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Leningrad Military District
Ленинградский военный округ
Leningrad md emb
Leningrad Military District Coat of Arms
Founded August 6, 1864
Country Russia Russian Empire (1864 - 1918)
Flag of the Soviet Union Soviet Union (1924 - 1991)
Russia Russian Federation (1991 - 2010)
Branch Soviet Armed Forces
Russian Armed Forces
Type Military district
Part of Ministry of Defence
Headquarters Saint Petersburg
Decorations File:Order of Lenin.jpg
Order of Lenin

The Leningrad Military District was a military district of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation. In 2010 it was merged with the Moscow Military District, the Northern Fleet and the Baltic Fleet to form the new Western Military District.

History[]

The Leningrad Military District was originally formed as the Petrograd Military District after the October Revolution of 1917 up to the beginning of the formation of the Red Army. The Petrograd District was established as a part of the RKKA by order в„– 71 of the Highest Military Council of 6 September 1918. On 1 February 1924, by the order в„– 126 the Revolutionary Military Councils of the USSR the Petrograd military district was renamed the Leningrad Military District. Markian Popov was appointed District Commander in 1939. Its main purpose was the defence of the Kola Peninsula and the northern shores of the Gulf of Finland. On the right flank it bordered with the Arkhangelsk Military District, on the left — with the Baltic MD. Among the defensive works started in the 1930s to protect the frontiers was the Karelian Fortified Region.

The Winter War of 1939-40 with Finland prompted a close examination of the combat maturity of the District’s troops, and for the better control of the 7th and 13th Armies the North-Western Front was formed from the staff of the District on 7 January 1940. Three and a half months later the Front was dissolved back into the District headquarters.

On June 9, 1940, directive 02622ss/ov was given to the District by Semyon Timoshenko to be ready by June 12 to (a) capture the vessels of the Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian Navy in their bases and/or at sea; (b) Capture the Estonian and Latvian commercial fleet and all other vessels; (c) Prepare for an invasion and landing in Tallinn and Paldiski; (d) Close the Gulf of Riga and blockade the coasts of Estonia and Latvia in Gulf of Finland and Baltic Sea; (e) Prevent an evacuation of the Estonian and Latvian governments, military forces and assets; (f) Provide naval support for an invasion towards Rakvere; (g) Prevent the Estonian and Latvian airplanes flying either to Finland or Sweden.[1]

Russian Ground Forces - Leningrad Military District Map

Leningrad Military District Map

On 22 June 1941 the District comprised the 7th Army, the 14th Army, the 23rd Army, the 1st Mechanised Corps (-), 177th Rifle Division, 191st Rifle Division, 8th Rifle Division, the 21st, 22nd, 25th, 29th Fortified Regions, Air Forces (six aviation divisions, including the 1st, 2nd, 5th, 39th, 41st, and 55th), and other formations and units.[2]

Two days after the German invasion of the Soviet Union, on 24 June 1941, the District was reorganised as the Northern Front, and two months later, on 23 August 1941, it was split into the Leningrad and Karelian Fronts. The Front’s forces heroic efforts played a major part in resisting the German attacks during the Siege of Leningrad.

By the joint efforts of troops of the Leningrad Front, Volkhov Front, and the 2nd Baltic Front during January 1944 the enemy was routed from the environs of Leningrad and Novgorod. Pressing home the attack, the forces of the Leningrad Front in summer and in the fall of 1944 helped seize Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. The Front was reorganized under the Leningrad District into a peacetime status on 9 July 1945. Marshall Leonid Govorov took command shortly afterwards.

In 1949 the 76th Air Army (76-й Краснознамённой Воздушной армии) became the district's Soviet Air Forces component, after the 13th Air Army was redesignated. General-Colonel of Aviation Fedor Polynin was the first commander of the 76th Air Army.[3] Apart from a brief period when the air army was redesignationed the Air Forces of the Leningrad Military District from 1980 to 1988, the 76th Air Army would be active in the region until 1998.

General, later Marshal, Sergei Sokolov assumed command in 1965. On 22 February 1968, in conjunction with the 50th anniversary of the Soviet Army and for its successes in combat and in political training, the District was awarded the Order of Lenin. Marshal Sokolov later became the Minister of Defence in 1984.

