Сухопутные войска Российской Федерации Sukhoputnye voiska Rossíyskoy Federátsii
-Russian Ground Forces (SV)
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Moskovsky Military District
Leningradsky Military District
Volga-Uralsky Military District
Sibirsky Military District
North Caucasus Red Banner Military District
Moskovsky Military District
Leningradsky Military District
Volga-Uralsky Military District
Sibirsky Military District
North Caucasus Red Banner Military District
RUSSIAN GROUND FORCES COLLAR INSIGNIA 2008 www.tridentmilitary.com
Space Forces
Strategic Rocket Forces
Ground Forces
Motor Rifle
Tank
Airborne
Rocket and Artillery
Enginers
Topographical
Signal
Transportation
Railroad
Pipeline troops
Military Railroads transport and communications
Chemical
Medical
Air Force
Air Defense (PVS)
Military Justice
FSB (ex-KGB)
Border Guards
Militsyia
RUSSIAN GENERAL AND MARSHAL SHOULDER BOARDS
RGMSB1. Russian Marshal everday shoulder boards.$125.00pr RGMSB3. Russian Marshal subdued field shoulder boards. For camouflage uniform. $125.00pr RGMSB5. Russian Marshal shoulder boards for the white shirt.$125.00pr RGSB31.Russian General of the Army parade shoulder boards. Early type with large marshal star and smaller star in wreath. No longer in use, replaced with 4 smaller stars. $85.00 RGSB35.Russian General of the Army shoulder boards for coat. Slip on.Early type with large marshal star and smaller star in wreath. No longer in use, replaced with 4 smaller stars. $85.00 RGSB34.Russian General of the Army shirt shoulder boards. Early type with large marshal star and smaller star in wreath. No longer in use, replaced with 4 smaller stars. $85.00 RGSB33.Russian General of the Army subdued shoulder boards for the camouflage uniform. Early type with large marshal star and smaller star in wreath. No longer in use, replaced with 4 smaller stars. $85.00 RGSB32.Russian General of the Army everyday shoulder boards. Early type with large marshal star and smaller star in wreath. No longer in use, replaced with 4 smaller stars. $85.00 RGSB26.Russian 1 star general camouflage shoulder boards.$45.00pr
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RUSSIAN ARMY SHOULDER BOARDS
RSB23.Russian army enlisted ranks shoulder boards with cyrillic "VS".Slip on.$15.00 RSB11.Russian Armed forces Cadet shoulder boards with "K". $15.00pr RSB25.Russian army Warrant officer shoulder boards.$15.00pr RSB13.Russian Army officer shoulder boards for rank of Lt. through Captain.$15.00 RSB33.Russian Army officer white shoulder boards for white shirts.Rank of Lt. through Captain.$15.00pr RSB63.Russian Army officer parade shoulder boards for rank of Lt. through Captain.$15.00pr RSB14.Russian Army officer boards for rank of Major through Colonel.$15.00pr RSB32.Russian Army officer white shoulder boards for white shirts.Rank of Major through Colonel.$15.00pr RSB62.Russian Army officer parade shoulder boards for rank of Major through Colonel.$15.00pr
RUSSIAN RANK STARS,METAL RANK CHEVRONS,AND CAMOUFLAGE RANK SHOULDER BOARD SLIDES FOR OFFICERS.
9.Gold metal triple chevron for dress uniform.Rank of Sergeant. $10.00pr
Russian VSR camouflage shoulder board slides for the camouflage uniform
15.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides with "CBY"Souvorov's military school. $15.00pr 16.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides for officer candidates with yellow embr "K".$15.00pr 18.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides for 1st leutenant. $20.00pr 19.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides for rank of Captain. $20.00pr 20.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides for rank of Major. $20.00pr 22.Russian VSR camouflage shoulder slides for rank of Colonel. $20.00pr
RSBD1.Russian eagle shoulder board device for Cossacks. $5.95pr RSB36.Russian shoulder boards for the Suvorov Junior Military Schools.$15.00pr
RUSSIAN ARMY PATCHES www.tridentmilitary.com
Russian Ground Forces
R583A.Russian sleeve patch with star and wreath for land forces.on black $5.00 - R583B. As above but embroidered.$8.50 R1011. Russian Ground Forces breast patch.3.5cm x 12cm.$5.00
Motor Rifles Troops
R478A.Russian motor rifles sleeve patch. $5.00 - R478B.As above but embroidered.$8.50 - R924.Russian embroidered sleeve patch for the 242nd mobile rifle regiment of the North Caucasus military district.Old type.$10.00 - R920.Russian embroidered sleeve patch for
the 242nd mobile rifle regiment of the North Caucasus military district.Current type.$10.00
R921.Russian embroidered sleeve patch for the 712th separate motor rifle training battalion of the North Caucasus military district.$10.00 - R1314.Sevastopol Motor Rifles Regiment. $6.50 –
R714.Russian sleeve patch of the 2nd guards motor rifle division"Tamansky".$6.50
Tank Troops
R482.Russian Tank Forces sleeve patch. $5.00 - R999.Russian Tank troops breast patch.3.5cm x 12cm.Yellow on Black.$5.00 R752.Russian sleeve patch for the Zhitomir-Shepetovski Guards Tank Regiment.Heroism & Bravery.$6.00
Reconnaissance Troops
R719.Russian sleeve patch of the 68th Guards Reconnaissance battalion.$6.00 R893.Russian sleeve patch for the 46th Reconnaissance battalion.$6.00SOLD OUT R894.Russian breast patch for the 46th Reconnaissance battalion.$6.00SOLD OUT
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Rocket and Artillery Troops
R571A.Russian sleeve patch for rocket and artillery troops. $5.00 - R571B.Russian embroidered sleeve patch for rocket and artillery troops.$8.50 R1014. Russian breast patch for Rocket and Artillery troops.3.5cm x 12cm.Yellow on Black.$5.
R649.Sleeve patch for t he 280th mobile artillery brigade with motto "power,grandeur,glory" $5.0000 R1318.Russian sleeve patch for the 16802nd Rocket brigade in Kabarovsk. $6.00 R518.Russian Sleeve patch for the 464th missile brigade.$6.00
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Engineers
R623.Sleeve patch for engineering troops of Russia. $5.00 - R1320. Sleeve patch for the 236th Guards Engineer-Sapper Battalion. $6.50 R1331. Sleeve patch for Engineer and Construction Base. $6.00
Communications Troops
R477B. As above but embroidered.$8.50 R852. Russian army sleeve patch for the 1st Signals Brigade with motto: Russia, Honour, Heroism. $6.00 R1007.Russian communications troops breast patch.3.5cm x 12cm.Yellow on Black.$5.00
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Transportation Troops
R272A.Russian sleeve patch for Transportation troops.$5.00 - R272B.As above but embroidered.$8.50 - R974. Russian transportation troops breast patch on c amouflage.$6.00
Railroad Troops
R584.Russian sleeve patch for railroad troops $5.00 - R954B.Russian sleeve patch for the Railroad troops of the Russian Federation.$6.00R572A.Russian embroidered flag sleeve patch for railroad troops.$8.00 - R572B.Russian flag sleeve patch for
Railroad Troops.$5.00
Military Traffic Control Police
R213B. "D.P.S. V.A.I." Embroidered sleeve patch.$8.50 - R972."D.P.S. V.A.I."Embroidered Military traffic control police upper sleeve shevron.3cm x 12cm.$5.00 - R1013."D.P.S. V.A.I."Embroidered Military traffic control police breast patch.3cm x 10cm.Yellow on Black.$5.00 R1015. "Military Patrol" breast patch.Yellow on Black.2.4cm x 13cm.$3.50 - R1299.Sleeve patch for troops in the Northern Caucasus military region. $6.50 - S6.Transdnestria "V.A.I." Military Automobile traffic police breast badge. $15.00 - S7."V.A.I." Military automobile traffic police. $15.00
Construction Troops
R499.Sleeve patch for the Russian 293rd military construction brigade.$5.00 R853.Russian army sleeve patch of the Military Construction Service.$5.00
Medical
R480.Russian medical service's sleeve patch. $5.00
Topographical
RAPBB6.Parade breast badge for topographical troops. $12.00
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RUSSIAN NBC PROTECTION TROOPS
R624A. New sleeve patch for the chemical troops of Russia. $5.00 - R624B. As above but embroidered.$8.50 - R703.Russian sleeve patch for troops of nuclear,biological, chemical defence.$6.00 - R704.Russian sleeve patch for the Saratov High Command School of NBC Protection Troops. $5.00 R705.Russian sleeve patch of the headquarters of troops of NBC defence.$6.00 - R706. Russian sleeve patch for the NBC Protection Brigade of the North Caucasian Military District. $6.00 - R712.Russian sleeve patch for the NBC Protection Brigade of the M oscow Military District. $6.00 R1319. Sleeve patch for the 2nd Mobile NBC Protection Brigade. $6.50
Military Bases - Troops in Northern Caucasus
R256.Sleeve patch of the 62nd military base.(ex division). $6.00
ARMY SPECIALISTS
RAFSB1.Army enlisted ranks Master specialist badge.$10.00 - RAFSB2.Army enlisted ranks 1st class specialist badge.$8.00 RAFSB3.Army enlisted ranks 2nd class specialist badge. $8.00 - RAFSB4.Army enlisted ranks 3rd class specialist badge. $8.00 RAFSB5.Army officer Master specialist badge. $20.00 - RAFSB6.Army officer 1st class specialist badge. $15.00 RAFSB7.Army officer 2nd class specialist badge. $15.00 - RAFSB8.Army officer 3rd class specialist badge. $15.00
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Russian Ground Forces Сухопутные войска Российской Федерации Sukhoputnye voiska Rossíyskoy Federátsii
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Russian Ground Forces (Russian: Сухопутные войска Российской Федерации, tr.: Suhopútnyje vojská Rossíjskoj Federácii) are the land forces of the Russian Federation, formed from parts of the collapsing Soviet Army in 1992. This in turn, posed many economic challenges coupled with reforms to professionalize the force during the transitional phase that Russia had to endure due to the collapse of the Soviet Union. While the Russian Ground Forces in their present form are only 15 years old, Russian officials trace their antecedents' history through the Imperial Russian era back to the time of Kievan Rus. Since 1992 the Ground Forces have had to withdraw many thousands of troops from former Soviet garrisons abroad, while being extensively committed to the Chechen wars, and peacekeeping and other operations in the Soviet successor states (what is known in Russia as the "near abroad"). Most recently they clashed with Georgian forces in July 2008. Mission
The primary responsibilities of the Ground Forces are the protection of the state border, combat on land, the security of occupied territories, and the defeat of enemy troops. The Ground Forces must be able to achieve these goals both in nuclear war and nonnuclear war, especially without the use of weapons of mass destruction. Furthermore, they must be capable of protecting the national interests of Russia within the framework of its international obligations. The Main Command of the Ground Forces is officially tasked with the following objectives:[1] • • • • •
The training of troops for co mbat, on the basis of tasks deter mined by the Armed Forces' General Staff. The improvement of troops' structure and composition, and the optimization of their numbers, including for special troops. The development of military theory and practice. The development and introduction of training field manuals, manuals, and methodology. The improvement of operational and combat training of the Ground Forces.
