The Sovetsky Soyuz-class battleships (Project 23), also
known as "Stalin's Republics", were a class of battleships begun by
the Soviet Union in the late 1930s but never brought into service.
They were designed in response to the battleships being built by
Germany. Only four hulls of the sixteen originally planned had been
laid down by 1940, when the decision was made to cut the program to
only three ships to divert resources to an expanded army rearmament
program.
The K-1000 battleship was rumoured to be a type of advanced
battleship produced by the Soviet Union at the beginning of the
Cold War. Soviet intelligence agencies actively encouraged the
circulation of rumours about the type, which were reprinted by
several Western journals including Jane's Fighting Ships.
The Kronshtadt-class battlecruisers, with the Soviet
designation as Project 69 heavy cruisers, were ordered for the
Soviet Navy in the late 1930s. Two ships were started but none were
completed due to World War II. These ships had a complex and
prolonged design process which was hampered by constantly changing
requirements and the Great Purge in 1937. They were laid down in
1939, with an estimated completion date in 1944, but Stalin's naval
construction program proved to be more than the shipbuilding and
armaments industries could handle. Prototypes of the armament and
machinery had not even been completed by 22 June 1941, almost two
years after the start of construction. This is why the Soviets
bought twelve surplus 38-centimeter (15.0 in) SK C/34 guns, and
their twin turrets, similar to those used in the Bismarck-class
battleships, from Germany in 1940. The ships were partially
redesigned to accommodate them, after construction had already
begun, but no turrets were actually delivered before Operation
Barbarossa.
Only Kronshtadt's hull survived the war reasonably intact
and was about 10% complete in 1945. She was judged obsolete and the
Soviets considered converting her into an aircraft carrier, but the
idea was rejected and both hulls were scrapped in 1947.
The Stalingrad-class battlecruiser, also known in the Soviet
Union as Project 82, was intended to be built for the Soviet Navy
after World War II. Three ships were ordered, but none were ever
completed.
A heavy cruiser was designed before the Second World War as
an intermediate between the light cruiser Kirov and Chapayev
classes and the Kronshtadt-class battlecruisers. The specification,
or OTZ in Russian, was issued in May 1941, but plans were shelved
with the invasion of the Soviet Union by Germany. Construction was
proposed again in 1943. After a lengthy design period, which
Premier Joseph Stalin—a major supporter of the project—often had a
hand in, keels for two ships were laid at the Marti South Shipyard
in Nikolayev (1951) and the Baltic Works in Leningrad (1952) and a
third ship was planned for the shipyard in Severodvinsk.
The Project 82 design which was ordered would have been much
larger than the original intermediate design, so much so that they
were considered the successors to the Kronshtadts, which had been
canceled at the outbreak of World War II. As envisioned by Stalin,
the Stalingrad battlecruisers' role would be to disrupt and break
up an enemy's light cruisers when they approached the Soviet coast.
However, after his death in March 1953, the ships were canceled by
the Ministry of Transport and Heavy Machinery. Only the incomplete
hull of Stalingrad was launched; used as a floating target for
anti-ship missiles, it was scrapped around 1962.
The Soviet Union, by the late 1930s Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
believed that his nation, like all the other major naval powers,
should once again begin the construction of battleships. Ignoring
the restrictions of the 1936 London Naval Agreement, Stalin ordered
the construction of four battleships of no less than 58,000 tons
(10,000 tons more than the contemporary U. S. Iowas) and nine
16-inch main guns (the same armament as the Iowas). The Soviets
were able to purchase design assistance from the preeminent U. S.
naval architectural firm of Gibbs & Cox, but their hopes to buy
guns, mountings, armor plate, and perhaps even a complete U. S.
battleship were frustrated by the Franklin Roosevelt
administration. Sovyetskiy Soyuz, Sovyetskaya Byelorussiya, and
Sovyetskaya Ukraina were laid down in 1938-1939. None was ever
completed. The three ships (a fourth, Sovyetskaya Rossija, was
never laid down) would have far exceeded the limits of the
Washington Treaty and were scheduled for completion,
optimistically, in 1941. Although it is generally believed that
their construction was halted by the German invasion of the Soviet
Union commencing in June 1941, building was actually canceled in
1940, and the incomplete rusty hulls, home to thousands of crows,
were dismantled in the late 1940s.
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