User:Buckshot06/List of armies of the Soviet Union (1989-91)
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List of armies of the Armed Forces of the USSR (1989-1991) - list armies as part of Soviet Armed Forces as of 1989-1991 and their status in the Former Soviet Union as of 2018.
- Note:
- Due to inconsistencies in various sources, the list may contain inaccuracies;
- A dash in the column "Predecessor" means that the army was a newly created formation;
- A dash in the column "1992 Transfer to jurisdiction" means that the army was disbanded without being under the jurisdiction of any of the former USSR states;
- In all sections in the column "Year of creation" the year in which the formation received the given full name is indicated;
- The list of common conditional abbreviations used is given at the end of the article.
Soviet Ground Forces
[edit]This section includes armies subordinated to the Commander-in-Chief of the Ground Forces.
Combined arms armies
[edit]Complete list of the combined arms armies (21 formations) that existed in the Ground Forces in the period from 1989 to 1991.[1]
- Note:
- Guards - Guards;
- MSD - motorized rifle division;
- pulad - machine gun-artillery division;
- td - tank division;
- UR - fortified area.
Army | Year of creation | Predecessor | Higher Headquarters, Location 1989-1991 |
Divisions and fortified areas | 1992 Transition under jurisdiction |
Reformation, change of control location, state on 2018 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Guards Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1968 | 1st Separate Combined Arms Army | KVO, Chernihiv, Chernihiv Oblast, Ukraine |
Six divisions | Ukraine | HQ 1st Guards Combined Arms Army was reorganized in 1992 into HQ 1st Army Corps. In 1996 the corps was disbanded. |
3rd Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1954 | 3rd Shock Army | GSFG, Magdeburg, East Germany |
Four tank divisions | — | The Army HQ was relocated to Khabarovsk and disbanded in March 1992. |
4th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1944 | 34th Army | Transcaucasus Military District, Baku, AzSSR |
Five MRDs (one mobilization) | — | In August 1992, the Army Headquarters was disbanded. |
5th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1941 | — | Far Eastern Military District, Ussuriysk, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR |
Five divisions, five fortified regions | Russia | The command location has not changed. |
6th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1952 | 31st Rifle Corps | LenVO Petrozavodsk |
Six motor rifle divisions (three mobilization) | Russia | In 1998, the Army was disbanded. |
7th Guards Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1943 | 64th Army | Yerevan, Transcaucasus Military District | Three motor rifle divisions, two fortified regions | — | In August 1992 HQ 7th Guards Army was disbanded. |
8th Guards Combined Arms Army of the Order of Lenin | 1943 | 62nd Army | GSFG, Nohra, Germany |
Three motor rifle divisions, one tank division | Russia | HQ 8th Guards Army was moved in 1993 to Volgograd and reorganized into the 8th Army Corps. |
11th Guards Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1943 | 16th Army | PribVO , Kaliningrad, RSFSR |
Five divisions | Russia | In 1997, the army was reorganized into the Ground and Coastal Forces of the Baltic Fleet. In April 2016, 11th Army Corps was created as part of the Baltic Fleet. Location has not changed. |
