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Transcaucasian Military District
Active 1935 – 31 December 1992
Country Flag of the Soviet Union Soviet Union
Type Military district
Headquarters Tbilisi
Engagements World War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Fyodor Tolbukhin, Konstantin Rokossovsky, Igor Rodinov

The Transcaucasian Military District, a military district of the Soviet Armed Forces, traces its history to May 1921 and the incorporation of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia into the USSR. It was disbanded by being redesignated as a Group of Forces in the early 1990s after the Soviet Union collapse.

It was originally formed from the Red Army's Separate Caucasian Army, which became the Red Banner Caucasian Army in August 1923. On 17 May 1935 the Red Banner Caucasus Army was redesignated the Transcaucasian Military District. The Georgian, Armenian, and Azerbaijani national formations, plus units from the 11th Soviet Red Army, all joined the new district about this time.

In July 1936 the District's formations and units received designations according to the countrywide numbering scheme and became: the 9th (formerly 1st Caucasus) Mountain Rifle Division, named for the Central Executive Committee of the Georgian SSR; the 20th (formerly 3rd Caucasus) Mountain Rifle Division; the 47th (former 1st) Georgian Mountain Rifle Division, named for Joseph Stalin; the 63rd (former 2nd) Georgian Mountain Rifle Division, named for Mikhail Frunze; the 76th Аrmenian Mountain Rifle Division, named after Comrade Voroshilov, and the 77th Аzerbaijani Mountain Rifle Division, named for Grigoriy Ordzhonikidze.[1]

On 22 June 1941 the District consisted of the 3rd (4th, 20th, and 47th Rifle Divisions), 23rd Rifle Corps (136th and 138th Rifle Divisions) and 40th Rifle Corps (9th and 31st Rifle Division), the 28th Mechanised Corps, which included the 6th and 54th Tank Divisions and the 236th Motorised Division (ru:236-я стрелковая дивизия), five unattached divisions – the 63rd, 76th, and 77th Rifle, the 17th Mountain Cavalry Division and the 24th Cavalry Division, and three fortified regions.[2]

On 1 August 1941 the 46th Army was formed from the 3rd Rifle Corps headquarters.

During the Second World War/Great Patriotic War it became the Transcaucasus Front. After the war the Transcaucasus Front reverted to being a part of the Headquarters Transcaucasus Military District (ZakVO), in Tbilisi. In 1979 Scott and Scott reported the District' headquarters address as Tbilisi-4, Ulitsa Dzneladze, Dom 46. The District became part of the Southern Direction, headquartered in Baku and including the North Caucasus and Turkestan Military Districts, in the late 1970s and early 1980s.[3]

Commanders 1945–99[]

  • Maslennikov, Ivan (1946–1947), Army General;
  • Tolbukhin, Fyodor Ivanovich (1947–1949), Marshal of the Soviet Union;
  • Antonov, Alexei Innokentevich (1950–1954), Army General;
  • Fedyuninsky, Ivan (1954–1957), Colonel General on 8 August 1955 – Army General;
  • Rokossowski, Konstantin (1957), Marshal of the Soviet Union;
  • Galitski, Kuzma N. (1958–1961), Army General;
  • Stuchenko, Andrei Trofimovich (1961–1968), Colonel General, on 13 April 1964 – Army General;
  • Kurkotkin, Semyon Konstantinovich (1968–1971), Colonel General;
  • Melnikov, Paul V. (October 1971 – 1978), Colonel General;
  • Koulishev O.F. (1978 – August 1983), Colonel General;
  • Arkhipov, Vladimir Mikhailovich (August 1983 – July 1985), Colonel General;
  • Kochetov, Konstantin Alekseevich (July 1985 – May 1988), Colonel General, on 29 April 1988 – Army General;
  • Rodionov, Igor (May 1988 – August 1989), Colonel General;
  • Patrikeev Valery Anisimovich (August 1989 – 26 September 1992), Colonel General;
  • Reut, Fyodor (September–December 1992)

Group of Russian Forces of the Transcaucasus

  • Reut, Fyodor (1993–97), Colonel General.
  • Andreyev, Vladimir V. (1997-2000), Col. Gen.
  • Zolotov, Nikolay Ye., (August 2000-), General Lieutenant[4]