History
As the Soviet Union dissolved there were some efforts made to keep the Soviet Armed Forces together as a single military for the new Commonwealth of Independent States. The last Minister of Defence of Soviet Union, Marshal Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, was appointed supreme commander of the CIS Armed Forces in December 1991.[2] Among the numerous treaties signed by varying republics in order to direct the transition period was a temporary agreement on general purpose forces, signed in Minsk on 14 February 1992. However, once it became clear that Ukraine, and potentially the other republics, were determined to undermine the concept of joint general purpose forces, and to form their own armed forces, the new Russian government made its move.[2] Boris Yeltsin signed a decree on the formation of a Russian Ministry of Defence on 7 May 1992, bringing the Russian Ground Forces into existence along with the other parts of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. At that time the General Staff was in the process of withdrawing tens of thousands of personnel from the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, the Northern Group of Forces in P oland, the Central Group of Forces in Czechoslovakia, the Southern Group of Forces in Hungary, and from Mongolia. Thirty-seven divisions had to be withdrawn from the four groups of forces and the Baltic States, and four military districts totalling 57 divisions were handed over to Belarus and Ukraine.[3] Some idea of the scale of the withdrawal can be gained from the division list here. For the dissolving Soviet Ground Forces, the withdrawal from the former Warsaw Pact states and the Baltic states was an extremely demanding, expensive, and debilitating process.[4] As the military districts that remained in Russia after the collapse of the Union consisted mostly of the mobilisable cadre formations, the Russian Ground Forces were to a large extent created by relocating the formerly full-strength formations from Eastern Europe to those under-resourced districts. However, the facilities in those districts were quite inadequate to house the flood of personnel and equipment returning from abroad, and many units "were unloaded from the rail wagons into empty fields."[5] The need for destruction and transfer of large amounts of weaponry under the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty also necessitated great adjustments. Post-Soviet reform plans
A reform plan was published on 21 July 1992 in Krasnaya Zvezda, the Ministry of Defence newspaper. Later one commentator said it was "hastily" put together by the General Staff "to satisfy the public demand for radical changes."[6] The General Staff, from that point, become a bastion of conservation, causing a buildup of troubles which later became critical. The reform plan advocated a change from an Army-Division-Regiment structure to a Corps-Brigade arrangement. The new structures were to be more able to
cope with a frontless situation and be more capable of independent action at all levels. Cutting out a whole level of command, leaving two rather than three higher echelons between the theatre headquarters and the fighting battalions would produce economies, increase flexibility, and simplify command-and-control arrangements.[7] The expected total changeover to this new structure actually proved to be rare, patchy, and sometimes reversed. More brigades appeared, but mostly as divisions that had eroded down to their new strengths, and new divisions, such as the new 3rd Motor Rifle Division in the Moscow Military District formed on the basis of disbanding tank formations, were formed rather than brigades. Few of the reforms planned in the early 1990s eventuated, for three reasons. Firstly, there was an absence of firm civilian political guidance, with Boris Yeltsin more interested in ensuring the Armed Forces were controllable and loyal, rather than reformed.[8] Secondly, declining funding did not assist matters, and thirdly, there was no firm consensus within the military about what reforms should be implemented. General Pavel Grachev, first Russian Minister of Defence (1992–96), for all his talk of reform, wished to preserve the old Soviet-style Army, with large numbers of low-strength formations and continued mass conscription. The General Staff and the armed services tried to preserve Soviet era doctrines, deployments, weapons, and missions in the absence of solid new guidance.[9] A British military expert, Michael Orr, makes a cogent case that the hierarchy had great difficulty fully understanding the changed situation because, as graduates of Soviet military academies, their education had given great operational and staff training, but in political terms had learned an ideology rather than a wide understanding of international affairs. Thus the generals could see only NATO expanding to the east, in contrast to Russian weakness, and could not reorient themselves, let alone the Armed Forces as a whole, to the new opportunities and challenges they faced.[10] Internal crisis of 1993
The Ground Forces reluctantly became involved in the Russian constitutional crisis of 1993 after then-President Yeltsin had issued an unconstitutional decree dissolving the Parliament following its resistance to his consolidation of power and neo-liberal reforms. A group of deputies, including Vice President Alexander Rutskoi, had barricaded themselves inside. While giving public support to the President, the Armed Forces, led by General Grachev, tried to remain neutral, following the wishes of the officer corps.[11] Yeltsin had to plead for hours to get the military leadership, who were unsure of the rightness of his cause and the reliability of their forces, to commit to the attack on the Parliament. When the attack was finally mounted, the forces used came from five different divisions around Moscow, and the personnel involved were mostly officers and senior non-commissioned officers.[4] There were also indications that some formations deployed into Moscow only under protest.[12] However, once Parliament had been stormed, the parliamentary leaders arrested, and temporary censorship imposed, Yeltsin did succeed in retaining power. Chechen Wars
The Chechen people had never willingly accepted Russian rule, and with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, had declared independence in November 1991 under a former Air Forces officer, General Dzhokar Dudayev.[13] With the continuation of Chechen "independence" seen as reducing Moscow's authority, a widespread perception of Chechnya becoming a haven for criminals, and the emergence of a hard-line group within the Kremlin advocating war, Yeltsin decided in November 1994 that action should be taken. At a Security Council meeting on 29 November, he ordered the Chechens to disarm or else Moscow would restore order. Defense Minister Pavel Grachev assured Yeltsin that he would "take Groznyy with one airborne assault regiment in two hours."[14] The operation began on 11 December 1994 and by 31 December Russian forces were entering Grozny, the Chechen capital. The 131st Motor Rifle Brigade was ordered to make a swift push for the centre of the city but was then virtually destroyed in Chechen ambushes. After finally seizing Grozny, amid fierce resistance, troops moved on to other Chechen strongholds. When Chechen militants took hostages in the Budyonnovsk hospital hostage crisis in Stavropol Kray in June 1995, peace looked possible for a time but fighting eventually went on. Dzhokar Dudayev was assassinated in April 1996, and that summer, a Chechen attack retook Groznyy. Alexander Lebed, then Secretary of the Security Council, began talks with the Chechen rebel leader Aslan Maskhadov in August 1996, signed an agreement on 22/23 August, and by the end of the month, fighting ended.[15] The formal ceasefire was signed in the Dagestani town of Khasavyurt on 31 August 1996, stipulating that a formal agreement on relations between the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria and the Russian federal government need not be signed until late 2001. The Russian Ground Forces' performance in the First Chechen War has been assessed as ' appallingly bad'.[16] Writing six years later, Michael Orr said "one of the root causes of the Russian failure in 1994–96 was their inability to raise and deploy a properly-trained military force."[17] In December 1996, Defence Minister Igor Rodionov even ordered the dismissal of the Commander of the Ground Forces, Vladimir Semyanov, for activities incompatible with his position, which were reportedly his wife's business activities.[18] The Second Chechen War began in August 1999 after Chechen militias invaded neighboring Dagestan, followed quickly in early September by a series of four terrorist bombings across Russia, which prompted Russian military action against the alleged Chechen culprits. Initially the main Russian technique used was to lay waste an area with artillery and airstrikes before the land forces advances. Improvements were made in the Ground Forces between 1996 and 1999, and when the Second Chechen War started, instead of hastily-assembled "composite regiments" whose members had never seen service together, dispatched with little or no training, formations were brought up to strength with some replacements, put through preparatory training, and then dispatched. Combat performance improved accordingly,[19] and large-scale opposition was crippled. Most of the more prominent past Chechen separatist leaders have died or have been killed, including former president Aslan Maskhadov and leading warlord and terrorist attack mastermind Shamil Basayev. However, small scale conflict has continued to drag on and is now spreading across other parts of the Russian Caucasus.[20] It has been a divisive struggle, with at least one senior military officer dismissed for being unresponsive to government commands. General Colonel Gennady Troshev was dismissed in 2002 for refusing to move from command of the North Caucasus Military District to command of the less important Siberian Military District. Reforms under Sergeyev
When Igor Sergeyev arrived as Minister of Defence in 1997, he started to initiate what were seen as real reforms under very difficult conditions.[21] The number of military educational establishments, virtually unchanged since 1991, was reduced, and the amalgamation of the Siberian and Trans-baikal Military Districts was ordered. A larger number of army divisions were given "constant readiness" status, which was supposed to bring them up to 80% manning and 100% equipment holdings. Sergeyev announced in August 1998 that there would be six divisions and four brigades on 24-hour alert by the end of that year. However, personnel quality—even in these favored units—continued to be a problem. Lack of fuel for training and a shortage of well-trained junior officers hamper combat effectiveness.[22] However, concentrating on the interests of his old service, the Strategic Rocket Forces, Sergeyev directed the disbanding of the Ground Forces headquarters itself in December 1997.[23] The disbandment was a "military nonsense", in Orr's words, "justifiable only in terms of internal politics within the Ministry of Defence".[24] The Ground Forces' prestige declined as a result, as the HQ disbandment implied in theory at least that the Ground Forces were no longer a branch or service ranking equally with the Air Force and Navy.[24] [edit] Reforms under Putin
Under President Vladimir Putin more funds have been committed, the Ground Forces Headquarters was reestablished, and some progress on professionalisation has occurred. Plans call for reduction in mandatory service to 18 months in 2007 and to one year by 2008,[25] but a mixed Ground Force, of both contract soldiers and conscripts, will remain. Funding increases began in 1999, when after some recovery in the Russian economy and associated income rise (especially from oil), "Russia's officially reported defence spending [rose] in nominal terms at least, for the first time since the formation of the Russian Federation."[26] The budget rose from 141 billion rubles in 2000 to 219 billion rubles in 2001.[27] Much of this funding has been spent on personnel—there have been several pay rises, starting with a 20% rise authorised in 2001, and the current professionalisation programme, including the 26,000 extra sergeants noted below, is expected to cost at least 31 billion roubles ($1.1 billion USD).[28] Increased funding has been spread across the whole budget, with personnel spending being matched by greater procurement and research and development funding. However, Alexander Goltz in 2004 said that given the insistence of the hierarchy on trying to force contract soldiers into the old conscript pattern,[29] there is little hope of a fundamental strengthening of the Ground Forces. He further elaborated that they are expected to remain, to some extent, a military liability and "Russia's most urgent social problem"[30] for some time to come. The Russian military journalist Alexander Golts, quoted in the introduction, summed up by saying: "All of this means that the Russian armed forces are not ready to defend the country and that, at the same time, they are also dangerous for Russia. Top military personnel demonstrate neither the will nor the ability to effect fundamental changes."[31] More money is arriving both for personnel and equipment; Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said in June 2008 that monetary allowances for servicemen in permanentreadiness units will be raised significantly.[32] Enlisted pay will rise to 65,000 rubles ($US2,750) per month and the pay of officers on combat duty in rapid response units will rise to 100,000–150,000 rubles ($US4,230–$6,355) per month. However, the CSRC report referred to above also suggests that while the move to one year conscript service will disrupt dedovshchina, it is unlikely that bullying will disappear altogether without significant societal change.[33] Other assessments from the same source point out that the Russian Armed Forces face major disruption in 2008 as demographic change hinders plans to reduce the term of conscription from two years to one.[34] As a result of these factors and continuing corruption, the additional funding may not have led to a large improvement in the Russian Army's effectiveness.[35] Personnel
The Ground Forces included an estimated total 395,000 including est. 190,000 conscripts and 35,000 personnel of the Airborne Forces (VDV) in 2006.[36] This can be compared to an estimated 670,000, with 210,000 conscripts, in 1995–96 (also an IISS estimate). These numbers should be treated with caution, however, due to the difficulty for those outside Russia to make accurate assessments, and confusion even within the General Staff on the numbers of conscripts within the force.[37] The Ground Forces began their existence in 1992 inheriting practically unchanged the Soviet military manpower system, though it was in a state of rapid decay. The Soviet Ground Forces were traditionally manned through conscription, which had been reduced in 1967 from three to two years. This system was administered through the thousands of military commissariats (военный комиссариат, военкомат (voyenkomat)) located throughout the Soviet Union. Between January and May of every year, every young Soviet male citizen was required to report to the local voyenkomat for assessment for military service, following a summons based on lists from every school and employer in the area. The voyenkomat worked to quotas sent out by a department of the General Staff, listing how young men are required by each service and branch of the Armed Forces.[38] However since the fall of the Soviet Union draft evasion has skyrocketed; officials regularly bemoan the ten or so percent that actually fall within the call-up's net. The new conscripts were then picked up by an officer from their future unit and usually sent by train across the country. On arrival, they would begin the Young Soldiers' course, and become part of the system of senior rule, known as dedovshchina, literally "rule by the grandfathers." There were only a very small number of professional non-commissioned officers (NCOs), as most NCOs were conscripts sent on short courses[39] to prepare them for section commanders' and platoon sergeants' positions. These conscript NCOs were supplemented by praporshchik warrant officers, positions created in the 1960s to support the increased variety of skills required for modern weapons.[40] The Soviet Army's officer-to-soldier ratio was extremely top-heavy, partially in order to compensate for the relatively low education level of the military manpower base and the absence of professional NCOs. Following the Second World War and the great expansion of officer education, officers became the product of four-to-five year higher military colleges.[41] As in most armies, newly commissioned officers usually become platoon leaders, having to accept responsibility for the soldiers' welfare and training (with the exceptions noted above). Young officers in Soviet Army units were worked round the clock, normally receiving only three holidays a month. Annual vacations were under threat if deficiencies emerged within the unit, and the pressure created enormous stress. Toward the end of the Soviet Union, this led a decline in morale amongst young officers.[42] In the early 2000s junior officers did not wish to serve—in 2002 more than half the officers who left the forces did so early. [43] Their morale is low, among other reasons, because their postings are entirely in the hands of their immediate superiors and the personnel department. "... Without having to account for their actions, they can choose to promote or not promote him, to send him to Moscow or to some godforsaken
post on the Chinese border."[44] There is little available information on the current status of women, who are not conscripted, in the Ground Forces. According to the BBC there were 90,000 women in the Russian Army in 2002, though estimates on numbers of women across the entire Russian armed forces in 2000 ranged from 115,000 to 160,000.[45] It is quite possible that the BBC reporter became confused between the Army (Ground Forces) and the entire Armed Forces, given their usual title in Russian as "Armiya". Women serve in support roles, most commonly in the fields of nursing, communications, and engineering. Some officers' wives have become contract service personnel. Kontraktniki
