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Soviet Border Troops

The Soviet Border Troops (Russian: Пограничные войска СССР, romanizedPogranichnyye voyska SSSR) were the border guard of the Soviet Union, subordinated to the Soviet state security agency: first to the Cheka/OGPU, then to NKVD/MGB and, finally, to the KGB. Accordingly, they were known as NKVD Border Security and KGB Border Troops. Unlike the border guards of many other countries, Soviet Border Troops also included the maritime border guarding units, and aviation units (i.e., a coast guard).

Soviet Border Troops
Пограничные войска СССР
Pograníchnyye Voiská SSSR
Patch of the Soviet Border Troops
Founded1918
Disbanded1992
Country Soviet Union (1918–1991)
 CIS (1991–1992)
AllegianceCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (until 1990)
President of the Soviet Union (1990–1991)
Commonwealth of Independent States (1991–1992)
TypeBorder guard
Size220,000 (1991)
ColorsGreen
EngagementsFirst World War

Chinese Civil War

Soviet–Japanese border conflicts

Second World War

Hungarian Revolution of 1956

Sino-Soviet border conflict

Soviet–Afghan War
Commanders
Current
commander
See list
Notable
commanders
Timofei Strokach
Pavel Zyryanov
The Karpov frontier post, Soviet-Afghan border
Former Soviet Border Guard observation post in Estonia

The mission of the Border Troops included repulsing armed incursions into Soviet territory; preventing illegal crossings of the border or the transport of weapons, explosives, contraband or subversive literature across the border; monitoring the observance of established procedures at border crossing points; monitoring the observance by Soviet and foreign ships of navigation procedures in Soviet territorial waters; and assisting state agencies in the preservation of natural resources and the protection of the environment from pollution. Border guards were authorized to examine documents and possessions of persons crossing the borders and to confiscate articles; to conduct inquiries in cases of violations of the state border; and to take such actions as arrest, search and interrogation of individuals suspected of border violations.

With the end of the Soviet Union, the Soviet Border troops remained under the command of the Commonwealth of Independent States but later were divided between the Union's constituent republics.

History edit

In 1934, under the NKVD, Border Troops were immediately subordinated to the GUPVO (abbreviated "Chief Directorate of Border and Internal Guard"). In 1939 they were reorganized into the GUPV ("Chief Directorate of Border Troops").

NKVD Border Troops consisted of infantry, cavalry, reconnaissance, naval and airforce units.

Since the 1920s, the distinctive part of Soviet Border Troops uniform was the medium-green colored parts of headwear and insignia (Russian Empire's Separate Corps of the Border Guard has it distinction since 1893). The color is also present on a maritime Border Troops ensign.

World War II edit

After the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the Border Troops assisted the pacification of the newly acquired Soviet territory adjoining the state border. The mass execution of Romanian civilians known as the Fântâna Albă massacre happened at this time.

Border Troops units on the western USSR frontier saw particularly fierce combat in the first weeks of the German invasion of the USSR (June–July 1941). They bore the brunt of the initial German assault, and due to this, suffered high casualty rates. Border Troop servicemen were among the defenders of the Brest Fortress.

Border troops were involved in all major campaigns of the war. Notably, the 105th, 157th, and 333rd Border Troops regiments (operating like regular army units) took part in the Battle for Berlin in 1945. During and after the war, 150 border guards were awarded the title of the Hero of the Soviet Union and over 13,000 of them were decorated with different orders and medals.

Post-War history edit

 
1968 stamp honouring the Border Troops
 
KGB Border Troops wearing the Spetsodezhda at the Khorgos Soviet-Chinese frontier post
 
Ploughed trace-control strip with a security electric fence KS-185

In wartime, the Border Troops would become a frontline combat service. The Border Troops also saw combat in 1969 in border clashes with Chinese soldiers on islands in the Ussuri River.

After the formation of the KGB, Soviet Border Troops became subordinated to this agency and remained so until the dissolution of the Soviet Union. As such, the Troops were concentrating on the tasks of preventing espionage infiltrations. The Border Guards were involved in the Soviet–Afghan War and a number of them were even awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union for their bravery during these conflicts.

The Soviet border was the longest in the world (From Norway to North Korea) and it comprised harsh terrain and climates; accordingly the Border Troops employed significant manpower, intensive maritime presence, and a dense and sophisticated system of field engineering devices. The most notable in that system was the trace-control strip (Russian: контрольно-следовая полоса) - a wide strip of plowed soil to make it apparent where a crossing had occurred.

The Border Troops consisted of conscripts drafted by the same system as for the Soviet Army, and a small number of professional enlistees. Officers were trained in specialized academies. Both conscripts and officer candidates for Border Troops were carefully selected and checked by the KGB. This made service in the troops privileged.

Landing Assault units edit

The Border Troops had Landing Assault Manoeuvre Groups (sing. десантно-штурмовая маневренная группа (ДШМГ)). The LAMGs of the KGB's Border Troops were temporary task forces, organised for a period of time by a Border Guard Detachment (пограничный отряд (ПОГО)), the border guard equivalent of an army brigade. The BG detachments formed temporary task forces, equivalent to battalions, for manoeuvre warfare. The land component units were called Motorised Manoeuvre Group (мото-маневренная группа (ммг)) and consisted of 3 or 4 Motorised Manoeuvre Border Outposts (sing. мото-маневренная пограничная застава), the Border Troops equivalent of a company). The 1st MMBO was armed with BMP-1 or BMP-2, the 2nd MMBO was armed with BTR-70 and the 3rd MMBO was armed with BTR-60PB. Each MMBO had 5 BMPs or BTRs. The MMG also had a motorised mortar battery, an anti-tank platoon and additional support units for a total of ca. 300 men. The fire and service support units were motorised with GAZ-66 light trucks.[1] The Landing Assault Manoeuvre Group formed the airmobile component, which operated in concert with the MMGs. While both types of units were commanded by Border Troops Lieutenant-Colonels, with manpower of less than 50 an LAMG number far fewer men than both the Border Troops's MMGs and the Landing Assault Battalions of the Ground Forces. An LAMG consisted of a command element and two Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outposts and had the following structure:[2]

Landing Assault Manoeuvre Group

  • command group (группа управления): 8 men - Commander (начальник ДШМГ); NCO; Translator; Paramedic; Radio Operator; 3 Sappers
  • 1st Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outpost (1 ДШПЗ) : 21 men
    • Commander (начальник ДШПЗ)
    • Fire Section (огневое отделение): 10 men - SPG-9 team of 3 men; AGS-17 team of 2 men; PK machine gun team of 2 men; RPG-7 team of 2 men and 1 Sniper / Radio Operator armed with SVD and equipped with R-392 radio
    • Rifle Section (стрелковое отделение): 10 men - 1 Commander and 9 Riflemen, armed with Kalashnikov rifles (some with night vision sights) and equipped with 1 R-392 radio
  • 2nd Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outpost (2 ДШПЗ): 21 men, identical to 1st LAMBO

The LAMG relied on Mil Mi-24 attack helicopters and Mi-8MTV-1 assault helicopters from the KGB Border Troops' own aviation assets.

Commanders of the Soviet Border Guards edit

Legal authority edit

 
KGB border Troops dog in training exercise

The legal status, duties, and rights of the Border Troops were set forth in the Law on the State Border, confirmed by the Supreme Soviet on November 24, 1982. Article 28 defined the basic duties of the Border Troops. Their duties included repulsing armed incursions into Soviet territory; preventing illegal crossings of the border or the transport of weapons, explosives, contraband, or subversive literature across the border; monitoring the observance of established procedures at border crossing points; monitoring the observance by Soviet and foreign ships of navigation procedures in Soviet territorial waters; and assisting state agencies in the preservation of natural resources and the protection of the environment from pollution. Border guards were authorized to examine documents and possessions of persons crossing the borders and to confiscate articles; to conduct inquiries in cases of violations of the state border; and to take such actions as arrest, search, and interrogation of individuals suspected of border violations.

