Southern Military District

Russian military district
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Southern Military District
Южный военный округ
Emblem of the Southern Military District
Founded22 October 2010
Country Russia
TypeMilitary district
Part of Russian Armed Forces
HeadquartersBudennovsky Prospekt 43, Rostov-on-Don[1]
DecorationsOrder of the Red Banner
Order of Suvorov
WebsiteOfficial website
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel General Sergey Kuzovlev
Insignia
Flag
Military unit
  The Southern Military District, on a map of the five Russian military districts
Russian Armed Forces
  • Ministry of Defence
Staff
Services (vid)
  • Russian Ground Forces
  • Russian Aerospace Forces
  • Russian Navy
Independent troops (rod)
  • Strategic Rocket Forces
  • Russian Airborne Forces
Special operations force (sof)
  • Special Operations Forces
Other troops
Military districts
History of the Russian military
  • v
  • t
  • e

The Southern Military District (Russian: Южный военный округ, romanizedYuzhnyy voyennyy okrug) is a military district of Russia.

It is one of the five military districts of the Russian Armed Forces, with its jurisdiction primarily within the North Caucasus region of the country, and Russian bases in South Caucasian post-Soviet states. The Southern Military District was created as part of the 2008 military reforms, and founded by Presidential Decree №1144 signed on September 20, 2010, to replace the North Caucasus Military District, and absorbing the military commands of the Black Sea Fleet and Caspian Flotilla.[2][3] The district began operation on October 22, 2010, under the command of Colonel-General Aleksandr Galkin.

The Southern Military District is the smallest military district in Russia by geographic size. The district contains 131 federal subjects of Russia: Adygea, Astrakhan Oblast, Chechnya, Dagestan, Ingushetia, Kabardino-Balkaria, Kalmykia, Karachay-Cherkessia, Krasnodar Krai, North Ossetia-Alania, Rostov Oblast, Stavropol Krai and Volgograd Oblast along with the six occupied Ukrainian oblasts consists of Crimea, Donetsk, Kherson, Lugansk, Sevastopol and Zaporozhye.[3][4]

The Southern Military District is headquartered in Rostov-on-Don, and its current district commander is Colonel General Sergey Kuzovlev, who has held the position since 23 January 2023.[5] It is considered to be the most effective and competent formation of the Russian military.[6]

History

Headquarters of the district at 53 Pushkinskaya Street / 43 Budenovsky avenue, Rostov-on-Don

The Southern Military District was formed on 22 October 2010, according to Presidential Decree of 20 September 2010 № 1144 "On the Military Administrative Division Of the Russian Federation" the Southern Military District was created along with two other new larger military districts: the Central Military District and the Eastern Military District.[2] By order of then Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, on 22 July 2010, interim commanders were named for the new military districts. Thus, the new position of commander of the Southern Military District, was Lieutenant-General Aleksandr Galkin, former Commander of the North Caucasus Military District, with Major-General Nikolai Pereslegin as the chief of staff for the district. Galkin was later promoted to Colonel General soon after his appointment as district commander.

The Southern Military District also directs two Russian military bases in Armenia: the 102nd Military Base in Gyumri, and the 3624th Air Base at the civil-military Erebuni Airport in the capital Yerevan, under the joint control of Armenian and Russian authorities.

In April 2014, Crimea and Sevastopol were added to the Southern Military District following the 2014 Crimean crisis in Ukraine, when they were annexed by Russia. The legal status of Crimea (as the Autonomous Republic of Crimea) and the city of Sevastopol is currently under dispute: Ukraine and the majority of the international community considers them an integral part of Ukraine, while Russia considers them an integral part of Russia, with Crimea (as the Republic of Crimea) and Sevastopol approved as federal subjects of Russian Federation.[7]

In 2016, the District was 98% staffed by contract servicemen.[8]

In November 2020, following the aftermath of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, Russian military peacekeepers were deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh for securing the Lachin corridor and along the line of contact for at least five years. A military base was set up with its headquarters at Stepanakert and is part of the Southern Military District commanded by First deputy commander of the military district Lieutenant General Rustam Muradov.[9] He was replaced by Deputy military district commander Lieutenant General Alexey Avdeev on 13 May 2021.[10]

In January–February 2021, the 1061st Centre for Material-Technical Support (1061 CMTO), the district's logistics command, was reorganised.[11] A storage base for missile and artillery weapons was formed and transferred to the direct subordination of the 1061 CMTO. The centre itself is located in the 4, 6 7 and 21 Military towns (военных городках) in Novocherkassk. One of the other units of the 1061 CMTO is the warehouse (for storing material and technical equipment of the clothing service) (Military Unit 57229-31) which has been headed by Stanislav Valerievich Yazykov 2011–2018 (in Stepnoy, Volgodonskoy District?).[12]