From small beginnings in the early 1990s, employment of contract soldiers has grown greatly within the Ground Forces, though many have been of poor quality (wives of officers with no other prospective employment, for example).[46] In December 2005, Sergei Ivanov proposed that in addition to the numerous enlisted contract soldiers, all sergeants should become professional, which would raise the number of professional soldiers and non-commissioned officers in the Armed Forces overall to approximately 140,000 in 2008. The current programme allows for an extra 26,000 posts for fully professional sergeants.[47] The CIA said in their World Fact Book that thirty per cent of Russian army personnel were contract servicemen at the end of 2005, and that as of May 2006, 178,000 contract servicemen were serving in the Ground Forces and the Navy. Planning calls for volunteer servicemen to compose 70% of armed forces by 2010, with the remaining servicemen consisting of conscripts. At the end of 2005, the Ground Forces had 40 allvolunteer constant readiness units, with another 20 constant readiness units to be formed in 2006.[48] These CIA figures can be set against IISS data which reports that at the end of 2004, the number of contracts being signed in the Moscow Military District was only 17% of the target figure, in the North Caucasus 45%, and in the Volga-Ural MD 25%.[49] Whatever the number of contract soldiers, commentators such as Alexander Golts are pessimistic that many more combat ready units will result, as senior officers "see no difference between professional NCOs, ... versus conscripts who have been drilled in training schools for less than six months. Such sergeants will have neither the knowledge nor the experience that can help them win authority [in] the barracks."[50] Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov underlined the awful in-barracks discipline situation, even after years of attempted professionalisation, when releasing the official injury figures for 2002. 531 men had died on duty as a result of accidents and crimes and 20,000 had been wounded (the numbers apparently not including suicides). According to Ivanov, "the accident rate is not falling".[51] Two of every seven conscripts will become addicted to drugs and alcohol while serving their terms, and a further one in twenty will suffer homosexual rape, according to 2005 reports.[52] Part of the reason is the feeling between contract servicemen, conscripts, and officers. Michael Orr: "There is no relationship of mutual respect between leaders and led and it is difficult to see how a professional army can be created without one. ..at the moment [2002] officers often despise contract servicemen even more than conscripts. 'Kontraktniki' serving in Chechnya and other 'hot spots' are often called mercenaries and marauders by senior officers."[53] Given this situation, it appears that any professional army of a Western type may be a long way off. Furthermore, the human cost of the current situation remains high, with the mistreatment of conscripts being labeled "one of Europe's worst human-rights scandals" by The Economist in 2005.[54] Crime and corruption in the ground forces
The new Russian Ground Forces inherited an increasing crime problem from their Soviet predecessors. As draft resistance grew in the last years of the Soviet Union, the authorities tried to compensate by enlisting men with criminal records and who spoke little or no Russian. Crime rates soared, with the military procurator in Moscow in September 1990 reporting a 40% increase in crime over the previous six months, including a 41% rise in serious bodily injuries.[55] Disappearances of weapons rose to rampant levels, especially in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus.[55] Generals directing the withdrawals from Eastern Europe diverted arms, equipment, and foreign monies intended to build housing in Russia for the withdrawn troops. Several years later, the former commander in Germany, General Matvei Burlakov, and the Defence Minister, Pavel Grachev, had their involvement exposed, and were also accused of directing the murder of reporter Dmitry Kholodov, who had been investigating the scandals.[55] In December 1996, Defence Minister Igor Rodionov even ordered the dismissal of the Commander of the Ground Forces, General Vladimir Semyonov, for activities incompatible with his position - reportedly his wife's business activities.[56] A 1995 study by the U.S. Foreign Military Studies Office[57] went as far as to say that the Armed Forces were "an institution increasingly defined by the high levels of military criminality and corruption embedded within it at every level." The FMSO noted that crime levels had always grown with social turbulence such as the trauma Russia was passing through. He identified four major types among the raft of criminality prevalent within the forces—weapons trafficking and the arms trade; business and commercial ventures; military crime beyond Russia's borders; and contract murder. Disappearances of weapons began during the dissolution of the Union, as referred to above, and has continued. Within units "rations are sold while soldiers grow hungry ... [while] fuel, spare parts, and equipment can be bought." [53] Meanwhile voyemkomats take bribes to arrange avoidance of service, or a more comfortable posting. Beyond the Russian frontier, drugs were smuggled across the Tajik border, supposedly being patrolled by Russian guards, by military aircraft, and a Russian senior officer, a General Major Alexander Perelyakin, had been dismissed from his post with the UN peacekeeping force in BosniaHercegovina, UNPROFOR, following continued complaints of smuggling, profiteering, and corruption. In terms of contract killings, beyond the Kholodov case, there have been widespread rumours that GRU Spetsnaz personnel have been moonlighting asmafiya hitmen.[58] Reports such as these continue. Some of the more egregious examples have included a constant-readiness motor rifle regiment's tanks running out of fuel on the firing ranges, due to the diversion, to local businesses, of their fuel supplies.[53] On this subject the last word may best be Sergey Ivanov's: visiting 20th Army in April 2002, he said the volume of theft was "simply impermissible".[53] However some degree of change is under way.[59] Abuse of personnel, sending soldiers to work outside units—a long standing tradition which could see conscripts doing things ranging from being large scale manpower supply for commercial businesses to being officers' families' servants—is now banned by Sergei Ivanov's Order 428 of October 2005 and, what is more, the order is being enforced, with several prosecutions recorded.[59] A halt has also been demanded by President Putin in November 2005 to dishonest use of military property—'We must completely eliminate the use of the Armed Forces' material base for any commercial objectives.' The spectrum of dishonest activity has included, in the past, exporting aircraft as scrap metal, but the point at which
officers are prosecuted has shifted, and investigations over trading in travel warrants and junior officers' routine thieving of soldiers' meals are beginning to be reported.[59] However, British military analysts comment that 'there should be little doubt that the overall impact of theft and fraud is much greater than that which is actually detected'.[59] Chief Military Prosecuter Sergey Fridinskiy said in March 2007 that there was 'no systematic work in the Armed Forces to prevent embezzlement'.[59] Organisation
The President of Russia is the Supreme Commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The Main Command (Glavkomat) of the Ground Forces, based in Moscow, directs activities. As noted above, this body was disbanded in 1997 but reformed by President Putin in 2001 by appointing Colonel General Nikolai Kormiltsev as the commander-in-chief of the ground forces and also as a deputy minister of defense.[60] Kormiltsev handed over to Colonel General (later General of the Army) Alexey Maslov in 2004, and in a realignment of responsibilities, the Ground Forces C-in-C lost his position as a deputy minister of defence. Like Kormiltsev, Maslov has while serving as Ground Forces C-in-C been promoted to Army General. As August 2008, current Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Ground Forces is General of the Army Vladimir Boldyrev.[61] The Main Command of the Ground Forces consists of the Main Staff of the Ground Troops, and departments for Peacekeeping Forces, Armaments of the Ground Troops, Rear Services of the Ground Troops, Cadres of the Ground Troops (personnel), Indoctrination Work, and Military Education.[62] There were also a number of directorates which used to be commanded by the Ground Forces C-in-C in his capacity as a deputy defence minister. They included Radiation, Chemical, and Biological Defence Troops of the Armed Forces, Engineer Troops of the Armed Forces, and Troop Air Defence, as well as several oth ers. Their exact command status is now unknown. Structure
The ground forces organizationally consist of the military districts (Moscow Military District, Leningrad, North Caucasus, VolgaUral, Siberian and Far Eastern), eight army headquarters,[63] one army corps headquarters (the 68th in the Far East), tank divisions, motorized rifle divisions, artillery divisions, fortified districts, individual military units, military establishments, enterprises and organizations.[64] The branches of service include motorized rifles, tanks, artillery and rocket forces, troop air defense, special corps (reconnaissance, signals, radioelectronic warfare, engineering, radiation, chemical and biological protection, technical support, automobile and the protection of the rear), military units and logistical establishments.[65] The Motorised Rifle Troops are the most numerous branch of service, that constitutes the nucleus of Ground Forces' battle formations. They are equipped with powerful armament for destruction of ground-based and aerial targets, missile complexes, tanks, artillery and mortars, anti-tank guided missiles, antiaircraft missile systems and installations, and means of reconnaissance and control. It is estimated that there are currently 19 motor rifle divisions, and the Navy now has several motor rifle formations under its command in the Ground and Coastal Defence Forces of the Baltic Fleet and the Northeastern Group of Troops and Forces on the Kamchatka Peninsula and other areas of the extreme north-east.[66] Also present are a large number of mobilisation divisions and brigades, known as 'Bases for Storage of Weapons and Equipment', that in peacetime only have enough personnel assigned to guard the site and maintain the weapons. The Tank Troops are the main impact force of the Ground Forces and the powerful means of armed struggle, intended for the accomplishment of the most important combat tasks. There are currently three tank divisions in the force: 4th & 10th within the Moscow Military District and 5th Guards "Don" in the Siberian MD.[67] The 2nd Tank Division in the Siberian Military District and the 21st Tank Division in the Far Eastern MD have disbanded in the last three years. The Artillery and Rocket Forces provide the Ground Forces' main firepower and the most important operational means for the solution of combat problems by the crushing defeat of groupings of the enemy. The Ground Forces currently include 5–6 static defence machine-gun/artillery divisions and seemingly now one division of field artillery—the 34th Guards in the Moscow MD. The previous 12th in the Siberian MD, and the 15th in the Far Eastern MD seem to have disbanded.[68] The Air Defense Troops (PVO) are one of the basic weapons for the destruction of enemy air forces. They consist of surface-to-air missiles, anti-aircraft artillery and radio-technical units and subdivisions.[69] Army Aviation, while intended for the direct support of the Ground Forces, is now und er the control of the Air Forces (VVS).[70]
Dispositions Sources are the IISS Military Balance, Robinson, and Stukalin & Lukin cited below.[71] Note that the dispositions for the Far East Military District are unclear; information changes, and thus broad figures have been indicated only unless there is specific information available.Each major formation is bolded, and directs the non-bolded units subordinate to it. The six districts report to Ground Forces Headquarters; the Ground Forces of the Baltic Fleet to the Baltic Fleet. Formation
Headquarters Location
Notes
Ground & Coastal Defence Forces of the Baltic HQ Kaliningrad Fleet
Former 11th Guards Army
7th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigade
Kaliningrad
Former 1st MRD; around 900 strong
79th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Gusev
Around 900 strong
Leningrad Military District (Colonel General HQ Saint Petersburg Valerii Gerasimov)[72]
138th Guards Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Kamenka
former 45th Guards Motorized Rifle Division until late 1990s
200th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Pechenga
2nd Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Promezhitsy region)
former 131st Motorized Rifle Division, 6th Army, until 1997 (Pskov
Spetsnaz; strength around 1500
Moscow Military District (General of the Army HQ Moscow Vladimir Bakin)[73]
Also serves as HQ Western Front
2nd Guards Motor Rifle Division
Alabino
Tamanskaya (Taman) Division; maybe disbanding or splitting into new brigades
34th Guards Artillery Division
Mulino (Gorokhovets)
16th Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Chuchkovo
Spetsnaz; Formerly at Teplyi Stan, suburb of Moscow
20th Army
Voronezh
Withdrawn from Germany (20th Guards Army at Eberswalde, DDR)
4th Guards Tank Division
Naro-Fominsk
Kantemirov Division
10th Guards Tank Division
Boguchar
22nd Army
Nizhny Novgorod
3rd Motor Rifle Division
Mulino, Novyy/Nizhny Novgorod
Operational Group of Russian Forces in Tiraspol Moldova
Former 14th Guards Army
Two(?) separate battalions
Former 59th MRD; then 8th Guards Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Tiraspol
North Caucasus Military District (Colonel HQ Rostov-na-Donu General Sergey Makarov)[74]
20th Guards Motor Rifle Division
Volgograd
10th (Mountain) Separate Brigade of Special Molkino, Designation region 22nd Guards Designation
Separate
Brigade
of
Krasnodar
Spetsnaz; Activated 1 July 2003
Special Kovalevka, Aksai, Rostov Spetsnaz Oblast
131st Motor Rifle Brigade
Maykop
42nd Motor Rifle Division
Khankala, Chechniya
58th Army
Vladikavkaz
19th Motor Rifle Division
Vladikavkaz
135th Separate Motor Rifle Regiment
Prokhladny, Balkaria
693th Separate Motor Rifle Regiment
Vladikavkaz
136th Separate Guards Motor Rifle Brigade
Buinaksk, Dagestan
205th 'Cossack' Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Budyonnovsk, Oblast
Trans-Caucasus Group of Forces
Tbilisi
This HQ has probably now disbanded; or moved to Armenia
102nd Military Base
Gumri, Armenia
former 127th motor rifle division
Volga-Ural Military District [75] General Arcady Bahin)
(Lieutenant
3rd Guards Designation
of
Separate
Brigade
moving to Abkhazia Groznyy,
Kabardino-
Subordinate to 19 Division Subordinate to 19 Division, moving to South Ossetia
Stavropol
HQ Yekaterinburg
Special Roshchinsky Oblast)
12th Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Asbest-5, region
34th Motor Rifle Division
Yekaterinburg
15th Motor Rifle Brigade
Roshchinsky
(Samara Sverdlovsk
Spetsnaz Spetsnaz
New permanent peacekeeping brigade
2nd Army
Samara
Former Volga MD HQ
27th Motor Rifle Division
Totskoye
201st Motor Rifle Division
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Siberian Military District (Colonel General HQ Chita Alexander Postnikov)[76] 29th Army
Ulan Ude
5th Guards Tank Division
Kyakhta, Buryatiya
245th Motor Rifle Division
Gusinoozersk
12th Artillery Division
Shelekhov, Irkutsk Oblast
11th Air Assault Brigade
Sosnovyy Bor, Ulan Ude
24th Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Kyakhta, Ulan Ude
36th Army
Borzya
131st Machinegun-Artillery Division
Sretensk, Yasnaya
Machine-Gun/Artillery (pulad)?; former 38th Motor Rifle Division
168th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Borzya
former 150th Training Golubaya Division
41st Army
Seems to have been disbanded 2007
Novosibirsk
85th Motor Rifle Division
Novosibirsk
122nd Guards Motor Rifle Division
Aleysk, Altay Kray
74th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade
Yurga
67th Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Berdsk Oblast)
Now may be 6th Guards Storage Base
Spetsnaz
Motor
Rifle
Division,
Former Siberian MD HQ
Constant readiness formation; former 94th Motor Rifle Division (GSVG) (Novosibirsk
Far East Military District (Colonel General Khabarovsk Vladimir Bulgakov)[77]
Spetsnaz Four Motor Rifle Divisions, Gun/Artillery Divisions
5th Army
Ussuriysk
81st Guards Motor Rifle Division
Bikin
127th Machinegun-Artillery Division
Sergeyevka
former 277th Motor Rifle Division
129th Guards Machinegun-Artillery Division
Barabash
former 123rd Motor Rifle Division
130th Machinegun-Artillery Division
Lesozavodsk
former 135th Motor Rifle Division
35th Army
Belogorsk
21st Guards Motor Rifle Division
Belogorsk
128th Machinegun-Artillery Division
Babstovo, YeAO
270th Motor Rifle Division
Khabarovsk
HQ 68th Corps
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
18th Machinegun-Artillery Division
Iturup, Kuriles
33rd Motor Rifle Division
Khomutovo, Sakhalin
probably disbanded with corps
14th Separate Brigade of Special Designation
Ussuriysk
Spetsnaz
83rd Airborne Brigade
Ussuriysk
Four
Machine-
former 272nd Motor Rifle Division
May have disbanded 2007/2008
Equipment
The Ground Forces retain a very large quantity of vehicles and equipment (see table below).[78] There is also likely to be a great deal further, older, equipment in state military store, a practice continued from the Soviet Union. However, following the collapse of the USSR, the newly independent republics became host to most of the formations with modern equipment, whereas Russia was left with lower-category units with usually older equipment.[79] As financial stringency began to bite harder, the amount of new equipment fell as well, and by 1998, only 10 tanks and about 30 BMP infantry fighting vehicles were being bought each year.[80] Funding for new equipment has greatly risen in recent years, and Russian defence industry continues to develop new weapons systems for the Ground Forces, such as the T-95 main battle tank,[81] and the S-400 Triumf new surface-to-air missile.[82] However, for the Ground Forces, while overall funding has dramatically increased, this does not guarantee that large numbers of new systems will enter service. As
regards the S-400 SAM, Yury Baluyevsky, Chief of the General Staff, was reported as saying to President Vladimir Putin in mid 2007 that "Over two dozen battalions are to be equipped with such systems by 2015.[83] In the case of vehicles, as the references show, examination of the actual number of vehicles planned to be bought yearly (about 200 MBTs and IFVs/APCs in the Warfare.ru link attached) means that for a force of about thirty divisions, each with about 300-–400 MBTs and IFVs, it might take around 30 years to reequip all formations.[84] Jane's World Armies notes that the Soviet/Russian military tradition has never placed much importance on the survivability of individual soldiers, and thus eschews protective equipment such as flak jackets and helmets as beung too heavy and uncomfortable, though promises to improve this state of affairs have been made.[52] Equipment summary
It should be clearly remembered that these figures are from two different sources. Main equipment numbers are from the IISS's Military Balance 2006, and these broadly agree with the latest 2008 edition of the Military Balance. Brackets figures marked operational are from warfare.ru. Equipment
Numbers
Main Battle Tanks
22,800+ (~6,500 active)[85][86]
Light Tanks
150 PT-76;[87] None[88]
Armoured Infantry Fighting Vehicles 15,000+ (~6,000 active)[89] Armoured Personnel Carriers
9,900+ (~6,400 active)[86]
Towed Artillery
12,765 (~7,550 active)[86]
Self Propelled Artillery
6,000 (~3,500 active)[90]
Multiple Rocket Launchers
about 4,500 (~900 active)[91]
Mortars
6,600 (~2,600 active)[90]
Self-Propelled Surface to Air Missiles about 2,500 Ranks and insignia
The newly reemergent Russia retained most of the ranks of the Soviet Army with some minor changes. The principal difference from the usual Western style is some variation in generals' rank titles, in one case at least, Colonel General, derived from German usage. Most of the rank names were borrowed from existing German/Prussian, French, English, Dutch and Polish ranks upon the formation of Russian regular army in the late 1600s,[citation needed ] and have lasted with few changes of title through the Soviet period. Notes 1.