Structure edit

The Border Troops strength was estimated in 1989 to be in the range of 230,000 men. Although under the operational authority of the KGB, the Border Troops were conscripted as part of the biannual call-up of the Ministry of Defense, and their induction and discharge were regulated by the 1967 Law on Universal Military Service, which covered all armed forces of the Soviet Union.[3]

On top of the Border Troops stood the Main Directorate of the Border Troops (MDBT, Russian: Главное управление пограничных войск), which played a role similar to that of the General Staff for the armed forces. The Main Directorate was subordinated to the First Deputy Chairman of the KGB (the second highest ranking official in the Committee). The Commander of the Border Troops normally held the rank of lieutenant general when he took over the position and later was promoted to Colonel general. Out of the three officers who commanded the troops the second one (Vadim Alexandrovich Matrosov) has reached the rank of Army general at that position. The Commander had several Lieutenant generals and Major generals as his deputies. The Main Directorate administered approximately nine border districts (pogranichnye okruga), which covered the nearly 63,000 kilometers of the state border and additional smaller formations and independent units. Border district boundaries were distinct from civil or military district boundaries.[4] At the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the Border Troops included the following operational forces:

Main Directorate of the Border Troops edit

Main Directorate of the Border Troops edit

Main Directorate of the Border Troops (Главное управление пограничных войск)

Under the Main Directorate was the

Border Troops Staff edit

Border Troops Staff (Штаб пограничных войск)

  • Chief of Staff / 1st Deputy Commander of the Border Troops - Lieutenant general
  • 1st Directorate (Operations) (1-е Управление (оперативное)) - Major general / Lieutenant general
  • Directorate of Organization and Mobilization (Организационно-мобилизационное управление) - Major general
  • 3rd Department (Signals and Warning Systems) (3-й отдел (связи и сигнализации) - Major general
  • Department of Information and Analysis (Информационно-аналитический отдел) - Major general
  • Directorate of Border-crossing Checkpoints (Управление КПП) - Major general
  • Department of Programs in Planning (Отдел программ планирования) - Major general

Directly subordinated to the MDBT edit

Border Districts edit

The Border Districts were combined arms formations of the KGB, which included border guards similar to motor-rifle infantry, border crossings and their organic aviation units (air regiments, squadrons and flights), signals (battalions and companies), combat engineers, construction engineers (battalions and companies), medical, repair and supply units. The districts bordering oceans and seas also included brigades of guard ships (сторожевые корабли (СКР) - patrol frigates, corvettes and boats, which next to their patrol tasks also had substantial anti-submarine role). The personnel of the Naval Service within the Border Troops held navy style ranks. The Chief of the Naval Directorate within the Main Directorate of the Border Troops was the highest ranking officer in the service with the rank of Rear admiral / Vice admiral. The Maritime Border Troops of the Russian Border Troops (Ru:Морские части Пограничных Войск КГБ СССР) operated within the twelve-mile limit of Soviet territorial waters. It was equipped with frigates and corvettes, fast patrol boats, hydrofoils, helicopters, and light aircraft.[5] In 1991 the Border Troops numbered ten Border Districts (singular: Пограничный округ, abbr. ПО):[6]

Note: The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise, starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union.

Northeastern Border District edit

The Northeastern Border District (Russian: Северо-Восточный пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. It guarded the easternmost territories of the Soviet Union from Wrangel Island and Mys Shmidta on the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait, the coastline of the Chukotka and Kamchatka Peninsulas to the island of Simushir, where it met the Pacific Border District's AOR. The security of the Sea of Okhotsk was also within the tasks of the NEBD and from Simushir its AOR ran in a strait line to the northern tip of Sakhalin and from there it continued to the mainland and the village of Ayan, Russia.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships (1-я КДПСКР) — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
    • 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships (1-я БрПСКР)
    • 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships (2-я БрПСКР)
    • Supply Ships Battalion (ДнКО) (some sources list the battalion (divizyon (дивизион)) as a unit of the 1st Brigade)

Air units:

Red Banner Pacific Border District edit

The Red Banner Pacific Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Тихоокеанский пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Vladivostok. It guarded the coastline of the larger southern Kuril Islands from Simushir to Kunashir, through the southern tip of Sakhalin it reached the Asian mainland at the border between the Khabarovsk Krai and Primorsky Krai. From there the district's AOR followed the coastline, the border with North Korea and the border with China to the place where the territory of the Primorsky Krai met the territory of the Khabarovsk Krai and the AOR of the Red Banner Far Eastern Border District.

Land units:

    • 1st Border outpost "Mramornaya"
    • 2nd Border outpost "named after Ovchinnikov"
    • 3rd Border outpost "Sinny Utyos"
    • 4th Border outpost "Slavyanka land"
    • 5th Border outpost "Ryazanovka"
    • 6th Border outpost "Shkolnaya"
    • 7th Border outpost "Ugolovaya"
    • 8th Border outpost "Verkhnya"
    • 9th Border outpost "named after Krainov"
    • 10th Border outpost "Ugolnaya"
    • 11th Border outpost "Utinaya"
    • 12th Border outpost "Zareche"
    • 13th Border outpost "named after A. E. Makhalin"
    • 14th Border outpost "named after P.F. Tereshkin"
    • 15th Border outpost "Pesechanaya"
    • 16th Border outpost "Zarubino"
    • 17th Border outpost "Slavyanka sea"
    • 18th Border outpost "Barabash"
    • 19th Border outpost "Kraskino"
    • 20th Border outpost "Checkpoint Khasan"
    • 21st Border outpost "Posyet Checkpoint"
  • 58th Grodekovskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of Kutuzov (2nd grade) Border Detachment (58-й ПОГО) — Pogranichny
  • 69th Kamen-Rybolovskiy Red Banner Border Detachment (69-й ПОГО) — Kamen-Rybolov
  • 57th Ussuriyskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour, "V. R. Menzhinsky" Border Detachment (57-й ПОГО) — Dalnerechensk
  • 12th Training Border Detachment (12-й УПОГО) — Perevoznaya
  • Vladivostok Border Entry Seaport (Владивостокский МПП) — Vladivostok
  • Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Nakhodka» (ОКПП «Находка»)
  • Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Vladivostok» (ОКПП «Владивосток»)

Naval units:

Air units:

Red Banner Far Eastern Border District edit

The Red Banner Far Eastern Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Дальневосточный пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Khabarovsk. It guarded the Chinese border in the Amur Oblast from the Primorsky Krai to the Zabaykalsky Krai where it met the AOR of the Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (14-я ОБрПСКР) — Kazakevichevo, Khabarovsk Krai [river patrol]
  • 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (13-я ОБрПСКР) — Leninskoye, Jewish Autonomous Oblast [river patrol]
  • 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (12-я ОБрПСКР) — Blagoveshchensk [river patrol]
  • 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (11-я ОБрПСКР) — Dzhalinda [river patrol]

Air units:

Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District edit

The Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Забайкальский пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Chita, Zabaykalsky Krai. It guarded the eastern part of the Soviet-Chinese border from the Amur Oblast to Mongolia and the Mongol-Soviet border. At the Chinese-Mongol-Soviet border three-point in the Gorno-Altai Autonomous Oblast near Khüiten Peak its AOR met the AOR of the Red Banner Eastern Border District.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • mostly land border, no naval units

