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43rd Rocket Army

The 43rd Red Banner Rocket Army, known officially as the 43rd Red Banner Missile Army, was an army of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces. It was formed in Vinnytsia from the 43rd Air Army of Long Range Aviation. In 1991, it came under the control of the Commonwealth of Independent States while stationed in Ukraine,[1] and was dismantled by 1996. For much of its existence, it was headquartered in the city of Vinnytsia, in the then-Ukrainian SSR. It was among the first units in the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces to field the UR-100 (SS-11 'Sego') and UR-100N (SS-19 'Stilleto') ICBMs.

43rd Rocket Army
Ukrainian patch of the 43rd Rocket Army
Active1960–1996
Country Soviet Union (1960-1991)
 Ukraine (1991-1996)
BranchSoviet Strategic Missile Forces (1960-1991)
Armed Forces of Ukraine (1991-1996)
TypeInter-Continental Ballistic Missile
Size6 missile / rocket divisions
Garrison/HQVinnytsia
Decorations Order of the Red Banner
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Alexander Shevtsov

History edit

On 9 April 1946 8th Air Army was renamed 2nd Air Army DA, and transferred to Vinnytsia, Vinnytsia Oblast. In 1946 the 2nd Air Army DA comprised the 2nd Guards Bomber Aviation Corps (2nd and 13th Guards Bomber Aviation Divisions) and the 4th Guards Bomber Aviation Corps (14th and 15th Guards Bomber Aviation Divisions). On 10 January 1949 2nd Air Army DA was redesignated 43rd Air Army DA.[2]

43rd Rocket Army was formed at Vinnytsia within the Kiev Military District's boundaries on 1 September 1960 from the previous 43rd Air Army of the Long Range Aviation.[3]

In 1961 the 43rd Rocket Army comprised the 44th Rocket Division (Kolomiya, Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, previously 73rd Engineer Brigade RVGK at Kamyshin[4]), the 19th Rocket Division (Gaisin, Vinnitsa Oblast), the 50th Rocket Division (Belokorovichi, Zhitomir Oblast), the 46th Rocket Division (Pervomaisk, Mykolaiv Oblast, formed from 93rd Motor Rifle Division of the Ground Forces), 43rd Guards Rocket Division (Romny, Sumy Oblast), the 35th Rocket Division (Ordzhonikidze, North Ossetia), and the 37th Guards Rocket Division (Lutsk, Volyn Oblast).[3]

On 19 March 1970, the 33rd Guards Rocket Division became part of the army.[3] On 25 May 1972, the 60th Rocket Regiment transferred from control of the 19th Rocket Division to direct army subordination.[5] The 434th Rocket Regiment also moved from the 46th Rocket Division to direct army subordination.[6] On 25 May 1975, the army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.[3]

The 434th Rocket Regiment transferred to Olovyannaya and became part of the 47th Rocket Division there on 1 July 1979.[6] On 12 December 1981, the 35th Rocket Division left the army and moved to Barnaul, becoming part of the 33rd Guards Rocket Army.[7] On 15 October 1984, the 60th Separate Rocket Regiment became part of the 50th Rocket Division.[5]

On 31 March 1990 the 44th Rocket Division at Kolomiya was disbanded. In June 1990 the 50th Rocket Army at Smolensk was disbanded, and its 32nd and 49th Guards Rocket Divisions were reassigned to the 43rd Rocket Army.[8]

 
Workers destroying a SS-24 silo at Pervomaisk

Organisation 1990:

The 50th Rocket Division was disbanded 30.4.91, followed by the 43rd Guards Rocket Division 31.12.92 and the 37th Guards Rocket Division 31.12.93. On 6 December 1991, the army withdrew from the Strategic Missile Troops and became part of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The dismantling of missile units began as barracks and other facilities were transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The missile warheads were sent to Russia.[8] In March 1993, the 33rd Guards, 49th Guards and 32nd Rocket Divisions (all stationed in Belarus) were transferred to the 27th Guards Rocket Army. By 1995, only the 19th and 46th Rocket Divisions remained as part of the army. It was finally disbanded on 8 May 1996.[3]

The 43rd Rocket Army's last commander was Colonel-General Vladimir Alekseevich Mikhtyuk, who served from 10.1.1991 to 8.5.1996.