2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
^ "Official website [Translated by Babelfish and amended for readability."]. Russian Ministry of Defence. http://www.mil.ru/848/1045/1272/1357/index.shtml. ^ a b International Institute for Strategic Studies (1992). The Military Balance 1992–3. London: Brassey's. p. 89. ^ International Institute for Strategic Studies (1995). The Military Balance 1995–96 . London: Brassey's. p. 102. ^ a b Muraviev, Alexey D.; Austin, Greg (2001). The Armed Forces of Russia in Asia. Tauris. p. 257. ^ Orr, Michael (June 1998). "The Russian Armed Forces as a factor in Regional Stability" (PDF). p. 2 Conflict Studies Research Centre. ^ Baev, Pavel "The Russian Army in a Time of Troubles", International Peace Research Institute, Oslo, 1996, p. 67 ^ Dick, Charles "Russian Views on Future War—Part 3", Jane's Intelligence Review , November 1993, p. 488 ^ Arbatov, Alexei "Military Reform in Russia: Dilemmas, Obstacles, and Prospects", International Security, Vol. 22, No. 4, Spring 1998, p. 112, and Baev, 1996, p. 67 ^ Arbatov, 1998, p. 113 ^ Orr, Michael, "The Russian Ground Forces and Reform 1992–2002", CSRC Paper D67, January 2003, p. 2 –3 ^ "McNair Paper 34, The Russian Military's Role in P olitics", January 1995 ^ "McNair Paper 34", 1995 ^ Finch, Raymond C. "Why the Russian Military Failed in Chechnya", Foreign Military Studies Office, Fort Leavenworth, KS ^ Blandy, C. W. "Chechnya: Two Federal Interventions. An Interim Comparison and Assessment", Conflict Studies Research Centre, P29, January 2000, p. 13, cited in Herspring, Dale, "Undermining Combat Readiness in the Russian Military", Armed Forces & Society , Vol 32, No. 4, July 2006 ^ Scott and Scott, Russian Military Directory 2002, p. 328 ^ Orr (2000), p. 82 ^ Orr (2000), p. 87 ^ Chronology of events - Rodionov dismisses commander of ground forces and then cancels visit to United States, Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, 4 December 1996. Retrieved September 2008. ^ Orr (2000), p. 88–90 ^ "Chechnya war", Reuters AlertNet, 04 November 2007
21. ^ Parchomenko, Walter, "The State of Russia's Armed Forces and Military Reform", Parameters (Journal of the US Army War College), Winter 1999–2000 22. ^ Krasnaya Zvezda 28 January and 9 February 1999, in Austin & Muraviev, 2000, p. 268, and M.J. Orr, 1998, p. 3 23. ^ Alexey Muraviev and Greg Austin, 2001, p. 259 24. ^ a b Orr, 2003, p. 6 25. ^ CIA World Fact Book 2006 26. ^ IISS The Military Balance 2000–01, p. 115 27. ^ IISS Military Balance 2001–02, p. 109 28. ^ IISS Military Balance, Russia section, recent editions 29. ^ Goltz, Alexander "Military Reform in Russia and the Global War Against Terrorism", Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Vol. 17, 2004, p. 33–4 30. ^ Goltz, 2004, p. 30 31. ^ Goltz, Alexander, "Military Reform in Russia and the Global War Against Terrorism, Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Vol 17, 2004, p. 30–1 32. ^ "RIA Novosti - Russia - Russia's public sector wages to rise 30% from Dec. 1 - PM Putin" 33. ^ Keir Giles, CSRC May 2007 34. ^ Keir Giles, "Where Have All The Soldiers Gone? Russian Military Manpower Plans versus Demographic Reality", CSRC, October 2006 35. ^ "Advancing, blindly", The Economist (2008-09-18). Retrieved on 21 September 2008. 36. ^ IISS, Military Balance 2006, p. 154 37. ^ Kachurovskaya, Anna, "Strana starosluzhashchikh", Kommersant-Vlast , 3 April 2006, quoted in Giles, Keir, "Where have all the soldiers gone?", CSRC, 06/47, October 2006 38. ^ Schofield, Carey, "Inside the Soviet Army", Headline, London, 1991, p. 67–70 39. ^ Suvorov, Viktor, Inside the Soviet Army, Hamish Hamilton, London, 1982, gives the figure of six months with a training division 40. ^ Odom, p. 43 41. ^ Odom, p. 40–41 42. ^ Odom, p. 42 43. ^ Golts. 44. ^ Golts, p. 35 45. ^ Quartly, Alaan, "Miss Shooting Range crowned", BBC News, 8 March 2003, and Matthews, Jennifer G., "Women in the Russian Armed Forces - a Marriage of Conven ience?", Minerva, Fall-Winter 2000 46. ^ Orr (1998). 47. ^ IISS, The Military Balance 2006, p. 147 48. ^ CIA World Fact Book 2 006, https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/rs.html 49. ^ IISS Military Balance 2004–5, p. 151 50. ^ Golts, p. 33–4 51. ^ Orr (2003), p. 12 52. ^ a b Jane's World Armies , Issue 18, December 2005, p. 564 53. ^ a b c d Orr (2003), p. 10 54. ^ "How are the mighty fallen", The Economist (2005-06-30). Retrieved on 21 September 2008. 55. ^ a b c Odom (1998), p. 302 56. ^ NUPI, http://www.nupi.no/cgi-win/Russland/krono.exe?314 57. ^ Turbiville, Graham H., "Mafia in Uniform: The Criminalisation of the Russian Armed Forces" 58. ^ Galeotti, p. 52 59. ^ a b c d e Giles, p. 3–4 60. ^ Kormiltsev was a Colonel General when he became C-in-C Ground Forces, but after about two years in the position was promoted to Army General in 2003. Profil via FBIS, Kormiltsev Biography, accessed September 2007 61. ^ "The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence official homepage on the Internet". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/eng/1862/12068/12088/12220/12240/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 62. ^ Scott and Scott, Russian Military Directory 2004, p. 118 63. ^ Change from nine to eight verified through Vad777, Russian language Siberian Military District page, accessed late July 2007. 64. ^ Babakin, Alexander, "Approximate Composition and Structure of the Armed Forces After the Reforms", Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye [Independent Military Review], No. 31, August 20–26, 2004 65. ^ Babakin, Alexander, "Approximate Composition and Structure of the Armed Forces After the Reforms", NVO, No. 31, August 20–26, 2004 66. ^ IISS Military Balance, various issues 67. ^ IISS Military Balance 2007 68. ^ V.I. Feskov et al 2004 is the source for the designations, while Teplitskiy (vad777)'s website is the source for their disbandment. 69. ^ Butowsky, p. 81 70. ^ Butowsky, p. 83 71. ^ "Vys Rossiya Armia"", Kommersant-Vlast , 14 May 2002 and "The Russian Armed Forces Today: A Structural Status Examination", Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Vol 18, No. 2, 2005 72. ^ "The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence official homepage on the Internet". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/eng/1862/12068/12089/12231/12328/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 73. ^ "Командующий войсками Московского военного округа". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/848/1045/1272/1365/1362/1891/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10.
74. ^ "The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence official homepage on the Internet". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/848/1045/1272/1365/1366/8797/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 75. ^ "The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence official homepage on the Internet". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/848/1045/1272/1365/1364/2029/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-12-20. 76. ^ "Siberian Military District". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/eng/1862/12068/12089/12235/12350/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 77. ^ "The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence official homepage on the Internet". Mil.ru. http://www.mil.ru/eng/1862/12068/12089/12236/12355/index.shtml. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 78. ^ IISS 2006, p. 155 79. ^ Austin and Muraviev, 2001, p. 277–278 80. ^ Baranov, Nikolai, "Weapons must serve for a long while", Armeiskii sbornik , March 1998, no. 3, p. 66–71, cited in Austin and Muraviev, 2001, p. 278. See also Mil Bal 95/96, p. 110 81. ^ "Russia's new main battle tank to enter service 'after 2010'", RIA Novosti , July 10, 2008 82. ^ "S-400 missile defense systems to start defending Moscow", RIA Novosti, 21 May 2007. Retrieved on 16 September 2008. 83. ^ "Russian News & Information Agency 84. ^ "Russia's Military Budget 2004 - 2007 | Russian Arms, Military Technology, Analysis of Russia's Military Forces". Warfare.ru. http://warfare.ru/?catid=239&linkid=2279. Retrieved on 2008-09-10. 85. ^ Tank database, warfare.ru - Russian Military Analisis. Retrieved on 1 September 2008. 86. ^ a b c "Georgia move fails to halt raids", BBC News, 11 August 2008. Retrieved on 1 September 2 008. 87. ^ IISS 2008 88. ^ PT-76 Light tank, warfare.ru, Russian Military Analisis. Retrieved on 21 September 2008. 89. ^ IFV & APC database, warfare.ru - Russian Military Analysis. Retrieved on 1 September 2008. 90. ^ a b Artillery database, warfare.ru - Russian Military Analysis. Retrieved on 1 September 2008. 91. ^ Multiple Rocket Launchers database, warfare.ru - Russian Military Analysis. Retrieved o n 1 September 2008. References 1. Arbatov, Alexei (1998). "Military Reform in Russia: Dilemmas, Obstacles, and Prospects". International Security 22 (4). 2. Austin, Greg & Muraviev, Alexey D. (2001). The Armed Forces of Russia in Asia. Tauris. ISBN 1860644856. 3. Babakin, Alexander (August 20–26, 2004). Approximate Composition and Structure of the Armed Forces After the Reforms. Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye (Independen t Military Review). 4. Baev, Pavel (1996). The Russian Army in a Time of Troubles. Oslo: International Peace Research Institute. ISBN 0761951873. Neil. "Russian Armed Forces Order of Battle". 5. Baumgardner, http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/9059/RussianArmedForces.html. 6. Butowsky, Piotr (July 2007). " Russia Rising ". Air Forces Monthly. 7. Central Intelligence Agency (2006). "World Fact Book". https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-worldfactbook/geos/rs.html. 8. Dick, Charles. (November 1993). Russian Views on Future War, Part 3. Jane's Intelligence Review. 9. "How are the mighty fallen", The Economist (2005-06-30). 10. Fes'kov, V.I.; Golikov, V.I. & K.A. Kalashnikov (2004). The Soviet Army In The Years Of The Cold War 1945–1991. Tomsk University Publishing House. ISBN 5751118197. 11. Finch, Raymond C.. "Why the Russian Military Failed in Chechnya". Fort Leavenworth, KS: Foreign Military Studies Office. http://fmso.leavenworth.army.mil/documents/yrusfail/yrusfail.htm. 12. Galeotti, Mark (February 1997). "Moscow's armed forces: a city's balance of po wer". Jane's Intelligence Review . 13. Giles, Keir. "Military Service in Russia: No New Model Army" (PDF). CSRC. 14. Golts, Alexander (2004). "Military Reform in Russia and the Global War Against Terrorism". Journal of Slavic Military Studies 17. 15. Herspring, Dale (July 2006). Undermining Combat Readiness in the Russian Military. 32. Armed Forces & Society. 16. "The Military Balance". International Institute for Strategic Studies. http://www.iiss.org/publications/the-military-balance. 17. Lenskii, A.G. & Tsybin, M.M. (2001). The Soviet Ground Forces in the Last Years of the USSR. St Petersburg: B&K Publishers. 18. Lukin, Mikail & Stukalin, Aleksander (14 May 2002/2005). "Vys Rossiyskaya Armiya ". Kommersant-Vlast. 19. James H. Brusstar and Ellen Jones (January 1995). "McNair Paper 34, The Russian Military's Role in Politics". http://www.ndu.edu/inss/McNair/mcnair34/34fal.html. 20. Odom, William E. (1998). The Collapse of the Soviet Military. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300074697. 21. Orr, Michael (June 1998). The Russian Armed Forces as a factor in Regional Stability. CSRC. 22. Orr, Michael (2000). Better or Just Not So Bad? An Evaluation of Russian Combat Performance in the Second Chechen War . CSRC. 23. Orr, Michael. "The Russian Ground Forces and Reform 1992–20 02". Retrieved on 2006-08-01. 24. Parchomenko, Walter (1999–2000). The State of Russia's Armed Forces and Military Reform. Parameters (Journal of the US Army War College). 25. Quartly, Alan (8 March 2003). "Miss Shooting Range crowned", BBC News. 26. Robinson, Colin (2005). "The Russian Ground Forces Today: A Structural Status Examination". Journal of Slavic Military Studies 18 (2). 27. Schofield, Carey (1991). Inside the Soviet Army . London: Headline. ISBN 0747204187. 28. Scott, Harriet Fast & Scott, William F. Russian Military Directories 2002 & 2004
29. Suvorov, Viktor (1982). Inside the Soviet Army. London: Macmillan. 30. Turbiville, Graham H. (1995). "Mafia in Uniform: The Criminalisation of the Russian Armed Forces". Mafia in Uniform: The Criminalisation of the Russian Armed Forces. Fort Leavenworth: U.S. Army Foreign Military Stu dies Office.
