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11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army

The 11th Red Banner Air and Air Defence Forces Army (Russian: 11-я Краснознамённая армия ВВС и ПВО) is a formation of the Russian Aerospace Forces, located in the Russian Far East, whose zone of responsibility covers the Eastern Military District. The 11th Army Air Force and Air Defense Army was reformed within the Eastern Military District on 14 August 2015.[1]

11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army
Great emblem
Active1998–2009; 2015–present
CountryRussian Federation
BranchRussian Aerospace Forces
Part ofMain Command of the Russian Aerospace Forces and Eastern Military District
HQKhabarovsk
Decorations Order of the Red Banner
Commanders
Current
commander
Lieutenant General Vladimir Kravchenko

The designation "11" for an aviation formation of this size in the Far East was introduced during the Second World War. In August 1942 the Air Forces of the 2nd Red Banner Army were redesignated the 11th Air Army. But this formation only last less than two and a half years, because in December 1944 the formation was reduced to the 18th Aviation Corps, which in June 1945 joined the 10th Air Army.

In April 1960 the designation "11" was taken up again by redesignation of the independent Far Eastern Air Defence Army. For decades thus the aviation forces in the area consisted of the 1st Air Army of the Air Forces, reformed on 1 July 1957 by merger of two existing armies when the higher command arrangements in the Far East were reorganised, and the 11th Air Defence Army of the Soviet Air Defence Forces. In 1998, six years after the fall of the Soviet Union, the two were merged into the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army, covering the Far Eastern Military District. Russian Naval Aviation also handed over a regiment of Mikoyan MiG-31 interceptor aircraft on the Kamchatka Peninsula which was included in the new force.

The 11th Army of VVS and PVO was disbanded in 2009[2] by being redesignated the 3rd Air and Air Defence Forces Command. The army was reformed once again in 2015 from the command.

11th Separate Air Defence Army Edit

The army traces its lineage back to the formation of the Far Eastern Air Defence Zone on 11 August 1941. The zone was broken up in spring 1945 to form the Priamur and Primorsky Air Defence Armies. Postwar, in October, the Priamur Air Defense Army was renamed the Far Eastern Air Defence Army, and soon reorganized as the Far Eastern Air Defense District (okrug PVO) in 1946. The Far Eastern Air Defence District took over responsibility for air defence east of Lake Baikal, including the old sector of the Primorsky Air Defence Army. In a February 1949 reorganization, the Far Eastern Air Defense District (raion PVO) was formed as a raion of the 1st (okrug) category, and the headquarters of the former Far Eastern Air Defence District became that of the Komsomolsk-Khabarovsk Air Defense District (raion PVO). The Amur Air Defence Army, headquartered at Khabarovsk, was formed in December 1954 during PVO restructuring from the Komsomolsk-Khabarovsk Air Defense District and the 50th Fighter Aviation Corps PVO, merging anti-aircraft and interceptor units. The army was reorganized as the Separate Far Eastern Air Defence Army in December 1956, its responsibilities expanded with the takeover of air defense units previously under naval control. The army was numbered in March 1960 as the 11th Separate Air Defence Army (or 11th Army of the Air Defence Forces (11 OA PVO). The army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner on 30 April 1975. Under the Ogarkov reforms, the army headquarters was disbanded in May 1980 and its units placed under the air force and air defence forces of the Far Eastern Military District. These changes were reversed in May 1986 and the army headquarters reformed, receiving a new battle flag.[3]

During the Soviet period, the 11th Air Defence Army gained headlines due to the defection of Viktor Belenko in September 1976, and the KAL 007 shootdown in 1983. The KAL 007 shootdown occurred on 1 September 1983. After a protracted ground-controlled interception, three Su-15 fighters from Dolinsk-Sokol airbase and a MiG-23[4] from Smirnykh Air Base managed to make visual contact with the Boeing 747 and later shot it down.