In early 1994, after the Trilateral Agreement, "General Vitaly Radetskyi, Ukraine’s new Minister of Defence, summoned Mikhtyuk and two of his senior generals to Kyiv.[10] Without warning, General Radetskyi told them they had 15 minutes to decide whether to take Ukraine’s oath of allegiance. General Mikhtyuk and one general took the oath, while the other refused. Then, the minister ordered [Mikhtyuk] to return to his headquarters in Vinnytsia immediately, and convene all of his subordinate commanders. ..He did so explaining his personal decision to remain in Ukraine, and asking each officer to take or reject the oath. “All of my deputies,” Mikhtyuk recalled, “except one, said they would not take the oath and asked me to transfer them to the Russian Federation."

"In March 1994, the 43rd Rocket Army had 18 operational regiments, manned by approximately 6,000 officers and warrant officers. By Ukrainian law, these officers would be retired with dismantlement of the rocket army. The Ukrainian government stated it would only be able to provide housing for 3,500 officers, which left 2,500 officers without housing."[11]

"Leonid Kuchma’s government directed the Minister of Defence in 1994-1996 to keep the SS-24 [note: Soviet designation RT-23 Molodets] missiles on alert. General Mikhtyuk and the 43rd Rocket Army complied."[12]

Russian sources say that the army was disestablished on 8 May 1996.

In either 1993 or May 1996, Colonel-General of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Mikhtyuk was appointed Deputy Minister of Defence of Ukraine - Commander of the 43rd Missile Army, to head the Interdepartmental Working Group overseeing the deactivation and destruction of strategic offensive weapons, стратегических наступательных вооружений (SHO).[13]

"Major General Oleksander Iliashov commanded the 46th Rocket Division, which once had 5,500 men. Although by 1997 the rocket division was much reduced, General Iliashov directed his planning staff to organize and carry out the work of decommissioning the SS-24 complexes. General Mikhtyuk directed that the work begin in July 1998. It did, and over the next three years, 1998-2001, all 46 SS-24 missiles were decommissioned and removed from missile complexes by 43rd Army technicians and Ukrainian contractors."[14]

On October 30, 2001, the last silo launcher (ШПУ) of the RT-23 Molodets intercontinental ballistic missile (according to U.S. Department of Defence classification - SS-24) in the 43rd Rocket Army was destroyed via an explosion.[15]

"One infrastructure requirement.. was digging up and recovering the thousands of kilometers of underground cabling.[16] These cables linked the missiles to regimental, division, army, and strategic rocket force command posts. The 43rd Rocket Army also had hundreds of kilometers of communications cables and wires, as well as power cables to each of the 130 missile complexes and 13 missile command posts. Bechtel was responsible for planning, organising and managing all work associated with eliminating these cables and electronic wires. The 43rd Rocket Army compiled annual statistics on cables recovered and metal scrap salvaged."

On August 20, 2002, after parting with the Battle Banner, the 43rd Rocket Army ceased to exist, and its commander, Colonel General of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Mikhtyuk, was dismissed from military service on the same day.

