Composition of the Navy special forces:

42nd naval reconnaissance point (Russky Island, Khalulai Bay, Vladivostok region, Pacific Fleet);

420th naval reconnaissance point (Polyarny village, Murmansk district, Northern Fleet);

431st naval reconnaissance point (Tuapse, Black Sea Fleet);

561st naval reconnaissance point (Parusnoye village, Baltiysk, Kaliningrad region, Baltic Fleet).

In official documents, a Navy Special Forces fighter is called a “reconnaissance diver.” They are armed with: 5.45 mm AK-74 assault rifles and its modifications, 5.66 mm underwater special APS assault rifles, 5.45 mm double-medium ADS assault rifles, 9 mm special silent AS Val assault rifles, 9 mm APB pistols, 7.62 mm special PSS pistols, 4.5 mm underwater pistols SPP-1 (SPP-1 M), various types of sniper weapons, mining/demining equipment, reconnaissance equipment, communications equipment, light diving equipment (breathing apparatus including closed regenerative type IDA-71 and SGV-98, wetsuits, masks, fins, etc.), technical means of delivery to enemy sea and coastal targets (inflatable boats, double towing divers "Sirena" and "Sirena-UME", three-seat towing divers "Marina", towing divers "Som- 1" and "Som-3", "Proteus-5M" and "Proteus-5MU", "Proton" and "Proton-U", group six-seater towing divers "Grozd").

If necessary, for the duration of special operations, detachments of “reconnaissance divers” can be assigned airplanes, helicopters, surface ships and submarines.

Submarines are used to achieve maximum secrecy in the landing of combat swimmers. Combat swimmers can disembark from submarines through torpedo tubes at low speed or while they are on the ground. When landing saboteurs on the move, a special buoy is first released onto the surface of the water, connected to the submarine by a towing and guiding cable. Holding on to it, swimmers float up and are towed behind the buoy on short poles until the entire group exits or the inflatable boat rises to the surface. The exit of combat swimmers from a boat lying on the ground is made from a depth of 20-30 m with a favorable bottom topography. In addition, together with the combat swimmers, the towing vehicles exit through the torpedo tube. The way the towing vehicle exits the torpedo tube can be different. You can load the divers' towing vehicle into the torpedo tube along with the divers and then push it out with a push rod, and then launch the propellers. Or you can load the towing vehicle into one device, release the diver from the other, and again push the towing vehicle out with a rod pusher, which is included in the standard equipment of the boat.

Surface ships (mainly fast boats) are used to deliver combat swimmers when stealth is not paramount to the mission, for example to strengthen the defense of underwater structures and other objects in a limited area. The boats, including air-cushion landing craft, are capable of carrying up to 20 or more people with full equipment. They can be delivered to the enemy coast on landing dock ships and then released through the docking chambers to the combat area.

Airplanes and helicopters are used when it is necessary to quickly deliver combat swimmers to significant distances from bases. They are dropped into the water, for example, from a helicopter from a height of 5-6 m, and with the help of a parachute - from a height of 800-6000 m. When using gliding parachutes, landing on land and water is possible at a distance of up to 11-16 km from the release point, which allows the carrier aircraft not to approach the coast at a dangerous distance and makes it difficult for the enemy to determine the landing area, and sometimes the purpose of his flight. During an air landing, underwater tugs, inflatable boats and cargo containers can be released simultaneously.

Combat swimmers are able to reach sabotage objects independently by swimming with the help of fins or using both single and multi-seat towing vehicles of the “wet” and “dry” type. When approaching the shore, tugboats and cargo containers are secured to the ground and, if possible, camouflaged. If there is a need for them in the future, then hydroacoustic beacons can be installed on these means, which are automatically turned on at a given time or by a command signal. Further movement of combat swimmers to the shore is carried out with the help of fins.

Officer training is carried out at the Faculty of Special Intelligence of the Novosibirsk Higher Combined Arms Command School, and the training of “reconnaissance divers” is carried out directly at the MCI.

The training system for special forces and anti-sabotage groups of the Navy was strikingly different from the methods used in other law enforcement agencies. It all started with a strict selection of candidates for “amphibian people.” For six months, conscripts who had scuba diving and sports skills before the army were trained in a special program, where physical and psychological stress was close to the limit. According to the testimony of former combat swimmers, one of the tests was a night march without specifying the distance and running time. And when complete physical exhaustion set in in the morning, psychological stability began to manifest itself.
After transferring from a training unit to a combat unit, conscripts began theoretical and practical training. The mandatory course included diving, airborne, navigation and topography, mountain specialization, maritime, physical training, mine demolition, hand-to-hand combat, survival in any conditions, the study of foreign armies and theaters of war, radio and much more necessary in modern warfare.

The main objects of sabotage actions of combat swimmers are: large surface ships, submarines in their base areas, berthing and hydraulic structures of ports. They can also be missile systems, factories, airfields, command posts, radar stations, communications centers, warehouses and other important facilities located on the coast. In addition, combat swimmers are capable of conducting reconnaissance in coastal waters and on the shore, destroying anti-landing barriers and natural obstacles in areas of planned amphibious landings, preparing sections of the coast for the approach of landing craft and landing sites for helicopters, as well as ensuring landing on the enemy’s coast intelligence groups and fight his combat swimmers.