In the late 1980s the 11th Separate Air Defence Army of the Voyska PVO, controlled two corps (23rd in Vladivostok & 8th in Komsomolsk) and four divisions (24th in Petropavlovsk, 29th in Blagoveshchensk, 6th in Okhotsk, and 25th in Chukotka) with 12 fighter aviation regiments (IAPs), 19 SAM brigades and regiments and ten radio-technical (radar) brigades/regiments.[5] The army underwent dramatic reductions during the 1990s, leaving it with only the 8th and 23rd Air Defence Corps. A 1990 reorganization eliminated the 24th and 25th Air Defence Division headquarters, with the units in Sakhalin and Chukotka coming directly under the 72nd Air Defence Corps, formed from the 6th Air Defence Division in Kamchatka. The corps reverted to the 6th Air Defense Division in 1994 when the last Chukotka air defense units were eliminated. The 29th Air Defence Division was eliminated in 1994.[3] By mid-1998, the 6th Air Defence Division was abolished after the last units in Sakhalin disbanded and its units became part of the new Aviation and Air Defence of the Joint Command of Troops and Forces in Northeast Russia.[6]

In 2001 the 8th and 23rd Air Defence Corps were renamed the 25th and 93rd Air Defence Divisions, respectively, and in 2009 became the 11th and 12th Aerospace Defence Brigades.

24th Air Defence Division was activated 5.60 in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Khomutovo), Sakhalin Oblast.

23rd Air Defence Corps 1988 Edit

HQ Vladivostok

  • 22nd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Tsentralnaya Uglovaya, Primorskiy Kray)([1])(http://eagle-rost.livejournal.com/310734.html)
  • 47th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Zolotaya Dolina (Unashi), Primorskiy Kray) (disbanded 1998)
  • 530th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Chuguevka, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 821st Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Spassk-Dalny, Primorskiy Kray) (disbanded 1994)
  • 130th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade (Vladivostok, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 150th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade (Zolotaya Dolina (Unashi), Primorskiy Kray)
  • 267th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade (Filino, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 639th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Vasilevka, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 749th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Timofeevka, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 1133rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Lipovtsy, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 10th Radio-Technical Brigade (Artem, Primorskiy Kray)
  • 123rd Radio-Technical Regiment (Timofeevka, Primorskiy Kray)

6th Air Defence Division 1988 Edit

HQ Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Kamchatka Oblast[7]

  • 865th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Airport (Yelizovo), Kamchatka Oblast)
  • 191st Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade (Petropavlovsk-Kamchatka, Kamchatka Oblast)
  • 60th Radio-Technical Regiment (Koryaki, Kamchatka Oblast)
  • 124th Radio-Technical Regiment (Ust-Kamchatsk, Kamchatka Oblast)

Formed from 222nd Fighter Aviation Division PVO May 1960; disbanded 1998.

24th Air Defence Division 1988 Edit

HQ Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Khomutovo)[8]

  • 121st Communications Center (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Khomutovo), Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 41st Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Burevestnik, Iturup Island)
  • 528th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Smirnykh, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 777th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO (Dolinsk-Sokol, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 328th independent Transport Aviation Squadron (Dolinsk-Sokol, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 140th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Poronaysk, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 752nd Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk (Khomutovo), Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 891st Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment (Okha, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 38th Radio-Technical Regiment (Smirnykh, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 39th Radio-Technical Regiment (Dolinsk, Sakhalin Oblast)
  • 125th Radio-Technical Regiment (Goryachiye Klyuchi, Kurilsky District, Sakhalin Oblast (Iturup Island)

11th Air Force and Air Defence Forces Army Edit

Following the amalgamation of the 11th Air Defence Army and the 1st Air Army, in 2007 the 11th Army included two regiments of Su-27 fighter aircraft, one of MiG-31 interceptors, two of Su-24 tactical bombers, two of Su-25 attack aircraft and one reconnaissance regiment of Su-24MRs.[9] The anti-aircraft component is much less powerful, including just three regiments of surface-to-air missiles, located in Khabarovsk, Komsomolsk and Vladivostok. The 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment, located at Dzemgi (Komsomolsk-on-Amur), was the first Russian Air Force unit armed with the upgraded Su-27SM fighters.

The 303rd Fighter Aviation Division fought with the 64th Fighter Aviation Corps of the Air Defence Forces during the Korean War, flying Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15s, though it is not certain that the current 303rd Division is the same unit that fought during that war.[10] The 303rd Fighter Aviation Division fought during Operation Bagration, and included the Normandie-Niemen regiment for a period.

In 2007 the commanding officer was General-Lieutenant Valeriy Ivanov (equivalent to a major-general), former commander of the 1st Air Defence Corps.

