Behind the Iron Curtain's naval facade lay a reality that contradicted decades of Soviet propaganda and Western assumptions alike. This final volume in the ten-part Cold War Soviet Naval Intelligence series reveals what CIA analysts discovered when they penetrated the carefully constructed myths surrounding Soviet naval power.
Through meticulous analysis of intercepted communications, observed exercises, and classified operational assessments, these declassified documents expose the true state of Soviet naval readiness during the Cold War's most dangerous years. From the Baltic to the Pacific, American intelligence officers tracked every major Soviet naval exercise, cataloged training deficiencies, and measured the gap between Moscow's claims and maritime reality.
The intelligence gathered here shaped critical decisions about U.S. naval spending, force deployments, and strategic planning throughout the 1970s and 1980s. These previously classified analyses reveal how Soviet crews actually performed under pressure, which technologies worked as advertised, and where the Red Navy's greatest vulnerabilities lay hidden.
As the concluding volume of this comprehensive series, these documents complete the most detailed intelligence picture of Soviet naval capabilities ever assembled.
Turn to page one and discover what the CIA really knew.