Forces in the late 1980s[]

In the late 1980s dispositions within the District were as follows:[5]

  • 4th Army, HQ Baku, Azerbaijan SSR
    • 23rd Motor Rifle Division, Kirovabad
      • 366th Motor Rifle Regiment, Stepanakert
      • other regiments
    • 60th Motor Rifle Division, Lenkoran
    • 216th Motor Rifle Division
    • 295th Motor Rifle Division, Baku

The Soviet Air Forces' presence in the district consisted of the 34th Air Army. It was made up of 2 aviation divisions (36th Bomber and 283rd Fighter) and six independent aviation regiments (total 12 aviation regiments).[6]

Army composition:[6]

  • 80 Independent Shturmovaya Aviation Regiment – Sitalchay Su-25
  • 188(?) Independent Fighter Regiment (?) – Shiraki/Шираки Su-17 (?)
  • 313 Independent Reconnaissance Regiment 'Берлинский Order of the Red Banner, Order of Kutuzov' Vaziani Su-17R (93 paп)
  • 325 Independent Transport Helicopter Regiment – (Tsulukidze now Khoni) Ми-8Т, Ми-6
  • 793 Independent Transport Helicopter Regiment – Telavi Ми-8Т, Ми-6 –
  • 882 Independent Reconnaissance Regiment – Dollyar Su-24МR, MiG-25RB
  • 36 Bomber Aviation Division – Большие Shiraki (Шираки) (Didi Shiraki)
    • 34 Bomber Aviation Regiment 'Ташкентский краснознаменный, Order of Kutuzov' Kirovabad Су-24 (34 бап)
    • 143 Bomber Aviation Regiment – Kopitnari Su-24М
    • 976 Bomber Aviation Regiment Инстербургский Kyurdamir Air Base Su-24, Su-17 (976 иап)
  • 283 Fighter Aviation Division 'Камышинская краснознаменная' Vaziani (283инад) (в/ч 06941)
    • 176 Fighter Aviation Regiment 'Berlin Red Banner' Miha Tskhakaya (Tskhakaia) МiG-29 (176 иап) (в/ч 42080)
    • 841 Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment 'Baranovichsk Red Banner, Order of Suvorov' Meria (Makharadze) Su-17 (30 гв. иап 1945)
    • 982 Fighter Aviation Regiment – Vaziani (Rustavi) МiG-23MLD (982 FAR 1945) (в/ч 40501)

Another source lists the:[7]

    • 529th Fighter Aviation Regiment – Bombora Airfield (Gudauta), Yak-28P (в/ч 74545)

The Soviet Air Defence Forces had the 19th Army of Air Defence Forces located in the District.

Russian Transcaucasus Group of Forces[]

Russian troops leaving Georgia

Russian troops leaving Georgia in 2007

By Ukaz № 260 of the President of the Russian Federation of 19 March 1992 the Soviet Transcaucasian Military District and the Caspian Flotilla were transferred to the jurisdiction of the Russian Federation.[8]

On 1 January 1993, the District became the Group of Russian Forces in the Transcaucasus (Russian Группа российских войск в Закавказье – ГРВЗ; GRVZ).[9] After many of the divisions listed above had dissolved or become part of the former republics' armed forces, in the mid 1990s the GRVZ's dispositions were:

  • Headquarters, Tbilisi
  • 12th Military Base, Batumi, Adjara AR, Georgia
  • 62nd Military Base, Akhalkalaki, Samtskhe-Javakheti, Georgia. Former 147th Motor Rifle Division. In October 1999, the base had: – personnel – 1,964 servicemen – equipment – 41 MBT, 114 AIFV/APC (BMP and BTR); 46 various military vehicles; 61 artillery systems; and 2 pontoon-bridging vehicles. The base includes the 409th and 412th motor-rifle regiments; the 817th artillery regiment; the 889th communication battalion; and the 65th artillery detachment.
  • 102nd Military Base, Gyumri, Armenia
  • 137th Military Base, Vaziani Military Base, Georgia (former 171st Guards District Training Centre) In October 1999, it was reported to have the 405th motorrifle regiment with 773 servicemen; 31 MBT; 70 AIFV/APC; 16 artillery systems; and one pontoon-bridging vehicle; the 566th communication battalion – 193 servicemen; 5 mobile radio stations P-145BM; and the 311th Separate Helicopter Squadron – 161 servicemen, 5 Mi-24 attack helicopters and 5 Mi-8MT transport helicopters. The 405th MRR had been absorbed from the 10th Guards Motor Rifle Division formerly headquartered in Kutaisi.
  • 142nd Tank Repair Factory, Tbilisi. In October 1999, it was reported to have 20 servicemen; and equipment including 28 MBT (T-72), 103 AIFV/APC and two self-propelled howitzers 2C3 "Acatsia".[10]
  • Khelvachauri-based (Adjaria) military depot. In October 1999, it had 56 servicemen. 29 AIFV – 5 BMP-1 and 24 BMP-2 – were stored there.
  • Other smaller formations and units, including an independent helicopter squadron