The most notable unit of the 11th Army in 2007 was the 18th Guards Vitebsk Normandie-Niemen Assault Aviation Regiment, stationed at Galyonki, which has been twice awarded the Red Banner and the Order of Suvorov. In 1943, during World War II, the regiment included the Normandie squadron of French pilots, which later became the independent regiment known as Normandie-Niemen. On 9 May 1995 (Victory Day), to commemorate these events, the 18th ShAP received the name Normandie-Niemen.[11] Since March 1993, the unit operates the Sukhoi Su-25 attack aircraft.

Structure after 2007 Edit

  • 11th Air Army - Khabarovsk[9]
    • 23rd Air Defence Corps - HQ at Vladivostok;
    • 25th Air Defence Division - HQ at Komsomolsk-na-Amure[14]
      • 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment - HQ at Dzemgi - Su-27; former 60th IAP. 2000 amalgamated with the 404th Fighter Aviation Regiment, and renamed 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment. [303 GSAD]
    • 303rd Composite Aviation Division - HQ at Ussuriysk
      • 277th Bomber Aviation Regiment - HQ at Khurba - Su-24; 1 September 2009 renamed 6988th Aviation Base.[15]
      • 302nd Bomber Aviation Regiment - HQ at Verino - Su-24; - 1 September 2009 absorbed by the 6988th Aviation Base.[16]
      • 18th Guards Normandie-Niemen Assault Aviation Regiment - HQ at Galenki - Su-25 - disbanded June 2009;[11]
      • 187th Assault Aviation Regiment - HQ at Chernigovka - Su-25, merged September 2009 into 6983rd Guards Aviation Base.[17]
      • 799th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment - HQ at Varfolomeyevka - Su-24MR, MiG-25RB(?);
    • 257th Independent Composite Aviation Regiment - HQ at Khabarovsk-Bolshoy - An-12, An-26, Mi-8;
    • Army Aviation component;
      • Unknown Independent Helicopter Regiment - HQ at Dolinsk-Sokol (Dolinsk) - Mi-8;
      • 319th Independent Helicopter Regiment for Battle Control - HQ at Chernigovka - Mi-24;
      • 364th Independent Helicopter Regiment - HQ at Srednebelaya - Mi-8, Mi-24, Mi-26;
      • 825th Independent Helicopter Regiment - HQ at Garovka-2 - Mi-6, Mi-8, Mi-26;

2023 Structure Edit

Additional MiG-31BM fighters in the Eastern Military District are deployed as part of the Pacific Fleet's naval aviation forces.

Tu-95MS and Tu-22M3 bombers (including with Kh-47M2 Kinzhal ASM) deployed as part of Russian Long-Range Aviation, including based at Ukrainka in the Eastern Military District (as of 2016).[27]

See also Edit

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ "11th Command of Air Force and Air Defence".
  2. ^ Roshcha, Sergey (6 May 2011). "Dali prostit'sya s Boyevym Znamenem" [Is goodbye to the battle flag]. Khabarovskiye Novosti (in Russian). Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  3. ^ a b Lensky & Tsybin 2015, pp. 33–34.
  4. ^ "Jeane Kirkpatrick's Address to the United Nations". New York Times. 7 September 1983. p. 15.
  5. ^ Lensky & Tsybin 2015, pp. 18–19.
  6. ^ Lensky & Tsybin 2015, pp. 42–47.
  7. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "6th Air Defence Division". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  8. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "24th Air Defence Division". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  9. ^ a b Air Forces Monthly, July & August 2007 issues.
  10. ^ 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. 157. ISBN 5-7511-1819-7. As an IAD after the war had been relocated in Primorye. It consists of 2 regiments survived the war (18th Guards and the 523rd), Twin Cities famous French air regiment Normandie - Niemen". Was part of the 54th, then 1st VA. Participated in the Korean War, having in the More and 17th Regiment.)
  11. ^ a b Holm, Michael (2014). "18th Guards Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  12. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "22nd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  13. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "530th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-09. Retrieved 2018-12-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "277th Bomber Aviation Regiment". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  16. ^ Holm, Michael (2014). "302nd Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment". ww2.dk. Retrieved 5 July 2014.
  17. ^ "187th independent Assault Aviation Regiment". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2022-06-05.
  18. ^ "Russian Military Forces: Interactive Map".
  19. ^ "Russian Military Transformation Tracker: Issue 1, August 2018-July 2019".
  20. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 65, 30 November - 6 December 2020".
  21. ^ "Russian Military Forces: Interactive Map".
  22. ^ "11th Command of Air Force and Air Defence".
  23. ^ "Russian Military Forces: Interactive Map".
  24. ^ "Rondeli Russian Military Digest: Issue 75, 15 February - 21 February 2021".
  25. ^ "Russian Military Transformation Tracker: Issue 1, August 2018-July 2019".
  26. ^ a b c d e f g "Russian Air Force - Today".
  27. ^ "Russia to Set up Heavy Bomber Division to Patrol Japan, Hawaii, and Guam".

