Formations of the Soviet Army
The Soviet Ground Forces, successor to the Red Army, the title changing in 1945, employed a wide range of different Military formations.
List
- Theatre of Military Operations or theatre of war[1] (TV)
- Theatre of military operations (ru:Театр военных действий, TVD, teatr voennykh deistvii) — Strategic Directions were set up and maintained at the beginning and at the end of World War II (the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945), and are considered a part of the TVD for the purpose of determining operational directions.[2] During World War II, six strategic direction commands existed as part of the Stavka:[3]
- Chief command of the troops of the Western Direction (1941–42), replaced by Stavka representative role
- Chief command of the troops of the North Western Direction (1941), replaced by Stavka representative role
- Chief command of the troops of the North Caucasus Direction (1941–42), replaced by Stavka representative role
- Chief command of the troops of the South Western Direction (1941–42), replaced by Stavka representative role
- Central Staff of the partisan movement (1942–45)
- Chief command of the Soviet troops in the Far East (1945)
- In their most modern form, TVDs were established in February 1979 (the Far Eastern) and in September 1984 (the Western (HQ Legnica), South-Western (HQ Kishinev), Southern (HQ Baku) TVD).[4] Viktor Suvorov gave the above formations the name 'High Commands in the Strategic directions'.
- Military district (in the USSR), and group of forces (in Eastern Europe). These peacetime administrative units would provide support to between one and six fronts during wartime. Groups of forces in Eastern Europe included the Central Group of Forces (Czechoslovakia), the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, the Northern Group of Forces (Poland), and the Southern Group of Forces (Balkans initially, then Hungary).
- Front — the largest wartime field formation, equivalent to an army group in many other forces. (The Imperial Russian Army designated "fronts" in World War I; the Soviets used the concept from the Russian Civil War of 1917-1922 onwards.)
- Army — the largest peacetime field formation. Each army was designated a combined arms army or a tank army. During World War II, the Fortified Region usually corresponded to an Army frontage formation. See Karelian Fortified Region and Kiev Fortified Region.
- Corps — Rifle, Cavalry, Artillery, Mechanised, Tank, Aviation and Aviation of PVO, and Airborne Corps.
- Rifle Corps - formations that existed in the pre-Revolution Imperial Russian Army were inherited by the Red Army. The formation of large mechanised or tank formations in the Soviet Union was first suggested based on development of doctrine for publication as PU-36, the field regulations of 1936, largely authored by Marshal Mikhail Tukhachevsky (1893-1937). The Red Army put the concept into practice where "In the attack tanks must be employed in mass", envisaged as "Strategic cavalry".[5] Although the name of "mechanised" may seem to the modern reader as referring to the infantry components of the Corps, in 1936 the term referred to armoured vehicles only[6] with the word "motorised" referring to the units equipped with trucks.
References
- Fomin, GSE
- Arkhomeyev, Sergej Fyodorovich (1986). Voennyj entsiklopedicheskij slovarj Военный энциклопедический словарь [Military encyclopedic dictionary] (in Russian). Moscow: Военное издательство. p. 711.
- p.208, Great Patriotic War 1941-1945 encyclopaedic dictionary, Soviet Encyclopaedia (publisher), Moscow, 1985
- See Michael Holm, High Commands (Theatre Commands), and Odom, Collapse of the Soviet Military.
- Simpkin, p.179
- Simpkin, p180.
Sources
- The Soviet Army: Troops, Organization, and Equipment. FM 100-2-3, June 1991. Washington DC: United States Department of the Army (copy available at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fm100-2-3_-_The_Soviet_Army,_Troops,_Organization,_and_Equipment.pdf)
- Fomin, N.N., Great Soviet Encyclopaedia (Russian: Большая Советская Энциклопедия), Moscow, 1978
- Simpkin, R., Deep battle: The brainchild of Marshal Tukhachevskii, Brassey's, London, 1987
Further reading
- Michael MccGwire, Military Objectives in Soviet Foreign Policy. Washington DC: Brookings Institution Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0815755524
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