13th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1941 | — | Rivne, Rivne Oblast, Ukraine, Carpathian Military District | Five motor rifle divisions | Ukraine | Reduced to an army corps. In November 2013, the Corps HQ was reorganized into Operational Command West. The location has not changed |
14th Guards Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1956 | 10th Guards Rifle Corps | Tiraspol, Molova | Five divisions (some mobilisation) | Russia[2] | In April 1995, the Army HQ was reorganized into the Operational Group of Russian Forces in Transnistria. Location has not changed. |
15th Combined Arms Army | April 1953 | HQ Far Eastern Military District (I) | Khabarovsk, Khabarovsk Territory, RSFSR | Four Motor Rifle Divisions, two Fortified Regions | Russia | In the early 1990s, the 15th Army was reduced into the 43rd Army Corps. |
20th Guards Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1957 | 4th Guards Mechanized Army | GSFG, Eberswalde, Germany |
Three tank divisions, one motor rifle division | Russia | HQ 20th Guards Combined Arms Army was relocated in 1993 to Voronezh. |
22nd Guards Combined Arms Army | 1990 | 13th Guards Army Corps | Moscow Military District, Nizhny Novgorod, Nizhny Novgorod Oblast , RSFSR |
Three divisions | Russia | In June 2009, HQ 22nd Army was disbanded. |
28th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1942 | — | BelVO, Grodno, Grodno Oblast, |
6th Guards TD 28th TD 76th TD 50th Guards MRD |
Belarus | In June 1993, HQ 28th Combined Arms Army was reorganized into the 28th Army Corps. In December 2002, the corps was reorganized into the Western Operational Command. |
32nd Combined Arms Army | 1971 | 1st Army Corps | Central Asian -> Turkestan MDs, Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan |
Three motor rifle divisions; 78th Tank Division 10th Fortified Region |
Kazakhstan | In June 1991, the 32nd Combined Arms Army was renamed the 40th Combined Arms Army. On the basis of HQ 40th Army, in April 1993, HQ Kazakh Ground Forces was formed. |
35th Combined Arms Army | 1969 | 29th Army Corps | Far Eastern MD, Belogorsk, Amur Region, RSFSR |
Five motor rifle divisions One fortified region |
Russia | In the early 1990s HQ 35th Army was reorganized into HQ 43rd Army Corps. |
36th Combined Arms Army | 1976 | 86th Army Corps | Transbaikal Military District, Borzya, Chita Oblast, RSFSR |
Three motor rifle divisions, five fortified regions. | Russia | In June 1989 HQ 36th Army was reorganized into HQ 55th Army Corps, which was disbanded in 1994. |
38th Combined Arms Red Banner Army | 1942 | 4th Reserve Army | Carpathian Military District Ivano-Frankivsk, Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ukraine |
Five motor rifle divisions | Ukraine | In January 1992, HQ 38th Combined Arms Army was reorganized into HQ 38th Army Corps. The corps was disbanded in 2003. |
39th Combined Arms Army | 1970 | — | Transbaikal Military District, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia |
Two tank divisions, three motor rifle divisions | Russia | The Army was disbanded in December 1992.[3] |
40th Combined Arms Army | 1979 | — | Turkestan Military District, Kabul, Afghanistan |
Three motor rifle divisions 103rd Guards Airborne Division |
— | In March 1989, HQ 40th Army was reorganized into HQ 59th Army Corps in Samarkand, which was disbanded in 1992. |
51st Combined Arms Army | 1977 | 2nd Army Corps | Far Eastern Military District, Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Sakhalin Oblast, RSFSR |
18th Machine Gun Artillery Division 33rd Motor Rifle Division 79th Motor Rifle Division |