Bibliography Edit

  • Lensky, A.G.; Tsybin, M.M. (2015). Советские Войска ПВО в последние годы Союза ССР. Часть 3 [Soviet Air Defense Forces in the last years of the USSR: Part 3] (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Info Ol. OCLC 861180616.
  • "11-ya Vozdushnaya Armiya" [11th Air Army]. samsv.narod.ru (in Russian). 7 May 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014.

11th, defence, forces, army, 11th, banner, defence, forces, army, russian, Краснознамённая, армия, ВВС, ПВО, formation, russian, aerospace, forces, located, russian, east, whose, zone, responsibility, covers, eastern, military, district, 11th, army, force, def. The 11th Red Banner Air and Air Defence Forces Army Russian 11 ya Krasnoznamyonnaya armiya VVS i PVO is a formation of the Russian Aerospace Forces located in the Russian Far East whose zone of responsibility covers the Eastern Military District The 11th Army Air Force and Air Defense Army was reformed within the Eastern Military District on 14 August 2015 1 11th Air and Air Defence Forces ArmyGreat emblemActive1998 2009 2015 presentCountryRussian FederationBranchRussian Aerospace ForcesPart ofMain Command of the Russian Aerospace Forces and Eastern Military DistrictHQKhabarovskDecorations Order of the Red BannerCommandersCurrentcommanderLieutenant General Vladimir Kravchenko The designation 11 for an aviation formation of this size in the Far East was introduced during the Second World War In August 1942 the Air Forces of the 2nd Red Banner Army were redesignated the 11th Air Army But this formation only last less than two and a half years because in December 1944 the formation was reduced to the 18th Aviation Corps which in June 1945 joined the 10th Air Army In April 1960 the designation 11 was taken up again by redesignation of the independent Far Eastern Air Defence Army For decades thus the aviation forces in the area consisted of the 1st Air Army of the Air Forces reformed on 1 July 1957 by merger of two existing armies when the higher command arrangements in the Far East were reorganised and the 11th Air Defence Army of the Soviet Air Defence Forces In 1998 six years after the fall of the Soviet Union the two were merged into the 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army covering the Far Eastern Military District Russian Naval Aviation also handed over a regiment of Mikoyan MiG 31 interceptor aircraft on the Kamchatka Peninsula which was included in the new force The 11th Army of VVS and PVO was disbanded in 2009 2 by being redesignated the 3rd Air and Air Defence Forces Command The army was reformed once again in 2015 from the command Contents 1 11th Separate Air Defence Army 1 1 23rd Air Defence Corps 1988 1 2 6th Air Defence Division 1988 1 3 24th Air Defence Division 1988 2 11th Air Force and Air Defence Forces Army 2 1 Structure after 2007 2 2 2023 Structure 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography11th Separate Air Defence Army EditThe army traces its lineage back to the formation of the Far Eastern Air Defence Zone on 11 August 1941 The zone was broken up in spring 1945 to form the Priamur and Primorsky Air Defence Armies Postwar in October the Priamur Air Defense Army was renamed the Far Eastern Air Defence Army and soon reorganized as the Far Eastern Air Defense District okrug PVO in 1946 The Far Eastern Air Defence District took over responsibility for air defence east of Lake Baikal including the old sector of the Primorsky Air Defence Army In a February 1949 reorganization the Far Eastern Air Defense District raion PVO was formed as a raion of the 1st okrug category and the headquarters of the former Far Eastern Air Defence District became that of the Komsomolsk Khabarovsk Air Defense District raion PVO The Amur Air Defence Army headquartered at Khabarovsk was formed in December 1954 during PVO restructuring from the Komsomolsk Khabarovsk Air Defense District and the 50th Fighter Aviation Corps PVO merging anti aircraft and interceptor units The army was reorganized as the Separate Far Eastern Air Defence Army in December 1956 its responsibilities expanded with the takeover of air defense units previously under naval control The army was numbered in March 1960 as the 11th Separate Air Defence Army or 11th Army of the Air Defence Forces 11 OA PVO The army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner on 30 April 1975 Under the Ogarkov reforms the army