Adelbert Waldron, forgotten sniper ace

Sniper at work (SGT Waldron) via Sharpeneing the Combat Edge: The Use of Analysis to reinforce military judgement, by Lieutenant General Julian J. Ewell http://www.history.army.mil/books/Vietnam/Sharpen/ch06.htm

Sniper at work (SGT Waldron) via Sharpeneing the Combat Edge: The Use of Analysis to reinforce military judgement, by Lieutenant General Julian J. Ewell

In the first half of 1969, 36-year old Sgt Waldron of the US Army’s 9th ID in Vietnam was credited with 109 confirmed kills, making him the highest scoring US sniper in history until Chris Kyle bested him in 2011.

Snipers have been a specter of the modern battlefield since the American War of Independence when Colonial sharpshooter Timothy Murphy was reputed to have killed both Sir Francis Clerke and General Simon Fraser with single well placed shots from a distance. Fast forward two hundred years and sniping had become an obsession of the U.S. military foot soldier. In Vietnam several sniper schools produced wickedly efficient young snipers who have since become legend such as marines Charles Mawhinney, Eric England and Gunnery Sgt Carlos Hathcock Snr.

However the most successful sniper of the conflict is a little known US Army Staff Sergeant, Aldelbert “Bert” F Waldron III.

Adelbert Waldron was born March 14, 1933 in Syracuse, New York and spent his formative years hunting in the wilds of the Empire State. He joined the Navy in 1953 and left that branch after successful service as an E-5 (GMG2) in 1965. Waldron enlisted in the Army in May 1968 as a Sergeant, the equivalent rank he held in the Navy. Sgt Waldron found himself attached to Company B, 3d Battalion, 60th Infantry Regiment (Scouts Out!) of the 9th Infantry Division in South Vietnam the same year.

An expert marksman with a rifle he was chosen to attend the 9th Infantry’s in-country sniper school run by members of the Army Marksmanship Unit and formed with the blessing of the division commander Lt Gen Julian J. Ewell. The 9th Infantry was the only major U.S. Army combat unit to conduct operations in the Mekong Delta where it was part of the Mobile Riverine Force (MRF). Riding shotgun on U.S. Navy brownwater Tango Boats and PBRs the MRF attempted to clean out the multitude of insurgent units operating in that lawless VC-rich area. In this high tempo hazardous environment Waldron was placed as a sniper.

Unique among the highest scoring U.S. snipers of the conflict (Chuck Mawhinney with 103, Eric England with 98 and Carlos Hathcock with 93) who were all Marines with bolt-action rifles, Waldron was a Soldier with a semi-automatic weapon. He used an accurized M-14 rifle, known popularly as an M-21.

m21

The M-21 Waldron used was a National Match quality weapon with a Leatherwood 3-9X Adjustable Range Telescope (ART) graduated to 600 yards (not meters) and the standard leather M1907 sling. Rock Island Arsenal converted some 1,435 of these weapons for use as sniper weapons and sent them to Vietnam in 1969. From then on it was the primary Army sniper rifle until 1988.

The M21 was accurate out to 800m and fired the M118 standard NATO 7.62mm round though most snipers used a matchgrade 173-grade hardball. Waldron at times used an early AN/PVS-2 Starlight night vision scope coupled with a suppressor and sniped targets in the middle of the night in base defense and counter-ambushes. On one such night he took no less than nine confirmed targets.

U.S. Army sniper (not Waldron) in Vietnam with a M21 sniper rifle and AN/PVS-2 scope

U.S. Army sniper (not Waldron) in Vietnam with a M21 sniper rifle and AN/PVS-2 scope. Note the riverine environment behind him.

While the typical PVS-2 was only able to see a man-sized object out to about 100 yards on a starlit night, when coupled with a AN/TVS-3 500-million candlepower IR spotlight mounted to a tower or a Huey flying overhead, this illumination allowed shots out to 500 yards.

AN/TVS-3 ground spotlight, these would bathe the area around a U.S. base in unseen IR light which the snipers with starlight scopes could pick up

AN/TVS-3 ground spotlight, these would bathe the area around a U.S. base in unseen IR light which the snipers with starlight scopes could pick up

UH-1H "Nighthawk" with M134 minigun, AN/VSS-3 Xenon

UH-1H “Nighthawk” with M134 minigun, AN/VSS-3 Xenon. You get the idea.

Between Dec 1968-May 1969, 9th ID snipers accounted for 934 confirmed kills, mostly in darkness in Night Hunter, Night Search, and Night Ambush operations. According to the records, just over 11 percent of these were Waldron’s alone.

Waldron was also credited with making one of the most famous near-mythical shots in sniper lore:

From Lt. Gen. Ewell in the U.S. Army’s Center for Military History’s archives:

“…, our most successful sniper was Sergeant Adelbert F. Waldron, III, who had 109 confirmed kills to his credit. One afternoon he was riding along the Mekong River on a Tango boat when an enemy sniper on shore pecked away at the boat. While everyone else on board strained to find the antagonist, who was firing from the shoreline over 900 meters away, Sergeant Waldron took up his sniper rifle and picked off the Viet Cong out of the top of a coconut tree with one shot (this from a moving platform).”

