The fate of Krasnoflotsk after the Soviet withdrawal

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After the last Soviet troops left Latvia in 1993, the Krasnoflotsk or Olmani coastal defence battery also came into the possession of the Latvian National Defence Forces. Soon the orphaned property began to be seized by for-profit prospectors.

In 1993, troops withdrew from Olmani, taking missiles and shells with them. Everything else - buildings, equipment and other belongings - was handed over to the Latvian government. For a time, the Latvian Home Guard guarded the army campus. The Latvian NBS considered keeping the coastal defence battery so that it could be used for both training and defence in the future. The existence of such a coastal defence battery would give Latvia military control over the Irbene Strait and provide a strong defence in case of political escalation. The Tārgale Parish Council also insisted on preserving the site for tourism. The then Executive Director of the Parish Council, Ivars Smukkalns, appealed to both regional and national authorities on more than one occasion to entrust the management of the site to the local municipality. The whole of Europe would have come to see the unique coastal defence battery, just as Europeans now come to see Sveaborg Fortress, which also houses Russian cannons and has been awarded UNESCO World Heritage status.

Unfortunately, none of the plans were realised due to lack of money, and the coastal battery was abandoned to its fate, with the army town and the cannons being looked after for a while by culture and history enthusiasts Edgars and Zoja Sīļi. However, 200 tonnes of first-class metal gave no rest to thieves and vandals. The town's belongings and possessions were looted by marauders, who also ransacked the border guard post on the Irbe River. The cannons themselves managed to stay in position for another three years, but were also scrapped in 1996. After the black metal thieves came the cable thieves, the powerful diesel generators were dismantled, the rangefinder was replaced, and the military experts stole the formularies and blueprints. In 2006, two people under the influence of alcohol set fire to the barracks by carelessly handling fire. Both died in the fire. All that was left of the barracks were brick walls. A unique legacy of military history has been destroyed and abandoned. Now it is only a rare military history enthusiast who wanders into it.
 

Storyteller: diggers.lv; Wrote down this story: Valdis Kuzmins, Jana Kalve
Used sources and references:

Olmans. Battery No.456 (diggers.lv)

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Related objects

Olman Battery No.456 (Soviet military base "Krasnoflotska")

The first coastal defence batteries for the defence of the Irbe Strait were built after 1912, when the Baltic Fleet Mine-Artillery Defence Position Plan was approved, which included several coastal defence batteries and sea mine-laying.

The Irbe Strait position was the furthest south, and its task was to block any enemy access to the Gulf of Riga. The main emphasis was on sea mines, tens of thousands of which were laid in the Irbe Strait during WWI by ships of the Baltic Fleet. It was not until 1916 that coastal defence batteries began to be built on the southern tip of the island of Saaremaa, Cape Sorve. Seven batteries were built in total, and Battery 43 was equipped with 305 mm guns. No defence batteries were built on the Latvian coast of the Irbe Strait.

Even after the establishment of the Republic of Latvia, the Latvian army and navy did not establish artillery positions to defend the Irbe Strait.

The situation changed after the mutual assistance pact between the Republic of Latvia and the USSR of 5 October 1939, which provided for a contingent of the Red Army and the Baltic Naval Fleet to be stationed in Kurzeme. Soviet plans also included the establishment of a coastal defence system based on the 1912 plan, with improvements. The plan was to build coastal defence batteries on the site of the Liepaja fortress, with new batteries south of Ventspils (Battery No 46) and two batteries in the narrowest part of the Irbe Strait near Mikeltornis. Already after the occupation and annexation of Latvia, the coastal defence plans of the Baltic Navy were supplemented and by June 1941 the 207th Artillery Division with five batteries was planned to be established in the northern part of Kurzeme. Two batteries were to be set up in the vicinity of Mikeltornis - Battery 40 at Lūžņa with 130 mm B-13 guns in reinforced concrete fortifications, and Battery 117 at Olmani (a place designated on Latvian army maps as Ķesteri) with 152 mm MU-2 guns. As the development of the 152 mm guns was not completed, temporary wooden platforms were built on the reinforced concrete fortifications of the battery and four more 130 mm guns were installed. Both batteries were completed by June 1941, but the batteries could not be traced in the war against the German 291st Infantry Division, and their crews moved to the island of Saaremaa.

At the end of WWII, the German Army Group "Courland" was quite serious about possible Soviet landings in northern Courland, especially after the ice melted in the Gulf of Finland and on the west coast of Estonia. Improvised coastal defence batteries were deployed all along the Kurzeme coast. The Soviet Battery No 40, Gerate Batterie Sommer of the 289th Artillery Division with two 122 mm Soviet howitzers, was stationed in reinforced concrete positions near Luzhne. In the area of Battery 117's position was Battery 2 of the 530th Artillery Division with three 152 mm Soviet trophy guns, three 37 mm zenith drones, one 20 mm four-barrel zenith drones, two 75 mm anti-tank guns and two mortars for illumination.

After the end of active hostilities in May 1945, the USSR began to rebuild the coastal defence system on the Kurzeme coast. In the autumn of 1945, a temporary Battery 456 with 152 mm guns of the Kane system was deployed near the Olmaņi farm, which was renamed "Krasnoflotskaya".

In 1952, the temporary guns of the battery were replaced by the latest 152 mm MU-2 weapon systems. The battery consisted of four reinforced concrete gun emplacements, a reinforced concrete command post with a range-finder turret and technical buildings. The construction of the battery was completed in 1958.

In 1958, after the dismantling of the Lūžņa coastal defence battery, it was replaced by a mobile 130 mm SM-4-1 gun Battery No 343. The mobile guns did not have reinforced concrete gun emplacements, but several log and sand structures were built.

Battery 343 operated until the early 1960s, and Battery 456 until 1975, when it was preserved. The battery positions were used to deploy S-125 air defence missile complexes, as well as the 10th Coastal Defence Artillery-Missile Regiment with CP-2 Sopka missile complexes, and the infrastructure was modified accordingly.

The Soviet Army transferred the infrastructure of the Olmaņi and Lūžņa batteries to the Republic of Latvia in 1993.