headquarters was disbanded in May 1980 and its units placed under the air force and air defence forces of the Far Eastern Military District These changes were reversed in May 1986 and the army headquarters reformed receiving a new battle flag 3 During the Soviet period the 11th Air Defence Army gained headlines due to the defection of Viktor Belenko in September 1976 and the KAL 007 shootdown in 1983 The KAL 007 shootdown occurred on 1 September 1983 After a protracted ground controlled interception three Su 15 fighters from Dolinsk Sokol airbase and a MiG 23 4 from Smirnykh Air Base managed to make visual contact with the Boeing 747 and later shot it down In the late 1980s the 11th Separate Air Defence Army of the Voyska PVO controlled two corps 23rd in Vladivostok amp 8th in Komsomolsk and four divisions 24th in Petropavlovsk 29th in Blagoveshchensk 6th in Okhotsk and 25th in Chukotka with 12 fighter aviation regiments IAPs 19 SAM brigades and regiments and ten radio technical radar brigades regiments 5 The army underwent dramatic reductions during the 1990s leaving it with only the 8th and 23rd Air Defence Corps A 1990 reorganization eliminated the 24th and 25th Air Defence Division headquarters with the units in Sakhalin and Chukotka coming directly under the 72nd Air Defence Corps formed from the 6th Air Defence Division in Kamchatka The corps reverted to the 6th Air Defense Division in 1994 when the last Chukotka air defense units were eliminated The 29th Air Defence Division was eliminated in 1994 3 By mid 1998 the 6th Air Defence Division was abolished after the last units in Sakhalin disbanded and its units became part of the new Aviation and Air Defence of the Joint Command of Troops and Forces in Northeast Russia 6 In 2001 the 8th and 23rd Air Defence Corps were renamed the 25th and 93rd Air Defence Divisions respectively and in 2009 became the 11th and 12th Aerospace Defence Brigades 24th Air Defence Division was activated 5 60 in Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo Sakhalin Oblast 23rd Air Defence Corps 1988 Edit HQ Vladivostok 22nd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Tsentralnaya Uglovaya Primorskiy Kray 1 http eagle rost livejournal com 310734 html 47th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Zolotaya Dolina Unashi Primorskiy Kray disbanded 1998 530th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Chuguevka Primorskiy Kray 821st Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Spassk Dalny Primorskiy Kray disbanded 1994 130th Anti Aircraft Missile Brigade Vladivostok Primorskiy Kray 150th Anti Aircraft Missile Brigade Zolotaya Dolina Unashi Primorskiy Kray 267th Anti Aircraft Missile Brigade Filino Primorskiy Kray 639th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Vasilevka Primorskiy Kray 749th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Timofeevka Primorskiy Kray 1133rd Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Lipovtsy Primorskiy Kray 10th Radio Technical Brigade Artem Primorskiy Kray 123rd Radio Technical Regiment Timofeevka Primorskiy Kray 6th Air Defence Division 1988 Edit HQ Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Kamchatka Oblast 7 865th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Airport Yelizovo Kamchatka Oblast 191st Anti Aircraft Missile Brigade Petropavlovsk Kamchatka Kamchatka Oblast 60th Radio Technical Regiment Koryaki Kamchatka Oblast 124th Radio Technical Regiment Ust Kamchatsk Kamchatka Oblast Formed from 222nd Fighter Aviation Division PVO May 1960 disbanded 1998 24th Air Defence Division 1988 Edit HQ Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo 8 121st Communications Center Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo Sakhalin Oblast 41st Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Burevestnik Iturup Island 528th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Smirnykh Sakhalin Oblast 777th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO Dolinsk Sokol Sakhalin Oblast 328th independent Transport Aviation Squadron Dolinsk Sokol Sakhalin Oblast 140th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Poronaysk Sakhalin Oblast 752nd Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo Sakhalin Oblast 891st Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Okha Sakhalin Oblast 38th Radio Technical Regiment Smirnykh Sakhalin Oblast 39th Radio Technical Regiment Dolinsk Sakhalin Oblast 125th Radio Technical