-aircraft gun series.

Posted

Deployment


Major Cuban Army commands are located as follows:


 Western Command (HQ)            Havana
       2nd Corps                 Pinar del Rio
     Central Command (HQ)        Matanzas
       Las Villas Corps          Santa Clara
     Eastern Command (HQ)        Santiago de Cuba
       3rd Corps                 Holguin
       5th Corps                 Camaguey
     Isla de la Juventud
      Command (HQ)               Isla de la Juventud

The United States has operated a naval facility at Guantanamo Bay in southeast Cuba since 1903. Anti-personnel land mines around the defensive perimeter of Guantanamo Bay are being removed.

Following the failed August 1991 hard-line coup in the former Soviet Union, Moscow announced its intention to withdraw its brigade of troops (11,000) deployed on the island since the 1960s. By 1996, only a small number of Russian advisors and 800 personnel manning SIGINT and radar facilities remained in Cuba.

Posted

CUBAN REVOLUTIONARY AIR FORCE AND AIR DEFENCE FORCE • Defensa Anti-Aérea y Fuerza Aérea Revolucionaria (DAAFAR)

FACILITIES
  Defence Force Headquarters: Havana HQ

  Cuban Air Force Airfields and Air Bases Organisation:
  Air Bases: Baracoa, Camagüey, Cienfugos, Guines, Havana, Holgüin, Jose Martin, San Antonio de los Banos, Sancti Spiritus, San Julian, Santa Clara, Santiago de Cuba

  Estado-Mayor de la Fuerza Aérea
  Ciudad Libertad - Escuela de Especialistas Menores "Yuri Gagarin"        

Zona Aérea Oste - UM1779 Regimiento de Caza
2a Brigada de Guardia
San Antonio de los Baños - 21° Regimiento de Interception (Inactive)
Escuadron de Caza Mixta: MiG-23ML/UB/29/UB
211° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM
212° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM
UM4768 Escuadron de Intercepcion: MiG-21bis/UM, L-39C
Escuadron de Helicopteros de Combate: Mi-24D

Baracoa - 22° Regimiento de Interception
221° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM
222° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM

San Julián (MUSJ) Air Base - 23° Regimiento de Caza 
231° Escuadrón de Caza: MiG-29A/UB
232° Escuadrón de Caza: MiG-23MF/UB
Escuadrón de Entrenamiento de Combate (Combat Training Squadron): MiG-21PFMA, MiG-21MF
1650° Entrenamiento de Combate (Combat Training): MiG-21UM
Formación primaria (Primary Training):  An-2

Guines - 24° Regimiento de Apoyo Táctico (Inactive)
241° Escuadrón de Apoyo Táctico: MiG-23BN/MF/UB

Havana / Playa Baracoa - UM3688 Regimiento de Transporte        
Jose Martin, Antonio de los Baños - 25° Regimiento de Transporte
3404° Escuadrón de Transporte: Il-76, An-32, An-30, An-26,
3688° Escuadrón de Transporte: An-26, An-2
UM3405 Regimiento Ejecutivo
3405° Escuadron Ejecutivo (3405th Executive Squadron): An-2/24, Yak-40, Mi-17

Havanna - 26° Regimiento de Helicópteros
261° Escuadrón de Helicópteros de Propósitos Generales: Mi-8/17
262° Escuadrón de Helicópteros de Propósitos Generales: Mi-8/17

Zona Aérea Central 1a Brigada de Guardia
Santa Clara - 11° Regimiento de Interception (Inactive)
111° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM
112° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21bis/UM

Sancti Spiritus - 12° Regimiento de Interception  (Inactive)
121° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21PFM/UM
122° Escuadrón de Interception: MiG-21PFM/UM

Santa Clara - 14° Regimiento de Apoyo Táctico  (Inactive)
141° Escuadrón de Apoyo Táctico: MiG-23BN

Cienfugos - 15° Regimiento de Transporte (Inactive)
151° Escuadrón de Transporte: An-26, An-2

Cienfugos - 16° Regimiento de Helicópteros (Inactive)
161° Escuadrón de Helicópteros de Guerra Anti-Submarina: Mi-8
162° Escuadrón de Helicópteros de Propósitos Generales: Mi-8
163° Escuadrón de Helicópteros de Propósitos Generales: Mi-17
Zona Aérea Oriente 3a Brigada de Guardia

La Coloma (MULM) Airport
1660 Escuadrón de Entrenamiento (Training Squadron): L-39C

Camagüey - Ignacio Agramonte (MUCM) Airport (Inactive)
31° Regimiento de Interception: MiG-21MF


Note: Cuba has 65 airports with paved runways (over 3,047 m: 7 2,438 to 3,047 m: 9 1,524 to 2,437 m: 17 914 to 1,523 m: 5 under 914 m: 27) and 71 airports with unpaved runways (914 to 1,523 m: 13 under 914 m: 58)
 

Posted (edited)

Cuba
Air Force

 

 

 

Historical Order of Battle (as at 1988):

Click on unit title for more details

Unit Type Base

 

Zona Aérea Central

 

1 Brigada "Batalla de Santa Clara"

   

          11.Regimiento de Caza

  BA Santa Cruz
111.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA Santa Cruz
112.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA Santa Cruz

          12.Regimiento de Caza

  BA Sancti Spiritus
121.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21MF(15) BA Sancti Spiritus
122.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21MF(15) BA Sancti Spiritus

          14.Regimiento de Apoyo Táctico

  BA Santa Clara
141.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-23BN(13),Mig-23UB(1) BA Santa Clara

          15.Regimiento de Transporte

  BA Cienfuegos
151.Escuadrón de Transporte An-26, An-2 BA Cienfuegos

          16.Regimiento de Helicópteros

  BA Cienfuegos
161.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-14PL BA Cienfuegos
162.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-17 BA Cienfuegos
163.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-8 BA Cienfuegos
     