Promoted to Staff Sgt Waldron finished his tour in Vietnam with a Silver Star, a Bronze Star, a Presidential Unit Citation, and two (2) Distinguished Service Crosses and a $50,000 bounty on his head. He taught at the US Army Marksmanship Unit briefly as a senior instructor before leaving army service in 1970.

In later years he worked for noted mercenary private military contractor, firearms engineer and former CIA operative Mitchel WerBell III.

Ol Mitch WerBell

Ol’ Mitch WerBell

Waldron was WerBell’s resident firearms instructor in his private training schools at the “Farm” in Powder Springs GA. It was in that school that Waldron’s name became linked to such groups as Lyndon LaRouche’s NCLC and people still comment snidely on possible legal troubles that he may have been in.

Hey everyone wants to throw stones when they can be anonymous about it.

Waldron died in quiet obscurity on October 18, 1995 in California. He was 62 years old. The former sniper who literally owned the night for six months in the Mekong delta is buried at Riverside National Cemetery, Section AB, Row B, Site 37.

Notably, Waldron did not publish a book or lecture as many other noted snipers of the 20th century have.

His DSC Citation :

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918 (amended by act of July 25, 1963), takes pleasure in presenting the Distinguished Service Cross to Sergeant Adelbert F. Waldron (ASN: RA-11938508/NSN: 4615848), United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations involving conflict with an armed hostile force in the Republic of Vietnam, while serving with Company B, 3d Battalion, 60th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. Sergeant Waldron distinguished himself by exceptionally valorous actions during the period 16 January 1969 to 4 February 1969, while serving as an expert rifleman during fourteen sniper missions. On 19 January while his company was being resupplied near Ap Hoa, Kien Hoa Province, approximately forty Viet Cong unleashed a heavy barrage of small arms and automatic weapons fire. Courageously exposing himself to the fusillade, Sergeant Waldron killed a number of the aggressors and was instrumental in forcing them to break contact. On the night of 22 January in an area infested with enemy soldiers and booby traps, he skillfully located a Viet Cong probing force. Calmly moving through open rice paddies from one firing position to another, he deceived the communists as to the actual strength of his unit and prevented a night assault by the main enemy element. During the night of 3 February when a nearby Vietnamese Army unit came under attack, he moved toward the battle site and, spotting several Viet Cong attempting to flank the Vietnamese soldiers, stopped them with deadly accurate fire. Later t hat night he saw another enemy soldier gathering his comrades’ weapons and killed him also. On these and other missions, Sergeant Waldron tirelessly located and made contact with numerically superior hostile forces. By his continuous disregard for his own safety, he prevented ambushes on friendly troops and contributed greatly to the success of allied operations. Sergeant Waldron’s extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty were in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, and the United States Army.
General Orders: Headquarters, U.S. Army, Vietnam, General Orders No. 1068 (March 28, 1969)
Action Date: January 16 – February 4, 1969
Service: Army
Rank: Sergeant
Company: Company B
Battalion: 3d Battalion
Regiment: 60th Infantry Regiment
Division: 9th Infantry Division

His Second DSC Citation:

The President of the United States of America, authorized by Act of Congress, July 9, 1918 (amended by act of July 25, 1963), takes pleasure in presenting a Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster in lieu of a Second Award of the Distinguished Service Cross to Sergeant Adelbert F. Waldron (ASN: RA-11938508/NSN: 4615848), United States Army, for extraordinary heroism in connection with military operations involving conflict with an armed hostile force in the Republic of Vietnam, while serving with Company B, 3d Battalion, 60th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. Sergeant Waldron distinguished himself by exceptionally valorous actions during the period 5 February 1969 to 29 March 1969, while serving as an expert rifleman on eighteen separate sniper missions in Kien Hoa Province. On 14 February while his squad was conducting a night patrol near Ap Phu Thuan, Sergeant Waldron, observing a numerically superior hostile force maneuvering to assault a friendly unit, moved rapidly from one position to another to deceive the enemy as to the actual strength of his squad and killed several Viet Cong. As a direct result of his determination, the enemy was routed and their assault prevented. On 26 February near Phu Tuc, he located a Viet Cong team preparing to launch a rocket on a Mobile Riverine Force. He adroitly shot and killed the soldiers. At Ap Luong Long Noi on 8 March, his company was attacked by a Viet Cong force. Sergeant Waldron killed many of the communists and forced them to withdraw. Despite adverse weather conditions, poor illumination and the pressure of arduous missions night after night, he repeatedly located and engaged many hostile elements, killing a number of the enemy. Sergeant Waldron’s extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty were in keeping with the highest traditions of the Military Service and reflects great credit upon himself, his unit, and the United States Army.
General Orders: Headquarters, U.S. Army, Vietnam, General Orders No. 2904 (August 2, 1969)
Action Date: February 5 – March 29, 1969
Service: Army
Rank: Sergeant
Company: Company B
Battalion: 3d Battalion
Regiment: 60th Infantry Regiment
Division: 9th Infantry Division

Sources

-Ewell Julian J Lt Gen “Sharpening the Combat Edge: The Use of Analysis to Reinforce Military Judgment” US Army Center for Military History Various archivists 1974

-Gilbert, Adrian Stalk, Kill The Thrill and Danger of the Sniper Experience St Martins Press 1998

-King, Dennis Lyndon LaRouche and the New American Fasicsm Doubleday 1989

-Lanning, Michael, Inside the Crosshairs Snipers in Vietnam  1998 Ballentine-Random House

-Plaster, Major John L., lecture on Sniping in Vietnam, Louisville, Ky, May 2016.