Air units:

Red Banner Eastern Border District edit

The Red Banner Eastern Border District had its headquarters in Almaty. It guarded the western part of the Chinese-Soviet border and a small section of the Afghan-Soviet border along the Wakhan District, after which began the area of responsibility of the Central Asian Border District.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • mostly land border, no naval units

Air units:

  • 10th Separate Aviation Regiment (10-й ОАП) — Almaty – Burunday Airfield
  • 22nd Separate Aviation Squadron (22-я ОАЭ) — Usharal Airfield
Red Banner Central Asian Border District edit

The Red Banner Central Asian Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Среднеазиатский пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Ashgabad. It guarded the Afghan-Soviet (without the strip along the Wakhan District) and the Iranian-Soviet border. The sea border of the district extended halfway along the southern line of Soviet territorial waters in the Caspian Sea until it met the AOR of the Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (22-я ОБрПСКР) — Termez, Uzbek SSR [river patrol]
  • 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships (46-й ОДнПСКР) — Krasnovodsk, Turkmen SSR

Air units:

Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District edit

The Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Закавказский пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Tbilisi. It guarded the western half of the Caspian Sea section of the Iranian-Soviet border, the western Iranian-Soviet land border, the Turkish-Soviet border and the Black Sea coastline from the Turkish border to the Kerch Strait, where the Red Banner Western Border District took over.

Land units:

Naval units:

  • 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (6-я ОБрПСКР) — Ochamchire, Georgian SSR
  • 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (17-я ОБрПСКР) — Baku, Azeri SSR
  • 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (21-я ОБрПСКР) — Poti, Georgian SSR

Air units:

Red Banner Western Border District edit

The Red Banner Western Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Западный пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Kiev. It guarded the Black Sea coastline to the west of the Kerch Strait, the borders with Romania, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and the Ukrainian and Belarusian sections of the Polish-Soviet border. To the north began the AOR of the Red Banner Baltic Border District.

Land units:

Naval units:

Air units:

Red Banner Baltic Border District edit

The Red Banner Baltic Border District (Russian: Краснознамённый Прибалтийский пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Riga. It guarded the Lithuanian and Kaliningrad sections of the Polish-Soviet border and the Kaliningrad, Lithuanian, Latvian and Estonian sections of the Baltic Sea Soviet coastline.

Red Banner Northwestern Border District edit

The Red Banner Northwestern Border District (Краснознамённый Северо-Западный пограничный округ) had its headquarters in Leningrad. It guarded the Russian section of the Baltic coastline, the Finnish-Soviet border, the Barents Sea, White Sea and the Kanin Peninsula coastline.

Separate Border Detachments edit

The main forces of a border district were organised in formations called Border Detachments (singular: Пограничный отряд, abbr. ПОГО). These formations roughly corresponded to separate motor-rifle brigades in the Soviet Army Ground Forces. However, unlike army motor-rifle brigades, which were commanded by Major-generals, the Border Detachments were commanded by Colonels. Four of the border detachments were separate from the districts and reported directly to the Main Directorate:

  • 4th Arkhangelsk Border Detachment (4-й Архангельский ПОГО)
  • Separate Arctic Border Detachment (Отдельный Арктический ПОГО)
  • The Separate Arctic Border Detachment (Russian: Отдельный Арктический пограничный отряд) had its headquarters in Vorkuta. The district did not have naval units. It had border outposts from Kolguyev Island to Mys Shmidta and a separate arctic aviation regiment.
  • Separate Detachment for Border Control "Moscow" (Отдельный отряд пограничного контроля «Москва») - The detachment carried out border control duties at the major Moscow airports - 12 border control sections operated at Sheremetyevo-2 Airport and one section each at Sheremetyevo-1 Airport cargo terminal, Vnukovo Airport, Domodedovo Airport and Chkalovsky Airport.
  • 105th Separate Red Banner Detachment Spetsnaz (105-й отдельный Краснознаменный отряд СпН) - The detachment was previously the sole Regiment of the Border Troops, legacy from the time when it belonged to the Soviet Ministry of the Interior. It consisted of one battalion, four separate companies and assorted support units and carried out security tasks at the Soviet embassy in East Germany, the main HQ of the KGB in East Germany and several field offices spread across the country. In 1989 the regiment was upgraded to a border detachment. With this its battalion was upgraded to a Motor-Maneuver Group (мото-маневренная группа) and the companies were upgraded to Border Outposts (singular: застава) in line with KGB Border Troops nomenclature.

Combined Arms troops edit

In times when the border troops were facing increased external threat or actual local conflict, they were reinforced with conventional units from the Soviet Ground Forces, which were directly integrated in their structure. Such example were tank and artillery battalions during the period of increased hostility during and immediately after the Sino-Soviet border conflict. In the final years of the USSR due to the mounting instability in the Caucasus region the Border Troops took over from the Armed Forces:

District forces edit

The main forces of the border districts were the Border Detachments (Russian: Пограничный отряд, abbr. ПОГО (singular)). Each detachment covered a specific section of the border and had a Colonel as its commanding officer. The territorial waters were patrolled by brigades of guard ships (Russian: Бригада сторожевых кораблей, abbr. БСКР (singular)) and were commanded by Captains 1st rank. All the guard ship brigades were separate, except for the 1st and the 2nd, which formed the 1st Division of Guard Ships (Russian: 1-я Дивизия сторожевых кораблей) in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, due to the vastness of the assigned area of operations in the Pacific Ocean.

The border detachments consisted of Border Command Posts (or Commandatures) (Russian: Пограничная командатура (singular)), Separate Bordercrossing Control Points (Russian: Отдельный контрольно-пропускной пункт, abbr. ОККП (singular)) and various combat support and combat service support units.[8] A Border Command Post consisted of several Border Outposts and corresponded roughly to a battalion of the armed forces and was therefore commanded by a lieutenant colonel. The main forces of a BCP accounted several regular Border Outposts (Russian: Пограничная застава, abbr. ПОГЗ (singular)), also informally called Line Border Outposts, as each had a section of the state border assigned to it. In the rear area of the BCP there was also a Reserve Border Outpost acting as the operational reserve of the commander. It had the same structure as the line Border Outposts, but was not permanently deployed at the border. In a situation of increased threat its function was to take over the threatened section of the border, thus becoming a line outpost itself. The equivalent of a BCP in the naval service of the Border Troops was a Battalion of Guard Ships (Russian: Дивизион сторожевых кораблей), commanded by a Captain 2nd rank.

The Border Outpost (Russian: Пограничная застава, abbr. ПОГЗ) was the smallest unit of the Border Troops, which was directly involved in the task of securing the state border. The TO&E called for 41 officers, NCOs, Sergeants and border guards, organised in a staff group, 2 rifle sections, a service canine section and a signals and remote sensing section. Around the time of the Sino-Soviet border conflict a reinforced TO&E with an additional rifle section (50 men in total) was introduced and later, during the Soviet–Afghan War a new TO&E with a fourth rifle section was introduced, increasing the manpower to 64 men. The border outposts were equal in status to separate combat companies of the Ground Forces, with a major as the CO.