 

Zona Aérea Oeste

 

2 Brigada "Playa Girón"

   

          21.Regimiento de Caza

  BA San Antonio de los Baños
211.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA San Antonio de los Baños
212.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA San Antonio de los Baños

          22.Regimiento de Caza

  BA Playa Baracoa
221.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA Playa Baracoa
222.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21bis(15) BA Playa Baracoa
223.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-23MF(12),Mig-23UB(1) BA Playa Baracoa

          23.Regimiento de Caza

  BA San Julian
231.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-29B(2),Mig-29UB(1) BA San Antonio de los Baños
232.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-23ML(14),Mig-23UB(1) BA San Julian

          24.Regimiento de Apoyo Táctico

  BA de Guinés
241.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-23BN(13),Mig-23UB(1) BA de Guinés

          25.Regimiento de Transporte

  BA Jose de Martin/La Habana
251.Escuadrón de Transporte Il-76(2), An-30(1), An-32(2) BA Jose de Martin/La Habana
252.Escuadrón de Transporte An-26, An-2, Yak-40(2) BA San Antonio de los Baños

          26.Regimiento de Transporte

  BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
261.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-2, Mi-8 BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
262.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-2, Mi-8 BA Campo Libertad/La Habana

          Escuela de Aviación Militar

  BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
1.Escuadrón de Entrenamiento L-39C, Z-326T BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
2.Escuadrón de Entrenamiento L-39C, Z-326T BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
3.Escuadrón de Entrenamiento L-39C, Z-326T BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
4.Escuadrón de Entrenamiento L-39C, Z-326T BA Campo Libertad/La Habana
     

 

Zona Aérea Oriente

 

3 Brigada "Cuartel Moncada"

   

          31.Regimiento de Caza

  BA de Camagüey
311.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21MF(15) BA de Camagüey
312.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-21MF(15) BA de Camagüey

          34.Regimiento de Apoyo Táctico

  BA de Holguin
341.Escuadrón de Caza Mig-23BN(13),Mig-23UB(1) BA de Holguin

          35.Regimiento de Transporte

  BA Santiago de Cuba
351.Escuadrón de Transporte An-26, An-2 BA Santiago de Cuba

          36.Regimiento de Helicópteros

  BA Santiago de Cuba
361.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-24(12) BA Santiago de Cuba
362.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-8 BA Santiago de Cuba
363.Escuadrón de Helicópteros Mi-8 BA Santiago de Cuba
Edited by Jaroslav
Posted

Cuban Defector Exposes Hole in U.S. Air Defense : Military: MIG flies undetected to Key West, Fla. Officials say system is geared to other threats, and such lapses probably can’t be stopped.

The undetected flight of a Soviet-built MIG from Cuba to Key West, Fla., exposed gaps in the nation’s southern air defense that military officials say may be all but impossible to plug.

The March 20 incident has prompted an internal investigation by NORAD, the U.S.-Canadian command charged with protecting North American airspace, spokesman Maj. John Niemann said.

No interceptors were scrambled to meet the MIG-23 flown by a defecting Cuban pilot, and tower personnel in Key West were unaware of the warplane’s approach until it had circled the island several times attempting to land.

In 1969, another Cuban defector flew a MIG all the way to Homestead Air Force Base, just south of Miami, where it landed.

NORAD blames the lapses in part on a policy that since the 1960s has fixated on the Soviet Union.

“We are aware of the gaps in our coverage,” Niemann said. “For years our emphasis was toward the (North) Pole and toward the coasts, and then when ICBM’s (intercontinental ballistic missiles) came in, even that air defense system was allowed to atrophy.”

Radar and other detection systems along the southern border have been beefed up since 1989 to combat drug trafficking.

NORAD’s explanation doesn’t sit well with some military experts. Retired Rear Adm. Gene La Roque, who heads the Washington-based Center for Defense Information, said: “For me, it’s incomprehensible that NORAD can’t pick a MIG up, coming in from Cuba. Are we wasting our money for an air defense system that doesn’t work?”

But former Assistant Secretary of Defense Lawrence J. Korb said the key issue is not an unexpected flight by a defector, but rather how the system would react to a full-scale military attack.

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-04-01-mn-1262-story.html

Posted

7th Special Motorised Rifle Brigade

7-я Особая мотострелковая бригада

Military Unit: 52388

Activated 4.63 in Narokko, Cuba, from the 496th Motorised Rifle Regiment (activated in 6.62 from parts of the 132nd Guards Motorised Rifle Regiment).

Organisation 1980:

  • 3rd independent Motorised Rifle Battalion
  • 4th independent Motorised Rifle Battalion
  • 20th independent Motorised Rifle Battalion
  • 5th independent Tank Battalion
  • 42nd independent Artillery Battalion
  • 00 independent Anti-Aircraft Artillery Battalion
  • 00 independent Reactive Artillery Battalion
  • 00 independent Reconnaissance Company
  • 00 independent Engineer-Sapper Company
  • 00 independent Chemical Defence Platoon
  • 00 independent Communications Company
  • 00 independent Material Supply Company

1.12.87 renamed 12th Training Center.

Disbanded 6.91.

Headquarters:

  • Narokko, Cuba, 4.63 - 6.91

Subordination:

  • General Staff Armed Forces of the Soviet Union, 4.63 - 6.91

Equipment 1989:

  • 2738 men, 40 tanks, 40 BMP and 80 BTR

Brigade coordinates:

  • Narokko base/barracks: 22 58 19N, 82 20 35W - some parts were located in Torrance, Cuba

http://ww2.dk/new/army/other/7omsbr.htm

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