|
2 Introduction
Most of available reports and
publications about histories of particular
projects, institutions or personalities of the
ex-Soviet space program tend to emphasize a role
of respective institution or personality in the
overall program. This is explainable in a
situation, when the basis of original
documentation, available to researchers, remains
extremely narrow and personal memoirs remain the
predominant source of information.
This paper represents an
attempt to survey an overall evolution of the
Soviet rocket and space industry (what demands
combining and cross-checking of fragments,
available from a variety of individual sources).
It is focused at company/Chief Designer level and
is to be accompanied by another report, focused
on higher levels.
The paper tracks basic
evolution of the Soviet rocket and space industry
after the 1946, when an original set of
institutions was established. The framework of
the report does not allow to pretend for a
comprehensive description of the full genealogy
of the Soviet space industry. However, analysis
of "genealogical trees" of the original
enterprises allows to reveal typical features of
development of rocket and space industry in the
Soviet Union.
2 Formation of the Soviet
rocket industry
As a background remark, it is
worth reminding some principal features of the
Soviet society, which substantially influenced
development of the Soviet rocket and space
industry from its very beginning.
The Soviet Union was a strictly
hierarchical society with a single pyramid of
power controlling all aspects of its life.
Despite presence of formal bodies, representing
different branches of power (the government -
Council of Minister, the parliament - Supreme
Soviet, the legal branch with Supreme Court at
the top), the ultimate control was executed from
just one place - Politburo (or Presidium) of the
Central Committee of CPSU. All industrial and
scientific enterprises belonged to the state,
which could reallocate resources and manpower in
any way, which top Communist Party authorities
would direct.
Remembering that, it is not so
surprising, that unlike the United States,
France, Britain, a birthday of the rocket
industry of the Soviet Union is known precisely.
It was on 13 May 1946, when Joseph Stalin signed
a Decree of the Council of Ministers of the USSR
#1017-419ss "Issues of jet armament".
That Decree formulated the
first program for development of missile
technology in the USSR and allocated
responsibilities for segments of that program
among the Ministries. In accordance with that
Decree a number of industrial enterprises were
established or re-organized within few months,
thus forming an original set-up of the Soviet
rocket industry:
- Science and Research
Institute #88 (NII-88) was established at
the Ministry of Armaments (MV) to become
the principal developer of liquid-fueled
ballistic missiles;
- NII-885 was established at
the Ministry of Electric Industry (later
- Ministry of Industry of Communications
Means);
- Special Design Bureau at
Kompressor Plant (of the Ministry of
Machine-building and Instrument
Engineering), which since 1941 developed
unguided solid-propellant missiles
launchers, was reorganized to the State
Union Design Bureau on Special
Machine-building (GSKB spetsmash) and was
set responsible for launch complexes,
fueling and ground support equipment;
- the Ministry of Aviation
industries, set responsible for liquid
rocket engines and aerodynamic testing
(as well as for winged missiles) already
possessed earlier established OKB-456 on
liquid rocket engines and NII-1, former
RNII, which was transferred from People's
Commissariat of Ordnance in 1944;
- NII-10 of the Ministry of
Ship-building Industry (MSP) was
additionally tasked to develop gyroscopes
for missiles.
Another special feature of
early history of the Soviet rocket industry is
that responsibility for development of
liquid-fueled missiles was given the Ministry of
Armaments, i.e. to artillery industry, rather
than to the aviation industry.
The reason was two-fold. First,
leaders of the aviation industry did not desire
an extra job - and extra risk of punishment for a
quite possible failure. (The aviation industry
already got tasks to develop jet aviation and
cruise missiles, so ballistic missiles appeared
much less relevant and more risky addition to the
task list). On the other hand, the principal
force, interested in LRBMs, was a command of so
called Guard Mortar Units - special artillery
units, armed with unguided missiles (known as
"katyushas"), which were widely
deployed in the Soviet Army during the WWII.
