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Northwestern Operational Command

The Northwestern Operational Command (SZOK) is a command of the Belarus Ground Forces. It is headquartered at Borisov and is commanded by Major General Alexander Volfovich. The command includes a mechanized brigade and a mixed artillery brigade. It was formed in 2001 from the 65th Army Corps.[1]

65th Army (1942 – April 1946)
7th Mechanized Army (April 1946 – 1957)
7th Tank Army (1957–1993)
7th Army Corps (1993–1994)
65th Army Corps (1994–2001)
Northwestern Operational Command (2001–present)
ActiveOctober 1942–present
Country Soviet Union (1942–1992)
 Belarus (1992–present)
Branch Red Army (1942–1946)
Soviet Army (1946–1992)
Belarus Ground Forces (1992–present)
TypeCommand
Garrison/HQBorisov
EngagementsWorld War II
Commanders
Chief of StaffMajor General Valeriy Gnilozub
Notable
commanders
Colonel General Pavel Batov
Major General Alexander Volfovich
Map showing main military units of the Belarusian Armed Forces

The command traces its lineage to the 65th Army of the Red Army, a field army of the Soviet Union during World War II. It was formed in October 1942 from rebuilding elements of the first formation of the 4th Tank Army on the Don Front. The army was commanded by Pavel Batov until after the fall of Berlin, and served in various Fronts commanded by Konstantin Rokossovsky for the duration of the war.

Postwar, the 65th Army was moved to the Belorussian Military District, where it became the 7th Mechanized Army. In 1957 it became the 7th Tank Army. With the Dissolution of the Soviet Union the army became part of the Belarus Ground Forces and was downsized into the 7th Army Corps in 1993. A year later it was renamed the 65th Army Corps.

History

Creation and Initial Operations of the 65th Army

 
Postwar photo of Colonel-General Pavel Ivanovich Batov

4th Tank Army, under command of Maj. Gen. Vasily Kryuchenkin, launched numerous counterattacks against the German corridor to Stalingrad from August to October, 1942, until it was severely depleted in strength. (It was derisively known for a time as the "four-tank army" due to the few vehicles still operational.)[2]

Pavel Batov, who had previously commanded the 51st Army and the 3rd Army, assumed command on October 22, 1942, a command he would hold until the end of the War. He had orders to rebuild these forces as a combined-arms army, the 65th Army, as part of Rokossovsky's new Don Front. This was accomplished by mid-November, and at this time the army consisted of:

65th Army played a leading role in Operation Uranus, the encirclement of the German forces at Stalingrad. Attacking out of the Kremenskaya bridgehead on the south bank of the Don. Rokossovsky later wrote in reference to Batov and his army:

"[He] displayed fine initiative with an improvised mobile task force... By striking at the enemy's flank and rear, the task force ensured the swift advance of the other units."[2]

In the lead up to Operation Ring the 65th mounted an attack by two rifle divisions against the positions of the German 44th Infantry Division on January 7, 1943. This attack penetrated the German defensive line and inflicted severe casualties. A counterattack by German armor contained the Soviet advance, but did not regain the original line, consumed scarce fuel and ammunition, and exposed the vehicles to concentrated artillery fire, leading to losses.[4]

When Ring kicked off at 0805 hours on January 10, 65th Army was backed by a 55-minute artillery barrage from over 500 guns and howitzers and 450 rocket launchers on an attack front of 12 km, the highest density of Soviet artillery achieved to that point of the war. This was followed by air attacks from the 16th Air Army against positions to the rear of the main German line. About 0900 hours, shock groups of five rifle divisions of the Army, supported by the 91st Tank Brigade and six Guards heavy tank regiments (60-70 KV tanks and 21 Churchill Mark IV tanks). The front of the 44th Division was smashed quite quickly and four depleted battalions were overrun.[5]

Redeployment to Central Front

Following the German surrender at Stalingrad, Rokossovsky's forces were redeployed northwest to become the new Central Front in the region around Kursk. 65th Army exploited a gap between the weak Second German Army and the Second Panzer Army, but was brought to a halt by the spring rasputitsa, German reserves released by their evacuation of the Rzhev Salient, and the German counter-offensive to the south of Kursk. 65th Army then dug in during the three-month lull in operations, towards the northwestern sector of the Kursk salient.