-Roberts, Craig, Crosshairs on the Kill Zone: American Combat Snipers, Vietnam through Operation Iraqi Freedom 2007.

The Last Argument of Kings

The only cannon held at the Springfield Armory National Historic Site is a bronze four-pounder (Canon de 4 de Vallière) named “La Perilleuse” (The Perilous) from an engraving on the gun, manufactured by Berenger, Strasbourg, France in 1758.

4 pdr french gun at spar La Perilleuse

Image via Springfield Armory

Some 200 4-pdrs of similar design were purchased from France during the Revolution, with most, if not all. passing through Springfield.

However, there is some debate, going back to the 1830s when it came to the site to stay, that La Perilleuse may have instead been captured by the British, presumably from the French in the Seven Years (French and Indian) War as it was produced during that era, then later captured from General Burgoyne at the Battle of Saratoga by the Colonials. One argument to support this is that it was rebored to the standard English 6-pdr size.

La Perilleuse gun and its carriage (a substituted Civil War Parrot gun model) sat in front of Armory Administration Building (Bldg.# 19) for many years and had a thick coat of black paint removed in the 1940s.

SA_French_gun_4pdr_1

Among the markings cast or engraved into the 1,265-pound gun is ‘Ultima ratio regum‘ – the last argument of kings.

More here

And Here

This is sure to get your attention in the trenches

Here we see perhaps the pinnacle of German Great War sniping rifles.

JP Sauer & Sohn Gewehr 98 Sniper Rifle with detachable Zeiss 2.5x monocular optical sight that superimposed a pyramidal aiming point in the field of view and trench mag 2
It is a JP Sauer & Sohn Gewehr 98 Sniper Rifle with detachable Zeiss 2.5x monocular optical sight that superimposed a pyramidal aiming point in the field of view. The large objective allowed for better light-gathering, but the best feature was a radium-enhanced reticle that allowed precise sighting in near darkness.

JP Sauer & Sohn Gewehr 98 Sniper Rifle with detachable Zeiss 2.5x monocular optical sight that superimposed a pyramidal aiming point in the field of view and trench mag

Best of all, the optic could be removed easily if the regular “iron sights” were the best for a specific shooting scenario.

Also of note is the 20-round “trench mag,” hinged breech cover to keep mud, blood and beer out, and the classic Mauser pigsticker on the end, for when raiders come a’ callin.

Hey, there is a tank sticking up out of the street

panther street turret

Starting in the 1944 Italian campaign, the Allies started to increasingly bump into German Panther turrets mounted on top of buried concrete bunkers, rather than atop tanks, for which they were increasingly running short of fuel.

It actually wasn’t a new idea, as the French had used scores of old FT-17 and newer Char turrets on the Maginot wall and other places.

Abandoned French fortification on the French-German border, May 1940 tank turret

Abandoned French fortification on the French-German border, May 1940

German captured Matilda tank that had been captured and concreted into position to be used as part of the defences of Halfaya Pass, 16 March 1942. A Valentine tank passes by in the background. (IWM E 9320

Germans used this captured Matilda tank and concreted into position, used as part of the defenses of Halfaya Pass, 16 March 1942. A British Valentine tank passes by in the background. (IWM E 9320)

These instant defensive fortifications were usually sited to cover choke points, and being low to the ground was difficult to spot or knock out.

German sentry stands next to the turret of a French tank, repurposed as a fortification on the Atlantic Wall, France, May 1943

U.S. Navy sailor examines a German 20-mm tank turret “pillbox” near one of the Dragoon invasion beaches in the South of France, 18 August 1944. The turret is from a PzKpfw II light tank and includes a 2 cm KwK 30 L/55 gun. As the tanks were obsolete by 1942, their turrets were increasingly utilized on the Atlantic Wall. (80-G-K-1942).

Panther turrets used a fixed artillery positions during the battle of Berlin

The buried concrete bunkers include a generator for power, large supplies of ammunition – much more than a tank could carry – and protected living quarters for the abbreviated turret crew.

Panther turrets used a fixed artillery positions during the battle of Berlin

Panther turrets used as a fixed artillery position during the battle of Berlin

panther turrets Panther turrets used a fixed artillery positions during the battle of Berlin b

panther2

21 – 22 May 1944, east of Piedimonte, Italy. Gefreiter Herbert Fries from 2nd Kompanie / Fallsch. Pz.-Jäger-Abt.1 in a Pantherturm, reportedly destroyed 17 allied tanks.

The Japanese were also users of the concept in WWII, especially in remote garrisons where gasoline was hard to get after 1942 and a dug-in tank could still be a “muzukashi” hardpoint.

Japanese Type 95 Ha-Go tank dug in as a strongpoint on the island of Kiska in August 1943, a classic turret fortification. Whether the guns were removed by the Japanese when they evacuated the island or U.S./Canadian forces removed them after is unknown.

