5th Air and Air Defence Forces Army
5th Army of Air Forces and Air Defence | |
---|---|
Active | 2001–2009 |
Country | Russia |
Branch | Russian Air Force |
Size | 2000s: ~ 3-5 air regiments |
Garrison/HQ | Yekaterinburg |
The 5th Army of VVS and PVO (5-я Краснознамённая армия военно-воздушных сил и противовоздушной обороны) was the Russian Air Force's smallest Air Army, with the headquarters located in Yekaterinburg. Its zone of responsibility was the Volga-Ural Military District, on the border between Europe and Asia.
The army shared its numerical numbering, but little history/lineage, with the Soviet Air Forces' 5th Air Army of the Second World War.
History
[edit]After the fall of the Soviet Union, the 4th Independent Air Defence Army of the former Soviet Air Defence Forces remained operating with its headquarters at Yekaterinburg. Either on 10 June 1994[1] or in December 1994 the army became the 5th Independent Air Defence Corps.[2] On 1 May 1998 this brought in air forces formations (as listed at [1] and [2]) and became the 5th Independent Corps of VVS and PVO. On 1 January 2001 (Holm, date of the directive?) or 1 June 2001 (Ivlev, note 1) the formation became the 5th Army of the VVS and PVO.[2]
Until October 2003 and the creation of the Russian airbase at Kant, Kyrgyzstan in Kyrgyzstan where a small number of Sukhoi Su-25 attack aircraft were located, the Air Army had no combat aircraft. It had only three regiments of surface-to-air missiles (Yekaterinburg, Samara and Engels), but also included two helicopter regiments and some other auxiliary units (seemingly the Balashov Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots (Saratov Oblast); the Orenburg Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots (Orenburg Oblast); the Syzran Highest Military Aviation School of Pilots (Kuybyshev Oblast); the Saratov Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots (Saratov Oblast); the Ufa Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots (Bashkirskaya ASSR); and the Chelyabinsk Higher Military Aviation School of Navigators.[3]
The 764th Fighter Aviation Regiment, operating MiG-31 aircraft, which was stationed at Bolshoye Savino Airport 16 km southwest of Perm, within the 5th Air Army's zone, was subordinated directly to the Air Forces HQ in Moscow. In addition to the Kant airbase established in 2003, possibly another air base in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, was subordinate to the 5th A VVS i PVO. From July 2007 to its disbandment, the commander of the 5th Army was Lieutenant General Mikhail Kucheryavy.[4]
In 2007, 12 Mi-24 and 12 Mi-8s of the Army took part in the joint Sino-Russian exercise Peace Mission 2007.[5]
On 7 May 2009 the Army was disbanded and its units incorporated within the new 2nd Air and Air Defence Forces Command and the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Command, along with the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army.[6]
Commanders
[edit]- General-Lieutenant Nikolay Petrovich Timofeev, 1990 - 1995[7]
- General-Lieutenant Nikolay Ivanovich Makarchuk, 1995 - 1997
- General-Lieutenant Evgeniy Leonidovich Yurev, 1997 - 6.07
- General-Lieutenant Mikhail Kucheryavy , June 2007 - 2009
2007 Russian Structure
[edit]- Headquarters, 5th Air Army - Yekaterinburg
- 30th Aviation Base - HQ at Koltsovo near Yekaterinburg - An-26 (former 142nd Independent Composite Air Squadron);
- 303rd Independent Helicopter Squadron (Hisor, Tajikistan)[8]
- 320th Independent Transport Squadron of Search & Rescue Service - HQ at Uprun (Troitsk), near Chelyabinsk - Mi-8;
- 999th Air Base - HQ at Kant, Kyrgyzstan - L-39, Mi-8, Su-25;[9]
- 76th Air Defence Division (Samara)
- 511th Guards Anti-Aircraft Rocket Regiment (Engels, Saratov Oblast)[10]
- 185th Anti-Aircraft Rocket Regiment (former 57th SAM Brigade) (Beryozovsky/Берёзовский, Sverdlovsk Oblast)
- 568th(?) Anti-Aircraft Rocket Regiment (Samara) - in December 1993 renamed from 134th Red Banner Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade[11]
- One radiotechnical brigade, one radiotechnical regiment (radar)
- Army Aviation component
References
[edit]- ^ Ивлев, Игорь (2021-09-24). Все армии ПВО, РВСН, сапёрные армии СССР и России в 1942-2021 гг (in Russian). Litres. ISBN 978-5-04-370389-7.
- ^ a b Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation 2009.
- ^ http://www.ww2.dk/new/air%20force/army/vvspurvo.htm
- ^ 'Kucheryavy takes up post as Urals Air Force, Air Defense Army commander', AVN Military News Agency, MOSCOW. July 10, 2007 (Interfax-AVN) and Konfisakhor, Aleksandra; Fomicheva, Yekaterina (29 December 2016). "Вице-губернатором Ленобласти станет бывший руководитель Управления ФСТЭК по СЗФО Михаил Кучерявый" [Vice-governor of Leningrad Oblast is former director of the Northwestern Federal District FSTC Mikhail Kucheryavy]. DP Biznes Press (in Russian). Retrieved 29 May 2017.
- ^ "General Staff". warfare.ru. Archived from the original on 3 December 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
- ^ "4-я армия ВВС и ПВО" [4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army] (in Russian). Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
- ^ Holm 2017.
- ^ Source ru-wiki 5 VA page, accessed August 2009
- ^ Kommersant, http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=766827, May 2007
- ^ "511th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
- ^ "134th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
- ^ "793rd independent Helicopter Regiment". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2017-05-29.
- Holm, Michael (2017). "4th independent Air Defence Army". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2017-05-26.
- Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation (2009). "История Уральского объединения ВВС и ПВО" [History of the Ural Air and Air Defence Forces Organization] (in Russian). Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. Archived from the original on 13 May 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
- Air Forces Monthly, July & August 2007 issues.