Regiment Goryachiye Klyuchi Kurilsky District Sakhalin Oblast Iturup Island 11th Air Force and Air Defence Forces Army EditFollowing the amalgamation of the 11th Air Defence Army and the 1st Air Army in 2007 the 11th Army included two regiments of Su 27 fighter aircraft one of MiG 31 interceptors two of Su 24 tactical bombers two of Su 25 attack aircraft and one reconnaissance regiment of Su 24MRs 9 The anti aircraft component is much less powerful including just three regiments of surface to air missiles located in Khabarovsk Komsomolsk and Vladivostok The 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment located at Dzemgi Komsomolsk on Amur was the first Russian Air Force unit armed with the upgraded Su 27SM fighters The 303rd Fighter Aviation Division fought with the 64th Fighter Aviation Corps of the Air Defence Forces during the Korean War flying Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15s though it is not certain that the current 303rd Division is the same unit that fought during that war 10 The 303rd Fighter Aviation Division fought during Operation Bagration and included the Normandie Niemen regiment for a period In 2007 the commanding officer was General Lieutenant Valeriy Ivanov equivalent to a major general former commander of the 1st Air Defence Corps The most notable unit of the 11th Army in 2007 was the 18th Guards Vitebsk Normandie Niemen Assault Aviation Regiment stationed at Galyonki which has been twice awarded the Red Banner and the Order of Suvorov In 1943 during World War II the regiment included the Normandie squadron of French pilots which later became the independent regiment known as Normandie Niemen On 9 May 1995 Victory Day to commemorate these events the 18th ShAP received the name Normandie Niemen 11 Since March 1993 the unit operates the Sukhoi Su 25 attack aircraft Structure after 2007 Edit 11th Air Army Khabarovsk 9 23rd Air Defence Corps HQ at Vladivostok 22nd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment HQ at Tsentralnaya Uglovaya Su 27 1 12 09 renamed 6989th Guards Aviation Base 12 303 GSAD other regt was 120 at Domna 530th Fighter Aviation Regiment HQ at Chuguyevka air base AFM 2007 Sokolovka MiG 25PU MiG 31 disbanded 1 December 2009 13 25th Air Defence Division HQ at Komsomolsk na Amure 14 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment HQ at Dzemgi Su 27 former 60th IAP 2000 amalgamated with the 404th Fighter Aviation Regiment and renamed 23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment 303 GSAD 303rd Composite Aviation Division HQ at Ussuriysk 277th Bomber Aviation Regiment HQ at Khurba Su 24 1 September 2009 renamed 6988th Aviation Base 15 302nd Bomber Aviation Regiment HQ at Verino Su 24 1 September 2009 absorbed by the 6988th Aviation Base 16 18th Guards Normandie Niemen Assault Aviation Regiment HQ at Galenki Su 25 disbanded June 2009 11 187th Assault Aviation Regiment HQ at Chernigovka Su 25 merged September 2009 into 6983rd Guards Aviation Base 17 799th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment HQ at Varfolomeyevka Su 24MR MiG 25RB 257th Independent Composite Aviation Regiment HQ at Khabarovsk Bolshoy An 12 An 26 Mi 8 Army Aviation component Unknown Independent Helicopter Regiment HQ at Dolinsk Sokol Dolinsk Mi 8 319th Independent Helicopter Regiment for Battle Control HQ at Chernigovka Mi 24 364th Independent Helicopter Regiment HQ at Srednebelaya Mi 8 Mi 24 Mi 26 825th Independent Helicopter Regiment HQ at Garovka 2 Mi 6 Mi 8 Mi 26 2023 Structure Edit Headquarters 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army 25th Air Defence Division Red Banner Komsomolskaya Komsomolsk on Amur Khaborovsk Krai 18 1529th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Khabarovsk S 400 SAM 1530th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Bolshaya Kartel Khabarovsk Krai S 400 surface to air missile systems 19 as of 2018 38th Air Defence Brigade Birobidzhan S 300V4 surface to air missiles from the brigade reported deployed on Iturup Island 20 26th Air Defence Division Chita Zabaykalsky Krai 1723rd Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Kashtak S 300PS SAM 21 53rd Air Defense Division Yelizovo 1532nd SAM Regiment S 400 SAM as of 2018 22 93rd Air Defence Division Vladivostok Primorsky Krai 23 1533rd Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Vladivostok S 400 S 300V Pantsir S2 SAM systems 589th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Nakhodka