These concepts outlasted the War, especially in Eastern Europe.

t1ug6

Soviet IS2 turret placed

Soviet IS2 turret placed

Austrian

Austrian

M48 on Golan Wall

M48 on Golan Wall

The Finns even bought 56 surplus T-55 tank turrets (just the turrets, which left the Soviets scratching their heads) in the late 1960s in what was likely the last use of such an idea. They placed them, coated with an asbestos-cork mixture to prevent moisture, along their craggy seacoast as the 100 56 TK (“100 mm, 56 length caliber, turret gun”) system, which was operational as late as 2012. These were arranged in 14 “sea fortresses,” each one equipped with 4 such turrets, linked by a central command and control and spotting system.

100 56 TK coastal artillery gun in Kuivasaari island. This gun is a modified T-55 turret used as coastal artillery

And of course, they were used extensively in the Middle East:

Captured Jordanian or Iraqi T-34-85 was turned into a pillbox in a settlement in Jordan Valley 6 Days War 1967 Jordan Valley, West Bank, Israel via DimaWa photo

One of the most enduring and best-preserved turret fortifications is found at the St.Aubins Fort in the Channel Island Military Museum, a repurposed French S 35 47mm tank turret.

The go-to book for more information on these (even covering Albanian and Bulgarian cold war panzer and T-34 turrets) is Neil Shorts’s aptly named Tank Turret Fortifications.

I certainly have thumbed through my own copy several times.

Polish Nagant in the wild

Last week I had posted an image of a very fine c.1935 FB Radom wz.30 Nagant revolver (the Polish Nagant) and as a follow up, I thought I would post this most excellent and very steampunk image of a Polish State Police (PP) officer using a re-purposed German Stahlhelm helmet (adorned of course with a Polish Eagle) and WWI-era armor plate as well as (most likely) a wz.30.

Enjoy:

"Policeman in full gear, Warsaw’s State Police (Policja Panstwowa m.st. Warszawy) Warsaw 1934. Photo Willem van de Poll

“Policeman in full gear, Warsaw’s State Police (Policja Panstwowa m.st. Warszawy) Warsaw 1934. Photo Willem van de Poll

Here are two more images of Stahlhelm/armored PP officers, with a locally made ballistic sheild. The guns of choice seem to be Mauser 1910/14s.

Policja8 Polish_State_Police_(Policja_Państwowa)_before_1939

Making like 1990

Throwback Thursday!

February’s Tip of the Spear, the journal of SOCOM, includes a great article by James D. Gray, the Combatant Craft Historian of the Combatant Craft Crewman Assc, (page 24-25) that ran originally on the Ethos Live NSW blog the month before.

It covers the operation of HSB detachments of Special Boat Unit-12 and three accompanying SEAL platoons during Desert Storm.

What is an HSB?

SBU-12 Fountain HSB carrying a CRRC (Ethos Live blog)

SBU-12 Fountain HSB carrying a CRRC. Note the M60 mount (Photo: Ethos Live blog)

These were the High Speed Boats in operation mainly with SBU-12 from the late ’80s to the late ’90s. And were made by several manufacturers in my neck of the woods including Halter Marine and United States Marine, Inc (USMI) both in Gulfport as well as to a lesser degree, Fountain Powerboats of Washington, NC.

A 33-foot Fountain used around 1990. Via Warboats.org Please visit that site for more info on SWCC craft http://www.warboats.org/Eschbuagh.htm

A 33-foot Fountain used around 1990. Note the open engine compartment and exhaust pipes. Via Warboats.org Please visit that site for more info on SWCC craft

These boats were generally 33-41 feet long fiberglass racing hulls, powered by 500hp Bulldogs, then Innovation Marine’s 557’s and finally 572s and 575’s to scoot them along at speeds of up to 70 knots. They had all sorts of covert tweaks such as an under hull silent exhaust system, recessed deck hardware, and concealed engine drives to help make them stealthier.

Manned by three SWCC crew, they could carry as many as 12 cramped passengers (or a more typically a half platoon or a boat team of SEALs and a Combat Rubber Raider across the bow as shown above).

They were also termed HSAC (High Speed Assault Craft) and replaced the 1980s era Sea Fox boats.

Here is one I visited at the SEAL Museum in Fort Pierce recently on my way back down to Key West. This is a USMI 42-footer with twin 550-hp gas engines on racing outdrives dubbed SOC6 (Special Operations Craft #6).

Note the Funduro commercial nav radar and general low profile, (Photo by Chris Eger)

Note the Furuno commercial nav radar, M60 mount, and general low profile, (Photo by Chris Eger)

Controls were spartan at best but remember these were coastal boats. Also note the pintel mounted M60E3 to the starboard (Photo by Chris Eger)

Controls were spartan at best but remember these were coastal boats. Also note the pintle-mounted M60E3 to the starboard (Photo by Chris Eger)

Outdrives. While this one does not have below-hull venting for the exhaust, many models did. (Photo by Chris Eger)

Outdrives. While this one does not have below-hull venting for the exhaust, many models did. (Photo by Chris Eger)

The blue on blue-gray scheme was effective (Photo by Chris Eger)

The blue on blue-gray scheme was effective (Photo by Chris Eger)

SOC6 was used in the Great Deception Raid along with three other HSBs to draw the attention of two Iraqi armored divisions to a beach that would see no action while the main attack went further north. In effect using a few dozen special operations guys to tie down 25,000+ Iraqis.

