The Bear Went Over the Mountain: Soviet Combat Tactics in Afghanistan

Front Cover
Tales End Press, Jun 24, 2012 - History
When the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in 1979, they soon realized that their army had the wrong equipment, the wrong training, and the wrong tactics to fight the Mujahideen. One result was this book, which was produced by the Frunze Military Academy, the premier training center in Russia, to capture the lessons learned from the Soviet-Afghan war. It contains a series of tactical vignettes, each describing a single military operation in the words of one of the officers in charge. These operations range from convoy escorts and the defense of isolated outposts all the way up to major combined-arms sweeps and airborne assaults on Mujahideen training centers. The success or failure of each operation is analyzed by the Frunze military staff, and also by Lester W. Grau, who translated the work into English and is an accomplished military analyst and historian. This book is therefore unique in supplying both Soviet and Western military perspectives on guerilla warfare and counter-insurgency operations in Afghanistan. This edition includes 45 tactical battle maps, and a glossary of Soviet Army terminology and map symbols.

Bibliographic information