The IISS estimates that 4,500 T-80s are in the Ground Forces' invento ry. GAZ-2975 "Tigr" on rehearsal of Moscow Victory Parade
A Russian soldier at a checkpoint in Kosovo in 2001 Russian soldiers and a BTR-80 armored personnel carrier in BosniaHerzegovina during 1996
Two T-80UD MBTs on Red Square in Moscow during failed Coup d'état attempt, August 1991 .
Backside of the 9A317 TELAR of Buk-M2E (export version) at 2007 MAKS Airshow - GAZ-2975 "Tigr" on rehearsal of Moscow Victory Parade
List of equipment of the
Russian Ground Forces From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vehicles Main Battle Tank T-90 |~450| (+ 300 more are modernized T-72s) + more on order. 125 mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, RC 12.7x108 AA, AT• 11 ATGM, Kontakt-5 ERA, Shtora-1 CMS, Arena or Drozd-2 APS T-80UM |~4500 According to [1] & [2]| 125 mm main gun, 7.62x54 co ax, RC 12.7x108 AA, AT-11 ATGM, Kontakt-5 • ERA, Shtora-1 , Drozd-2 APS T-72BM/BV |~9700 According to [3] & [4]| 125mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, RC 12.7x108 AA, AT-11 ATGM, Kontakt-5 • ERA T-64BV |~4300 in reserve, According to GlobalSecurity.org| 125 mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, RC 12.7x108 AA, AT-8 • ATGM, Kontakt-1 ERA
T-62M1 |~1900 in reserve/storage. 115mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 12.7x109 AA, AT-12 ATGM, Drozd APS, ERA, Cage armor T-55 |~1010 in reserve. 100mm main gun, Cage armor • Armoured Personnel Carrier (total of 9,900+ APCs) BTR-90 |~80| 30mm autocannon main gun, 30 mm Grenade Launcher, 7.62x54 coax, 7 passengers, external ATGM • launcher. BTR-80A |~4000| 30mm autocannon main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 7 passengers • BTR-70M1986/1 |~2000| 14.5x115 main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 8 passengers • BTR-60PB |~2000| 14.5x115 main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 12 passengers • MT-LB |~4800| 7.62x54 PKT main gun, 10 passengers • BTR-D |~514| 7.62x54 PKT main gun, 10 passengers • Infantry Fighting Vehicle BMP-3 |~1400| 100mm main gun, 30mm autocannon and 7.62x54 coax, 2 x 7.62x54, AT-10 and external ATGM, ERA, 7 • passengers BMP-2E |~3055| 30mm autocannon main gun, 7.62x54 coax, AT-5 ATGM, 7 p assengers • BMP-1P |1543 Active, More than 9057 in Reserve According to [5]| 73mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, AT-5 ATGM, 8 • passengers BMD-3 |~103| Airborne, 30mm autocannon main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 30mm auto GL, external AT-5 ATGM, 5 passengers • BMD-2 |~361| Airborne, 30mm autocannon main gun, 7.62x54 coax, 7.62x54, external AT-5 ATGM, 5 passengers • BMD-1P |~715| Airborne, 73mm main gun, 7.62x54 coax, two 7.62x54, external AT-5 ATGM, 5 passengers • Light Transport GAZ-33097 | Truck • GAZ-3937 Vodnik | 9 passengers • GAZ-2975 Tigr | High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle • Ural-4320 | 27 passengers • UAZ-469 | 3+ passengers • Reconnaissance Vehicle BRDM-2 |~2080| Recon, 14.5x115 main gun, 7.62x54 coax • BRDM-3 | Recon, 30mm autocannon main gun, 7.62x54 PKT coax • BRM-1 |~637| Recon, 73mm main gun, 7.62x54 PKT coax • Air Defence Vehicle S-400 / SA-20 |new| Maximum 400 km missile range, said to be able to engage low RCS targets, claimed to be best in the • world S-300PMU-2 / SA-10D |~440| Maximum 195 km missile range, 4 missiles per TEL • S-300V 9M82 / SA-12b |~200| Maximum 100 km missile range, 2 missiles per TEL, ABM optimized. • Buk-M1-2 / SA-17 |~250| Maximum 50 km missile ran ge, 4 missiles per TEL • 9K331M Tor-M1 / SA-15 |~120| Maximum 12 km missile range, 8 missiles ready to fire • 9K35M3 Strela-10M3 / SA-13 |~350| Maximum 5 k m missile range, 4 missiles ready to fire • 9K33M3 Osa-AKM / SA-8B |~550| Maximum 15 km missile range, 6 missiles ready to fire • 2K12 Kub / SA-6 |~350| Maximum 24 k m missile range, 3 missiles ready to fire • 2K11M Krug-M / SA-4 |~220| Maximum 55 km missile range, 2 missiles ready to fire • 2K22M Tunguska-M1 |~256| Maximum 8 km missile ran ge, 2 x 30mm autocann on at 5000 RPM, 8 missiles read y to fire • ZSU-23-4M Shilka |~450| Maximum 2.5 km gun range, 4 x 23mm autocannon at 4000 RPM • Towed Artillery and Mortars (total some 30,045+ artillery pieces) •
2B14-1 | 82mm , mortar, maximum 4.02 km firing range 2s12 | 120mm, mortar, maximum 7.1 km firing range • 2A18 / D-30 |~1213| 122mm, maximum range with regular shell; 15.4 km, rocket assisted; 21.9 km • 2A29 / MT-12 |~526| 100mm, anti-tank gu n, maximum 8.2 km firing range indirect fire, 1 km HEAT or 2 km HVAPFSDS • direct fire 2A36 |~682| 152mm, maximum range with regular shell; 27 km, rocket assisted; 40 km • 2A45M / Sprut-B | 125mm, anti-tank gun, maximum 12.2 km firing range, uses 125mm tank ammunition like the AT-11 • ATGM 2A65 |~370| 152mm, maximum 24.7 km firing range • D-20 / M-55 |~430| 152mm, maximum 17 km firing range • D-74 | 122mm, maximum 23.9 km firing range • M-46 |~55| 130mm, maximum range with regular shell; 27.5 km, rocket assisted; 38 km • M-389 | 155mm, maximum 15.2 km firing range • Nona-K |~1112| 120mm, maximum 8.7 km firing range • Self-Propelled Artillery (IISS estimate total 6,010) 2S1 |~1037| 122mm, maximum range with regular shell; 15.3 km, rocket assisted; 21.9 km • 2S3 |~1402| 152mm, maximum 17.3 km firing range • 2S4 |~430| 240mm, maximum 9.7 km firing range • 2S5 |~569| 152mm, maximum 17.3 km firing range • 2S7M |~800| 203mm, maximum range with regular shell; 37 km, rocket assisted; 55 km • 2S9 | 120mm, maximum range with regular shell; 8.8 km, rocket assisted; 12.8 km • 2S19 MSTA-S |~800| 152mm, maximum 24.7 km firing range • 2S23 Nona-SVK |~50| 120mm, maximum 12.8 km firing range • 2S31 | 120mm, maximum 13 km firing range • ASU-85 | 85-mm Self-Propelled Artillery • Multiple Rocket Launcher System Vehicle 9K51 Grad / BM-21B |~1750| 122mm, maximum 4 0 km range, 36 missiles read y to fire • 9P140 Uragan / BM-27 |~500-800| 220mm, maximum 40 km range, 16 missiles ready to fire • 9A52-2 Smerch / BM-30 |~300(According to Janes Russia had 300 Bm-30 in 2001)| 300 mm, maximum 90 km firing • range, 12 missiles ready to fire TOS-1 | 220mm, maximum 3.5 km firing range, 30 missiles ready to fire, uses thermobaric warheads • Tactical Ballistic Missile Systems OTR-21 Tochka-U / SS-21 | 482 kg conventional warhead, 100 kt nuclear, maximum 120 km missile range • Iskander-E / SS-26 | 480 kg conventional warhead, maximum 400 km missile range, 2 missiles ready to fire • Aircraft • None; all army aviation a ircraft were recently transferred to the Air Force Individual weapons Pistol • Makarov PMM | 9x18 PMM, 12 round magazine, main service sidearm o Stechkin APS | 9x18 PM, 20 round magazine, capable of fully automatic fire o 6P9 PB | 9x18 PM, 8 round magazine, uses a suppressor o 6P13 APB | 9x18 PM, 20 round magazine, capable of fully automatic fire, uses a suppressor o PSS | 7.62x41 SP-4, 6 round magazine, fires a "special purpose noiseless cartridge" o Serdyukov SPS / SR-1 / Gyurza | 9x21 SP-10/11, 18 round magazine, high armor piercing capability o Yarygin PYa / MP-443 | 9x19 7N21, 17 round magazine, special high power cartridge, replacing PMM as main o service sidearm GSh-18 | 9x19 7N21 or PBP, 18 round magazine, special high power cartridge o • Submachine Gun PP-19 Bizon | 9x18 PMM or 9x19, 64 round helical magazine o AEK-919K Kashtan | 9x18 PMM, 20 30 round magazine capacity o PP-90M1 | 9x19 7N21 or 7N31, 64 round helical magazine, 32 round conventional box magazine o PP-2000 | 9x19 7N21 or 7N31, 20 or 40 round magazine, can use spare magazine to work as a "butt stock" o SR-2M Veresk | 9x21 SP-10/11, 20 or 30 round magazine, high armor piercing capability o Rifle • SKS | 7.62x39,10 round magazine, mainly used as a ceremonial arm. o Assault Rifle • AK-74M | 5.45x39, 30 round magazine, new 60 round magazine, main service rifle o AKS-74 | 5.45x39, 30 round magazine, new 60 round magazine, moderate usage by VDV o AKS-74U | 5.45x39, 30 round magazine, shortened version of the AK-74, moderate usage o AKM | 7.62x39, 30 round magazine, former main service rifle, some usage mainly in urban environments due to o the ability to penetrate heavy cover. AS Val | 9x39 SP-5 or SP -6, 10 or 20 round magazine, uses an integrated suppressor, widespread usage o OTs-14 Groza | 9x39 SP-5 or SP-6 or 7.62x39, 20 round 9x39 or 30 round 7.62x39 magazine, bullpup o •
o o o
o o •
Shotgun
Saiga-12 | 12 gauge combat shotgun fed from 8 round magazine Machine Gun RPK-74 | 5.45x39, 30 or 45 round magazine or 75 round drum, LMG based on the AK-74, main service SAW o RPK | 7.62x39mm, 30 or 40 round magazine or 75 round drum, former main service GPMG, based on the AKM, o some usage PKM | 7.62x54, belt fed with 100 or 200 or 250 round boxes, uses a heavily modified Kalashnikov design, main o service GPMG Pecheneg | 7.62x54, belt fed with 100 or 200 round boxes, GPMG based on and designed to replace the PKM, o limited usage NSV | 12.7x108, belt fed with 50 round boxes, main service HMG o Kord | 12.7x108, belt fed with 50 round boxes, replacing the NSV as the main service HMG, limited usage o Sniper Rifle Dragunov | 7.62x54, 10 round magazine, semi auto, main service sniper rifle o Dragunov SVU | 7.62x54, 10 round magazine, semi auto, bullpup variant of the SVD, moderate usage o VSS Vintorez | 9x39 SP-5 or SP-6, 10 or 20 round magazine, semi or full auto, uses an integrated suppressor, o widespread usage SV-98 | 7.62x54, 10 round magazine, bolt action, limited usage o KSVK | 12.7x108, 5 round magazine, semi auto, limited usage o OSV-96 | 12.7x108, 5 round magazine, semi auto, can be folded in half, limited usage o Anti-Personnel Explosive RGO | fragmentation grenade, 6 meter kill radius, 3.8 second fuse, will detonate on impact after being armed for o 1.8 seconds RGN | fragmentation grenade, 4 meter kill radius, 3.8 second fuse, will detonate on impact after being armed for o 1.8 seconds MON-90 | Claymore style AP mine, propels ~2000 steel projectiles to a kill radius of 90 meters, detonated b y trip o wire or manually MON-100 | Claymore style AP mine, propels ~400 steel projectiles to a kill radius of 100 meters, detonated by o trip wire or manually MON-200 | Claymore style AP mine, is a larger and more powerful version of th e MON-100, detonated by trip o wire or manually OZM|-72 | ~500g TNT, anti-personnel fragmentation mine, d etonated by pressure, tripwire, or manually o POMZ | ~75g TNT, anti-personnel fragmentation mine, d etonated by pressure, tripwire, or manually o PMN | ~240g TNT, anti-personnel blast mine, detonated by pressure o PMN-2 | ~100g TNT, anti-personnel blast mine, detonated by pressure o PMN-4 | ~50g TNT, anti-personnel blast mine, d etonated by pressure o RPO | One-shot disposable RPG style thermobaric rocket launch er, RPO-A and RPO-Z thermobaric rockets o RPG-7V2 | Reloadable RPG launcher, TBG-7V thermobaric and OG-7V |frag rockets o RPG-27 | One-shot disposable RPG launcher, RShG-1 thermobaric rockets o RPG-29 | Reloadable RPG launcher, TBG-29 thermobaric rockets o GP-30 | 40mm under barrel GL, can be fitted to AKM, AK-74, AN-94, and AK-10X rifles and their variants o RG-6 / 6G-30 | 40mm multi-shot GL, 6 roun d capacity in revolver style c ylinders o GM-94 | 43mm multi-shot pump action GL, 3 round magazine capacit y, optimized for CQB using grenades with o a small kill radius AGS-17 | 30mm automatic GL, belt fed with 2 9 round drums, high ROF o AGS-30 | 30mm automatic GL, belt fed with 2 9 round drums, lightweight modern version of the AGS-17, high o ROF Anti-Tank Explosive TM-57 | ~7 kg TNT, AT mine, deto nated by pressure o TM-62M | ~7 kg TNT, AT mine, deton ated by pressure o RPG-7V2 | Reloadable RPG launcher, PG-7VL with ~500mm RHA penetration, P G-7VR with ~600mm RHA o penetration after ERA RPG-16 | Reloadable RPG launcher, PG-16 with ~300 mm RHA penetration, higher accuracy and four times the o range of the RPG-7 RPG-18 | One-shot disposable RPG launcher, PG-18 with ~375mm RHA penetration o RPG-22 | One-shot disposable RPG launcher, PG-22 with ~400mm RHA penetration o RPG-26 | One-shot disposable RPG launcher, PG-26 with ~500mm RHA penetration o RPG-27 | One-shot disposable RPG launcher, PG-27 with ~750mm RHA penetration after ERA o RPG-29 | Reloadable RPG launcher, PG-29V with ~750mm RHA penetration after ERA o AT-4C Spigot C / 9M111M Fagot-M | ATGM launcher, ~600mm RHA penetration after ERA, maximum 2.5 km o missile range o
