A question in a pub quiz during my summer break caused me to
listen more carefully – “Where is Transnistria?” Not one of the teams got it
right and when the correct answer was given, ‘Moldova’’, one team didn’t
believe such a country even existed. In fairness, it does have a Ruritanian sound
to it, but the quizmaster was correct, even if his answer might be contested in
the Transnistrian capital of Tiraspol.
Transnistria has also been in the news in recent weeks. The
Russian Deputy PM Dmitry Rogozin was barred from EU airspace when he tried to
visit Moldova, to meet the pro-Russian President.
Moldova (historically known as Moldavia) is sandwiched
between Romania and Ukraine on the River Dniester. The Moldavian Soviet
Socialist Republic was created in 1940 largely from the Soviet annexation of
Bessarabia and the lands occupied by Romania. It declared its independence from
the USSR in 1991 and became the modern Republic of Moldova with its capital at
Chisinau.
Transnistria is situated on the east bank of the Dniester
and in the Soviet period was an autonomous part of the Ukrainian SSR. It has
majority ethnic Ukrainian and Russian population that opposed Moldavian
language laws and closer links to Romania. Moldavian and Romanian languages are
very similar.
Separatist forces in Transnistria declared their
independence in September 1990 as the Pridnestrovian Moldavian Soviet Socialist
Republic (PMR). Just to confuse everyone further, ‘Prinestrovie’ is the Russian
name for Transnistria. It became one the unrecognised republics like Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, although some argue that the separation in Transnistria is
more political than ethnic.
Moldova had no army other than paramilitary and police
units. By the end of the conflict they had recruited some 25,000 men, with
equipment from Soviet stores and some support from Romania. The PMR got weapons
from the Russian 14th Army and received active support from this
force that included 14,000 professional troops. The PMR recruited around 9,000
troops supported by Cossack volunteers.
There were a number of minor military incidents in late 1990
and 1991, but the war properly started in March 1992 when Moldova was admitted
as a member of the UN. There were three main areas of conflict.
The first was in the village of Cocieri, on the east side of
the Dniester, but held by Moldovans who ejected PMR police and built defence
lines around three villages. Both sides
amassed significant numbers of troops who fought intermittently for several
weeks. A second bridgehead was created in the Cosnita area and similar fighting
took place.
The most serious fighting was in the city of Bendery when
Moldovan troops attempted to establish control and arrested a Major from the
Russian 14th Army. Three Russian T64 tanks were destroyed, but
overwhelming PMR and Russian forces captured the town. The Moldovan air force,
using MiG-29’s sought to blow up the bridges across the Dneister, to stop 14th
Army units crossing into Moldova.
A ceasefire was agreed in July 1992 and the Joint Control Commission
was established with peacekeeping forces from Russia, PMR and Moldova. Although
the Russian forces are much smaller, this arrangement remains in place to this
day.
For wargaming purposes, 1990’s Russian troops will do for
both sides, although the irregular forces and police units had a variety of
paramilitary uniforms. I gamed the period in 6mm, so the differences are
marginal.
The 1992 conflict is pretty difficult for the Moldovan army,
being outnumbered due the intervention of the Russian army. A conflict today
would be different because the Russian forces are much smaller and could not be
reinforced through Ukraine. The PMR forces number around 5,000, plus 1000
Cossacks, supported by a few tanks, artillery and APCs. The Russian forces have
been reduced to some 1500 men in two motor rifle battalions and support units.
The modern Moldovan army is a small professional force
consisting of nearly 6,000 men in three motor rifle brigades, one artillery
brigade and a Special Forces battalion. It has some 300 AIFV/APCs, 227 artillery
pieces, including ATMs, AA guns and missile systems. The air force had 31
MiG-29 aircraft, but these were sold to the USA in 2006. Today, the air force
only has transport aircraft and 8 Mi-8 helicopters, supported by SAMs. The
Moldovan army is part of NATO’s Partnership for Peace and has military
agreement with Romania.
A recent episode of the excellent US drama ‘Madam Secretary’
included a Russian attempt to take over Bulgaria, countered by a NATO armed
response - another interesting ‘what-if’ for modern gamers in the region.
My pulp forces include the East Transnistrian Border Police, although the only reason I knew about the place was my brother served in the Peace Corps in Moldova.
ReplyDeleteThat's an interesting placement. I haven't been to Transnistria, but I was briefly in Moldova. It's actually a very attractive place, once you put to one side war, politics and poverty...
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