In May 1960 the Northern Military District was subsumed into the Leningrad Military District, and Headquarters Northern Military District became Headquarters 6th Army.[4] Among the district's divisions at the time was the 156th Motor Rifle Division, formerly the 25th Rifle Division. In 1965 the 156th Motor Rifle Division became the 37th Motor Rifle Division.

On 3 June 1968 the District was placed on alert. The Norwegian Army raised its alert levels in response. Within a couple of days the mobilized forces in the Leningrad region reached 11,000 soldiers, 4,000 naval infantry, 210 tanks, 500 troop transports, 265 self-propelled cannons, 1,300 logistics transports, 50 helicopters and 20 Antonov An-12 transport aircraft, all of which were staged in the Petchenga-Murmansk area near Norway.[5] On the evening of 7 June, the Norwegian Garnisonen i Sør-Varanger garrison heard the noise of powerful engines coming from the manoeuvres along the entire Soviet front of the Norwegian-Soviet border. Actual observations were not possible over the border in the dark. On that same night the GSV commanding officer ordered all GSV reserve forces to report to their emergency muster locations. The Soviet demonstration of strength lasted until 10 June, when the Soviet forces stood down.[5]

In 1979, Scott and Scott reported the headquarters address as Leningrad, L-13, Pod'ezdnoy Per., Dom 4.

In 1988 V.I. Feskov et al. reported the district's forces as consisting of the 6th Army (Petrozavodsk) with the 37th, 54th (Allakurtti), 71st (Petrozavodsk), 111th (Sortavala) and 131st Motor Rifle Divisions; the 26th Army Corps at Arkhangelsk, formed in 1967, with the 69th (Vologda) and 77th Guards Motor Rifle Divisions (Arkhangelsk),[6] the 258th Independent Helicopter Squadron at Luostari/Pechenga airfield near Luostari,[7] and other smaller units; the 30th Guards Leningrad Red Banner Army Corps at Vyborg, with the 45th Guards Motor Rifle Division, the 64th Guards Motor Rifle Division, and the 146th Motor Rifle Division at Chernaya Rechka;[8] and the 63rd Guards Training Motor Rifle Division, the 76th Guards Airborne Division, and the 115th Guards Motor Rifle Division under district control.[9] At Vladimirsky Lager was the 250th 'Spare' Motor Rifle Division, at Garbolovo ([60 20 14N, 30 29 55E]) the 36th independent Landing-Assault Brigade (effectively an airmobile brigade), which had been activated in 1979,[10] at Leningrad the 229th Rear Defence Division, and at Pavlovsk the 2nd Guards Artillery Division.

In 1989 V.I. Feskov et al. reported that the 69th Guards MRD had become the 5189th Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (Russian acronym VKhVT), the 71st became the 5186th VKhVT (in 1989), the 115th Guards became a storage base (in 1989), and the 146th Motor Rifle Division was reduced to become the 3807th Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (in 1989).

The 36th Landing-Assault Brigade was under district control until June 1990, when it was transferred to the Soviet Airborne Troops. Becoming part of the Russian Airborne Troops as the country dissolved, it was active until February 1997. In 1990 the 37th MRD became a weapons and equipment storage base (seemingly by 1990), the 63rd Guards became the 56th Guards District Training Centre, and the 77th Guards was converted to a coastal defence division of the Northern Fleet by 1990.[11] It was then reorganised as a separate coastal defence brigade by 1 December 1994.

Commanders 1945-91[]

Post-Cold War[]

The fall of the Soviet Union caused much reassessment of the Russian Federation’s military situation. Economic constraints have greatly hampered military effectiveness. Several formations, such as the 25th Motor Rifle Brigade, formed on 1 January 1993[13] from the disbanding 24th Tank Training Division at Riga, arrived in the district having been withdrawn from the former Baltic Military District. Since 1992 many formations and units of the District have participated in local conflicts and peace-keeping missions, especially in the North Caucasus.