A specific operational reserve unit was the Motor Maneuver Group (Russian: Мото-маневренная группа (ММГ)). As the name implied, this was a maneuver element, organized similarly to an army motor rifle battalion, with its own infantry fighting vehicles, armored personnel carriers, mortars and anti-tank weapons. The MMG was a temporary task force fielded by the border detachment by combining personnel from its various units. On an operational deployment an MMG could act both as a classic BCP or as a mechanized warfare unit, the Soviet–Afghan War being the perfect example for this versatility. A typical example for a motor maneuver group was the MMG-1 (AKA the "Transcaucasus", later "Mazar-i-Sharif", later the "Marmoly" MMG) of the Termez Border Detachment, deployed to Afghanistan. It had:[9]

  • command section with one BTR-60 and one UAZ-469
  • 3 border outposts, each consisting of 50 men, including three officers, two Sergeant-Majors and seven Sergeants, further divided into
    • 5 sections with one BTR-60 each
  • mortar battery of 64 men, including five officers and a Sergeant-Major. The battery had one BTR-60 (R-145BM "Chayka" command variant) and fifteen GAZ-66 trucks.
  • 6 mortar sections, each armed with one PM-120 (120-mm) and one BM-82 (82-mm) mortar
  • reconnaissance platoon of 13 men, including one officer and two Sergeants. It had two sections - the first was armed with a BRM-1, the second - with a BTR-60
  • anti-tank platoon of 18 men, including one officer and three Sergeants. The platoon had 4 SPG-9 and 4 GAZ-66 in two sections of two AT teams each.
  • combat engineer platoon of 20 men, including one officer, one Sergeant-Major and five Sergeants. The platoon had BTR-60, ZIL-131, GAZ-66 and heavy engineering machinery divided among two sapper sections and one engineering section
  • signals platoon with two BTR-60s (R-145BM "Chayka" command variant) and an R-140 radio mounted on a ZIL-157
  • medical aid post with a medical officer, a Sergeant-Major and an ambulance driver. Each of the three border outposts and the mortar battery had a paramedic, operationally subordinated to the medical officer
  • logistical platoon of 29 men, including two Sergeant-Majors and three Sergeants. The platoon was subdivided into
    • a supply, a transport and a repair sections

The MMG numbered a total personnel of ca. 300 men. In case the area of operation covered mountainous terrain the border detachments could form heliborne task forces called Air Assault Maneuver Groups (Russian: Десантно-штурмовая маневренная группа, abbr. ДШМГ (singular)). The personnel received parachute and helicopter assault training and adopted Soviet Airborne Forces and Ground Forces Air Assault Troops tactics, weapons and equipment to such an extent, that these units used the traditional VDV patch of two cargo airplanes, a parachute and a red star. These units utilized the organic Mi-8 helicopters of the Border Troops aviation branch. Due to their airborne role and the restricted cargo capacity of their aviation assets (as compared to the mechanized MMGs), these units normally counted ca. 120 men. An example for such a unit is the

AAMG formed by the same Termez Border Detachment for operations in Afghanistan. It had:[10]

  • command section
  • 3 air assault border outposts
  • mortar platoon
  • AGS-17 grenade launcher platoon
  • grenade launcher / flamethrower platoon
  • combat engineer platoon
  • signals platoon

The border area was divided into a border zone, which included the territory of the district and settlements adjacent to the state border, and the border strip, which was approximately two kilometers in depth, running directly along the border. Only permanent residents or those who had obtained special permission from the MVD could enter the border zone. Entry into the border strip was forbidden without special permission from the Border Troops.[11]

Border Troops Naval Service edit

The Border Troops had their own naval assets. They were subordinated administratively to the Sea Directorate of the Border Troops (Морское управление пограничных войск), headed by a Rear admiral / Vice admiral. Operationally the naval units were subordinated to the border districts. The patrol ships of the naval service were much heavier armed than similar-sized ships of coast guards around the world. They lacked the sophisticated anti-air and anti-ship missile systems, but were armed with artillery as heavy as the AK-100 and for their ASW they carried anti-submarine mortars, torpedoes and even anti-submarine missile systems. Soviet and Russian naval classification did not follow Western convention for smaller major surface combatants. While Western navies use classification based on the ship's size (aviso, corvette, frigate, destroyer), the Soviet Navy (and by extension the KGB's naval service) used classification based on the ship's function. Thus the corvette and frigate-sized warships of the Navy and the Naval Service were classified as guard ships (sing. сторожевой корабль, abbreviated SKR (СКР)). To distinguish the ships of the border troops from those of the navy, the former are classified as border guard ships (sing. пограничный сторожевой корабль, abbreviated PSKR (ПСКР)) and to distinguish between the larger and smaller units in their fleet the corvette and frigate-sized units were classified as ships (sing. корабль, abbreviated KR (КР)), while the smaller patrol craft were classified as cutters (sing. катер, abbreviated KA (КА)). The types of ships in the Border Troops fleet included:

  • border guard ship (пограничный сторожевой корабль (ПСКР)) - patrol corvettes and frigates
  • border guard cutter (пограничный сторожевой катер (ПСКА)) - patrol craft
  • border support ship (пограничный корабль обеспечения (ПКО)) - replenishment ships
  • patrol vessel (патрульное судно (ПС)) - fishery patrol ships
  • border ship in special service (пограничный корабль специальной службы (ПКСС)) - corvette / frigate-sized official government yachts
  • border cutter in special service (пограничный катер специальной службы (ПКАСС)) - small guard craft, used for the security of coastal areas of official government sea residences and government yachts

Note: The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise, starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union.

Naval Service fleet:[12]

Northeastern Border District (СВПО) - HQ in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky

  • 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships (1-я КДПСКР) — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
    • 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships (1-я БрПСКР)
      • single ship project 52K - PSKR-010 "Purga" (retired on 16.03.1990.)
      • patrol icebreakers of project 97P "Iceberg" - PSKR-161 "Aysberg", PSKR-083 "Dunay"
      • patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR-135 "Brest", PSKR-081 "Sakhalin", PSKR-070 "Kamchatka"
    • 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships (2-я БрПСКР)
    • Supply Ships Battalion (ДнКО)
      • 3 sealift ships of project 1595 "Pevek"[citation needed] - PKO-063 "Nikolay Sipyagin", PKO-071 "Sergey Sudeyskiy", PKO-016 "Nikolay Starshinov"