Commanders edit

  • Colonel-General of Aviation Georgy Nikolaevich Tupikov, 22.11.60 - 25.11.61[3]
  • Colonel-General Pavel Borisovich Dankevich, 25.11.61 - 7.7.62
  • Colonel-General Aleksandr Grigorevich Shevtsov, 24.8.62 - 20.6.66
  • Colonel-General Mikhail Grigorevich Grigorev, 20.6.66 - 25.4.68
  • Colonel-General Aleksey Dmitrievich Melekhin, 25.4.68 - 15.7.74
  • Colonel-General Yury Petrovich Zabegaylov, 15.7.74 - 18.12.75
  • Colonel-General Vadim Serafimovich Nedelin, 18.12.75 - 15.8.82
  • Colonel-General Aleksandr Petrovich Volkov, 15.8.82 - 22.7.87
  • Lieutenant-General Valery Vasilevich Kirilin, 22.7.87 - 10.1.91
  • Colonel-General Vladimir Alekseevich Mikhtyuk, began service January 1991, took the Ukrainian oath 1994.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Harahan 2014, pp. 101–105.
  2. ^ Holm, Michael. "43rd Air Army DA". Soviet Armed Forces 1945-1991. Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Holm, Michael. "43rd Missile Army". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  4. ^ Holm, Michael. "44th Missile Division". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  5. ^ a b Holm, Michael. "60th Missile Regiment". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  6. ^ a b Holm, Michael. "434th Missile Regiment". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  7. ^ Holm, Michael. "35th Missile Division". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  8. ^ a b "43-я ракетная армия" [43rd Rocket Army]. ruzhany.info (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-02-21.
  9. ^ Michael Holm, 46th Missile Division
  10. ^ Harahan 2014, pp. 112–113.
  11. ^ Harahan 2014, p. 121.
  12. ^ Harahan 2014, p. 158.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-08-30. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  14. ^ Harahan 2014, p. 161.
  15. ^ See also Harahan 2014, 162.
  16. ^ Harahan 2014, p. 156.
  • Harahan, Joseph P. (2014). (PDF). DTRA History Series. Defense Threat Reduction Agency. ASIN B01LYEJ56H. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-05-15. Retrieved 12 March 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Joseph P. Harahan, Combining Military Professionalism, Technological Mastery of Nuclear Weapon Systems, and Diplomacy: General-Colonel V. A. Mikhtyuk and the Decommissioning, Dismantlement, and Destruction of the 43rd Rocket Army (Nuclear) in Ukraine, 1994–2002, paper given at ICOHTEC 33rd Symphosium, Leicester, 2006