At this time the order of battle of the 65th Army was as follows:

  • 18th Rifle Corps (69th, 149th and 246th Rifle Divisions)
  • 27th Rifle Corps (60th and 193rd Rifle Divisions and 115th Rifle Brigade)
  • 37th Guards, 181st, 194th and 354th Rifle Divisions
  • 4 Separate Tank Regiments, 2 Antitank Regiments, 2 Mortar Regiments, 2 Guards Mortar Regiments, and other support units

Army strength: 100,000, 1,837 guns and mortars, 124 tanks and self-propelled guns.[6]

Due to its position in the western sector of the salient, the 65th emerged mostly unscathed from the Battle of Kursk, and was well equipped to exploit the German defeat. In late July and August the Army joined in the pursuit of German forces to the Dnepr River. On 15 Oct., with divisional and army artillery firing 1,000 shells per minute in support, the 193rd Rifle Division forced a crossing of the Dnepr.[7] From this point on, the 65th Army began earning a well-deserved reputation for its abilities in river-crossing and bridgehead operations.[8]

Operation Bagration

Rokossovsky's command was renamed 1st Belorussian Front, and in June, 1944, 65th Army took part in major strategic operations in Belorussia. The Army's order of battle at this time was as follows:

In a well-known confrontation at the planning stage, Rokossovski convinced Stalin that, given the terrain, it was better to strike two strong blows against the German forces than just one.[10] He was counting on Batov's ability to lead his Army across swampy regions south of Bobruisk, using corduroy roads, swamp shoes, and other means. 65th Army did not disappoint, and within a few days the German Ninth Army was encircled and mostly destroyed. For his performance, Batov was promoted to Colonel General.[11]

65th Army crossed the Bug River on July 22, and pushed on to cross the Narev River, north of Warsaw, by Sept. 4. Operation Bagration had run out of steam, but Batov's army held off strong German counterattacks against the Narev bridgehead for more than two months.[11] Following this, Rokossovski was reassigned to command of 2nd Belorussian Front. A shift in Front boundaries accompanied this, and 65th and 70th Armies became part of his new command. In the following months forces were built up in the Narev bridgehead for an offensive to be launched in January.

Into Germany

During the new offensive, 65th Army forced a crossing of the Vistula River in early February. Rokossovski later noted:

"I had been with 65th Army since Stalingrad and had had ample opportunity to observe the splendid combat qualities of its men, commanders, and, of course, Pavel Batov, a brave and talented soldier."[11]

In March, 1945, the order of battle of 65th Army was as follows:

  • 18th Rifle Corps (16th and 69th Rifle Divisions)
  • 46th Rifle Corps (108th, 186th and 413th Rifle Divisions)
  • 105th Rifle Corps (44th Guards, 193rd, and 354th Rifle Divisions)
  • 1 Separate Tank Regiment and 1 Separate Self-propelled Artillery Regiment, and other support units.[12]

For the Danzig operation the army also had the 66th Guards SU Brigade attached, the Red Army's only heavy SU brigade, a potent force of 60 ISU-122 self-propelled guns.[13]

The offensive propelled 65th Army into eastern Germany, finally to the Oder River, near Stettin-an-Oder, where it once again forced a difficult river crossing in Apr. 1945. Officials of the city surrendered to Colonel A. G. Frolenkov's 193rd Rifle Division on Apr. 26.[14]

Cold War

In April 1946, the 65th Army was reorganised as the 7th Mechanised Army at Łódź. On 20 December, it became the 7th Tank Division (Mobilization), with its divisions becoming regiments. It was headquartered in Borisov from May 1948. On 21 March 1950, it was increased in strength to an army with its old designation.[15] In 1955 the 7th Mechanized Army was equipped with the IS-3, T-54, T-34 and PT-76 tanks, as well as the ISU-122 self-propelled gun.

In 1957, the 7th Mechanized Army was transformed into 7th Tank Army.

  • The 10th Tank Division was reformed in the 34th Tank Division
  • 15th Guards Mechanized Division was reformed in the 47th Guards Tank Division
  • 27th Guards Mechanized Division – the 39th Guards Tank Division.