Red Banner Pacific Border District (КТПО) - HQ in Vladivostok

  • 8th Awarded the Order of the Red Star Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (8-я ОБрПСКР) — Malokurilskoye, Shikotan, Kuril Islands
    • patrol tugboats of project 745P - "Chukotka", "Neman", "Amur", "Bug"
    • patrol tugboat of project 733 - PSKR-467, PSKR-482
    • patrol boats of project 10410 - PSKR-907, PSKR-908, PSKR-914
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-675, 677, 678, 679, 682, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 691,
    • tugboats of project 1496 - 2 units
    • fast patrol boats of project 1408.1 - 3 units
    • liaison boats of project 371U - 1 unit
  • 9th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (9-я ОБрПСКР) — Korsakov, Sakhalin
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-673, 680, 681, 683, 687, 690
  • 19th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (19-я ОБрПСКР) — Nevelsk, Sakhalin
    • patrol tugboats of project 745P - "Забайкалье"
    • patrol boats of project 10410 - PSKR-903 "Holmsk", PSKR-907, PSKR-915 "Nevelsk"
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-672, 674(?), 680, 681, 683, 684, 692, 693, 694
    • tugboats of project 1496 - PSKA-277
  • 16th Sakhalinskaya Red Banner Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (16-я ОБрПСКР) — Nakhodka
    • patrol frigates of project 11351 - PSKR- "Menzhinskiy", "Imeni XXVII Syezda KPSS"
    • patrol tugboats of project 745P - "Приморье"
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 12412 - PSKR-800 "Беркут", PSKR-801 "Ворон", PSKR-803 "Кондор", PSKR-805 "Коршун", PSKR-807 "Кобчик", PSKR-809 "Кречет", PSKR-812 "Сокол", PSKR-816 "Ястреб", PSKR-818 "Находка" (собственные имена получили в 1996 г.)
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-670, PSKR-674(?), PSKR-676, PSKR-678
    • tugboats of project 1496 - PSKA-580, PSKA-582, PSKA-586, PSKA-587, PSKA-590, PSKA-591, PSKA-592(?), PSKA-594
    • liaison boats of project 371 - 1 unit
    • liaison boats of project 343 - 1 unit
  • 10th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (10-я ОБрПСКР) — Vladivostok
    • ПКО проект 1595 - "Ivan Lednyov", "Mikhail Konovalov", "Vyacheslav Denisov", "Ivan Evteev", "Neon Antonov",
    • ПКО project 1545- PKO- "Ivan Golubets", PKO- "Sovetskiy Pogranichnik"
    • fishery patrol vessels of project 850285  - "Командор", "Хеолуф Бидструп", "Манчжур", "Шкипер Гек"
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-110
  • 15th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (15-я ОБрПСКР) — Dalnerechensk [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1249 - PSKR- (used as command ship)
    • riverine monitors of project 1204 - 325
    • liaison boats of project 371 - no less than 9 units

Red Banner Far Eastern Border District (КДПО) - HQ in Khabarovsk

  • 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (14-я ОБрПСКР) — Kazakevichevo, Khabarovsk Krai [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1249 - PSKR-52, PSKR-58 (used as command ship)
    • riverine monitors of project 1248 - PSKR-313, PSKR-314
    • riverine monitors of project 1208 - "им. 60-летия ВЧК", "им. 60-летя Октября", "им 60-летия погранвойск", "Вьюга"
    • riverine monitors of project 1204 - 313, 332, 336, 337, 350, 351, 354, 359, 360, 376, 378, 382,
    • riverine patrol boats of project 1408.1
    • liaison boats of project 371
  • 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (13-я ОБрПСКР) — Leninskoye, Jewish Autonomous Oblast [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1249 - 1 unit used as command ship
    • riverine monitors of project 1248 - PSKR-300, PSKR-301, PSKR-302, PSKR-303, PSKR-304, PSKR-305, PSKR-306, PSKR-308, PSKR-311
  • 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (12-я ОБрПСКР) — Blagoveshchensk [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1249 - 1 unit used as command ship
    • riverine monitors of project 1248
    • riverine monitors of project 1204 - 330, 333, 340, 341, 348, 349, 353, 355, 356, 357, 362, 365, 367, 369, 370, 372, 380, 386,
    • riverine patrol boats of project 1408.1
    • liaison boats of project 371
  • 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (11-я ОБрПСКР) — Dzhalinda [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1204 - unknown quantity

Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District (КЗабПО) - HQ in Chita

  • mostly land border, no naval units

Red Banner Eastern Border District (СВПО) - HQ in Almaty

  • mostly land border, no naval units

Red Banner Central Asian Border District (КСАПО) - HQ in Ashgabat

  • 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (22-я ОБрПСКР) — Termez, Uzbek SSR [river patrol]
    • riverine monitors of project 1204 - unknown quantity
  • 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships (46-й ОДнПСКР) — Krasnovodsk, Turkmen SSR

Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District (КЗакПО) - HQ in Tbilisi

  • 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (6-я ОБрПСКР) — Ochamchire, Georgian SSR
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-616, PSKR-631, PSKR-638, PSKR-641, PSKR-644, PSKR-649, PSKR-657, PSKR-659, PSKR-721, PSKR-723
    • fast patrol craft of project 201 - PSKR-252, PSKR-261
    • fast patrol craft of project 125А - PSKR-152, PSKR-162, PSKR-163, PSKR-165
    • fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-100, PSKR-101, PSKR-102
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-275,  PSKA-510, PSKA-520, PSKA-525, PSKA-559, PSKA-576, PSKA-577
    • Battalion ГУК (Group of Training Cutters) - fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-500, PSKA-501, PSKA-502, PSKA-503
  • 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (17-я ОБрПСКР) — Baku, Azeri SSR
    • fast patrol craft of project 10410 - PSKR-902, PSKR-905
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-603, PSKR-605, PSKR-609, PSKR-610, PSKR-617, PSKR-618, PSKR-624, PSKR-625, PSKR-656, PSKR-658, PSKR-664, PSKR-666, PSKR-669
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - 6 unknown units
    • former Navy minesweepers of 264 - 2 unknown units
  • 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (21-я ОБрПСКР) — Poti, Georgian SSR
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 12412 - PSKR-808 "Grif", PSKR-811 "Orlan", PSKR-814 "Sarych", PSKR-291 "Novorossiysk" (formerly Navy MPK-291 (small ASW ship)), PSKR-292 "Kuban" (formerly Navy MPK-292 (small ASW ship))
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKA-651, PSKA-660, PSKA-665, PSKA-695, PSKA-700, PSKA-715
    • fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-109, PSKR-110
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-513, PSKA-516, PSKA-553, PSKA-554, PSKA-563

Red Banner Western Border District (КЗапПО) - HQ in Kiev

  • 5th Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships (5-я ОБрПСКР) — Balaklava, Crimea, Ukrainian SSR
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 1124P - PSKR- "Dnepr", PSKR- "Izmail"
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 12412 - PSKR-813 "Гр. Куропятников", PSKR-815 "Гр. Гнатенко"
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-623, PSKR-629, PSKR-630, PSKR-635, PSKR-636, PSKR-637, PSKR-642, PSKR-645, PSKR-722
    • fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-103, PSKR-105, PSKR-108, PSKR-115
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-125, PSKA-141, PSKA-508, PSKA-510, PSKA-523, PSKA-524, PSKA-525, PSKA-534
  • 18th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (18-я ОБрПСКР) — Odessa, Ukrainian SSR
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-643(?), PSKR-648, PSKR-650, PSKR-652, PSKR-702, PSKR-705, PSKR-709, PSKR-720
    • fast patrol craft of project 125A - PSKR-165
    • fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-509, PSKA-511, PSKA-512, PSKA-513, PSKA-516, PSKA-517, PSKA-518, PSKA-519, PSKA-520, PSKA-526, PSKA-527, PSKA-528, PSKA-529, PSKA-531, PSKA-546, PSKA-547, PSKA-550, PSKA-555, PSKA-558, PSKA-562, PSKA-574, PSKA-579

Red Banner Baltic Border District (КППО) - HQ in Riga

  • 4th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (4-я ОБрПСКР) — Liepāja, Latvian SSR
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 1124P - PSKR-626 "Nikolay Kaplunov"
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-600, PSKR-602, PSKR-606(?), PSKR-614, PSKR-615, PSKR-639, PSKR-646, PSKR-663, PSKR-710, PSKR-713, PSKR-717
    • fast patrol craft of project 125A - PSKR-153, PSKR-154
    • patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Yan Berzin"
  • 20th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (20-я ОБрПСКР) — Ventspils, Latvian SSR
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 12412 - PSKR-810 "N. Kaplunov", PSKR-815 "Sobol", PSKR-817 "Jaguar"
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-613, PSKR-619, PSKR-620, PSKR-621, PSKR-622, PSKR-634, PSKR-696, PSKR-697, PSKR-698, PSKR-703, PSKR-706, PSKR-714, PSKR-724
    • patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Ural"
  • 3rd Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships (3-я ОБрПСКР) — Tallinn, Estonian SSR
    • fast patrol craft (corvettes) of project 12412 - PSKR-802 "Kunitsa", PSKR-804 "Toliatti", PSKR-806 "Kaliningrad"
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-601, PSKR-608, PSKR-627, PSKR-628, PSKR-632, PSKR-633, PSKR-634, PSKR-640, PSKR-643(?), PSKR-647, PSKR-655, PSKR-708, PSKR-716, PSKR-718, PSKR-719, PSKR-725
    • fast patrol craft of project 201 - PSKR-032, PSKR-071
    • fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-094, PSKR-080, PSKR-072
    • fast patrol craft of project 125A - 2 unknown units
    • fast patrol craft of project 1400 - 2 unknown units
    • patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Viktor Kingisepp"