A Halter HSB type used on the Great Deception Raid. Note the M2s on the bridge wings

A Halter HSB type used on the Great Deception Raid. Note the M2s on the bridge wings. Photo from the Ethos Live Blog.

From Gray’s article:

At Mina Saud, Kuwait, the SEALs under Lt. Tom D. Dietz, assigned to Seal Team Five, boarded their CRRCs and moved into the target area. The HSBs loitered to provide recovery or hot extract if needed. Within two hours, the SEALs in the area planted demolition charges and beacons to indicate an amphibious landing and ex-filtrated. They linked up with the CRRCs then transited to the recovering HSBs. The escort HSBs then moved in within 200 yards of the beach and conducted two firing runs on bunkers on the beach with .50 cal machine guns and Mk-19 and 7.62 Mini-guns, and threw satchel charges into the water during egress. The planted demolitions by the operators, exploded shortly after leaving the area, and air strikes were also called in. The raiders returned to base shortly before dawn.

After the arrival of the purpose-built 82-foot Halter Marine MkV SOC boats in the mid-1990s, most of the NSW HSBs were scraped or stripped down and sold to the general public. That has put a number in circulation.

SOC6 was found in poor repair in 2000 after being sold as surplus and was restored by retired SEAL personnel working with the Naval Historical Center with funds provided by the President of USMI.

Others have been reworked by civilians and security companies for their own reasons.

1994 seal hsb

A Fountain for sale, cheap

A Fountain for sale, cheap

A close up of the Fountain's cockpit

A close up of the Fountain’s cockpit

Three privately owned Halter HSBs at a dock near Rudee Inlet across from Owls Creek public Boat landing Virginia Beach, Va. 2008

Three privately owned Halter HSBs at a dock near Rudee Inlet across from the Owls Creek public boat landing Virginia Beach, Va. 2008

A scrapped condition 39-foot Halter HSB was up for sale recently for $4995 (without engines or drives and with holes in the hull).

halter 39

Note the high radar tower replacing the bar used previously

Note the high radar tower replacing the bar used previously

So with a little elbow grease and a lot of patchwork you can make like 1990 all over again– though you’ll never be cool enough to tie down two divisions of Iraqis cool.

Warship Wednesday June 8, 2016: Indonesia’s biggest stick with a James Bond twist

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. –– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, June 8, 2016: Indonesia’s biggest stick with a James Bond twist

Soviet Cruiser ORDZHONIKIDZE in July 1954, while conducting a port visit at Helsinki, Finland. [3600 x 2895]

Here we see the Soviet Navy’s Sverdlov-class light cruiser Ordzhonikidze with her crew manning the rails in June 1954 on a peaceful port visit to Helsinki, a capital that was being bombed by Soviet aircraft just nine years prior. Obsolete before she was completed, she sowed enduring mystery in her brief career with the Motherland and went on to become Sukarno’s wooden sword.

At the end of World War II, Stalin was only beginning his arms race with the West, which included several of the world’s largest navies. The Red Banner Fleet had armadas of submarines and small craft but was lacking in capital ships. The Sovs had no carriers and, even though battleships and gun-armed cruisers were fast approaching block obsolescence as a whole in the Atomic age, Stalin was desperately short of these as well with only a few lingering Gangut-class battlewagons and Maxim Gorky/Chapayev class cruisers on the list as “prestige ships.”

This led to an order for a staggering 30 brand new 16,000-ton Sverdlov (Project 68bis) class cruisers.

They had good lines and were a good design-- for 1938.

They had good lines and were a good design– for 1938.

Capable of a 9,000-mile range, equipped with a half-dozen air, surface and navigation radars, and capable of breaking 32 knots, they had long legs, big eyes, and high speed, all things you want in a cruiser to both screen a naval task force and perform as a surface action group on their own accord. The thing is their armament was hopelessly dated.

These all-gun love boats had a dozen powerful 152 mm (6 in)/57 cal B-38 guns in four triple Mk5-bis turrets which were outstanding guns for the time (though they had been designed in 1938). They could sling a 121-pound AP pill out to 34,080 yards (30,215 m) every nine seconds or so, which means the 12-gun battery could pepper a 78-round broadside in the time it takes to watch an extended commercial. A dozen 100 mm/56 (3.9″) B-34 Pattern 1940 guns in twin mounts, 32x37mm AAA guns, and (likely for the last time in a major warship design) surface-launched anti-ship torpedoes rounded out the Sverdlovs.

They compared well against the U.S. Navy’s Cleveland-class light cruisers (14,500-tons, 4 × triple 6″/47cal guns), which the Americans had commissioned 27 of by the end of 1945 (see where the figure of Stalin wanting 30 Sverdlovs came from?), but the catch was that Washington laid up virtually all of their low-mileage Cleveland’s by 1950 and those that remained in service did so as hybrid guided-missile cruisers with a limited big-gun armament.

