Svetlana-class light cruisers. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com
A letter of the German naval attache in Japan dated Tokyo, Japan 12 January 1938 referred to the Japanese newspaper Asahi which reported on 11 January from Hong Kong that a reliable source stated that the Soviet Union inted to increase her naval Far East force at Vladivostok. This was to be executed after the ice smelt in spring 1938. Transferred were the cruisers Krasny Kavkas (1) and Provintern (2), the destroyers Petrovski (3) and Dsershinky (4), a minelayer and 6-600 tons submarines. Underway would they visited Singapore, Hong Kong and other British naval strongpoints.
Notes
1. Krasny Kavkaz. Admiral Nakhimov-class cruiser preceded by Svetlana-class succeeded by Kirov-class, laid down as Admiral Lazarev by Russud Dockyard, Nikolayev, Ukraine on 31 October 1913, launched on 21 June 1916, renamed Krasny Kavkaz on 14 December 1926, design modified and completed, commissioned on 25 January 1932, training ship since 12 May 1947 and sunk as a target on 21 November 1952.
2. Part of Svetlana-class cruisers preceded by Muraviev Amurski-class succeeded by Admiral Nakhimov-class, laid down by Russo-Baltic Shipyard, Reval [Tallinn], Estonia as Svetlana on 7 December 1913, launched on 27 November 1915, unfinished transferred to Petrograd, renamed Profintern on 5 February 1925, completed in October 1926, commissioned on 1 July 1928, renamed Krasny Krym on 31 October 1939, training ship since November 1954 and stricken in July 1959.
3. Fidonisy-class or Kerch-class destroyer preceded by Derzky-class succeeded by Opytny-class. Laid down as Korfu by Naval Shipyard, Nikolayev, Ukraine on 23 May 1916, launched on 10 October 1917, in German, Ukrainian and then inSoviet hands in 1920, renamed Petrovsky on 5 February 1925, renamed Zheleznyakov on 25 June 1939, transferred to Bulgaria on 18 December 1947, given back on 15 september 1949, renamed as barracks ship PKZ-62 on 8 April 1953, stricken on 10 July 1956 and broken up in 1957.
4. Dzerzhinsky. Part of Fidonisy-class or Kerch-class destroyers preceded by Derzky-class succeeded by Opytny-class. Ordered on 17 March 1915, laid down as Kaliakria on 29 October 1915, launched on 14 August 1916, commissioned on 30 October 1917, renamed Dzerzhinsky on 24 November 1926, commissioned on 28 August 1929 and sunk when striking a mine off Sevastopol on 13 May 1942 and stricken on 24 June.
Source
High Command of the Kriegsmarine (OKM). Case 36.