Red Banner Northwestern Border District (КСЗПО) - HQ in Petrozavodsk

  • 1st Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships (1-я ОБрПСКР) — Kuvshinskaya Salma, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
    • patrol corvettes of project 1124P - PSKR-015 "Brilliant", PSKR-048 "Zhemchug", PSKR-022 "Izumrud", PSKR-028 "Rubin", PSKR-055 "Ametyst", PSKR-036 "Sapphir", PSKR-097 "Provorniy", PSKR-079 "Predanniy", PSKR-047 "Nadezhdniy", PSKR-066 "Dozorniy"
    • patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR- "Karelia", PSKR- "Zapolyarye", PSKR- "Enisey"
    • patrol icebreakers of project 97P "Iceberg" - PSKR-036 "Imeni XXVI syezda KPSS"
    • patrol tugboat of project 733 - PSKR-460[13]
  • 2nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships (2-я ОБрПСКР) — Vysotsk, Leningrad Oblast, Russian SFSR
    • fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-604, PSKR-611, PSKR-612, PSKR-633, PSKR-653, PSKR-654, PSKR-661, PSKR-662, PSKR-667, PSKR-699, PSKR-701, PSKR-704, PSKR-707, PSKR-711, PSKR-712
    • patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR- "Ladoga"

Border Troops Aviation edit

The Border Troops had their own aviation assets. Administratively they fell under the Aviation Department of the Border Troops (Авиационный отдел пограничных войск), with a Major general / Lieutenant general as its chief. Operationally the aviation units were subordinated to the border districts. Unlike its predecessor - the Border Troops of the NKVD (which fielded their own bombers and ground attack aircraft prior to and during World War II), the air arm of the Border Troops of the KGB played a combat support role to the border guards and the patrol ships. The only purely combat aircraft type in service was the Mil Mi-24 attack helicopter. The mainstay of the BT air fleet - the Mil Mi-8, had limited ground attack capabilities. The Border Troops aviation's main role was to deliver supplies and troops to remote border outposts, to deliver foot patrols in remote areas and to mount heli-borne assaults in combat operations. Kamov Ka-27PS helicopters supported the operations of the Border Troops' naval arm. The service also had a small number of Ilyushin Il-76 heavy troop transport jets, which could deliver reinforcements between the various border districts. The Il-76s, Tu-154s and Yak-40s of the Moscow Special Purpose Aviation Unit were also tasked with rapid deployment of the KGB's special operations units (Alpha Group, Vympel Group, Sigma Group etc.). A secondary role of the service was to provide executive air transport for the KGB as a whole, for which it also had Tupolev Tu-134 (later Tupolev Tu-154) and Yakovlev Yak-40 in its inventory. At the time of the Soviet Union's collapse the Border Troops aviation had the following structure:[14]

Note: The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise, starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union.

Units directly reporting to the Main Directorate of the Border Troops:

Separate Arctic Border Detachment (ОАПО) - HQ in Vorkuta

Northeastern Border District (СВПО) - HQ in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky

Red Banner Pacific Border District (КТПО) - HQ in Vladivostok

Red Banner Far Eastern Border District (КДПО) - HQ in Khabarovsk

Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District (КЗабПО) - HQ in Chita

Red Banner Eastern Border District (СВПО) - HQ in Almaty

Red Banner Central Asian Border District (КСАПО) - HQ in Ashgabat

Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District (КЗакПО) - HQ in Tbilisi

Red Banner Western Border District (КЗапПО) - HQ in Kiev

Red Banner Baltic Border District (КППО) - HQ in Riga

Red Banner Northwestern Border District (КСЗПО) - HQ in Petrozavodsk

Training edit

Enlisted men were trained with their operational units, whereas officers were trained in special Border Troops schools, such as the Dzerzhinskii Higher Border Command School in Alma-Ata (Kazakh SSR) and the Mossovet Higher Border Command School in Moscow. Military-political officers received training at the Voroshilov Higher Border Military-Political School, founded in the 1930s and located outside Leningrad. In 1972 a higher border military-political school was created in Golytsin, near Moscow. More recently, higher border command faculties were set up at the Frunze Military Academy and the Lenin Military-Political Academy. The period of instruction at the Higher Border Command and Military-Political Schools was four years. Officer candidates, who were screened carefully by their local KGB offices before admittance, took general higher education courses along with specialized military and political studies.

Political considerations edit

Soviet sources repeatedly stressed that a border guard was not only a soldier but also a defender of Soviet ideology. His mission entailed sensitive political tasks, such as detecting subversive literature. To ensure a high level of discipline among personnel of the Border Troops, much attention was devoted to political training and indoctrination. For this purpose, a network of political organs, the Political Directorate of the Border Troops, was established within the Border Troops. It had political departments within all the border districts, detachments, and education institutions, and a network of full-time party political officers worked among all troop units. They conducted political study groups, gave propaganda lectures, and worked to increase the level of combat effectiveness among the troops.

Famous former members of Soviet Border Troops edit

Dissolution and legacy edit

With the Dissolution of the Soviet Union, Border Troops formations in most Soviet republics became border guards of the respective independent states. These new guards mostly changed their name and subordination. The new states of Armenia and Tajikistan are unique exceptions. Tajikistan's border with Afghanistan was guarded by the Russian Border Guard (engaging in heavy fighting) until the late 1990s under a special treaty.[citation needed] Armenia's border is still guarded by Russians under similar conditions.[citation needed]

 
Soviet era border guard reenactors during the 2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade.

In Russia and some other post-Soviet states, the Border Troops retained some Soviet traditions, most notably the green shoulder boards on their uniforms and "Border Guards Day" (Russian: День пограничника), an official holiday celebrated both by active service and former border guards.

Successors edit

See also edit

References edit

  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.

  1. ^ "Структура и тактика действий спецподразделений погранвойск в Афганистане". pv-afghan.narod.ru. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
  2. ^ "ММГ-2 Талукан - Структура ММГ ПВ КГБ СССР". mmg-kgb.ucoz.ru. Retrieved 2021-04-16.
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  4. ^ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+su0535%29[dead link]
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  7. ^ "Заброшенная 17-я погранзастава "Славянка Морская" 59-го пограничного отряда" (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-01-19.
  8. ^ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+su0535%29[dead link]
  9. ^ "ММГ "Закавказская" - "Мазари-Шариф" - "Мармоль" Начало истории - 1981год - История ММГ - Сайт ММГ-1 Мармоль". mmg-marmol.ucoz.ru. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  10. ^ "Cайт Термезской ДШМГ - л/с ДШМГ главная". termez-desant.ucoz.ru. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  11. ^ http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field%28DOCID+su0535%29[dead link]
  12. ^ "Пограничные Сторожевые корабли". russ-flot.narod.ru. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  13. ^ "E В Меню".
  14. ^ "Сергей Дроздов. Была такая авиация..." rvsn.ruzhany.info. Retrieved 2019-10-25.