The beautiful Cleveland-class cruiser USS Miami (CL-89) plowing through a wave during her shakedown cruise, 17 February 1944. She was everything the Sverdlovs were and more, but only saw 46 months of active duty before she was decommissioned on 30 June 1947-- before the first Svedlov was commissioned-- and only left red lead row in 1961 to be scrapped.

The beautiful Cleveland-class cruiser USS Miami (CL-89) plowing through a wave during her shakedown cruise, 17 February 1944. She was everything the Sverdlovs were and more, but only saw 46 months of active duty before she was decommissioned on 30 June 1947– before the first Svedlov was even commissioned– and only left red lead row in 1961 to be scrapped.

The first Sverdlov was laid down on 15 October 1949 and before Stalin passed into that great Georgian gangster paradise in the ground in 1953, construction on another 20 was started. Then came Nikita Khrushchev who canceled most of the class outright. In all, out of Uncle Joe’s planned 30 cruisers, just 14 were finished and commissioned into service. Nikita himself was said to comment that the ships were good only for state visits and as a missile target.

This leads us to the hero of our tale.

Georgian-born Grigol Ordzhonikidze (Орджоникидзе) was a buddy of Uncle Joe and led a Red Army into that breakaway republic of their mutual birth in 1921 to bring them back into the fold of Moscow’s bosom. This didn’t stop the fantastically mustachioed revolutionary from passing in 1937 during the Great Purge, officially of a heart attack at just age 50.

This guy, who looks kinda like Gabe Kaplan from Welcome Back Carter and John Turturro had a baby...

This guy, who looks kinda like Gabe Kaplan from Welcome Back Carter and John Turturro had a baby…

Never officially out of standing, Stalin originally named a Chapayev-class cruiser after his buddy which was never completed during World War II and replaced on the list by a nicer Sverdlov-class vessel laid down at Plant #194 (Admiralty Shipyard, Leningrad) as serial #600 on 19 October 1949.

Ordzhonikidze was completed and joined the Baltic Fleet on 31 August 1952, just months before Stalin’s own demise.

Ordzhonikidze

Ordzhonikidze on parade in Leningrad, 1954. Note the pennants and giant illuminated red star in her rigging

Ordzhonikidze on parade in Leningrad, 1954. Note the pennants and giant illuminated red star in her rigging. Also, note the extensive radar suite used by these ships. The Soviets benefited from Lend-Lease British and American naval radars in 1944-45 and learned valuable lessons from both, meaning that by the 1950s they were roughly comparable.

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A beautiful new ship in the Baltic, she was tapped to perform several state visits with Soviet political figures– to include Khrushchev aboard– stopping in Helsinki for four days in 1954 as well as a later visit to Copenhagen.

The Soviet light cruiser ORDZHONIKIDZE at the Neva River, Leningrad, 1955, wearing 310 hull number. Note the Winter Palace in the background

Her next international stop was the UKs Portsmouth Harbor– the first time Soviet leaders visited Britain– where she arrived 18 April 1956 with two destroyers as escorts.

Baltika 01.08.1956 KRL pr. 68-bis Ordzhonikidze

Sverdlov-class Soviet cruiser Ordzhonikidze arrives in Portsmouth carrying Khrushchev April 1956 From the LIFE Magazine Archives – Carl Mydans Photographer

LIFE Magazine Archives – Carl Mydans Photographer

LIFE Magazine Archives – Carl Mydans Photographer

LIFE Magazine Archives – Carl Mydans Photographer

LIFE Magazine Archives – Carl Mydans Photographer

Greeted by the RM band

It seems, however, that a wetsuit-clad group of Soviet Naval Spetsnaz, who mounted an undersea patrol around the vessel, also accompanied the cruiser. It was during the visit that British MI6 frogman and WWII diving legend Lionel “Buster” Crabb disappeared on 19 April while allegedly investigating the props on Ordzhonikidze.

Commander Crabb

Commander Crabb. He was something of a true-life James Bond figure.

In the meantime, the Soviets reported to the British they had seen a diver swimming at the surface at 7.30 a.m. that morning between their ships, which sparked something of an international incident that queered the week that the Soviet Premier spent kissing babies in England.

crabb twelve big

Photo via UK National Archives

Photo via UK National Archives

Then, some 14 months later what was left of a body in a green Royal Navy type frogman suit, sans head and hands, was found floating in Chichester Harbor.

In 2007, a former Soviet Naval Spetsnaz combat diver by the name of Eduard Koltsov gave an interview to the BBC in which he stated that he had slit Crabb’s throat in undersea combat and proudly displayed both the knife he claims he used and the Order of the Red Star he was awarded for his actions. Several documents, heavily redacted, were released by the UK’s National Archives that kinda sorta but not really verified what happened.

Now back to the story of the Ordzhonikidze herself.

Орджоники́дзе 1960

Орджоники́дзе 1960

Ordzhonikidze on parade in Baltiysk (Pillau), 1960 on the anniversary of VE-Day. Note the salute .Kinda classy in a town that was German just 15 years before.

Ordzhonikidze on parade in Baltiysk (Pillau), 1960 on the anniversary of VE-Day. Note the salute. Kinda classy in a town that was German just 15 years before.

Transferring to the Black Sea Fleet, she arrived in Sevastopol in February 1961, though her time in the ancient sea would be brief.