Russia | In the early 1990s, the 51st Army was reorganized into 68th Army Corps (Russia). |
Tank and mechanised armies 1945-91
[edit]Initially a list of tank armies that existed in the Ground Forces in the period from 1989 to 1991.[1]
Tank army (full name) |
Year of creation | Predecessor | Higher headquarters 1989-1991 |
Divisions in the army | 1992 Transition under jurisdiction |
Reformation, change of control location, state on 2018 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Guards Tank Red Banner Army | 1944 | 1st Tank Army | GSFG, Dresden, East Germany |
Two tank divisions, one motor rifle division | Russia | HQ 1st Guards Tank Army was relocated to Smolensk in 1994 and reorganized into HQ 1st Combined Arms Army. In 2014, the army was recreated in Odintsovo, Moscow Oblast. |
2nd Guards Tank Red Banner Army | 1944 | 2nd Tank Army | GSVG, Fürstenberg, East Germany |
One tank division, three motor rifle divisions | Russia | The army headquarters was relocated to Samara in 1993 and reorganized as HQ 2nd Guards Combined Arms Army. |
3rd Guards Tank Army | May 1943 | 3rd Tank Army | Luckenwalde, East Germany | Three divisions | - | Redesignated 3rd Guards Tank Army on May 14, 1945. Known as 3rd Guards Red Banner Mechanized Army in 1946. Redesignated 18th Guards Army in 1957. Moved to Almaty 1964 as an operations group, briefly reformed as an army 1969, but then used as the basis of HQ SAVO. |
5th Guards Tank Red Banner Army | 1957 | 5th Guards Mechanized Army | BelVO, Bobruisk, Mogilev Oblast, BSSR |
Three tank divisions, one motor rifle division | Belarus | Became an army corps. Disbanded in 2001 |
6th Guards Tank Red Banner Army | 1957 | 6th Guards Mechanized Army | KVO, Dnepropetrovsk, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Ukraine |
Seven tank divisions, several mobilisation | Ukraine | Became an army corps. In November 2013, the Corps Directorate was reorganized into Operational Command "South". The deployment has not changed. |
7th Tank Red Banner Army | 1957 | 7th Mechanized Army | Belorussian Military District, Borisov, Minsk Oblast, BSSR |
Three tank divisions, one motor rifle division (mobilisation) | Belarus | In August 1993, HQ 7th Tank Army was reduced in status to 7th Army Corps. In 1994, the corps was renamed 65th Army Corps. In December 2001, the 65th Army Corps was reorganized into the North-Western Operational Command. The deployment has not changed. |
8th Tank Army of the Red Banner | 1957 | 8th Mechanized Army | PrikVO, Zhytomyr, Zhytomyr Region, Ukrainian SSR |
23rd TD 30th Guards. TD 50th TD |
Ukraine | In December 1993, HQ 8th Tank Army was reorganized into the HQ 8th Army Corps. The corps was disbanded in 2015. |
Air Forces
[edit]Air armies (18 formations) that existed in the USSR Air Force in the period from 1989 to 1991.[4][5]
- Note: abbreviations
- adib/apib - fighter-bomber aviation division / fighter-bomber aviation regiment;
- bad/bap - bomber aviation division / bomber aviation regiment;
- VVS - air force (as applied to a military district or group of troops);
- vtap - military transport aviation regiment;
- Guards is short for Guards;
- drap/orap - long-range reconnaissance aviation regiment / separate reconnaissance aviation regiment;
- iad/iap - fighter aviation division / fighter aviation regiment;
- oap - separate aviation regiment;
- ovp - separate helicopter regiment;
- osap - separate mixed aviation regiment;
- otvp - separate transport helicopter regiment;
- oshap - separate assault aviation regiment;
- tbad - heavy bomber aviation division.