In 1960, the 47th Guards Tank Division was renamed the 45th Guards Tank Division.

In 1965, the 45th Guards Rivne Tank Division became a training tank formation subordinated to the Belorussian Military District, and the 39th Guards Tank Division was reorganized into the 37th Guards Rechitsa Tank Division.

From 1960 to 1980, the basis of the 7th Tank Army was formed by the 3rd Guards Kotelnikovo, the 34th Dnieper, and the 37th Guards Rechitsa Tank Divisions. The formation actively participated in well-known large-scale exercises and maneuvers such as "Dnepr", "Neman", "Dvina", Exercise Zapad-81 and "Fall 88".[16] By a Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 15 January 1974, for good results in combat training, the 7th Tank Army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.[1] A USSR Ministry of Defense directive dated 25 January 1989 ordered the disbandment of the 3rd Guards Tank Division, effective from 1 June 1989. Instead, the 19th Guards Nikolaevsk-Budapest Tank Division was moved from the Southern Group of Forces in Hungary to Zaslonovo. On 7 November 1990 Tank Army had 764 T-62 and T-72 tanks, 208 infantry fighting vehicles and armored personnel carriers, as well as 212 guns, mortars and multiple rocket launchers. It also included the Scud-equipped 76th Rocket Brigade.[17]

Service in the Belarus Ground Forces

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Armed Forces of the Republic of Belarus were created on the basis of the Belorussian Military District, including the 7th Tank Army. In 1993, the 7th Tank Army was renamed the 7th Army Corps, and in 1994 the 65th Army Corps. In December 2001, as a result of the reform of the Armed Forces of Belarus, the corps was transformed into the North-Western Operational Command (NWOC).[1] Since then the troops and staff of the NWOC have participated in the exercises "Neman-2001", "Berezina-2002", "The Shield of the Fatherland – 2004", "Shield of the Union – 2006", "West-2009" and others. A joint operational exercise of the armed forces of the Republic of Belarus and the Russian Federation, "Shield of the Union", was held in 2011. The exercise was held at the Ashuluk range in Astrakhan Oblast in the Russian Federation.[18] The command participated in exercise "West-2011".[19]

Units

The following units are part of the Northwestern Operational Command.[20]

  • 120th Guards Rogachevskaya Mechanised Brigade (339th Guards Mechanized Group of tank and motorized infantry battalions, 334th and 355th Tank Battalions, 356th Motorized Rifle Battalion, 310th Artillery Group, 149th Separate Communications Battalion, 126th Separate Engineer Battalion, 82nd Repair and Refurbishment Battalion, Minsk)
  • 231st Mixed Artillery Brigade (Borovka)
  • 427th Multiple Rocket Launcher Regiment
  • 502nd Anti-Tank Artillery Regiment (Osipovichi)
  • 740th Minsk Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade (with SAM "Osa"; Borisov)
  • 42nd Separate Signal (Radio) Battalion

Electronic warfare troops:

  • 244th Signals Intelligence Center

Corps of Engineers:

  • 7th Torun Order of Alexander Nevsky and the Red Star Engineering Regiment (Borisov)