The 111th Motor Rifle Division (still part of 6th Army) was active until 1994, and then seemingly became the 20th Independent MR Bde, which became a VKhVT between January 1997 and June 1998.[14] As the 20th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade it shifted formations into the 30th Guards Army Corps. Also in 1994 the 5186th VkHVT at Petrozavodsk was seemingly upgraded into the 30th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade.[11]

In early December 1997, President Boris Yeltsin said in Sweden that Russia would make unilateral reductions to forces in the northwest, which included the Leningrad Military District. He promised that land and naval units would be reduced by 40 per cent by January 1999.[15] In May 1999, when Russian defense minister Marshal Igor Sergeyev confirmed that the cuts had taken place, Sergeyev said that the personnel of the Leningrad Military District had been drawn down by 52 per cent.[16] In terms of formations, the series of disbandments left the district almost unrecognisable.[11] The 6th Army’s staff at Petrozavodsk, the staff of the 30th Guards Army Corps at Vyborg, and all the motor rifle divisions previously in the district disbanded (including the 54th Guards MRD, reduced in size to a brigade and then which became a storage base, and the 64th Guards, reduced to a storage base). Left in their place were a number of weapons and equipment storage sites, and two motor rifle brigades (between January 1997 and June 1998 the 45th Guards MRD was reduced in size to become the 138th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade, and the 131st was reduced in size to become the 200th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade).[17]

In terms of air forces, after the collapse of the Soviet Union the 76th Army of the Soviet Air Forces and the 6th Air Army of the Soviet Air Defence Forces, were left operating in the district. The two forces were merged as the 6th Army of VVS and PVO in 1998.[18]

The 138th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade at Kamenka was deployed for operations during the Second Chechen War, in which, along with other Russian Ground Forces units, its personnel was reported to have behaved badly at times.[19] A 22-year old woman in Ingushetia was shot by drunken soldiers from the brigade scavenging for alcohol. The deployment of a tank battalion of the brigade was apparently halted when it was discovered that soldiers had been selling the explosive from their tanks' reactive armour. The second fully operational brigade in the district, the 200th Motor Rifle Brigade descends from the World War II-era 45th Rifle Division, which later became the 131st Motor Rifle Division.

According to Soldat.ru online forum conversation in August 2007, as from 1 December 2006 the 35th Base for Storage of Weapons & Equipment, a former motor rifle division, at Alakurtti, was disbanded.[20]

The Russian Airborne Troops' 76th Air Assault Division was also based within the district's boundaries, at Pskov.

Presidential Decree 900 dated July 27, 1998 gave the District's composition as the Republic of Karelia, the Komi Republic, Arkhangelsk, Vologda, Leningrad, Murmansk, Novgorod, and Pskov oblasts, Saint Petersburg, and the Nenets Autonomous Okrug. The district headquarters is now in the General Staff Building on Palace Square in Saint Petersburg.

The last commander of the district, General Lieutenant Nikolai Bogdanovsky, commanded between March 2009 and September 2010. On the abolition of the district General Bogdansky became Deputy Commander of the Russian Ground Forces.

Subordinate Units[]

Russian Ground Forces - Leningrad Military District Structure

Structure and units of the Leningrad Military District 2010

Order of Lenin Leningrad Military District 2010:

  • Combat formations:
    • 25th Guards Independent Motor-Rifle Brigade "Sevastopol - Latvian Rifles", in Vladimirsky Lager equipped with MT-LBV[21]
    • 138th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade "Krasnoselskaya", in Kamenka equipped with MT-LBV] (former 45th Guards MRD)
    • 200th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade "Pechenga", in Pechenga equipped with MT-LBV
    • 216th Reserve Base (4th Independent Motor-Rifle Brigade), in Petrozavodsk
    • 2nd Independent Spetsnaz Brigade, in Cherekhi
    • 56th Guards District Training Center "Krasnoselskyy"
  • Missile and Artillery formations:
    • 26th Missile Brigade "Nemanskaya", in Luga
    • 9th Guards Artillery Brigade "Kelecko-Berlin", in Luga
    • 7014th Artillery Reserve Base, in Luga
  • Air-defence formations:
  • Engineering formations:
    • 140th Guards Engineer Regiment "Kingisepskyy", in Kerro Vsevolozhskyy
    • 7022nd Engineer Reserve Base
  • NBC-defence formations:
    • 10th Independent NBC-defence Battalion, in Sertolovo
  • Signal formations:
    • 95th (Communications Hub) Signal Brigade "50th years of USSR"
    • 132nd (Territorial) Signal Brigade "Konstancskaya"
    • 60th Signal Center
    • 1269th Independent Electronic Warfare Center
    • 140th Independent (Rear) Signal Battalion

Notes[]