- uap - training aviation regiment;
Air Army (full name) |
Year of creation | Predecessor | Belonging to association (military district or group of troops), dislocation management, 1989-1991 |
Divisions and separate regiments in the army | 1992 Transition under jurisdiction |
Reformation, change of control location, state on 2018 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Air Red Banner Army | 1957 | 29th and 54th Air Army | FOR, Khabarovsk, RSFSR |
20th IAD 40th IAD 33rd IAD 303rd IAD 26th Guards apib 229th apib 293rd apib 277th bap 387th cap 799th op 257th osap |
Russia | In May In 1998, the 1st Air Army was reorganized into the 11th Air Force and Air Defense Army. The location has not changed |
4th Air Army of the Supreme High Command | 1968 | Air Force TsGV | Supreme High Command Headquarters, Legnica , Poland |
132nd bad 149th bad 239th IAD 151st electronic warfare unit 688th detachment 55th detachment |
Russia | In August 1992, the 4th Air Army was relocated to Rostov-on-Don. In June 1997, the 4th Air Army was reorganized into the 4th Air Force and Air Defense Army. The location has not changed |
5th Air Army | 1988 | VVS OdVO | OdVO, Odessa, Ukrainian SSR |
119th IAD 190 th IAP 642nd Guards. apib 827th unit |
Russia | In August 1992, the 5th Air Army department was reorganized into the 5th Aviation Corps department. In 2004, by the merger of 5th Aviation Corps and 60th Air Defense Corps, Air Command South was created. The location has not changed[6] |
14th Air Army | 1988 | VVS PrikVO | PrikVO, Lvov, Ukrainian SSR |
289th bad 533 -ya iad 48th guards. orap 452nd oshap |
Ukraine | In August 1992, the 14th Air Army was reorganized into the 14th Aviation Corps. In 2004, by merging 14th Aviation Corps and 28th Air Defense Corps was created Air Command "West" |
16th Red Banner Air Army | 1988 | Air Force GSVG | GSVG, Wünsdorf, Germany |
6th Guards. Iad 16th Guards. iad 126th iad 105th adib 125th adib 357th oap 368th oap 11th orap 931st guards . detachment 226th sap 239th guards. ovp |
Russia | Management of the 16th Air Army in November 1993 was relocated to the settlement. Kubinka of the Moscow Region. In November 1998, it was reorganized into the Directorate of the 16th Combined Aviation Corps. In February 2002, the Directorate of the 16th Corps was reorganized into Directorate of the 16th Air Army. In August 2009, the Directorate of the 16th Air Army was disbanded |
17th Air Army | 1988 | VVS KVO | KVO, Kiev, Ukrainian SSR |
105th UAP 702 th uap 703rd uap 130th uap 288th uap |
Ukraine | Disbanded in 1992 |
23rd Air Army | 1988 | Air Force of ZabVO | ZabVO, Chita, RSFSR |
30th adib 246th IAD 120th IAP 101st Regt 125th unit 193rd unit 68th unit |
Russia | |
24th Air Army of the Reserve of the Main Operational Command | 1980 | 2nd Separate Heavy Bomber Aviation Corps | YES, Vinnitsa, Ukrainian SSR |
32- I bad 56th bad 138th IAD 118th EW brigade 511th brigade 456th Guards. vtap |
Ukraine | In March 1992, the 24th Air Army department was reorganized into the Ukrainian Air Force department]. The location has not changed |
26th Air Army | 1988 | BelVO Air Force | BelVO, Minsk, BSSR |
1st Guards. bad 95th iad 206th cap 378th cap 379th cap 10th orap 50th sap 65th ovp |
Belarus | In June 1992, the directorate of the 26th Air Army was reorganized into the directorate of the Belarusian Air Force. In 2001, the directorate of the Belarusian Air Force and the directorate of the Air Defense Forces of Belarus have been merged. The location has not changed |
30th Air Army of the High Command Reserve | 1980 | 8th Separate Heavy Bomber Aviation Corps | YES, Irkutsk, RSFSR |
73rd Tbad 79th Tbad< in April The 37th Air Army, with the re-creation of the Long-Range Aviation Command</ref> |
Russia | In October 1994, the Directorate of the 30th Air Army was disbanded |
34th Air Army | 1988 | Air Force ZakVO | ZakVO, Tbilisi, GSSR |
36th Bad 283rd Iad 80th Oshap 313th detachment 882nd detachment 325th detachment 793rd detachment |
— | In November 1994, the directorate of the 34th Air Army was disbanded |
36th Air Army | 1988 | Air Force of the Southern Group of Forces | Southern Armed Forces, Budapest, Hungary |