Storage Bases:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Северо-западное оперативное командование" [North Western Operational Command]. www.mil.by (in Russian). Retrieved 2015-12-25.
  2. ^ a b David Glantz, "Pavel Ivanovich Batov", in Stalin's Generals, (Harold Shukman, Ed.), Phoenix Press, 2001, p. 39
  3. ^ Nafziger collection file 942RKAA 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, pp 9 – 10
  4. ^ Robert A. Forczyk, Tank Warfare on the Eastern Front 1943-1945, Pen & Sword Books Ltd., Barnsley, UK, 2016, pp. 44-45
  5. ^ Forczyk, p. 45
  6. ^ , pp 21 – 22
  7. ^ Charles C. Sharp, "Red Swarm", Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From 1942 to 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, Vol. X, Nafziger, 1996, p. 75
  8. ^ Glantz, p. 40
  9. ^ Nafziger collection file 944RFAF 2015-09-23 at the Wayback Machine, pp 31 – 33
  10. ^ Earl F. Ziemke, The Soviet Juggernaut, Time-Life Books, Chicago, 1980, pp 127 – 29
  11. ^ a b c Glantz, p 41
  12. ^ Combat Composition of the Soviet Army, 1945, p 82
  13. ^ Sharp, "Red Hammers", Soviet Self-Propelled Artillery and Lend Lease Armor 1941 – 1945, Soviet Order of Battle World War II, vol. XII, Nafziger, 1998, p 20
  14. ^ Nikolai Litvin, 800 Days on the Eastern Front, University Press of Kansas, 2007, p 104
  15. ^ Holm, Michael. "7th Tank Army". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2015-12-29.
  16. ^ Makarevich, Nikolai (19 October 2012). "Генерал-майор Иван Чаус: "Традиции 65‑й армии не канули в Лету"" [Major General Ivan Chaus: "65th Army traditions are not forgotten"]. vsr.mil.by (in Russian). Ministry of Defense of Belarus. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
  17. ^ Zaloga, Steven J. (2013-04-20). Scud Ballistic Missile and Launch Systems 1955–2005. Osprey Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 9781472803061.
  18. ^ "Начался второй этап совместного оперативного учения «Щит Союза — 2011»" [Second phase of exercise Shield of the Union 2011]. vsr.mil.by (in Russian). 21 September 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  19. ^ [Happy Birthday, SZOK!]. vsr.mil.by (in Russian). 22 October 2015. Archived from the original on 15 August 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2016.
  20. ^ "Севоро-Западное оперативное командование | Армия Беларуси" [North Western Operational Command – Army of Belarus]. belarmy.by (in Russian). 14 March 2011. Retrieved 2016-01-29.