On 24 June 2023, the headquarters of the district was captured by Wagner Group during the Wagner Group rebellion.[13]

District organization

Russian Ministry of Defense branch office in Simferopol

As part of the larger reorganisation, the 49th Army reformed with its headquarters seemingly in the former Institute of Communications of the Strategic Rocket Forces at Stavropol.[14] According to warfare.ru, 49th Army (listed at Stavropol/Maikop) has under control the 7th Military Base (in Abkhazia) and the 8th (former Taman Guards Motor Rifle Division), 33rd Mountain Motor Rifle and 34th separate Mountain Motor Rifle Brigades (Borzoi, Chechniya, Maikop, and Storozhevaya-2), as well as the 66th Communications Brigade.[15]

There are also two Spetsnaz brigades (10th and 22nd) an experimental reconnaissance brigade (the 100th), plus one Russian Airborne Troops unit also stationed in the district: the 7th Guards Mountain Air Assault Division at Novorossiysk (which, in 2021, absorbed the former 56th Guards Airborne Brigade).[16] The Russian Aerospace Forces has the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army in the district. Also under the district's control are the Navy's Black Sea Fleet and Caspian Flotilla, including their respective air and Naval Infantry components, including – in the case of the Black Sea Fleet – the 22nd Army Corps.

In early 2017, the reformation of the 8th Guards Combined Arms Army, successor to the Soviet 8th Guards Army, began within the Southern Military District. The army's headquarters is located at Novocherkassk and it is to include the 150th Motor Rifle Division and the 20th Guards Motor Rifle Division. The first phase of its formation was completed in June 2017.[17]

The 58th Combined Arms Army comprising two further motorized rifle divisions, plus other army level units and the 4th Guards Military Base in South Ossetia is the third army-level formation in the District.

Component units

External image
image icon IISS estimate of major unit dispositions in the Southern Military District, 20 March 2014
  • 175th Luninets-Pinsk Order of Alexander Nevsky Twice Red Star Headquarters Brigade (Aksay)
  • 176th Communications Brigade (Territorial) (Rassvet)
  • 11th Guards Kingisepp Red Banner Order of Alexander Nevsky Engineering Brigade (Kamensk-Shakhtinsky)
  • 28th NBC Defence Brigade (Kamyshin)
  • 439th Rocket Artillery Brigade (Znamensk)
  • 1270th Electronic Warfare Center (Kovalevka)
  • 37th Railway Brigade (Russian Railway Troops) (Volgograd)
  • 39th Railway Brigade (Krasnodar)
  • 333rd Railway Pontoon Bridge Battalion (Volgograd)
  • Mountain Training Center of the Armed Forces (Baksan)
  • 54th Training Center of Intelligence Units (Vladikavkaz)
  • 27th Training Center of Railway Troops (Volgograd)
  • 102nd Military Base (Gyumri, Armenia)
    • 76th Motorized Brigade (Gyumri, Armenia)
    • 73rd Motorized Brigade (Yerevan, Armenia)
    • 988th Air Defense Regiment (Gyumri, Armenia)
  • Unnamed Military Base in (Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan)[citation needed]

58th Combined Arms Army (Vladikavkaz)[18]

Note: the 42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division, reforming from late 2016 in Chechniya, is drawn from the 8th Guards, 17th, and 18th Guards Motor Rifle Brigades[27]

8th Combined Arms Army (Novocherkassk)

  • 150th Motor Rifle Division (Novocherkassk)
    • 103rd Motorized Rifle Regiment (Kadamovskiy and Kuzminka, Rostov Oblast)[28][25]
    • 163rd Tank Regiment (Kuzminka, Rostov Oblast)[28][25]
    • 102nd Motorized Rifle Regiment (Persianovskiy, Rostov Oblast)[28][25]
    • 68th Tank Regiment (Persianovskiy, Rostov Oblast)[28][25]
    • 174th Reconnaissance Battalion (Persianovskiy, Rostov Oblast)[25]
    • 381st Artillery Regiment (Persianovskiy and Millerovo, Rostov Oblast)[28][25]
    • Additional Motorized Rifle Regiment reported forming within the Division as of 2018[25]
    • 933rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Millerovo)[28]
  • 20th Guards Motor Rifle Division (Volgograd and Kamyshin regions; reconstituted from former 20th Motor Rifle Brigade starting in 2021; transformation to complete in 2022)[20]
    • 242nd Guards Motor Rifle Regiment (Kamyshin, Volgograd Oblast);
    • 255th Motor Rifle Regiment (Volgograd);
    • 33rd Motor Rifle Regiment (Kamyshin);
    • 944th Guards Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment;
    • 358th Guards Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment;
    • 428th Separate Tank Battalion (near Volgograd; planned to re-equip with T-90M main battle tanks)[29][30]
    • 487th Separate Anti-Tank Artillery Battalion.[31]
  • 464th Rocket Brigade
  • 47th Missile Brigade (Korenovsk, Krasnodar Krai, established 2021; equipped with Iskander surface-to-surface missiles)[32][33]
  • 238th Artillery Brigade (Korenovsk, Krasnodar Krai, established 2021; equipped with 2A65 Msta-B guns and 9K57 Uragan multiple launch rocket systems)[33]
  • 77th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade (Korenovsk; equipped with S-300V4 anti-aircraft missile system)[25]
  • Additional SAM brigade reported forming in 2021/22 with Buk-M3 surface-to-air missile systems[32]