General Major Aleksander Studenikin, former deputy commander of the Moscow Military District's 20th Army, commanded the Group in 2004 with General (Major?) Andrei Popov as his deputy.[11]

The Russian presence at Vaziani was withdrawn in the late 1990s and an agreement over the withdrawal of the 12th and 62nd Bases by 2007–08 was made in 2005. The Akhalkalaki 62nd base was officially transferred on schedule to Georgia on 27 June 2007.[12] The 12th Military Base in Batumi was transferred earlier scheduled; scheduled for February 2008, it was transferred on 13 November 2007. The ‘Zvezda’ command post (probably the former District war headquarters) in the town of Mtskheta, just north of Tblisi, was handed over by early September 2005.[13] Due to the espionage conflict between Russia and Georgia, the Transcaucasus Group of Forces headquarters in Tbilisi was closed down ahead of schedule: 287 Russian servicemen left Georgia by 31 December 2006.[14]

Even after the GRVZ is totally withdrawn, Russian troops will remain in peacekeeping roles in Abkhazia and South Ossetia, de jure parts of Georgia. There are about 1,600 men on the Abkhazian-Georgian boundary (serving alongside UNOMIG) and a battalion in South Ossetia. According to the Russian authorities, the Gudauta military base is also now used by the peacekeeping forces, but no international monitoring has ever been allowed there.

References[]

  1. A.G. Lenskii (А. Г. Ленский), Сухопутные силы РККА в предвоенные годы. Справочник. — Санкт-Петербург Б&К, 2000, p.151-2
  2. Orbat.com/Niehorster, Administrative Order of Battle, Transcaucasus Military District, 22 June 1941
  3. William E Odom, The Collapse of the Soviet Military, Yale University Press, 1998, p.29
  4. Scott and Scott, Russian Military Directory 2002, 181.
  5. V.I. Feskov, K.A. Kalashnikov, V.I. Golikov, The Soviet Army in the Years of the Cold War 1945–91, Tomsk University Publishing House, Tomsk, 2004
  6. 6.0 6.1 Feskov, V.I.; K.A. Kalashnikov, V.I. Golikov. (2004). The Soviet Army in the Years of the 'Cold War' (1945–1991). Tomsk: Tomsk University Press. p. 144. ISBN 5-7511-1819-7. 
  7. http://www.webarmy.ru/forums/showmessage.php?id=4315
  8. Указ Президента РФ от 19.03.1992 № 260 «О переходе Закавказского военного округа и Каспийской флотилии Военно-морского флота временно под юрисдикцию Российской Федерации»
  9. http://www.mihai-gribincea.com/publications/Gribincea%20-%20Military%20Bases.pdf
  10. Army and Society in Georgia October 1999
  11. Nino Kopaleishvili, ‘Bomb Injures Russian Military Official’, Tbilisi Messenger, 8 April 2004, p.5
  12. Russia Transfers Akhalkalaki Military Base to Georgia. Civil Georgia. 27 June 2007. Retrieved 29 June 2007.
  13. ‘Zvezda has been transferred to Georgia’, Georgian MOD website, www.mod.gov.ge/?=E&id=10, accessed 29 October 2005.
  14. Russia to withdraw Tbilisi garrison early – minister, RIA Novosti, 10 October 2006

External links[]

(note incorrect title of formation - not 'operational')

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The original article can be found at Transcaucasian Military District and the edit history here.
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