Further reading edit

  • László Békési, György Török: KGB and Soviet Security Uniforms and Militaria 1917-1991 in Colour Photographs, Ramsbury (UK), 2002, ISBN 1-86126-511-5.

External links edit

  • of his service in the border guards and NKVD
  • NKVD.org: information site about the NKVD

soviet, border, troops, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, jan. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Soviet Border Troops news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Soviet Border Troops Russian Pogranichnye vojska SSSR romanized Pogranichnyye voyska SSSR were the border guard of the Soviet Union subordinated to the Soviet state security agency first to the Cheka OGPU then to NKVD MGB and finally to the KGB Accordingly they were known as NKVD Border Security and KGB Border Troops Unlike the border guards of many other countries Soviet Border Troops also included the maritime border guarding units and aviation units i e a coast guard Soviet Border TroopsPogranichnye vojska SSSR Pogranichnyye Voiska SSSRPatch of the Soviet Border TroopsFounded1918Disbanded1992Country Soviet Union 1918 1991 CIS 1991 1992 AllegianceCommunist Party of the Soviet Union until 1990 President of the Soviet Union 1990 1991 Commonwealth of Independent States 1991 1992 TypeBorder guardSize220 000 1991 ColorsGreenEngagementsFirst World War Basmachi movement Operation Faustschlag Battle of Bakhmach Crimea Operation 1918 Chinese Civil War Sino Soviet conflict 1929 Soviet Japanese border conflicts Battle of Lake KhasanSecond World War Winter War Operation Barbarossa Continuation War Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran Soviet Japanese WarHungarian Revolution of 1956Sino Soviet border conflict Soviet Afghan WarCommandersCurrentcommanderSee listNotablecommandersTimofei StrokachPavel Zyryanov The Karpov frontier post Soviet Afghan borderFormer Soviet Border Guard observation post in EstoniaThe mission of the Border Troops included repulsing armed incursions into Soviet territory preventing illegal crossings of the border or the transport of weapons explosives contraband or subversive literature across the border monitoring the observance of established procedures at border crossing points monitoring the observance by Soviet and foreign ships of navigation procedures in Soviet territorial waters and assisting state agencies in the preservation of natural resources and the protection of the environment from pollution Border guards were authorized to examine documents and possessions of persons crossing the borders and to confiscate articles to conduct inquiries in cases of violations of the state border and to take such actions as arrest search and interrogation of individuals suspected of border violations With the end of the Soviet Union the Soviet Border troops remained under the command of the Commonwealth of Independent States but later were divided between the Union s constituent republics Contents 1 History 1 1 World War II 1 2 Post War history 1 3 Landing Assault units 2 Commanders of the Soviet Border Guards 3 Legal authority 4 Structure 4 1 Main Directorate of the Border Troops 4 1 1 Main Directorate of the Border Troops 4 1 2 Border Troops Staff 4 2 Directly subordinated to the MDBT 4 2 1 Border Districts 4 2 1 1 Northeastern Border District 4 2 1 2 Red Banner Pacific Border District 4 2 1 3 Red Banner Far Eastern Border District 4 2 1 4 Red Banner Trans Baikal Border District 4 2 1 5 Red Banner Eastern Border District 4 2 1 6 Red Banner Central Asian Border District 4 2 1 7 Red Banner Trans Caucasus Border District 4 2 1 8 Red Banner Western Border District 4 2 1 9 Red Banner Baltic Border District 4 2 1 10 Red Banner Northwestern Border District 4 2 2 Separate Border Detachments 4 2 3 Combined Arms troops 4 3 District forces 4 4 Border Troops Naval Service 4 5 Border Troops Aviation 5 Training 6 Political considerations 6 1 Famous former members of Soviet Border Troops 7 Dissolution and legacy 7 1 Successors 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editIn 1934 under the NKVD Border Troops were immediately subordinated to the GUPVO abbreviated Chief Directorate of Border and Internal Guard In 1939 they were reorganized into the GUPV Chief Directorate of Border Troops NKVD Border Troops consisted of infantry cavalry reconnaissance naval and airforce units Since the 1920s the distinctive part of Soviet Border Troops uniform was the medium green colored parts of headwear and insignia Russian Empire s Separate Corps of the Border Guard has it distinction since 1893 The color is also present on a maritime Border Troops ensign World War II edit After the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact the Border Troops assisted the pacification of the newly acquired Soviet territory adjoining the state border The mass execution of Romanian civilians known as the Fantana Albă massacre happened at this time Border Troops units on the western USSR frontier saw particularly fierce combat in the first weeks of the German invasion of the USSR June July 1941 They bore the brunt of the initial German assault and due to this suffered high casualty rates Border Troop servicemen were among the defenders of the Brest Fortress Border troops were involved in all major campaigns of the war Notably the 105th 157th and 333rd Border Troops regiments operating like regular army units took part in the Battle for Berlin in 1945 During and after the war 150 border guards were awarded the title of the Hero of the Soviet Union and over 13 000 of them were decorated with different orders and medals Post War history edit nbsp 1968 stamp honouring the Border Troops nbsp KGB Border Troops wearing the Spetsodezhda at the Khorgos Soviet Chinese frontier post nbsp Ploughed trace control strip with a security electric fence KS 185In wartime the Border Troops would become a frontline combat service The Border Troops also saw combat in 1969 in border clashes with Chinese soldiers on islands in the Ussuri River After the formation of the KGB Soviet Border Troops became subordinated to this agency and remained so until the dissolution of the Soviet Union As such the Troops were concentrating on the tasks of preventing espionage infiltrations The Border Guards were involved in the Soviet Afghan War and a number of them were even awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union for their bravery during these conflicts The Soviet border was the longest in the world From Norway to North Korea and it comprised harsh terrain and climates accordingly the Border Troops employed significant manpower intensive maritime presence and a dense and sophisticated system of field engineering devices The most notable in that system was the trace control strip Russian kontrolno sledovaya polosa a wide strip of plowed soil to make it apparent where a crossing had occurred The Border Troops consisted of conscripts drafted by the same system as for the Soviet Army and a small number of professional enlistees Officers were trained in specialized academies Both conscripts and officer candidates for Border Troops were carefully selected and checked by the KGB This made service in the troops privileged Landing Assault units edit The Border Troops had Landing Assault Manoeuvre Groups sing desantno shturmovaya manevrennaya gruppa DShMG The LAMGs of the KGB s Border Troops were temporary task forces organised for a period of time by a Border Guard Detachment pogranichnyj otryad POGO the border guard equivalent of an army brigade The BG detachments formed temporary task forces equivalent to battalions for manoeuvre warfare The land component units were called Motorised Manoeuvre Group moto manevrennaya gruppa mmg and consisted of 3 or 4 Motorised Manoeuvre Border Outposts sing moto manevrennaya pogranichnaya zastava the Border Troops equivalent of a company The 1st MMBO was armed with BMP 1 or BMP 2 the 2nd MMBO was armed with BTR 70 and the 3rd MMBO was armed with BTR 60PB Each MMBO had 5 BMPs or BTRs The MMG also had a motorised mortar battery an anti tank platoon and additional support units for a total of ca 300 men The fire and service support units were motorised with GAZ 66 light trucks 1 The Landing Assault Manoeuvre Group formed the airmobile component which operated in concert with the MMGs While both types of units were commanded by Border Troops Lieutenant Colonels with manpower of less than 50 an LAMG number far fewer men than both the Border Troops s MMGs and the Landing Assault Battalions of the Ground Forces An LAMG consisted of a command element