11th Guards. iad 44th bap 190th apib 328th guards. orap |
— | In November 1994, the directorate of the 34th Air Army was disbanded |
37th Air Army of the Reserve of the Main Strategic Command | 1980 | Long-Range Aviation Command | YES, Moscow, RSFSR |
106th tbad 201st tbad 271st vtap |
Russia | In August 2009, the directorate of the 37th Air Army was reorganized into the Long-Range Aviation Command |
46th Air Army of the Supreme High Command of the SN | 1980 | 6th Separate Heavy Bomber Aviation Corps | DA, Smolensk, RSFSR |
13th battalion 15th battalion 22nd battalion 326th battalion 103rd vtap 199th Guards. Drap The 290th Drape |
Russia[7] | In October 1994, the 46th Air Army command was disbanded |
49th Air Army | 1988 | TurkVO Air Force | TurkVO, Tashkent, UzSSR |
34th Adib 115th Guards. IAP 735th Bap 87th Orap |
— | According to some sources, in June 1989, the Directorate of the 49th Air Army was reorganized into the 56th Combined Aviation Corps [8]. According to other sources The 49th Air Army was merged with the 73rd Air Army, and in January 1993 the 73rd Air Army was reorganized into the Air Force of Uzbekistan[9] |
73rd Air Army | 1988 | Air Force SAVO | SAVO → TurkVO, Alma-Ata, KazSSR[10] → Tashkent, UzSSR[11] |
10th IAD< br>24th adib 149th bap 905th iap 39th orap |
Kazakhstan Uzbekistan[12] |
in May 1992 became the basis for the creation of the Air Force of Kazakhstan[13][14]. At the same time, this aviation corps included 5 aviation regiments. refname=MH/> |
76th Air Red Banner Army | 1968 | LenVO Air Force | LenVO, Leningrad, RSFSR |
67th Bap 98th Guards Regt 138th osap 722nd bap |
Russia | In July 1998, the 76th Air Army was merged with the 6th Separate Air Defense Army to form 6th Air and Air Defence Forces Army. |
References
[edit]- ^ a b Feskov et al 2013, p. 640.
- ^ After the collapse of the USSR, HQ 14th Guards Army and the 59th Guards MRD went to Russia. The rest of the formations are divided between Ukraine and Moldova
- ^ http://www.ww2.dk/new/army/armies/39oa.htm; see also Feskov et al 2013, 574, 576.
- ^ Feskov et al 2013.
- ^ I. Drogovoz (2007). Air Shield of the Country of Soviets. Military Historical Library. Minsk. p. 448. ISBN 978-975-13-9628-9.
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ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Alexander Dmitriev (2018-08-05). "Who guards the sky over Odessa?". www.odessa-life.od.ua. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
- ^ The 13th and 15th divisions went to Ukraine
- ^ 49th Air Force on the Michael Holm Historical Site
- ^ Sobirov M. (2013-09-15). "Abstract "The history of the formation and development of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan"" (PDF). www.library.ziyonet.uz. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
- ^ ww2.dk/new/air%20force/army/73va.htm 73rd Air Army on the historical website of Michael Holm
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ The formations and units of the 73rd air army were shared between Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. The command of the 73rd Air Army went to Uzbekistan
- ^ Timur Aubakirov (2017-09-04). ru/interview/general-leytenant-aviatsii-nurlan-ormanbetov-professiya-letchika-%E2%80%93-eto-ne-tolko-romantika-no-i-trud-172462239/ "Aviation Lieutenant General Nurlan Ormanbetov: "The profession of a pilot is not only romance, but also work»". www.sarbaz.kz. Archived from -professiya-letchika-%E2%80%93-eto-ne-tolko-romantika-no-i-trud-172462239/ the original on 2017-11-07. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
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(help) - ^ Vladimir Severny (2018-08-20). ""Airplanes First"". www.caravan.kz. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
- Feskov, V.I.; Golikov, V.I.; Kalashnikov, K.A.; Slugin, S.A. (2013). Вооруженные силы СССР после Второй Мировой войны: от Красной Армии к Советской [The Armed Forces of the USSR after World War II: From the Red Army to the Soviet: Part 1 Land Forces] (in Russian). Tomsk: Scientific and Technical Literature Publishing. ISBN 9785895035306.