On the other side of the globe, Indonesian strongman Sukarno was getting stronger, having dissolved Parliament in 1960 as well as several Islamic-based political parties while leaning on support from the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) — which brought the new nation firmly into Moscow’s arms as he sought out a policy of Confrontation (Konfrontasi) against the Dutch over West Papua New Guinea (Irian).

map

In February 1960, Khrushchev paid a visit to Sukarno, and soon after the floodgates of Communist fellowship opened.

Nikita Khrushchev and Sukarno, 1960, during the honeymoon stage that saw Indonesia make out like a bandit on gear from Moscow

This turned into a massive outlay of military gear transferred from the CCCP to Jakarta as Indonesia for a time became second only to Red China in Soviet arms deliveries ranging from 150,000 SKS-45 rifles to modern jet fighters. This included making the TNI-AL (Indonesian Navy) the most powerful submarine force in the Asia-Pacific region with a full squadron of Whiskey-class submarines, two torpedo retrievers, and one submarine tender, all purchased for a song. By comparison, no other Southeast Asian nation possessed a submarine force of any size, with the closest runner-up being the Royal Australian Navy having only six British-made Oberon’s.

Therefore, it made sense that the only major surface ship exported by the Cold War-era Soviet military was to be sent to Indonesia. Sure hundreds of patrol craft, missile boats, destroyers, and frigates were given away, but cruisers, battleships, and carriers before 1989? Nyet!

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On 5 April 1962, with a handful of Indonesian military personnel aboard, Ordzhonikidze departed from Sevastopol after spending 14 months undergoing modifications for operations in the tropics (more ventilators and generators) and leisurely sailed to the Far East, arriving 5 August in Surabaya.

Ordzhonikidze in the Indian Ocean on the way to Indonesia

Ordzhonikidze in the Indian Ocean on the way to Indonesia

Btw, if the shifting hull numbers on our cruiser have you confused, don’t be as they are more of a temporary tactical marking than anything else. The Soviet Navy’s pennant numbers were related to the fleet in which the ship was serving, so if you changed fleets you changed numbers. Further, there is evidence to support that Moscow changed the whole shebang at least once or twice just to add to the ship-watching confusion in the West, making the fact that our cruiser sports the hull numbers 057, 435, 310, and 21 inside of eight years petty common.

Once in the Far East, her crew proceeded to work side-by-side with 1,200 handpicked Indonesian sailors for six months, training men who had never conned a ship larger than a frigate to control a 14,000-ton cruiser that had everything written in Cyrillic. It was also likely that some of the local crew were simply Soviet officers and michmen wearing Indonesian uniforms. The Dutch naval intelligence service, MARID (Marine Inlichtingendienst), received information in the summer of 1962 that Soviet crews were largely manning Indonesian-flagged submarines and Tuepolev bombers.

Note the Indonesian crew side by side with the Soviets. There are few images of her afloat in TNI-AL service

Note the Indonesian crew side by side with the Soviets. There are few images of her afloat in TNI-AL service

KRI Irian and her Crew in the 1960s. Note the Western-style dungarees and dixie cups. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia) 

The helicopter looks to be an Aérospatiale SA 313 Alouette II, a type used in the 1960s by both the Indonesian Army and Navy. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

A closer look at the Alouette. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

Note the name board. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

Doesn’t the Alouette look like an erector set? Note the sunglasses and Panama-hatted VIP. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

Note the 37mm Bofors-style AAA twins and life rafts. Via Perpusnas RI (National Library of the Republic of Indonesia)

In the meantime, the Indonesians embarked on Operation Trikora, pitting their 16 newly acquired Soviet-built destroyers and frigates and dozen submarines against the Royal Netherlands Navy’s four destroyers and three subs in the area, pushing them out while infiltrating small landing teams and paratroopers through the area. Although the Dutch have a proud naval tradition of combat at sea that stretches back to the 16th century and would no doubt have given a good account of themselves if the balloon went up, quantity is a quality of its own.

By 5 August 1962, the Netherlands finally recognized Indonesia’s claim to Western New Guinea in the New York Agreement — without the big Russian cruiser having to fire a shot or even sail through the disputed waters. In October, a UN peacekeeping force arrived to effect the transfer.

To make it official, on 24 January 1963, Ordzhonikidze was decommissioned by the Soviets and five days later handed over to the Indonesian Navy who promptly commissioned her as the Kapal Republik Indonesia (Republic of Indonesia Ship) Irian (C201), becoming the fleet’s instant flagship.

On May 1, Indonesia officially annexed Western New Guinea as Irian Jaya, the nation’s 26th province, while the ship of the same name sat at anchor offshore as cement to the deal, bringing His Excellency President Dr. Ir. H. Sukarno to the islands for the occasion.

However, KRI Irian‘s continued service was limited at best, especially with the crisis abated.

Soon after her transfer, she suffered a collision with a submarine and then an escorting destroyer within weeks. In November 1963, six of her boilers were destroyed after being used improperly while underway, effectively crippling her as a warship less than a year after her transfer.

Irian slowly made for Vladivostok as soon as that port was clear of ice in the Spring of 1964 and spent the summer there being overhauled by the Soviets, who were reportedly shocked at how bad she had deteriorated in her short time with the Indonesians.