•
•
•
•
SR-3 Vikhr | 9x39 SP-5 or SP-6, 10 or 20 round magazine, very compact 9A-91 | 9x39 SP-5 or SP-6, 10 or 20 round magazine, compact AN-94 | 5.45x39, 30 round magazine, new 60 round magazine, 2 round burst mode fired at 1800 RPM, originally designed to replace AK-74M, limited usage AK-103 | 7.62x39, 30 round magazine, modernized AKM, limited usage AK-105 | 5.45x39, 30 round Magazine, Replacing AKS-74U
AT-5B Spandrel B / 9M113M Konkurs-M | ATGM launcher, ~800mm RHA penetration after ERA, maximum 4 km missile range AT-13 / 9K115 Metis-M | ATGM launcher, ~800mm RHA penetration after ERA, maximum 1.5 km missile o range AT-14 / 9K135 Kornet | ATGM launcher, ~1000mm RHA penetration after ERA, maximum 5.5 km missile o range Man-Portable Air-Defence System • SA-14 Gremlin / 9K34 Strela-3 | Maximum 4.5 km missile range o SA-18 / 9K38 Igla | Maximum 5.2 km missile range o Igla-S | Maximum 5.2 km+ missile range o References GlobalSecurity • warfare.ru • o
Russian Army Divisions In the Soviet Armed Forces, a division (Russian: diviziya) may have referred to a formation in any of the Armed Services, and would have included subunits appropriate to the Service such as regiments and battalions, squadrons or naval vessels. There is also a similarly sounding unit of military organization in Russian military terminology, called divizion. A divizion is used to refer to an artillery battalion, a specific part of a ship's crew (korabel’nyy divizion, ‘ship battalion’), or a group of naval vessels (divizion korabley). Almost all divisions irrespective of the Service had the 3+1+1 structure of major sub-units, which were usually regiments. The title Guards is an honor bestowed on units for heroism demonstrated in battles as a legacy of the Soviet formations, and was bestowed on divisions in all wartime Services. The Guards designation was created on 18 September 1941, when the 100th, 127th, and 153rd Rifle Divisions were renamed the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Guards Rifle Divisions respectively. In many cases the unit simultaneously received a name usually related to place of the heaviest battles for which it was honored; for example 4th Guards Kantemirovskaya Tank Division, 2nd Guards Tamanskaya Motor Rifle Division and others. During the Soviet era a Motorised Rifle Division (MRD) usually had approximately 12,000 soldiers organized into three motorized rifle regiments, a tank regiment, an artillery regiment, an air defense regiment, surface-to-surface missile and antitank battalions, and supporting chemical, engineer, signal, reconnaissance, and rear services companies.[1] A typical Tank Division had some 10,000 soldiers organized into three tank regiments and one motorized rifle regiment, all other sub-units being same as the MRD.[2] A typical Soviet Frontal Aviation Division consisted of three air regiments, a transport squadron, and associated maintenance units. The number of aircraft within a regiment varied. Fighter and fighter-bomber regiments were usually equipped with about 40 aircraft (36 of the primary unit type and a few utility and spares) while bomber regiments typically consisted of 32 aircraft. Divisions were typically commanded by Colonels or Major Generals, or Colonels or Major Generals of Aviation in the Air Force. Soviet Naval and the Strategic Missile Forces divisions. Compared to Russian forces, U.S. Army divisions have more infantry personnel and greater number of logistic assets, but fewer armored vehicles and artillery pieces. Russian forces are intended primarily for intensive, shorter operations, being quickly replaced by another division when worn out. Thus Soviet divisions had fewer mobility assets and projection capabilities than possessed by the United States. The U.S. military posture thus can deploy and operate at long distances, but the Russian military posture cannot do so to nearly same degree. In the early 1980s, out of a total of 194 active tank, motorized rifle and airborne divisions in the Soviet force, 65 were located in the western USSR, 30 in Eastern Europe and an additional 20 in the Transcaucasus and North Caucasus Military Districts (MDs). All these divisions were available for offensive operations against NATO. In addition to these forces, 17 lowstrength divisions, centrally located in the USSR, constituted the Strategic Reserves. For operation in the Southern Theater the Soviet Armed Forces had in place six divisions in the Turkestan Military District and four engaged in combat operations in Afghanistan as part of the 40th Army. These forces could be reinforced by the 20 divisions from the Caucasus MDs if they were not engaged against NATO. Soviet forces for operations in the Far East were composed of 52 tank and motorized rifle divisions. The six Warsaw Pact allies of the Soviet Union had a total of 55 active divisions, which, collectively with Soviet divisions, amounted to 249 combat divisions. Many of these divisions, most notably those in the interior of the USSR, were at low levels of readiness. The Soviet Union also maintained 17 mobilization bases, predominantly in the western USSR, that could form additional combat divisions. These bases usually contained the combat equipment needed to form new divisions and would require augmentation in manpower and a substantial amount of training before they could be committed to combat operations. In 1989 the Soviet Union had 150 motorized rifle and 52 tank divisions in three states of readiness:A, B, and V. The Ground Forces had sixty-five divisions, kept at between 50 and 75 percent of their projected wartime strengths, in the westernmost military districts of the Soviet Union; fifty-two divisions at less than half their wartime levels in the Siberian Military District, the Transbaykal, Central Asian, and Far East Military Districts along the border with China; and twenty-six low-readiness divisions in the Transcaucasus MD, the North Caucasus Military District, and the Turkestan Military District. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russian tank and motorized-rifle divisions were reduced to near-cadre state, many being designated Bases for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (Russian acronym VKhVT). These bases, or "cadre" divisions were equipped with all the heavy armaments of a full-strength motor-rifle or tank division, while having only skeleton personnel strength, as low as 500 personnel. The officers and men of a cadre division focus primarily on maintaining the equipment in working condition. During wartime mobilization such a division would be beefed up to full manpower strength; however, in peacetime a cadre division is unfit for any combat. In 1995, of 81 land forces divisions, 51 were not combat ready. Of 26 brigades, 14 are not in a state of operational readiness. Airborne troops and two peacekeeping divisions had the highest level of readiness. By 1996 the ground forces included sixty-nine divisions: seventeen armored, forty-seven motorized infantry, and five airborne. Under the new defense policy document signed by President Boris Yeltsin on 1 August 1998, the number of divisions in the regular armed forces was to be reduced to ten. These were to be full-strength, high-readiness Ground Forces divisions, one of which will be specifically trained in peacekeeping operations. The divisions, deployed in various parts of the country, would engage exclusively in combat training. This policy was not carried out, and was superseded by the "constant combat readiness" concept (see Russian Ground Forces for details). The Motorized Rifle Troops have been mechanized infantry since 1957. The Soviet Union fielded a new model of armored personnel carrier (APC) every decade since the late 1950s, and in 1967 it deployed the world's first infantry fighting vehicle (IFV). Similar to an APC, the tactically innovative IFV had much greater firepower, in the form of a 73 mm main gun, an antitank missile launcher, a heavy machine gun, and firing ports that allowed troops to fire their individual weapons from inside the vehicle. In 1989 the Soviet Union had an inventory of over 65,000 APCs and IFVs, with the latter accounting for almost half of this inventory. The Soviet Ground Forces viewed the tank as their primary weapon. In 1989 the Tank Troops had five types of main battle tanks, including the T-54/55, T-62, T-64, T-72, and T-80. The greater part of the total tank inventory of 53,000 consisted of older, although still highly potent, T-54/55 and T-62 tanks. The Rocket Troops and Artillery have been an important combat arm of the Ground Forces because of the belief that firepower has tremendous destructive and psychological effect on the enemy. In 1989 the Ground Forces had eighteen artillery divisions, in addition to the artillery and missile units organic to armies and divisions. Artillery and surface-to-surface missile brigades were attached to each combined arms or tank army. An artillery regiment and a surface-to-surface missile battalion were parts of each Soviet motorized rifle and tank division. In 1989 the Rocket Troops and Artillery manned 1,400 "operational-tactical" surface-to-surface missile launchers.
List of Soviet Army divisions 1989–91 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Motor Rifle Divisions Division
Location, Status 1990
Location, Status 2006
Origin
1st Guards Motor 11th Guards Army, Kaliningrad, Rifle Division Baltic MD
Now Motor Rifle Brigade
2nd Guards Motor Alabino, Moscow Military Rifle Division District
3rd Guards Motor Coastal defence division, Baltic Rifle Division Fleet, Klaipeda
Disbanded
3rd Guards Rifle Division, to MRD 1957
4th Guards Motor Turkestan Military District, Rifle Division Termez
Disbanded 1989
4 Guards Mech Corps (WW2), then 4 Guards Mech Div, then 4 Gds MRD 1957
5th Guards Motor 40th Army, Shindand, Rifle Division Afghanistan, 1989
Disbanded 1989
5th Guards Mechanised Corps
No change
6th Guards Motor Now storage base, Moscow Northern Group of Forces, Poland Rifle Division Military District
1st Guards Rifle Division (second formation) 2nd Guards Rifle Division
90th Guards Rifle Division (WW2), became 90th Guards Tank Div in 1965
7th Motor Rifle Division
5th Army, Far East Military District
Disbanded 1958
7th Mechanized Corps, World War II
8th Guards Panfilovtsy MRD
17th Army Corps, Frunze, Turkestan Military District
Part of Kyrgyz armed forces
316th Rifle Division->8th Guards Rifle Division
9th Motor Rifle Division
12th Army Corps, Maykop, North Now 131st MR Bde, Maykop Caucasus Military District
9th Rifle Division
10th Guards Motor 31st Army Corps, TCMD, R Division Akhaltsikhe, Georgia
Part of Military of Georgia
10th Guards Rifle Division
11th Guards Motor Transbaikal Military District R Division
Now storage base
7th Guards Mech Corps (WW2)
12th Motor RD
39th Army, Mongolia
Converted to storage base, Ulan12th Rifle Division Ude
13th Motor Rifle Division
33rd Army Corps, Siberian Military District, Biysk
Storage base, Biysk
Newly formed 1960
15th Motor Rifle Division
Seventh Guards Army, Kirovakan, Transcaucasus Military District
Part of Armenian armed forces
100th MRD 1957←26th Mech Div 1946/55←15th Rifle Div
16th Motor RD
Baltic Military District, Latvia
Disbanded 1991
16th Guards Rifle Division
17th Guards Motor 13th Army, Carpathian Military R Division District
Part of Ukrainian Ground Forces 40th Guards Rifle Division, World War II
18th Guards Motor Central Group of Forces, RD Czechoslovakia
Baltic Fleet Ground Forces, Kaliningrad
18th Guards Rifle Division
19th Motor Rifle Division
No change
19th MRD 1965 ← 92nd MRD 1957 <19th Rifle Division
42nd Army Corps, North Caucasus MD, Vladikavkaz
20th Guards Motor 1st Guards Tank Army, Group of Withdrawn to Volgograd, North 8th Guards Mechanised Corps RDivision Soviet Forces in Germany, Caucasus MD 21st MRD
Group of Soviet F in Germany
Omsk, Siberian Military District?