External links

  • Pavel Ivanovich Batov

northwestern, operational, command, szok, command, belarus, ground, forces, headquartered, borisov, commanded, major, general, alexander, volfovich, command, includes, mechanized, brigade, mixed, artillery, brigade, formed, 2001, from, 65th, army, corps, 65th,. The Northwestern Operational Command SZOK is a command of the Belarus Ground Forces It is headquartered at Borisov and is commanded by Major General Alexander Volfovich The command includes a mechanized brigade and a mixed artillery brigade It was formed in 2001 from the 65th Army Corps 1 65th Army 1942 April 1946 7th Mechanized Army April 1946 1957 7th Tank Army 1957 1993 7th Army Corps 1993 1994 65th Army Corps 1994 2001 Northwestern Operational Command 2001 present ActiveOctober 1942 presentCountry Soviet Union 1942 1992 Belarus 1992 present BranchRed Army 1942 1946 Soviet Army 1946 1992 Belarus Ground Forces 1992 present TypeCommandGarrison HQBorisovEngagementsWorld War II Operation Uranus Operation Ring Battle of Kursk Lower Dnieper Offensive Operation Bagration Lublin Brest Offensive East Pomeranian Offensive Berlin Strategic OffensiveCommandersChief of StaffMajor General Valeriy GnilozubNotablecommandersColonel General Pavel BatovMajor General Alexander Volfovich Map showing main military units of the Belarusian Armed ForcesThe command traces its lineage to the 65th Army of the Red Army a field army of the Soviet Union during World War II It was formed in October 1942 from rebuilding elements of the first formation of the 4th Tank Army on the Don Front The army was commanded by Pavel Batov until after the fall of Berlin and served in various Fronts commanded by Konstantin Rokossovsky for the duration of the war Postwar the 65th Army was moved to the Belorussian Military District where it became the 7th Mechanized Army In 1957 it became the 7th Tank Army With the Dissolution of the Soviet Union the army became part of the Belarus Ground Forces and was downsized into the 7th Army Corps in 1993 A year later it was renamed the 65th Army Corps Contents 1 History 1 1 Creation and Initial Operations of the 65th Army 1 2 Redeployment to Central Front 1 3 Operation Bagration 1 4 Into Germany 1 5 Cold War 1 6 Service in the Belarus Ground Forces 2 Units 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditCreation and Initial Operations of the 65th Army Edit Postwar photo of Colonel General Pavel Ivanovich Batov4th Tank Army under command of Maj Gen Vasily Kryuchenkin launched numerous counterattacks against the German corridor to Stalingrad from August to October 1942 until it was severely depleted in strength It was derisively known for a time as the four tank army due to the few vehicles still operational 2 Pavel Batov who had previously commanded the 51st Army and the 3rd Army assumed command on October 22 1942 a command he would hold until the end of the War He had orders to rebuild these forces as a combined arms army the 65th Army as part of Rokossovsky s new Don Front This was accomplished by mid November and at this time the army consisted of 3 Guards Rifle Divisions 4th 27th 40th 6 Rifle Divisions 23rd 24th 252nd 258th 304th 321st 2 Separate Tank Brigades 91st 121st 3 Army Artillery Regiments 1 Howitzer Regiment 5 Guards Mortar Regiments and supporting units 3 65th Army played a leading role in Operation Uranus the encirclement of the German forces at Stalingrad Attacking out of the Kremenskaya bridgehead on the south bank of the Don Rokossovsky later wrote in reference to Batov and his army He displayed fine initiative with an improvised mobile task force By striking at the enemy s flank and rear the task force ensured the swift advance of the other units 2 In the lead up to Operation Ring the 65th mounted an attack by two rifle divisions against the positions of the German 44th Infantry Division on January 7 1943 This attack penetrated the German defensive line and inflicted severe casualties A counterattack by German armor contained the Soviet advance but did not regain the original line consumed scarce fuel and ammunition and exposed the vehicles to concentrated artillery fire leading to losses 4 When Ring kicked off at 0805 hours on January 10 65th Army was backed by a 55 minute artillery barrage from over 500 guns and howitzers and 450 rocket launchers on an attack front of 12 km the highest density of Soviet artillery achieved to that point of the war This was followed by air attacks from the 16th Air Army against positions to the rear of the main German line About 0900 hours shock groups of five rifle divisions of the Army supported by the 91st Tank Brigade and six Guards heavy tank regiments 60 70 KV tanks and 21 Churchill Mark IV tanks The front of the 44th Division was smashed quite quickly and four depleted battalions were overrun 5 Redeployment to Central Front Edit Following the German surrender at Stalingrad Rokossovsky s forces were redeployed northwest to become the new Central Front in the region around Kursk 65th Army exploited a gap between the weak Second German Army and the Second Panzer Army but was brought to a halt by the spring rasputitsa German reserves released by