Hence, it proves logical, that the Ministry of
Armaments, which was responsible for production
of artillery pieces, accepted the LRBM challenge
after the Ministry of Aviation Industry rejected
it.
However, because of this
peculiarity rocket and aviation industries in the
Soviet Union began developing separately. The
influence of that remains obvious even 50 years
after: because of the original separation there
is essentially no truly aerospace industry
in the former Soviet Union. With very few
exceptions, all industrial companies are either
in missiles and space or in aviation
business.
2 Further evolution (expansion)
As the missile program
advanced, the industry began to expand. In a
market economy such an expansion would go by
virtue of a Government placing more orders for
missiles and thus stimulating industry
contractors to develop their capabilities or to
switch them from aircraft to missiles. In the
administrative system of the Soviet Union that
was done in other ways.
In some cases, a
"plain" expansion occurred, when new
facilities were constructed for newly emerging or
expanding programs. That was the case, for
example, with missile and space factories,
constructed in late 50s near Krasnoyarsk and now
known as Krasmash and NPO of Applied Mechanics.
This approach, however, was an exception rather
than a rule.
More commonly, as some program
demonstrated promising capabilities, officials,
responsible for it, managed to pursuade higher
authorities to strap additional facilities to the
program. To deduce typical modes of that
"Soviet-type expansion" let us consider
further evolution of the principal original
rocket companies.
NII-88,
established as a lead organization on development
of ballistic missile technology, very soon grew
too big to hold all the program inside. Its first
formal "off-springs", however, appeared
yet at the very beginning. In 1946 Branch #1 was
established at Gorodomlya Island, where German
scientists were located until their repatriation
in 1950-53[]. The facility at Ostashkov
(apparently associated with former NII-88 Branch
#1) in 1958 became an independent enterprise, now
known as Zvezda. In 1947 construction was ordered
of the Branch #2, a test base for rocket engines
near Zagorsk. It was constructed in 1948 and
later became an independent NII-229, now known as
NII of Chemical Machine-building (NII Khimmash).
In 1956 Experimental Design
Bureaus #1 (on LRBM) and #2 (on liquid rocket
engines), which existed within NII-88 for a long
time, were separated to become independent
entities: OKB-1 and OKB-2, headed by Chief
Designers Sergey P. Korolyov and Alexey M.
Isayev, respectively.
The rest of NII-88 continued to
evolve in the same way, spawning new enterprises:
- NII of Measuring
Technology (NIIIT) in 1966;
- Agat Organization in 1973
and
- NII of Material Studies
(NIIMV), now Kompozit NPO, in 1975.
Thus, in 30 years the original
NII-88, now known as the Central Science and
Research Institute of Machine-building
(TsNIImash), gave birth to 7 independent
organization, which together formed the so called
"Podlipki bush" of space companies.
The mainstream of NII-88
development appears quite simple and
straightforward. It fits the concept of straight
development of a growing enterprise with
separation of divisions as they become too big to
manage.
This simple mode was, however,
facilitated by the circumstance, that main
production-related fragments (and associated
big-ticket programs) left NII-88 with OKB-1 and
OKB-2 in 1956.
A further evolution of OKB-1,
represented in Figure 1b, displays much more
complicated behavior.
A wide-spread belief about
Korolyov extensively spawning branches of his OKB
and generously giving out to them portions of his
own all-covering agenda, proves to be just one
part of the story.
Along with that mode of
expansion not a lesser role was played by a mode,
which could be referred to as
"seeding". That means loading of
already available enterprises with a work on a
Lead Developer (here - Korolyov's) projects. In
this mode a newly engaged enterprise remained
formally independent, but in fact the Lead
Developer did obtain some influence on a new
co-developer or manufacturer (and thus increased
its own "weight", though to less extent
than in the case of full-scale acquisition of
that company).
In the history of Soviet rocket
industry "seeding" was first
demonstrated long before separation of OKB-1 from
NII-88.