1st Army Corps (People's Militia of the Donetsk People's Republic: Народная милиция Донецкой Народной Республики):[a]

  • 4 Motorized Rifle Brigades (1st, 3rd, 5th, 100th Motorized Rifle Brigades)
  • 2 Motorized Rifle Regiments (9th and 11th Motorized Rifle Regiments)
  • 2 special forces battalions (1st and 3rd SF Battalions)
  • 1 tank battalion (2nd Battalion)
  • 1 reconnaissance battalion (Sparta Separate Reconnaissance Battalion)
  • 1 artillery brigade (Kalmius Artillery Brigade)[25]

2nd Guards Luhansk-Severodonetsk Army Corps (People's Militia of the Luhansk People's Republic: Народная милиция Луганской Народной Республики):

  • 3 Motorized Rifle Brigades (2nd, 4th, 7th Motorized Rifle Brigades)
  • 1 Motorized Rifle Regiment (6th Motorized Rifle Regiment)
  • 1 tank battalion (Pantsir Special Mechanized Force)
  • 1 reconnaissance battalion (Greka Separate Reconnaissance Battalion)
  • 1 artillery brigade[25]

49th Combined Arms Army (Stavropol/Maykop)

Airborne Troops

Special forces/Reconnaissance

Aerospace Forces units

Naval Forces

Leadership

Colonel-General Sergey Kuzovlev

Commanders

  • Colonel-General Aleksandr Galkin (10 December 2010 – June 2016)
  • Colonel-General (later Army General) Aleksandr Dvornikov (20 September 2016 – 23 January 2023)[44]
  • Colonel-General Sergey Kuzovlev (23 January 2023 – present)

Chiefs of Staff – First Deputy Commanders

  • Major General Nikolai Pereslegin (April 2010 – October 2013)
  • Lieutenant General Andrey Serdyukov (October 2013 – December 2015)
  • Lieutenant General Alexander Zhuravlyov (December 2015 – March 2017)
  • Lieutenant General Mikhail Teplinsky (March 2017 – February 2019)
  • Lieutenant General (later Colonel General) Sergey Kuzovlev (February 2019 – December 2022)

Deputy Commanders

Commanders of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh

  • Lieutenant General Rustam Muradov (11 November 2020 – 9 September 2021)
  • Major General Mikhail Kosobokov (9 September 2021 – 25 September 2021)
  • Lieutenant General Gennady Anashkin (25 September 2021 – 12 January 2022)
  • Major General Andrey Volkov (12 January 2022 – present)

Notes

  • ^1 The federal subjects of Crimea, Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Sevastopol and Zaporizhzhia are disputed territories internationally recognized as de jure part of Ukraine but under the de facto administration of the Russian Federation.
  1. ^ Ukrainian sources describe the 1st and 2nd (Donbas/Russian) Army Corps in Ukraine's Donbas as "operationally subordinate" to the 8th Army HQ.[34] As of 2021, subordinate units in these two corps are said to include:

See also

References

  1. ^ "South Military District Informational Support Section". Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. Archived from the original on 2011-11-11.
  2. ^ a b "Южный военный округ (ОСК "Юг") – "новейший" облик". Archived from the original on 2012-03-13. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
  3. ^ a b УКАЗ Президента РФ от 20.09.2010 N 1144 "О ВОЕННО – АДМИНИСТРАТИВНОМ ДЕЛЕНИИ РОССИЙСКОЙ ФЕДЕРАЦИИ" Archived 2012-03-31 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Russia includes occupied territories in its Southern Military District — UK intelligence". 4 February 2023.
  5. ^ Kanayev, Pyotr (23 January 2023). "В Западном и Южном военных округах сменили командующих" [Commanders changed in Western and Southern military districts] (in Russian). RBK Group. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  6. ^ "Geopolitics Decanted by Silverado – the Long War: Analysis of the war in Ukraine (June 5, 2022)".
  7. ^ UKRAINE REPORTS RUSSIAN MILITARY ACTIVITY ON CRIMEA BORDER, Newsweek (8 August 2016)
    Gutterman, Steve (18 March 2014). "Putin signs Crimea treaty, will not seize other Ukraine regions". Reuters.com. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
    Ukraine crisis timeline, BBC News
    UN General Assembly adopts resolution affirming Ukraine's territorial integrity, China Central Television (28 March 2014)
  8. ^ "ЦАМТО / Новости / Сергей Шойгу: боевые возможности ЮВО за 2016 год увеличены на 10%".
  9. ^ "Russia's Role in Enforcing Peace in Nagorno-Karabakh Stirs Hopes, Bitterness". wsj. 7 December 2020.
  10. ^ "У российских миротворцев в Карабахе сменился командующий". rbc.ru. 13 May 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
  11. ^ https://sliv.top/2021/06/02/vooruzhenie/
  12. ^ https://stepnaya-now.ru/2018/05/25/zdes-odevaetsya-nasha-armiya/
  13. ^ "Military coup in Russia? Wagner mercenary group takes control of military building in Rostov, Moscow on high alert". Business Today. 2023-06-24. Retrieved 2023-06-24.
  14. ^ http://russiandefpolicy.wordpress.com/2011/01/10/more-appointments-dismissals-etc/, accessed January 2011, and http://www.ryadovoy.ru/forum/index.php/topic,2479.0.html Archived 2012-03-13 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Southern Military District". warfare.ru. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  16. ^ Michael Holm, 56th independent Guards Landing-Assault Brigade, accessed January 2014.
  17. ^ Ramm, Alexey; Andreyev, Yevgeny (17 March 2017). "В Южном военном округе появится новая армия" [New army in the Southern Military District]. Isvestia (in Russian). Retrieved 2 April 2017.
  18. ^ Galeotti, 2017, 31, with the retention of the 67th AARB and 34 C3 Bde, which he does not list.
  19. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 84, 31 May – 6 June 2021".
  20. ^ a b "TASS: Military & Defense".
  21. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 88, 28 June – 4 July 2021".
  22. ^ Georgia, Civil. "Civil.Ge | Russia troop deployments menace Georgia". www.civil.ge. Retrieved 2017-06-14.
  23. ^ "67th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2017-06-14.
  24. ^ "На 4-й российской военной базе в Южной Осетии проведены контрольные стрельбы | Политика | ИА "RSOnews"". www.rsonews.org. 16 April 2011. Retrieved 2017-06-30.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Russian Military Forces: Interactive Map".
  26. ^ "Russian Military Workshop" (PDF).
  27. ^ "В ЮВО на территории Чечни завершается формирование 42-й мотострелковой дивизии" [Formation of the 42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division completed in Chechnya in Southern Military District]. structure.mil.ru (in Russian). 7 December 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2017.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Harris & Kagan 2018.
  29. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 81, 29 March – 9 May 2021".
  30. ^ "Дивизии ЮВО получат модернизированные танки Т-90М". 2 June 2021.
  31. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 99, 13 September – 19 September 2021".
  32. ^ a b c "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 117, 17 January – 23 January 2022".
  33. ^ a b "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 95, 16 August – 22 August 2021".
  34. ^ "OSCE Documents" (PDF).
  35. ^ Galeotti 2017, 31.
  36. ^ a b "Танковые подразделения армейского корпуса ЧФ провели учебные стрельбы на полигоне "Ангарский" – Юг и Северный Кавказ || Интерфакс Россия". www.interfax-russia.ru (in Russian). 25 January 2018. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  37. ^ "В Крыму прошло учение артиллерийских подразделений армейского корпуса и береговых частей Черноморского флота". function.mil.ru. Retrieved 2021-02-16.
  38. ^ a b "На крымских рубежах оборона активна / Реалии / Независимая газета". nvo.ng.ru. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  39. ^ "В Крыму появился 8-й артиллерийский полк береговой обороны | Новости | ОТР". ОТР – Общественное Телевидение России. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
  40. ^ "Army corps in Crimea to be complemented with rocket battalion – Commander".
  41. ^ "Ukraine says Russian Marines ring coast guard base". Huffington Post. Associated Press. 28 March 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  42. ^ "В Каспийске завершено формирование 177-го полка морской пехоты". November 23, 2018.
  43. ^ В новом полку морской пехоты Каспийской флотилии прошло первое занятие по предметам боевой подготовки / mil.ru
  44. ^ Milenin, Andrei (20 September 2016). "Александр Дворников назначен командующим войсками ЮВО" [Aleksandr Dvornikov appointed commander of the Southern Military District]. Isvestia (in Russian). Retrieved 2 October 2016.
  • "Russian Military Forces: Interactive Map".

References

  • Galeotti, Mark (2017). The Modern Russian Army 1992–2016. Elite 217. Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-47281-908-6.
  • Harris, Catherine; Kagan, Frederick W. (2018). Russia's Military Posture: Ground Forces Order of Battle (PDF). Institute for the Study of War. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-10-25. Retrieved 2020-10-30.
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Districts since 2010