The Germans during the war from top to bottom identified the Soviets as 'The Russian' not Russkies as I normally tend to use, but there you go, useless info, I'm full of it.
My own Eastern Front interest lies as the Russians destroy Army Group Centre in Operation Bagration through to the last desperate fighting in the streets of Berlin. Chain of Command for now seems to stop at Kursk in 1943, the Russian list in the rule book is supposed to cover late war but it doesn't, not according to official Russian sources anyway, it is generic and as such works fine. I had to look for myself, I was going with a simple Russian Rifle Platoon and I found information on such quite quickly online, but again nothing is ever simple and we all know that official organisation normally does not extend to the experience of the front line. No matter it is a start.
So for the bog standard Soviet Rifle Platoon for 1944 we have four squads, two Light and two Heavy, the make up of the platoon is as follows:-
Force Rating: Four Sections +5
(If I have got my sums right on the Chain of Command Calculator Force
Ratings for Regular troops are; three sections +0, three six man
sections -4, four six man sections -1, the Command stays the same.)
1 x Platoon Commander, Lieutenant or Junior Lieutenant with SMG (Senior Leader)
1 x Deputy Commander, Snr Sgt, rifle
1 x Sniper*
2 Light Infantry Sections
1 x Section Commander, Sgt or Jr Sgt, SMG (Junior Leader)
1 x Deputy Commander, Semi-automatic rifle **
1 x Rifleman, SMG
1 x LMG
1 x Assistant for LMG, Rifle ***
4 x Riflemen, Rifle
2 Heavy Rifle Sections
1 x Section Commander, Sgt or Jr Sgt, SMG (Junior Leader)
1 x Deputy Commander, Semi-automatic rifle **
1 x Rifleman, SMG
2 x LMG
2 x Assistant for LMG, Rifle ***
2 x Riflemen, Rifle
* this was reduced from 2 to 1 sometime between summer 43 and 44, only the sniper is mentioned but for wargame purposes I would count this as a two man team, I don't know if the rules handle one man teams
** this could also have been a normal rifle but several organisations give the platoons one of these so it goes to the senior rifleman.
*** this gentleman could also have been armed with SMG
A Soviet Rifle Company had a medical team, so a medic should be added to the support options in the rule book. Rifle Battalions also had access to 82mm mortars in their make up, at least in 1943 so this too should be in the support options. Another interesting aspect here is you make the Deputy Commander a Junior Leader rather than an assistant as befitting his rank.
Now for the good stuff, just as you get this into your head this was the
ideal formation on paper, by the time this got to the Front there was probably only
one Heavy Section, this is quite likely because like every other
belligerent at this late stage of the war even the Soviets were getting
short on infantry especially the way they used them. You can also find
variations of this organisation online despite each of them claiming to
be from the official records however the variations are fairly small and
at the end of the day you have to make a decision. The above with only
three sections will probably do you until the end of the war for the
Rifle Platoon, there was a new organisation for 1945 which reduced the
Guards and therefore more than likely the normal Rifle Platoons to six
man sections, basically three rifles, one LMG with Assistant along
with the section commander. There is a good chance this did not filter
through before the war ended, however if you like living dangerously and have crossed the German border it's an option.
The above all pertains to Chain of Command but could easily be used with Bolt Action or any other platoon level rule set if you are an historically minded player.
While looking around the internet I came upon this strange picture, a PzIV with what looks like severe shell damage to the turret and something very strange stuck to the gun, any ideas?
A couple of links
https://www.battleorder.org/ussr-rifle-co-1944
http://www-solar.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/~aaron/WW2ORG/sov_InfDiv44.html
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0ByQYXLuttS5ZZDlHQTdRbXNpcTg/view Calculator
While I am doing my normal and keeping away from people I now have a bunch of WWII civilians and extra bits and pieces for the Germans, British and Russians to see me through the emergency, I also have tentative plans for a small industrial complex nipping away at me. If this is not enough will I have to start a new period?
Planning is such fun! I await seeing your Russian Hordes in action.
ReplyDeleteIf a new project does not motivate, how about a return to the SYW?
Not sure how much wargaming is going to go on for now Jonathan, missus and I have had to cut ties to clubs etc. until this crises passes us by which could take months. I may have to turn to the SYW for my sanity.
DeleteGood work George! Be interested to see what the gaming public make of these lists ;o)
ReplyDeleteG'wan... start a new period!
Cheers
Matt
Got enough on the back burner at the moment Matt.
DeleteMantlet cover over the gun barrel which attaches to turret, it has been blown out no doubt from the force of the hit maybe?
ReplyDeleteYep.. or they're changing gun barrel?
DeleteDuh, of course it is, good spot.
DeleteLists! The backbone and the bane of wargaming! Best of luck with the project.
ReplyDeleteGot to love em David, ta.
DeleteComing a bit late to this but the last TOE actually enacted was the Dec 42 one which had the 4 section platoon. Infantry Divs that weren't getting replacements or not enough to keep up with losses did drop down to 3 section platoons like that in the back of the rules, with no platoon sergeant or snipers, and in extreme cases, only 2 companies to a battalion. Those changes were at Front level. Good sources for the detail is Red Army Handbook by Steven Zaloga & Leland Ness
ReplyDeleteWhat a great recommendation, I got a .pdf of the book last night, very impressed.
Delete