416th Rifle Division (World War II)
22nd MRD
Far East Military District
Became Mot R Brigade, 1 June 2002
22nd Rifle Division
23rd Guards MRD
4th Army, Transcaucasus Military Part of Azerbaijan armed forces District
7th Guards Cavalry Corps, then 31st Guards Mechanised Division
24th Motor Rifle
13th Army, Carpathian Military
24th Rifle Division
Part of Ukrainian armed forces
Division
District, Yavarov
25th Guards MRD
1st Guards Army, Kiev Military District, Chernigov
Part of Ukrainian armed forces
25th Guards Rifle Division
26th Guards Motor 11th Guards Army, Baltic R Division Military District, Gusev
Disbanded 1989
26th Guards Rifle Division
27th Guards Motor Group of Soviet Forces in R Division Germany
Totskoye, Volga-Ural Military District
27th Guards Rifle Division
28th Guards Motor Odessa Military District R Division
Became 28th Mechanized Brigade (Ukraine) circa 2001
28th Guards Rifle Division
29th MRD
No change?
29th Rifle Division
30th Guards Motor Central Group of Forces, Zvolen, R Division Czechoslovakia
Disbanded in Belarus
55th Guards Rifle Division
32nd Guards Motor R Division
Moscow Military District
Disbanded early 1990s
32nd Guards Rifle Division
33rd MRD
Far East Military District
Now storage base
342nd Rifle Division
34th Motor Rifle Division
Ural Military District, Sverdlovsk
Volga-Ural Military District, Yekaterinburg
34 MRD 1965 < 126th MRD 1957 < 1955 77th Rifle Div
35th Motor Rifle Division
20th Army, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany
Disbanded 1992
35 MRD 1965, 19th MRD 1957, by 1955 1st Mech Div from 1st Mech Corps
36th MRD
Artemovsk, Kiev M District
Disbanded 1992
Formed 1966
37th Motor Rifle Division
6th Army, Leningrad Military District
Disbanded
25 RD (WW2), 156 MRD 1957, 37 MRD 1965
38th Guards Motor 36th Army, Transbaikal Military R Division District, Sretensk
MG Artillery Division
38 Gds RD (WW2), 38 Guards MRD 1965
39th Guards Motor 8th Guards Army, Group of R Division Soviet Forces in Germany
Disbanded 1992
39th Guards Rifle Division
40th Motor Rifle Division
5th Guards Army, Far East Military District
To Pacific Ocean Fleet as coastal defence division
40 Rifle Division
41st Motor Rifle Division
39th Army, Mongolia
Disbanded 1992
Formed 1967 from elements of 52nd MRD
42nd Guards North Caucasus Military District, Motor R Division Grozny
Became 173rd Training Centre, then disbanded 1992
24th Guards Rifle Division
43rd Guards(?) Motor R Division
Became 469th District Training Centre
43 RD (WW2), 130 MRD 1957, 43 MRD 1965
45th Guards Motor 30th Guards Army Corps, R Division Leningrad Military District
Became 138th Motor Rifle Brigade
45 Guards Rifle Division (WW2), to MRD 1957
46th Motor Rifle Division
Disbanded 1989
Formed 1980
47th Guards Motor 5th Army, Far East Military R Division District
Disbanded 1959
3rd Guards Mechanized Corps
48th Motor Rifle Division
Withdrawn to Smolensk, under KGB control, later disbanded
48th Rifle Division
Far East Military District
Volga Military District, Kuybyshev
Kiev Military District, Voroshilovgrad
Central Group of Forces, Vysoke Myto, Czechoslovakia
50th Guards Motor Belarussian Military District R Division
Part of Armed Forces of Belarus 50th Guards Rifle Division
51st Guards Motor 13th Army, Carpathian Military R Division District
Became Ukrainian Ground Forces' 51st Mechanized Brigade
76th Rifle Division, which became 51st Guards Rifle Division
52nd Motor Rifle Division
Transbaikal Military District, Nizhneudinsk
Storage base, later disbanded
347th Rifle Division
54th Motor Rifle Division
Sixth Army, Leningrad Military District, Alakutti
Reduced to storage base
341st Rifle Division
56th Motor Rifle Division
Siberian Military District, Omsk
Reorganised as District Training 56th Rifle Division Centre, later disbanded
57th Guards Motor 8th Guards Army, Group of R Division Soviet Forces in Germany
Disbanded 1992
57th Guards Rifle Division
58th Motor Rifle Division
36th Army Corps, Turkestan Military District, Kyzyl-Arvat
Became part of Turkmenistan armed forces
344th Rifle Division
59nd Guards Motor R Division
14th Guards Army, Odessa Military District, Tiraspol
Now 8th Motor Rifle Brigade
59th Guards Rifle Division, World War II
60th Motor Rifle Division
4th Army, Transcaucasus Military Became part of Military of District, Lenkoran Azerbaijan
406th Rifle Division
61st Motor Rifle Division
Turkestan Military District, Ashkabad
Part of Turkmenistan armed forces
357th Rifle Division
62nd Motor Rifle Division
33rd Army Corps, Siberian Military District, Itatka
63rd Guards Motor R Division
Leningrad Military District, Sertolovo
Became 56th District Training Centre
63rd Guards Rifle Division
64th Guards Motor 30th Guards Army Corps, R Division Leningrad Mil District, Sapernoe
Reduced to storage base
64th Guards Rifle Division
65th Motor Rifle Division
Storage base, later disbanded
368th Rifle Division
66th Guards Motor Carpathian Military District, R Division Chernivtsi
Part of Ukrainian armed forces
66th Guards Rifle Division
67th Motor Rifle Division
35th Army, Far East Military District, Skovorodino
1992 redesigned 115th Guards MRD
Formed 1968
68th Guards Mot Rifle Division[1]
Turkestan Military District, Sary Ozek
Part of Military of Kazakhstan
Former 372nd Red Banner Novgorod Rifle Division
69th Motor Rifle Division
26th Army Corps, Leningrad Military District, Vologda
Reduced to storage base
69th Rifle Division
70th Guards Motor 38th Army, Carpathian Military R Division District, Ivano-Frankovsk
Disbanded in 1991
70th Guards Rifle Division
71st Motor Rifle Division
6th Army, Leningrad Military District, Petrozavodsk
Reduced to storage base
71st Rifle Division
72nd Guards Motor R Division
1st Guards Army, Kiev Military District, Belya Tserkov
Became Ukrainian 72nd Mechanised Division
72nd GRD
73rd MRD
Far East Military District, Novoe
Disbanded 1989
73rd Rifle Division
74th MRD
Siberian Military District, Yurga
Disbanded 1989
227th Rifle Division
75th Motor Rifle Division
7th Transcaucasus Military District, Nakhichevan
KGB control 1989-91, disbanded 1992
75th Rifle Division
77th Guards Motor 26th Army Corps, Leningrad R Division Military District, Arkhangelsk
1989, converted to coastal defence division, 1991 disbanded
77th Guards Rifle Division
78th Motor Rifle Division
Ural Military District, Chebarkul
Converted to District Trg Centre, then reduced to storage base
417th Rifle Division
79th Motor Rifle Division
51st Army, Far East Military District, Poronaisk
Reduced to storage base
79th Rifle Division
Became part of Kazakh forces
80th Guards Rifle Division (WW2)
Ural Military District, Chelyabinsk
80th Guards MRD Turkestan Military District, Otar 81st Guards Motor 5th Army, Far East Military R Division District, Bikin
Now Omsk?
No change
Formed 1971
81st Guards Rifle Division
82nd Motor Rifle Division
34th Army Corps, North Caucasus Disbanded after 1989 Mi District, Volgograd
Formed 1969 from 266 MRD cadres
83rd Guards Motor R Division
13th Army, Carpathian Military District, Rovno
Disbanded 1986 or '89
8th Guards Cavalry Division
84th Motor Rifle Division
36th Army Corps, Turkestan Military District, Ashkabad
Became part of Turkmenistan's armed forces
Formed 1981 from 58 MRD cadre
85th Motor Rifle Division
Siberian Military District, Novosibirsk
No change
85th MRD 1957 < to 1955 85th Rifle Division
86th Guards Motor 14th Guards Army, Odessa R Division Military District, Beltsy
Disbanded after 1990
86th Guards Rifle Division
87th Motor Rifle Division
25th Army Corps, Far East Military District, Petropavlovsk
Disbanded 1989
Formed 1968 from elements of 22 MRD
88th Motor Rifle Division
36th Army Corps, Turkestan Military District, Kushka
Became part of Turkmenistan's armed forces
Formed 1980 from elements of 5 GMRD
91st Motor Rifle Division
29th Army, Transbaikal Military District, Bratsk
Reformed as 497th territorial educational center 1987
Formed Dec 1, 1981 Nizhneudinsk; 1986 relocated in settlement Padun of the city of Bratsk
92nd Guards Motor R Division
Odessa Military District, Nikolaev
Became Ukrainian 92nd District 92nd Guards Rifle Division Training Centre
93rd Guards Motor R Division
Southern Group of Forces, Kecskemét, Hungary
Withdrawn to Ukraine, became 93rd GRD part of Ukrainian Ground Forces
94th Guards Motor 2nd Guards Tank Army, Group of Withdrawn to Yurga, Siberian M 94th GRD R Division Soviet Forces in Germany D, became 74th Motor Rifle Bde 96th MRD
Volga Military District, Kazan
Became storage base, later disbd 96th Rifle Division
97th Guards Motor 13th Army, Carpathian Military R Division District, Slavuta
Became Ukrainian 97th Mechanized Brigade
97th Guards Rifle Division
99th Motor Rifle Division
25th Army Corps, Far East Military District, Anadyr
Red to 3840 Storage Base, 1 June 1999, storage base disb, 2002
Formed 1968(?)
100th Guards MRD
Transcaucasian Mil D, Tbilisi
Became 173rd District Training Centre
Soviet 1st Guards Mechanized Corps
105th MRD
Transbaikal Military District
Disbanded 1958
From WW2 era 36 MRD
107th MRD
Baltic Military District, Vilnius
Disbanded 1992
Formed 1968 from cadres 265th MRD
108th Motor Rifle Division
40th Army, Bagram, Afghanistan
Withdrawn to Termez, became part of Uzbek armed forces
360th Rifle Division
111th Motor Rifle Division
6th Army, Leningrad Military District, Sortavala
Became 23rd Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment
367th Rifle Division
115th Guards Motor R Division
Leningrad Military District?, Valdai
Became storage base
67th Guards Rifle Division
118th Motor Rifle Division
43rd Army Corps, Far East Military District, Birobidzhan
Became MG Artillery division
Formed 1969
120th Guards Motor R Division
Belarussian Military District, Minsk
Became part of Belarus armed forces
120 Guards Rifle Division, September 1943
121st Motor Rifle Division
5th Army, Far East Military District, Sibirtsevo
Became District Training Centre 10th Mechanised Corps, WW2
122nd Guards Motor R Division
36th Army, Transbaikal Military District, Dauriya
123rd Guards Motor R Division
5th Army, Far East Military District, Barabash
Became MG Artillery division
17th Guards Rifle Division
126th Motor Rifle Division
32nd Army Corps, Odessa Military District, Simferopol
Became Ukrainian coastal defence formation
126th Rifle Division
127th Motor Rifle Division
Seventh Guards Army, Transcaucaus MilD, Leninakan
Became Russian 102nd Military 261st Rifle Division Base
128th Guards Motor R Division
38th Army, Carpathian Military District, Mukachevo
Now 128th Mechanized Brigade, 128th Guards Mtn Rifle Division part of Ukrainian Ground Forces
129th Motor Rifle Division
Far East Military District, Knyaz- Became 392 District Training Volkonka Centre 1 December 1987
Formed 1969
131st Motor Rifle Division
6th Army, Leningrad Military District, Pechenga
45th Rifle Division (Soviet Union)
No change?
Became 200th Motor Rifle Brigade
5th Guards Tank Corps
134th Motor Rifle Division
Central Asian Military District, Dushanbe
Disbanded 1989
Formed 1980
135th Motor Rifle Division
15th Army, Far East Military District, Lesozavodsk
Became Machine-Gun Artillery Division
Former 39th Rifle Тихоокеанской Division
136th Motor Rifle Division
1st Guards Army, Kiev Military District, Piryatin
Became part of Ukrainian armed 343rd Rifle Division forces
144th Guards Motor R Division
Baltic Military District, Talinn
Withdrawn to Yelnya, Moscow MD, reduced to storage base
29th Guards Rifle Division
145th Motor Rifle Division
31st Army Corps, Transcaucasus Military District, Batumi
Became 12th Military Base
Soviet 89th "Tamanyan" Rifle Division
146th Motor Rifle Division
Leningrad Military District, Chernaya Rechka
Reduced to storage base
147th Motor Rifle Division
31st Army Corps, Transcaucasus Military District, Akhalkalaki
Became 62nd Military Base
149th Motor Rifle Division
39th Army, Mongolia
Withdrawn to Borzya, became Motor Rifle Brigade
150th MRD
Transbaikal Military District, Borzya
Became District Training Centre
152nd MRD
Transcaucasus MDistrict, Kutaisi
Disbanded 1991
155th Motor Rifle Division
32nd Army, Turkestan Military District, Ust-Kamenogorsk
Became part of Kazakh armed forces 1992
157th Motor Rifle Division
32nd Army Corps, Odessa Military District, Kerch
Reduced to storage base
161st Motor Rifle Division
13th Army, Carpathian Military District, Izyaslav
Became part of Ukrainian armed 161st Rifle Division, briefly 24th Mech forces Div and 99th MRD until 1965
164th Motor Rifle Division
7th Guards Army, Transcaucasus Military District, Yerevan
Became part of Armenian armed 164th Rifle Division, briefly 69th Mech forces Div and 121st MRD until 1965
167th Motor Rifle Division[2]
32nd Army, Turkestan Military District, Semipalatinsk
Became part of Kazakh armed forces 1992
167th Rifle Division, briefly in 1950s until 1957 153rd MRD
172nd Motor Rifle 1st Guards Army, Kiev Military Division District, Konotop
Reduced to storage base
172nd Rifle Division, World War II
180th Motor Rifle Division
Became part of Ukrainian armed 180th 'Kievskaya' Rifle Division, World forces 1992 War II
Odessa Military District, Belgorod-Dnesterovskii
192nd Motor Rifle 35th Army, Far East Military Division District, Blagoveshchensk
Reduced to Motor Rifle Brigade
194th Motor Rifle Division
15th Army, Far East Military District, Khabarovsk
Reduced to Motor Rifle Brigade
199th Motor Rifle Division
5th Army, Far East Military District, Krasny Kut
Reduced to storage base
201st MRD
40th Army, Kunduz, Afghanistan
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
203rd Motor Rifle 32nd Army, Turkestan Military Division District, Karaganda
Reduced to storage base, became part of Kazakh armd forces
206th Motor Rifle Division
13th Army Corps, Moscow MD, Tambov
Reduced to storage base
207th Motor Rifle Division
2nd Guards Tank Army, Group of Disbanded 1992 Soviet F in Germany, Stendal
213th MR D
Volga Military District, Totsk
216th Motor Rifle Division
4th Army, Transcaucasus Military Disbanded 1989 District, Saatl?