As early as in 1947 Plants #66
and 385, in Urals were assigned for a serial
production of missiles and in December of 1947
the Serial Design Bureau #385 (SKB-385) was
established to supervise that. Sometime between
1950 and 1955 SKB-385 was promoted to a
"Leading" bureau, i.e. was allowed to
develop its own projects. It was not until 1955,
when SKB-385 was "loaded" with serial
production of the R-11 missiles, developed at
OKB-1 of NII-88, and Viktor Makeyev, the Lead
Designer of R-11, was appointed as a Chief
Designer of SKB-385. Thus, in terms of
organizational genealogy the former SKB-385 (now
known as "Makeyev KB" State Rocket
Center), is not a direct descendant of Korolyov's
OKB-1, but rather an "adopted child".
Similarly, the Plant #186 in
Dniepropetrovsk, which existed from 1944, was
loaded with a serial production of OKB-1's
missiles in 1951. The adjacent SKB-586 is,
however, rarely listed among "Korolyov's
descendants" - apparently because a
competing "school" was established
there with appointment of Mikhail K. Yangel as a
Chief Designer in 1954.
After 1956 major milestones in
OKB-1 expansion were:
- loading of the former
State Aviation Plant #1 with a serial
production of the R-7 ICBMs, beginning in
1957. To supervise the production at the
Plant, the Serial Design Department #25
was organized. In 1960 this Department
became OKB-1 Branch #3 and eventually, in
1974 - the Central Specialized Design
Bureau (TsSKB);
- In 1959 the OKB-1 Branch
#2 was established at the newly
constructed Plant #1001 (now Krasnoyarsk
Machine-building Plant, or Krasmash). It
was originally intended to supervise
serial production of the R-9 ICBMs.
However, as early as in 1960 its
principal original business changed to
the R-14 LRBM, developed by Yangel, and
in 1961 Branch #2 was transformed into an
independent OKB-10 [].
- The same 1959 OKB-1
acquired an adjacent artillery Design
Bureau, headed by Grabin. It was switched
to development of new, solid-propellant
LRBMs and then ICBMs. However, very soon
after death of Korolyov the
solid-propellant thematics was given away
by his successor Vasiliy P. Mishin to
NII-1 of the Ministry of Defense
Industry.
- In 1974 Mishin, accused of
the failure of the Moon program, was
removed from the post of Chief Designer
of the Bureau, which under him changed
the name from OKB-1 to the Central Design
Bureau of Experimental Machine-building
(TsKBEM). Viktor P. Glushko, the Chief
Designer of OKB-456, was appointed
instead. However, since Glushko would not
leave his own Bureau, the new company was
formed: Energia NPO, including both
TsKBEM and OKB-456. The agglomerate
existed until Glushko's death in 1989 and
then split into original parts, which got
names Energia NPO and Energomash NPO
respectively.
The history of OKB-1
illustrates, how expanded missile industry
gradually attracted enterprises of the
aviation-related facilities.
The history of Design Bureau by
Chief Designer Vladimir N. Chelomey gives a
remarkable example of seemingly more conventional
evolution of an aviation company towards missile
and space-related tasks.
First of all, it is necessary
to note, that there were two Design
Bureaus, headed by Chelomey.
The first was established in
1944 at Plant #51 (former Polikarpov's) with a
mission to make a V-1-like cruise missile. That
OKB, however, was disbanded in 1953 under a
pressure of more influential competitors.
Nevertheless, in 1954, a new small Special Design
Group (SKG) was established to resume development
of cruise missiles (with folding wing). In 1952
the SKG was promoted to This Group soon (in 1955)
became full-scale Experimental Design Bureau -
OKB-52 - and was given Reutov Mechanical Plant.
It is there, where this company resides now under
a name of NPO mashinostroyenia. In the meantime,
however, it experienced a dramatic evolution,
with fast soaring and subsequent fall.