43rd, rocket, army, 43rd, banner, rocket, army, known, officially, 43rd, banner, missile, army, army, soviet, strategic, rocket, forces, formed, vinnytsia, from, 43rd, army, long, range, aviation, 1991, came, under, control, commonwealth, independent, states, . The 43rd Red Banner Rocket Army known officially as the 43rd Red Banner Missile Army was an army of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces It was formed in Vinnytsia from the 43rd Air Army of Long Range Aviation In 1991 it came under the control of the Commonwealth of Independent States while stationed in Ukraine 1 and was dismantled by 1996 For much of its existence it was headquartered in the city of Vinnytsia in the then Ukrainian SSR It was among the first units in the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces to field the UR 100 SS 11 Sego and UR 100N SS 19 Stilleto ICBMs 43rd Rocket ArmyUkrainian patch of the 43rd Rocket ArmyActive1960 1996Country Soviet Union 1960 1991 Ukraine 1991 1996 BranchSoviet Strategic Missile Forces 1960 1991 Armed Forces of Ukraine 1991 1996 TypeInter Continental Ballistic MissileSize6 missile rocket divisionsGarrison HQVinnytsiaDecorations Order of the Red BannerCommandersNotablecommandersAlexander Shevtsov Contents 1 History 2 Commanders 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory editOn 9 April 1946 8th Air Army was renamed 2nd Air Army DA and transferred to Vinnytsia Vinnytsia Oblast In 1946 the 2nd Air Army DA comprised the 2nd Guards Bomber Aviation Corps 2nd and 13th Guards Bomber Aviation Divisions and the 4th Guards Bomber Aviation Corps 14th and 15th Guards Bomber Aviation Divisions On 10 January 1949 2nd Air Army DA was redesignated 43rd Air Army DA 2 43rd Rocket Army was formed at Vinnytsia within the Kiev Military District s boundaries on 1 September 1960 from the previous 43rd Air Army of the Long Range Aviation 3 In 1961 the 43rd Rocket Army comprised the 44th Rocket Division Kolomiya Ivano Frankivsk Oblast previously 73rd Engineer Brigade RVGK at Kamyshin 4 the 19th Rocket Division Gaisin Vinnitsa Oblast the 50th Rocket Division Belokorovichi Zhitomir Oblast the 46th Rocket Division Pervomaisk Mykolaiv Oblast formed from 93rd Motor Rifle Division of the Ground Forces 43rd Guards Rocket Division Romny Sumy Oblast the 35th Rocket Division Ordzhonikidze North Ossetia and the 37th Guards Rocket Division Lutsk Volyn Oblast 3 On 19 March 1970 the 33rd Guards Rocket Division became part of the army 3 On 25 May 1972 the 60th Rocket Regiment transferred from control of the 19th Rocket Division to direct army subordination 5 The 434th Rocket Regiment also moved from the 46th Rocket Division to direct army subordination 6 On 25 May 1975 the army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner 3 The 434th Rocket Regiment transferred to Olovyannaya and became part of the 47th Rocket Division there on 1 July 1979 6 On 12 December 1981 the 35th Rocket Division left the army and moved to Barnaul becoming part of the 33rd Guards Rocket Army 7 On 15 October 1984 the 60th Separate Rocket Regiment became part of the 50th Rocket Division 5 On 31 March 1990 the 44th Rocket Division at Kolomiya was disbanded In June 1990 the 50th Rocket Army at Smolensk was disbanded and its 32nd and 49th Guards Rocket Divisions were reassigned to the 43rd Rocket Army 8 nbsp Workers destroying a SS 24 silo at PervomaiskOrganisation 1990 19th Rocket Division Rakovo Khmelnytskyi Oblast 32nd Rocket Division Postavy Vitebsk Oblast 33rd Guards Rocket Division Mozyr Gomel Oblast 37th Guards Rocket Division Lutsk Volyn Oblast 43rd Guards Rocket Division Romny Sumy Oblast 46th Nizhnedneprovskaya Lower Dnieper Order of the October Revolution Red Banner Rocket Division Pervomaisk Mykolaiv Oblast 9 49th Guards Rocket Division Lida Grodno Region Belorussian SSR transferred to 27th Guards Rocket Army from March 1993 50th Rocket Division Belokorovichi Zhitomir Oblast 24th Arsenal GRAU Military Unit Number 14247 A2365 Lviv 50 Mykhaylenky Zhytomyr Oblast The 50th Rocket Division was disbanded 30 4 91 followed by the 43rd Guards Rocket Division 31 12 92 and the 37th Guards Rocket Division 31 12 93 On 6 December 1991 the army withdrew from the Strategic Missile Troops and became part of the Armed Forces of Ukraine The dismantling of missile units began as barracks and other facilities were transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine The missile warheads were sent to Russia 8 In March 1993 the 33rd Guards 49th Guards and 32nd Rocket Divisions all stationed in Belarus were transferred to the 27th Guards Rocket Army By 1995 only the 19th and 46th Rocket Divisions remained as part of the army It was finally disbanded on 8 May 1996 3 The 43rd Rocket Army s last commander was Colonel General Vladimir Alekseevich Mikhtyuk who served from 10 1 1991 to 8 5 1996 In early 1994 after the Trilateral Agreement General Vitaly Radetskyi Ukraine s new Minister of Defence summoned Mikhtyuk and two of his senior generals to Kyiv 10 Without warning General Radetskyi told them they had 15 minutes to decide whether to take Ukraine s oath of allegiance General Mikhtyuk and one general took the oath while the other refused Then the minister ordered Mikhtyuk to return to his headquarters in Vinnytsia immediately and convene all of his subordinate commanders