their evacuation of the Rzhev Salient and the German counter offensive to the south of Kursk 65th Army then dug in during the three month lull in operations towards the northwestern sector of the Kursk salient At this time the order of battle of the 65th Army was as follows 18th Rifle Corps 69th 149th and 246th Rifle Divisions 27th Rifle Corps 60th and 193rd Rifle Divisions and 115th Rifle Brigade 37th Guards 181st 194th and 354th Rifle Divisions 4 Separate Tank Regiments 2 Antitank Regiments 2 Mortar Regiments 2 Guards Mortar Regiments and other support unitsArmy strength 100 000 1 837 guns and mortars 124 tanks and self propelled guns 6 Due to its position in the western sector of the salient the 65th emerged mostly unscathed from the Battle of Kursk and was well equipped to exploit the German defeat In late July and August the Army joined in the pursuit of German forces to the Dnepr River On 15 Oct with divisional and army artillery firing 1 000 shells per minute in support the 193rd Rifle Division forced a crossing of the Dnepr 7 From this point on the 65th Army began earning a well deserved reputation for its abilities in river crossing and bridgehead operations 8 Operation Bagration Edit Rokossovsky s command was renamed 1st Belorussian Front and in June 1944 65th Army took part in major strategic operations in Belorussia The Army s order of battle at this time was as follows 18th Rifle Corps 37th Guards 44th Guards and 69th Rifle Divisions 105th Rifle Corps 75th Guards 193rd and 354th Rifle Divisions 15th and 356th Rifle Divisions and 115th Rifle Brigade 1st Guards Tank Corps 15th 16th 17th Guards Tank Brigades and 1st Guards Motorized Rifle Brigade 1 Separate Tank Regiment and 4 Separate Self propelled Artillery Regiments and other support units 9 In a well known confrontation at the planning stage Rokossovski convinced Stalin that given the terrain it was better to strike two strong blows against the German forces than just one 10 He was counting on Batov s ability to lead his Army across swampy regions south of Bobruisk using corduroy roads swamp shoes and other means 65th Army did not disappoint and within a few days the German Ninth Army was encircled and mostly destroyed For his performance Batov was promoted to Colonel General 11 65th Army crossed the Bug River on July 22 and pushed on to cross the Narev River north of Warsaw by Sept 4 Operation Bagration had run out of steam but Batov s army held off strong German counterattacks against the Narev bridgehead for more than two months 11 Following this Rokossovski was reassigned to command of 2nd Belorussian Front A shift in Front boundaries accompanied this and 65th and 70th Armies became part of his new command In the following months forces were built up in the Narev bridgehead for an offensive to be launched in January Into Germany EditDuring the new offensive 65th Army forced a crossing of the Vistula River in early February Rokossovski later noted I had been with 65th Army since Stalingrad and had had ample opportunity to observe the splendid combat qualities of its men commanders and of course Pavel Batov a brave and talented soldier 11 In March 1945 the order of battle of 65th Army was as follows 18th Rifle Corps 16th and 69th Rifle Divisions 46th Rifle Corps 108th 186th and 413th Rifle Divisions 105th Rifle Corps 44th Guards 193rd and 354th Rifle Divisions 1 Separate Tank Regiment and 1 Separate Self propelled Artillery Regiment and other support units 12 For the Danzig operation the army also had the 66th Guards SU Brigade attached the Red Army s only heavy SU brigade a potent force of 60 ISU 122 self propelled guns 13 The offensive propelled 65th Army into eastern Germany finally to the Oder River near Stettin an Oder where it once again forced a difficult river crossing in Apr 1945 Officials of the city surrendered to Colonel A G Frolenkov s 193rd Rifle Division on Apr 26 14 Cold War Edit In April 1946 the 65th Army was reorganised as the 7th Mechanised Army at Lodz On 20 December it became the 7th Tank Division Mobilization with its divisions becoming regiments It was headquartered in Borisov from May 1948 On 21 March 1950 it was increased in strength to an army with its old designation 15 In 1955 the 7th Mechanized Army was equipped with the IS 3 T 54 T 34 and PT 76 tanks as well as the ISU 122 self propelled gun In 1957 the 7th Mechanized Army was transformed into 7th Tank Army The 10th Tank Division was reformed in the 34th Tank Division 15th Guards Mechanized Division was reformed in the 47th Guards Tank Division 27th Guards Mechanized Division the 39th Guards Tank Division In 1960 the 47th Guards Tank Division was renamed the 45th Guards Tank Division In 1965 the 45th Guards Rivne Tank Division became a training tank formation subordinated to the Belorussian Military District and the 39th Guards Tank Division was reorganized into the 37th Guards Rechitsa Tank Division From 1960 to 1980 the basis of the 7th Tank Army was formed by the 3rd Guards Kotelnikovo the 34th Dnieper and the 37th Guards Rechitsa Tank Divisions The formation actively participated in well known large scale exercises and maneuvers such as Dnepr Neman