In 1958-59 the OKB-52 began to
expand its operations into ballistic missile and
space field -- and to expand itself. In 1958
NII-642 was attached to OKB-52 as a Branch. In
October 1960 OKB-23, headed by Vladimir M.
Myasishchev till then, became another Branch of
OKB-52. Khrunichev Plant was assigned to OKB-52
as a production facility for its ICBMs. Finally,
OKB-301, formerly headed by Semyon A. Lavochkin,
was also attached to OKB-52 in late 1962.
A role of personal relations is
clearly observed in the history of Chelomey KB.
First, the original Chelomey's OKB, based at
Plant #51, was taken over upon insistence of
Artem I. Mikoyan, who began a competitive
project, but had a very influential partner -
Sergo L. Beria, son of Minister of Security
Lavrentiy P. Beria. Perhaps, having learned that
lesson, Chelomey in late 50s appointed son of
Nikita S. Khrushchev, Sergey, as his Deputy. Most
people outside of OKB-52 believe, that that was
instrumental in getting a favorable attitude of
the top state management and, in particular, made
it easier to acquire new Branches.
After removal of Nikita
Khrushchev in 1964 Chelomey's influence
diminished and all the branches were gradually
taken away by competitors or separated
themselves. For example, Lavochkin OKB-301 regain
independence and was in 1965 loaded with
interplanetary probes job, passed from OKB-1.
To complement the previous
consideration, concentrated on prime contractors
(or "Lead Developers", in Russian
terms), let us discuss the evolution of NII-885,
the institute, which was established to develop
guidance systems.
NII-885
originated in 1938 with a mission to develop
systems of radio control for military articles.
In 1946 the Institute was assigned to the
Ministry of Electric Industry and renamed (for a
very short while) to NII of Special Technology.
NII-885 was based on the
territory of the Plant #1 of People's
Commissariat of Defense (later Ministry of Armed
Forces), which used to manufacture military
telephones and telegraph equipment and later
became the Experimental Plant of NII-885. After
1946 the Institute quickly grew and in 1952-54 a
number of ?non-profile? divisions (long-range
communications, computers, etc.) were shed to
become independent bodies and to allow NII-885 to
concentrate on development of missile guidance
systems.
In 1963 the Institute, where
for a long time fought directions of radio
guidance (headed by Chief Designer Mikhail
Ryazanskiy) and of inertial guidance (headed by
lower-ranked Nikolay A. Pilyugin), separated to
two parts - NII of Instrument Engineering (NIIP)
and NII of Automatic Instrument Engineering
(NIIAP).
In 1978 Radiopribor NPO was
formed on the basis of NIIP and the Radiopribor
plant. In 1992 the NPO dissolved back to the
Radiopribor Plant and NII, which is now called
Russian NII of Space Instrument Engineering
(RNIIKP).
The last of the original
companies, listed in Section 2 - GSKB
Spetsmash - has an apparently
straightforward history. After the Bureau,
originally established in 1941 as SKB of
Kompressor Plant, was re-organized in August
1946, it continues to develop launch complexes
for missiles and only once changed its name to
the current Design Bureau of General
Machine-building (KBOM).
2 Conclusion
The study demonstrates, that
the evolution of the Soviet rocket and space
industry is more complicated, than usually
imagined.
Several typical features could
be extracted from histories of the considered
companies.
- Lead Developers of rockets
and space systems demonstrate more
aggressive expansion, while narrower
focused institutions develop more
smoothly.
- The expansion of
industrial enterprises occurred primarily
in the form of administrative
acquisitions or re-subordinations.
A typical form was a
takeover of an existing company and its
conversion into a Branch of an acquirer.Less violent mode envisioned
loading of a new company with a work for
a project, developed by a Lead Developer.
In some cases (typical
for Stalin epoch), appealing facilities
could be taken over by an influential
company, while a previous collective
would be thrown away.
|