S 400 Pantsir SAMs 1724th Anti Aircraft Missile Regiment Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Sakhalin Oblast S 400 SAM reported 24 303rd Composite Aviation Division Khurba Khabarovsk Krai 23rd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment Dzyomgi Airport Two squadrons Su 35S fighters one flight deployed at Yasny air base on Iturup Island 25 26 as of 2019 22nd Fighter Aviation Regiment Uglovoye airfield Two squadrons Mig 31BM BSM One squadron Su 35S 26 2019 277th Guards Bomber Aviation Regiment Khurba Two squadrons Su 34 26 2019 18th Guards Assault Aviation Regiment Chernigovka air base reformed 2013 at Chernigovka two squadrons of Sukhoi Su 25 Frogfoot in 2019 26 120th Independent Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment Domna Zabaykalsky Krai Two squadrons Su 30SM 26 2019 266th Assault Aviation Regiment Step air base Two squadrons Sukhoi Su 25 26 2019 799th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron Vozdvizhenka air base Sukhoi Su 24 26 2019 18th Army Aviation Brigade formerly 573rd Aviation Base of Army Aviation Second Rank Bolshoy airfield Khabarovsk Tsentralny Khaborovsk Khaborovsk Krai 112th Separate Helicopter Regiment 319th Separate Helicopter Regiment formerly 575th Aviation Base of Army Aviation Second Rank Chernigovka air base Additional MiG 31BM fighters in the Eastern Military District are deployed as part of the Pacific Fleet s naval aviation forces Tu 95MS and Tu 22M3 bombers including with Kh 47M2 Kinzhal ASM deployed as part of Russian Long Range Aviation including based at Ukrainka in the Eastern Military District as of 2016 27 See also EditList of military airbases in RussiaReferences EditCitations Edit 11th Command of Air Force and Air Defence Roshcha Sergey 6 May 2011 Dali prostit sya s Boyevym Znamenem Is goodbye to the battle flag Khabarovskiye Novosti in Russian Retrieved 5 July 2014 a b Lensky amp Tsybin 2015 pp 33 34 Jeane Kirkpatrick s Address to the United Nations New York Times 7 September 1983 p 15 Lensky amp Tsybin 2015 pp 18 19 Lensky amp Tsybin 2015 pp 42 47 Holm Michael 2014 6th Air Defence Division ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 Holm Michael 2014 24th Air Defence Division ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 a b Air Forces Monthly July amp August 2007 issues 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 157 ISBN 5 7511 1819 7 As an IAD after the war had been relocated in Primorye It consists of 2 regiments survived the war 18th Guards and the 523rd Twin Cities famous French air regiment Normandie Niemen Was part of the 54th then 1st VA Participated in the Korean War having in the More and 17th Regiment a b Holm Michael 2014 18th Guards Fighter Bomber Aviation Regiment ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 Holm Michael 2014 22nd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 Holm Michael 2014 530th Fighter Aviation Regiment PVO ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2015 02 09 Retrieved 2018 12 11 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Holm Michael 2014 277th Bomber Aviation Regiment ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 Holm Michael 2014 302nd Fighter Bomber Aviation Regiment ww2 dk Retrieved 5 July 2014 187th independent Assault Aviation Regiment www ww2 dk Retrieved 2022 06 05 Russian Military Forces Interactive Map Russian Military Transformation Tracker Issue 1 August 2018 July 2019 Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 65 30 November 6 December 2020 Russian Military Forces Interactive Map 11th Command of Air Force and Air Defence Russian Military Forces Interactive Map Rondeli Russian Military Digest Issue 75 15 February 21 February 2021 Russian Military Transformation Tracker Issue 1 August 2018 July 2019 a b c d e f g Russian Air Force Today Russia to Set up Heavy Bomber Division to Patrol Japan Hawaii and Guam Bibliography Edit Lensky A G Tsybin M M 2015 Sovetskie Vojska PVO v poslednie gody Soyuza SSR Chast 3 Soviet Air Defense Forces in the last years of the USSR Part 3 in Russian St Petersburg Info Ol OCLC 861180616 11 ya Vozdushnaya Armiya 11th Air Army samsv narod ru in Russian 7 May 2014 Retrieved 5 July 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 11th Air and Air Defence Forces Army amp oldid 1157213036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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