  1. Petrov 2008, p. 154
  2. http://orbat.com/site/ww2/drleo/012_ussr/41_oob/leningrad/_leningrad.html - Order of Battle 22 June 1941
  3. http://www.generals.dk/general/Polynin/Fedor_Petrovich/Soviet_Union.html
  4. Feskov et al 2004 p.14
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Cold War" (in Norwegian). Pasvikelva.no. http://www.pasvikelva.no/index.php?page_id=2&article_id=104&lang_id=2. Retrieved 16 February 2009. 
  6. The 77th Guards Motor Rifle Division traces its history to the 21st Division of the Moscow People's Militia, formed in July 1941. In August–September 1941 the division became the 173rd Rifle Division (2nd Formation). From the northern autumn of 1942, the division participated in the heroic battle of Stalingrad, leading the defensive and offensive operations north-west of Stalingrad and in the city. In accordance with Order of the NKO number 104 dated March 1, 1943 173rd Rifle Division was converted to 77 Guards Rifle Division - for successful combat operations on the Stalingrad front. Reduced to 10th Brigade 1946-52, became 77th Guards Motor Rifle Division 1957. In the northern autumn of 1989 transferred to the Northern Fleet and became a coastal defence division. Reduced to 163rd Separate Coastal Defence Brigade on 1 December 1994. Brigade disbanded 1 March 1996. On November 28, 1998, the divisional banner and other regalia was given to the 332nd Naval Infantry Battalion of the Caspian Flotilla, which became the 600th Moscow-Chernigov Naval Infantry Battalion. Reformed as 77th Brigade in December 2000. http://specnaz.pbworks.com/w/page/17658020/77-обрмп
  7. Holm, 258th Independent Helicopter Squadron
  8. The 146th Motor Rifle Division was the former 83rd Rifle Division, originally formed in Karelia in 1944 and redesignated in 1957. Feskov et al 2004.
  9. V.I. Feskov et al 2004, 58.
  10. Holm
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Andrew Duncan, 'Russian forces in decline - Part 2,' Jane's Intelligence Review, October 1996, 444-445.
  12. Krasnaya Zvezda 13 Dec 91 1st ed p1. Confirmation appointment by President Yel'tsin, KZ 8 Oct 92 p 1.
  13. Valdis V Pavlovskis, Russian Withdrawals from Latvia - An Update, Jane's Intelligence Review, Volume 5, Issue 4, April 1993, p 166. Warfare.ru reported that the brigade, based at Vladimirsky Lager, was a redesignation of the 42nd Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment. In 2000 it had 443 personnel, 31 T-80; 24 Uragan, 236 MT-LBT. In 2009: BM-21 Grad – 18, 152mm 2S3M Akatsia – 36, 2B14 Podnos– 18, 100 mm MT-12 Rapira – 6, 9P149 Shturm-S – 18, 9A33BM2(3) Osa – 12, 9A34(35) Strela-10 – 6, 2S6M Tunguska – 6. 41(82) T-80, 120 MT-LB. 4393?(2200?) personnel. The brigade has been involved in several mobilisation exercises over the years. See also ru:13-й гвардейский стрелковый полк.
  14. Duncan, Jane's Intelligence Review, October 1996, 444-445, and Duncan 1998.
  15. James Meek and David Fairhall, ‘Yeltsin Slashes Baltic Force’, The Guardian, Dec. 4, 1997
  16. Interfax, ‘Defense Minister Segeyev gives details of cuts to northwest forces’, May 6, 1999
  17. Andrew Duncan, 'Russia and Ukraine: Restructuring for a New Era,' Jane's Intelligence Review, June 1998, 6-7.
  18. Piotr Butowski, 'Russia's new air force enters a tight manoeuvre,' Jane's Intelligence Review, May 1999, p.18
  19. Some Provisional Notes On Current Russian Operations In Dagestan & Chechnya
  20. Форум
  21. http://www.redstar.ru/2009/10/07_10/2_02.html

References[]

  • Russian official site at www.mil.ru
  • Petrov, Pavel (2008) (in Estonian, translated from Russian). Punalipuline Balti Laevastik ja Eesti 1939–1941. Tänapäev. ISBN 978-9985-62-631-3.
  • Scott and Scott, The Armed Forces of the USSR, Eastview, 1979
  • See Also - Leningrad MD at Warfare.ru
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