218th MRD
Siberian Mil District, Abakan
Disbanded
219th MRD
Far East MDistrict, Vozhaevka
Reduced to storage base
242nd MRD
33rd Army Corps, Siberian Military District, Abakan
Reduced to storage base
206th Rifle Division 207th Rifle Division, formed 1942
Disbanded 216th Rifle Division
Formed 1972
245th Motor Rifle Division
29th Army, Transbaikal Military District, Gusinoozyorsk
254th Motor Rifle Division
Southern Group of Forces, Hungary
Withdrawn to Artemovsk, Ukraine, became Ukrainian mech div
254th Rifle Division
262nd Motor Rifle 35th Army, Far East Military Division District, Vozhaevka
Later disbanded
262nd Rifle Division
265th Motor Rifle Division
Far East Military District, Yekaterinovka
Reduced to storage base
265th Rifle Division
266th Motor Rifle Division
35th Army, Far East Military District, Raichikhinsk
Reduced to storage base
266th Rifle Division
270th Motor Rifle Division
15th Army, Far East Military District, Komsomolsk
272nd Motor Rifle 43rd Army Corps, Far East Division Military District, Babstovo
No change
No change
Became MG Artillery division
277th Motor Rifle Division
5th Army, Far East MD, Sergevka Became MG Artillery division
287th Motor Rifle Division
38th Army, Carpathian Military District, Yarmolints
295th Motor Rifle Division
4th Army, Transcaucasus Military Became part of Azerbaijani District, Baku armed forces
15 + 7 Unchanged 2nd Guards MRD 19th MRD 20th Guards MRD 21st MRD 27th Guards MRD 29th Guards MRD 34th MRD 62nd MRD 67th/115th MRD 81st MRD 85th MRD 122nd MRD 201st MRD 245th MRD 270th MRD
(later reformed a new 3rd MRD) 2nd Guards TD 4th Guards TD 5th Guards TD 10th Guards TD 15th Guards TD 21st Guards TD 90th Guards TD
First formed 1967
270th Rifle Division 272nd Rifle Division 66th Rifle Division
Became part of Ukrainian armed 287th Rifle Division forces 295th Rifle Division
143 Motor Rifle Divisions and 52 Tank Divisions after 1989 3 Coastal Defence 6 Machine-Gun Art 11 MR Brigade 16+7 to Ucraina 18th Guards MRD 38th Guards MRD 131 (ex-9 MRD) 17th Guards (ex-22 MRD) 40th MRD 118th MRD 24th MRD th rd 138 (ex-45 MRD) 45 MRD 123 MRD 25th Guards 8 (ex-59 G MRD) 28th Guards 135th MRD 74 (ex-94 GMR 6 + 2 Training 272nd MRD 51st Guards 200 (ex-131 MR th Centers 277 MRD 66th Guards (ex-149 MRD) rd 43 Guards MRD 72nd Guards (ex-192 MRD) 91st (497 TerEduC) 45 MRD + 12 TD (ex-194 MRD) 92nd Guards 100th MR (173 DTC) 93rd Guards Disbanded (ex-24th TD) st 121 MRD (DTC) 3 – 4 – 5 – 7 – 16 (ex 1st G TD) 97th Guards th 129 MRD (392 DTC) – 26 – 30 – 32 – 126th MRD 150th MR (DTC) 35 – 36 – 37 – 39 23 MR + 12 T 127th Guards th 49 TD (212 DTC) – 41 – 42 – 46 – Storage Bases 136th MRD th 44 TD (DTC) 47 – 48 – 52 – 56 6 – 11 – 12 – 13 161st MRD 2 Military Bases – 57 – 65 – 70 – – 33 – 54 – 64 – 180th MRD th 127th MR (102 MB) 73 – 74 – 75 – 77 69 – 71 – 78 – 254 MRD 79 – 111 – 115 17th G TD 147th MR (62 MB) – 82 – 83 – 86 – – 144 – 146 – 87 – 96 – 99 – 23rd TD 105 – 106 – 134 – 157 – 172 – 199 30th TD MVD Division 152 – 207 – 213 – – 206 – 219 – 41at Guards TD 14th TD 242 – 265 – 266 42nd Guards TD 216 – 218 – 262 MRD MRD 48th Guards TD 7 G – 9 G – 12 G 3 G – 16 G – 26 117th GuardsTD G – 29 – 40 G – – 13 – 20 – 25 – 2+8 to Belarus 31 – 32 – 47 – 60 51 – 65 – 67 – th 68 – 76 – 77 – 59 thG MRD – 75 – 79 TD 120 G MRD 193 TD 6th G TD 8th G TD 11th GTD 19th TD 28th TD 34th TD 37th TD 45th G TD
16+1 Other Countries
1 Kyrghyzistan 8th Guards MRD 1 Georgia 10th Guards MRD 2 Armenia 15th MRD 164th MRD 2 Azerbaijian 23rd Guards MRD 295th MRD 1 Uzbekistan 108th MRD 4 Turkmenistan 58th MRD 61st MRD 84th MRD 88th MRD 6 Khazakstan 68th Guards MRD 81st Guards MRD 155th MRD 167th MRD 203rd MRD 78th TD
Tank Divisions Division
Location, Status 1990
Location, Status 2006
Origins
1st Guards Tank Division
11th Guards Army, Kaliningrad, Baltic MD
Reduced to Tank Brigade
1st Tank Corps
2nd Guards Tank Division
39th Army, Mongolia
Withdrawn to Siberia
2nd Guards Tank Corps
3rd Guards Tank Division
7th Tank Army, Belarussian Military District, Zaslonovo
4th Guards Moscow Military District, NaroKantemirovskaya Tank Div Fominsk
Reduced to storage base, became 3rd Guards Tank Corps part of Belarus armed forces
No change
5th Guards Cavalry Corps
5th Guards Tank Division
Transbaikal Military District, Kyakhta
6th Guards Tank Division
28th Army, Belorussian Military District, Grodno
7th Guards Tank Division
3rd Shock Army, Group of Soviet Forces Disbanded 1990 in Germany, Dessau-Rosslau
8th Guards Tank Division
5th Guards Tank Army, Belorussian Military District, Pykhovichi
Reduced to storage base, became 8th Guards Tank Corps part of Belarus armed forces
9th Guards Tank Division
1st Guards Tank Army, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, Riesa/SachsenZeithan
Disbanded in 1991
10th Guards UralskoLvovskaya Tank Division
3rd Shock Army, Group of Soviet Forces Withdrawn to Boguchar, in Germany, Altengrabow Moscow MD
11th Guards Tank Division
1st Guards Tank Army, Group of Soviet Withdrawn to Slonim, Belarus, Forces in Germany, Dresden became part of Belarus AF
12th Guards Tank Division
3rd Shock Army, Group of Soviet Forces Disbanded at Vladikavkaz in in Germany, Neuruppin 1991
13th Guards Tank Division
Southern Group of Forces, Veszprém,
Disbanded in 1989
14th Tank Division
North Caucasian MD, Novocherkassk
Became 100th Div of MVD 1989 Formed 1972
15th Guards Tank Division
Central Group of Forces, Milovitse, Czechoslovakia
Withdrawn to Chebarkul, Volga- 15th Guards Cavalry Ural MD Division
16th Guards Tank Division
Withdrawn to Chaykovsky, 2nd Guards Tank Army, Group of Soviet Volga-Ural MD, reduced to Forces in Germany, Neustrelitz storage base
16th Guard Tank Corps
17th Guards Tank Division
6th Guards Tank Army, Kiev Military District, Krivoy Rog
Became Ukrainian 17th Guards Armoured Brigade
20th Guards Rifle Division 1945
19th Guards Tank Division
Southern Group of Forces, Hungary, Esztergom
Withdrawn to Belarus, reduced to 2nd Guards Mechanised storage base Corps
20th Zvenigorodskaya Tank Northern Group of Forces, Poland Division
Now part of Siberian Mil District
4th Guards Tank Corps
Reorganised as mechanised brigade, became part of Belarus
Disbanded in 1991
21st Guards Tank Division
35th Army, Far East Military District, Belogorsk
No change
23rd Tank Division
8th Tank Army, Carpathian Military District, Ovruch
Reduced to storage base, became part of Ukrainian armed forces
24th Tank Division
Baltic MD, Riga
Withdrawn to Strugi Krasne, Leningrad MD, as Motor Rifle Brigade
25th Tank Division
20th Guards Army, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, Vogelsang
Disbanded 1989
26th Guards Tank Division
Moscow Military District, Kovrov
Reorganised as District Training Centre
27th Tank Division
Far East Military District, Zavatinsk
Reduced to storage base
28th Tank Division
28th Army, Belarus Military District,
Reduced to equipment base,
63rd Cavalry Division 7th Guards Tank Corps
9th Tank Corps
13th Guards Rifle Div
20th Tank Corps 31st Guards Rifle Division
53rd Guards 'Tartus' Red Banner Rifle Division
8th Mechanised Corps
Slonim
became part of Belarus AF
29th Tank Division
5th Guards Tank Army, Belarus Military Reduced to storage base District, Slutsk
30th Guards Tank Division
8th Tank Army, Carpathian Military District, Novograd-Volinsky
Now 30th Mechanized Brigade (Ukraine)
31st Tank Division
28th Army Corps, Central Group of Forces, Bruntal
Withdrawn to Moscow MD, amalgamated with another div
32nd Guards Tank Division
20th Guards Army, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, Juterburg
Disbanded 1989
34th Tank Division
7th Tank Army, Belorussian Military District, Borisov
Reduced to storage base, became part of Belarus armed forces
37th Tank Division
7th Tank Army, Belorussian Military District, Polotsk
Reduced to storage base, became part of Belarus armed forces
40th Guards Tank Division
11th Guards Army, Baltic Military District, Sovetsk
Reduced to tank brigade, then storage base
41st Guards Tank Division
1st Guards Army, Kiev Military District, Reduced to storage base, became 41st Guards Rifle Uman part of Ukrainian armed forces Division
42nd Guards Tank Division
6th Guards Tank Army, Kiev Military District, Dnepropetrovsk
Reduced to storage base, became 42nd Guards Rifle part of Ukrainian armed forces Division
44th Tank Division
Ural Military District, Kamyshin
Reorganised as district training centre
279th Rifle Division
45th Guards Tank Training Division (I)
Belorussian Military District
Disbanded 1960
69th Guards Rifle Division
45th Guards Tank Division (II)
Belorussian Military District, Pechi
Reorganised as 72nd Training Centre, became part of Belarus
6th Guards Rifle Division
47th Guards Tank Division
Soviet 1st Guards Tank Army, Group of Withdrawn to Moscow Military Soviet Forces in Germany, Hillersleben District, amalgamated
48th Guards Tank Division
Oster, Kiev Military District
Became 169th Dist Trng Centre, Ukrainian Ground Forces
5th Guards Airborne Division
49th Tank Division
Transbaikal Military District
Became 212th Dist Trng Centre
Formed 1965 as MR training div; by 1989 49 TD
51st Tank Division
39th Army, Bogandur, Mongolia
Withdrawn, red to storage base
Formed 1967
60th Tank Division
Moscow Military District
Disbanded 1990
Formed from 60 RD? 1947
65th Tank Division
Moscow Military District, Ryazan?
'Spare' division (cadre?)
67th Tank Division
Siberian Military District
'Spare' division (cadre?)
Reduced to storage base, post 1989
68th Tank Division
Siberian Military District
'Spare' division (cadre?)
Reduced to storage base, post 1989
75th Guards Tank Division
Kiev Military District
Disbanded 1989
75th Guards Rifle Division, 1965(?)
76th Tank Division
Belarussian Military District, Brest
Reduced to storage base, 1989
77th Tank Division
Far East Military District
Reduced to storage base, post 1989
264th Rifle Division
78th Tank Division
Ayaguz, Turkestan Military District
Became part of Kazakh armed forces
78th Rifle Division
79th Tank Division
8th Guards Army, Group of Soviet Forces in Germany
Disbanded 1992
79th Guards Rifle Division
90th Guards Tank Division
Group of Soviet Forces in Germany
Withdrawn to Soviet Union
6th Guards Mech Corps
13th Guards Cavalry Division
116th Guards Rifle Division
47th Guards Rifle Division
117th Guards Tank Division Carpathian Military District
Became 119th District Training 111th Guards Rifle Centre of the Ukrainian GForces Division
193rd Tank Division
Reduced to storage base
Belarussian Military District
193rd Rifle Division