Dvina Exercise Zapad 81 and Fall 88 16 By a Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet on 15 January 1974 for good results in combat training the 7th Tank Army was awarded the Order of the Red Banner 1 A USSR Ministry of Defense directive dated 25 January 1989 ordered the disbandment of the 3rd Guards Tank Division effective from 1 June 1989 Instead the 19th Guards Nikolaevsk Budapest Tank Division was moved from the Southern Group of Forces in Hungary to Zaslonovo On 7 November 1990 Tank Army had 764 T 62 and T 72 tanks 208 infantry fighting vehicles and armored personnel carriers as well as 212 guns mortars and multiple rocket launchers It also included the Scud equipped 76th Rocket Brigade 17 Service in the Belarus Ground Forces Edit After the collapse of the Soviet Union the Armed Forces of the Republic of Belarus were created on the basis of the Belorussian Military District including the 7th Tank Army In 1993 the 7th Tank Army was renamed the 7th Army Corps and in 1994 the 65th Army Corps In December 2001 as a result of the reform of the Armed Forces of Belarus the corps was transformed into the North Western Operational Command NWOC 1 Since then the troops and staff of the NWOC have participated in the exercises Neman 2001 Berezina 2002 The Shield of the Fatherland 2004 Shield of the Union 2006 West 2009 and others A joint operational exercise of the armed forces of the Republic of Belarus and the Russian Federation Shield of the Union was held in 2011 The exercise was held at the Ashuluk range in Astrakhan Oblast in the Russian Federation 18 The command participated in exercise West 2011 19 Units EditThe following units are part of the Northwestern Operational Command 20 120th Guards Rogachevskaya Mechanised Brigade 339th Guards Mechanized Group of tank and motorized infantry battalions 334th and 355th Tank Battalions 356th Motorized Rifle Battalion 310th Artillery Group 149th Separate Communications Battalion 126th Separate Engineer Battalion 82nd Repair and Refurbishment Battalion Minsk 231st Mixed Artillery Brigade Borovka 427th Multiple Rocket Launcher Regiment 502nd Anti Tank Artillery Regiment Osipovichi 740th Minsk Anti Aircraft Rocket Brigade with SAM Osa Borisov 42nd Separate Signal Radio BattalionElectronic warfare troops 244th Signals Intelligence CenterCorps of Engineers 7th Torun Order of Alexander Nevsky and the Red Star Engineering Regiment Borisov Storage Bases 814th Service Center includes 2 repair battalions Borisov 19th Nikolaevsk Budapest Red Banner Order of Suvorov 2nd class Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment former 19th Guards Mechanized Brigade Zaslonovo 34th Dneprovskaya Base for Storage of Weapons Technology possibly disbanded former 34th Tank Division Borisov 37th Rechitkaya Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment former 37th Guards Tank Division Polotsk See also EditList of Soviet armiesReferences Edit a b c Severo zapadnoe operativnoe komandovanie North Western Operational Command www mil by in Russian Retrieved 2015 12 25 a b David Glantz Pavel Ivanovich Batov in Stalin s Generals Harold Shukman Ed Phoenix Press 2001 p 39 Nafziger collection file 942RKAA Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine pp 9 10 Robert A Forczyk Tank Warfare on the Eastern Front 1943 1945 Pen amp Sword Books Ltd Barnsley UK 2016 pp 44 45 Forczyk p 45 Nafziger collection file 943RGAB pp 21 22 Charles C Sharp Red Swarm Soviet Rifle Divisions Formed From 1942 to 1945 Soviet Order of Battle World War II Vol X Nafziger 1996 p 75 Glantz p 40 Nafziger collection file 944RFAF Archived 2015 09 23 at the Wayback Machine pp 31 33 Earl F Ziemke The Soviet Juggernaut Time Life Books Chicago 1980 pp 127 29 a b c Glantz p 41 Combat Composition of the Soviet Army 1945 p 82 Sharp Red Hammers Soviet Self Propelled Artillery and Lend Lease Armor 1941 1945 Soviet Order of Battle World War II vol XII Nafziger 1998 p 20 Nikolai Litvin 800 Days on the Eastern Front University Press of Kansas 2007 p 104 Holm Michael 7th Tank Army www ww2 dk Retrieved 2015 12 29 Makarevich Nikolai 19 October 2012 General major Ivan Chaus Tradicii 65 j armii ne kanuli v Letu Major General Ivan Chaus 65th Army traditions are not forgotten vsr mil by in Russian Ministry of Defense of Belarus Retrieved 12 July 2016 Zaloga Steven J 2013 04 20 Scud Ballistic Missile and Launch Systems 1955 2005 Osprey Publishing p 20 ISBN 9781472803061 Nachalsya vtoroj etap sovmestnogo operativnogo ucheniya Shit Soyuza 2011 Second phase of exercise Shield of the Union 2011 vsr mil by in Russian 21 September 2011 Retrieved 6 July 2016 S dnyom rozhdeniya SZOK Happy Birthday SZOK vsr mil by in Russian 22 October 2015 Archived from the original on 15 August 2016 Retrieved 6 July 2016 Sevoro Zapadnoe operativnoe komandovanie Armiya Belarusi North Western Operational Command Army of Belarus belarmy by in Russian 14 March 2011 Retrieved 2016 01 29 External links EditPavel Ivanovich Batov Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northwestern Operational Command amp oldid 1165783781, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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