Partisan detachment


Soviet partisan detachment , was the main organisational form of the Soviet partisan units.
Numerical and structural complement of the partisan detachment varied, with usual number of about 100 to several hundred personnel, organised in the 3—4 companies, 3 platoons each, 3 sections each. Detachment was commanded by commander and commissary, who were aided by staff head and staff, and by deputies on recon, diversions and logistics with their respective sub-units. Bigger detachments had heavy weapons sub-units.
Each detachment maintained primary structures of the Communist Party and Komsomol.
From 9 September 1942 the Belorussian Headquarters of the Partisan Movement classified detachments by their numerical complement: 100–150, 151–350, 351 and more personnel.
By their objectives, detachments could be: common, diversionist-recon, cavalry, artillery, staff, reserve, local defense, marching.
On the BSSR territory 1255 distinguishable detachments had operated in 1941–1944, majority of them in the structures of the partisan brigades, but 203 separately.
The bigger detachment in certain conditions could be expanded into a partisan brigade, or into a partisan regiment.