David Fields
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What did the two navies learn about each other?
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The emphasis of this chapter is on what the Royal Navy learned about the culture and procedures of the Russian Navy during two-and-a-half decades of cooperation. Illustrations from face-to-face experiences gathered by the authors support some general hypotheses about Russian ‘top-downism’, stove-piping, enslavement to fixed procedures regardless of the given circumstances as well as the preference of depth over breadth in officer training. To balance these perceptions, an attempt is made to assess Russian impressions of the Royal Navy – often surprisingly positive. The use of the authors’ ‘lived experience’ brings colour and the human element to the Russian way of doing business not widely available in other sources on the subject. An element of humour humanises some of these encounters and seeks to add some meat to the bare bones of these interactions. ‘What were the Russians like?’ is a question frequently asked, the more so in the light of the invasion of Ukraine and the loss of direct access. Here, an attempt is made to answer that question – especially for those in the current and future Royal Navy who will need to assess and even second-guess their maritime adversary for years to come.

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The Royal and Russian Navies

Cooperation, Competition and Confrontation

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