On a lighter note, they were surprised to see the officer’s wardroom had been converted to a chapel, something that had been banned on Soviet ships since 1922.

Escorted back to Surabaya by a Red Navy destroyer and fleet tug, Irian resumed operations in August 1964, which primarily consisted of leaving port every few months for a couple of days then heading back to the dock.

The next year, with Sukarno not needing outside muscle against the Dutch anymore, death squads liquidated Indonesian communists with the help of lists gathered by the CIA, and Soviet support for their weapons rightly vanished. In all, an estimated 1 million communists disappeared.

By 1967, Irian was in poor shape again and a new leader, Gen. Suharto, an Army man with a dim view on naval affairs and an even dimmer one on human rights turned the deteriorating former Soviet cruiser into a floating prison ship for his opponents.

This went on for a few years, and with the possibility of the Irian sinking at her moorings, she was beached on a sandbar in 1970. Sometime after this Soviet “tourists” came aboard and removed/destroyed sensitive equipment. Two years later she was sold for scrap to a Taiwan concern, where no doubt any secrets the ship had that the U.S. didn’t know about already were revealed.

In all, she lived just over 10 years and to this day was the largest warship the Indonesian navy operated, sticking with small (under 3,000-ton) frigates and corvettes since then.

I can find no remnants of the big cruiser on public display.

Of Irian’s 13 completed sisters, most remained in Soviet service until the end of the Cold War although their usefulness in a naval battle in the age of anti-ship missiles and combat jets was questionable, even though several were equipped as missile slinging hybrids. Stricken when the Wall came down, they were quickly (or in the case of sistership Murmansk, not so quickly) scrapped.

Just one remains– Mikhail Kutuzov, preserved as a museum ship in Novorossiysk, part of the last Russian presence on the Black Sea, where she sits as an important reminder to the Ukrainians of Tsar Putin’s reach.

Mikhail Kutuzov museum ship

Mikhail Kutuzov museum ship

As for the frogman Crabb, he is remembered by a monument at Milton Cemetery, Milton Road, Portsmouth, though it is still not clear how he disappeared.

Milton Cemetery, Milton Road, Portsmouth crabb

Finally, in Papua/Irian, a local insurgency against the Indonesian authorities that began in 1963 continues to this day.

Specs:

In Indonesian service, via Shipbucket

In Indonesian service, via Shipbucket

Displacement: 13,600 tons standard, 16,640 tons full load
Length: 210 m (689 ft. 0 in) overall, 205 m (672 ft. 7 in) waterline
Beam: 22 m (72 ft. 2 in)
Draught: 6.9 m (22 ft. 8 in)
Installed power: 6 boilers, 118,100 shp (88,100 kW)
Propulsion: 2 shaft geared steam turbines
Speed: 32.5 knots (60.2 km/h; 37.4 mph)
Range: 9,000 nautical miles (17,000 km; 10,000 mi) at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Complement: 1,250
Armament:
12 × 152 mm (6 in)/57 cal B-38 guns in four triple Mk5-bis turrets
12 × 100 mm (3.9 in)/56 cal Model 1934 guns in 6 twin SM-5-1 mounts
32 × 37 mm (1.5 in) anti-aircraft guns
10 × 533 mm (21 in) torpedo tubes
Armour:
Belt: 100 mm (3.9 in)
Conning tower: 150 mm (5.9 in)
Deck: 50 mm (2.0 in)
Turrets: 175 mm (6.9 in)
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Enter the forgotten lever-action semi-auto

With my recent acquisition of a Francotte-style rifle (my poor beat down Nepalese 1878) I have spent some time researching other Francotte firearms. One of which is among the oddest ducks I have ever seen:

The Model 1910 La Francotte-Automatique carabine

Francotte Model 1910 5 Francotte Model 1910 6

This Edwardian era little 6mm centerfire had an 8-shot detachable magazine but still used a modified Martini short-throw lever action, just like the old-school Francottes of the 19th Century.

However, once you loaded the first round into the chamber via the lever, each reload came semi-auto from the box mag. You could also lock out the self-loading feature and cycle the weapon manually via the more traditional lever.

Francottesemiautomaticrifle6mm.jpg~original

The Liege, Belgium-made gun weighed in at 4.5-pounds flat, was 37-inches long overall, and cost 150 francs in pre-WWI France.

Further, it was a take-down design, meaning it could be easily broken down into two pieces each about 17-20 inches long for easy carry. It was marketed as a light but effective small game and target rifle to the modern velocipedestrienne of the day in the same vein as the Marlin Bicycle rifle.

Francotte Model 1910 8

They are pretty rare as few were made.

I found one that was valued at a Rock Island Auction (where many of these images come courtesy from) a while back at $1500-$2500.

Francotte Model 1910 crest

An aspect not much seen

Inside a Paladin gun tube

U.S. Army Soldiers from Alpha Battery, 2nd Battalion 29th Field Artillery Regiment at the National Training Center in Fort Irwin, Calif., inspect the 155mm gun tube for calibration on the Paladin Vehicle to prepare for Decisive Action Rotation 14-10, Sept. 11, 2014. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Charles Probst)

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