He did so explaining his personal decision to remain in Ukraine and asking each officer to take or reject the oath All of my deputies Mikhtyuk recalled except one said they would not take the oath and asked me to transfer them to the Russian Federation In March 1994 the 43rd Rocket Army had 18 operational regiments manned by approximately 6 000 officers and warrant officers By Ukrainian law these officers would be retired with dismantlement of the rocket army The Ukrainian government stated it would only be able to provide housing for 3 500 officers which left 2 500 officers without housing 11 Leonid Kuchma s government directed the Minister of Defence in 1994 1996 to keep the SS 24 note Soviet designation RT 23 Molodets missiles on alert General Mikhtyuk and the 43rd Rocket Army complied 12 Russian sources say that the army was disestablished on 8 May 1996 In either 1993 or May 1996 Colonel General of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Mikhtyuk was appointed Deputy Minister of Defence of Ukraine Commander of the 43rd Missile Army to head the Interdepartmental Working Group overseeing the deactivation and destruction of strategic offensive weapons strategicheskih nastupatelnyh vooruzhenij SHO 13 Major General Oleksander Iliashov commanded the 46th Rocket Division which once had 5 500 men Although by 1997 the rocket division was much reduced General Iliashov directed his planning staff to organize and carry out the work of decommissioning the SS 24 complexes General Mikhtyuk directed that the work begin in July 1998 It did and over the next three years 1998 2001 all 46 SS 24 missiles were decommissioned and removed from missile complexes by 43rd Army technicians and Ukrainian contractors 14 On October 30 2001 the last silo launcher ShPU of the RT 23 Molodets intercontinental ballistic missile according to U S Department of Defence classification SS 24 in the 43rd Rocket Army was destroyed via an explosion 15 One infrastructure requirement was digging up and recovering the thousands of kilometers of underground cabling 16 These cables linked the missiles to regimental division army and strategic rocket force command posts The 43rd Rocket Army also had hundreds of kilometers of communications cables and wires as well as power cables to each of the 130 missile complexes and 13 missile command posts Bechtel was responsible for planning organising and managing all work associated with eliminating these cables and electronic wires The 43rd Rocket Army compiled annual statistics on cables recovered and metal scrap salvaged On August 20 2002 after parting with the Battle Banner the 43rd Rocket Army ceased to exist and its commander Colonel General of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Mikhtyuk was dismissed from military service on the same day Commanders editColonel General of Aviation Georgy Nikolaevich Tupikov 22 11 60 25 11 61 3 Colonel General Pavel Borisovich Dankevich 25 11 61 7 7 62 Colonel General Aleksandr Grigorevich Shevtsov 24 8 62 20 6 66 Colonel General Mikhail Grigorevich Grigorev 20 6 66 25 4 68 Colonel General Aleksey Dmitrievich Melekhin 25 4 68 15 7 74 Colonel General Yury Petrovich Zabegaylov 15 7 74 18 12 75 Colonel General Vadim Serafimovich Nedelin 18 12 75 15 8 82 Colonel General Aleksandr Petrovich Volkov 15 8 82 22 7 87 Lieutenant General Valery Vasilevich Kirilin 22 7 87 10 1 91 Colonel General Vladimir Alekseevich Mikhtyuk began service January 1991 took the Ukrainian oath 1994 See also editNuclear weapons and UkraineReferences edit Harahan 2014 pp 101 105 Holm Michael 43rd Air Army DA Soviet Armed Forces 1945 1991 Retrieved 22 February 2016 a b c d e f Holm Michael 43rd Missile Army www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 02 21 Holm Michael 44th Missile Division www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 02 21 a b Holm Michael 60th Missile Regiment www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 02 21 a b Holm Michael 434th Missile Regiment www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 02 21 Holm Michael 35th Missile Division www ww2 dk Retrieved 2016 02 21 a b 43 ya raketnaya armiya 43rd Rocket Army ruzhany info in Russian Retrieved 2016 02 21 Michael Holm 46th Missile Division Harahan 2014 pp 112 113 Harahan 2014 p 121 Harahan 2014 p 158 Enciklopedicheskij slovar RVSN Sajt Ministerstva oborony RF Archived from the original on 2017 08 30 Retrieved 2017 08 30 Harahan 2014 p 161 See also Harahan 2014 162 Harahan 2014 p 156 Harahan Joseph P 2014 With Courage and Persistence Eliminating and Securing Weapons of Mass Destruction with the Nunn Luger Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs PDF DTRA History Series Defense Threat Reduction Agency ASIN B01LYEJ56H Archived from the original PDF on 2016 05 15 Retrieved 12 March 2023 Further reading editJoseph P Harahan Combining Military Professionalism Technological Mastery of Nuclear Weapon Systems and Diplomacy General Colonel V A Mikhtyuk and the Decommissioning Dismantlement and Destruction of the 43rd Rocket Army Nuclear in Ukraine 1994 2002 paper given at ICOHTEC 33rd Symphosium Leicester 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 43rd Rocket Army amp oldid 1180597186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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