and two Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outposts and had the following structure 2 Landing Assault Manoeuvre Group command group gruppa upravleniya 8 men Commander nachalnik DShMG NCO Translator Paramedic Radio Operator 3 Sappers 1st Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outpost 1 DShPZ 21 men Commander nachalnik DShPZ Fire Section ognevoe otdelenie 10 men SPG 9 team of 3 men AGS 17 team of 2 men PK machine gun team of 2 men RPG 7 team of 2 men and 1 Sniper Radio Operator armed with SVD and equipped with R 392 radio Rifle Section strelkovoe otdelenie 10 men 1 Commander and 9 Riflemen armed with Kalashnikov rifles some with night vision sights and equipped with 1 R 392 radio 2nd Landing Assault Manoeuvre Border Outpost 2 DShPZ 21 men identical to 1st LAMBOThe LAMG relied on Mil Mi 24 attack helicopters and Mi 8MTV 1 assault helicopters from the KGB Border Troops own aviation assets Commanders of the Soviet Border Guards editNikolai Stakhanov 1942 1952 Pavel Zyryanov 1952 1956 Timofey Strokach 1956 1957 Pavel Zyryanov 1957 1972 Vadim Matrosov 1972 1989 Ilya Kalinichenko 1989 1991Legal authority edit nbsp KGB border Troops dog in training exerciseThe legal status duties and rights of the Border Troops were set forth in the Law on the State Border confirmed by the Supreme Soviet on November 24 1982 Article 28 defined the basic duties of the Border Troops Their duties included repulsing armed incursions into Soviet territory preventing illegal crossings of the border or the transport of weapons explosives contraband or subversive literature across the border monitoring the observance of established procedures at border crossing points monitoring the observance by Soviet and foreign ships of navigation procedures in Soviet territorial waters and assisting state agencies in the preservation of natural resources and the protection of the environment from pollution Border guards were authorized to examine documents and possessions of persons crossing the borders and to confiscate articles to conduct inquiries in cases of violations of the state border and to take such actions as arrest search and interrogation of individuals suspected of border violations Structure editThe Border Troops strength was estimated in 1989 to be in the range of 230 000 men Although under the operational authority of the KGB the Border Troops were conscripted as part of the biannual call up of the Ministry of Defense and their induction and discharge were regulated by the 1967 Law on Universal Military Service which covered all armed forces of the Soviet Union 3 On top of the Border Troops stood the Main Directorate of the Border Troops MDBT Russian Glavnoe upravlenie pogranichnyh vojsk which played a role similar to that of the General Staff for the armed forces The Main Directorate was subordinated to the First Deputy Chairman of the KGB the second highest ranking official in the Committee The Commander of the Border Troops normally held the rank of lieutenant general when he took over the position and later was promoted to Colonel general Out of the three officers who commanded the troops the second one Vadim Alexandrovich Matrosov has reached the rank of Army general at that position The Commander had several Lieutenant generals and Major generals as his deputies The Main Directorate administered approximately nine border districts pogranichnye okruga which covered the nearly 63 000 kilometers of the state border and additional smaller formations and independent units Border district boundaries were distinct from civil or military district boundaries 4 At the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the Border Troops included the following operational forces Main Directorate of the Border Troops edit Main Directorate of the Border Troops edit Main Directorate of the Border Troops Glavnoe upravlenie pogranichnyh vojsk Command Rukovodstvo Commander Lieutenant general Colonel general Office of the Commander Secretariat Sekretariat Staff Shtab Lieutenant general the Chief of Staff of the BT is simultaneously the First Deputy Commander of the BT Military Political Directorate Voenno politicheskoe upravlenie Major general Lieutenant general Combat Training Directorate Upravlenie boevoj podgotovki Major general Operations Directorate Operativnoe upravlenie Lieutenant general Naval Directorate Morskoe upravlenie Rear admiral Vice admiral Engineering Technical Directorate Inzhenerno tehnicheskoe upravlenie Lieutenant general Personnel Directorate Upravlenie kadrov Major general Lieutenant general Automotive and Armored Fighting Vehicles Department Otdel avtobronetankovoj tehniki Major general Aviation Department Aviacionnyj otdel Major general of aviation Military Construction Department Voenno stroitelnyj otdel Major general Military Education Establishments Department Otdel voenno uchebnyh zavedenij Major general Lieutenant general Military Scientific Directorate Voenno nauchnoe upravlenie Major general Lieutenant general Military Medical Department Voenno medicinskij otdel Major general Military Veterinary Service Voenno veterinarnaya sluzhba Financial Department Finansovyj otdel Major general Rear Services Tyl PV Major general Lieutenant generalUnder the Main Directorate was the Border Troops Staff edit Border Troops Staff Shtab pogranichnyh vojsk Chief of Staff 1st Deputy Commander of the Border Troops Lieutenant general First Deputy Chief of Staff Lieutenant general 1st Directorate Operations 1 e Upravlenie operativnoe Major general Lieutenant general Directorate of Organization and Mobilization Organizacionno mobilizacionnoe upravlenie Major general 3rd Department Signals and Warning Systems 3 j otdel svyazi i signalizacii Major general Department of Information and Analysis Informacionno analiticheskij otdel Major general Directorate of Border crossing Checkpoints Upravlenie KPP Major general Department of Programs in Planning Otdel programm planirovaniya Major generalDirectly subordinated to the MDBT edit Border Districts edit The Border Districts were combined arms formations of the KGB which included border guards similar to motor rifle infantry border crossings and their organic aviation units air regiments squadrons and flights signals battalions and companies combat engineers construction engineers battalions and companies medical repair and supply units The districts bordering oceans and seas also included brigades of guard ships storozhevye korabli SKR patrol frigates corvettes and boats which next to their patrol tasks also had substantial anti submarine role The personnel of the Naval Service within the Border Troops held navy style ranks The Chief of the Naval Directorate within the Main Directorate of the Border Troops was the highest ranking officer in the service with the rank of Rear admiral Vice admiral The Maritime Border Troops of the Russian Border Troops Ru Morskie chasti Pogranichnyh Vojsk KGB SSSR operated within the twelve mile limit of Soviet territorial waters It was equipped with frigates and corvettes fast patrol boats hydrofoils helicopters and light aircraft 5 In 1991 the Border Troops numbered ten Border Districts singular Pogranichnyj okrug abbr PO 6 Note The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union Northeastern Border District edit The Northeastern Border District Russian Severo Vostochnyj pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky It guarded the easternmost territories of the Soviet Union from Wrangel Island and Mys Shmidta on the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait the coastline of the Chukotka and Kamchatka Peninsulas to the island of Simushir where it met the Pacific Border District s AOR The security of the Sea of Okhotsk was also within the tasks of the NEBD and from Simushir its AOR ran in a strait line to the northern tip of Sakhalin and from there it continued to the mainland and the village of Ayan Russia Land units 110th Koenigsbergskiy awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment 110 j POGO Anadyr 60th Awarded the Order of Lenin and the Order of Alexander Nevsky Vilnius Kuril Islands Border Detachment 60 j POGO Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 61st Magadanskiy Border Detachment 61 j POGO MagadanNaval units 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships 1 ya KDPSKR Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships 1 ya BrPSKR 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships 2 ya BrPSKR Supply Ships Battalion DnKO some sources list the battalion divizyon divizion as a unit of the 1st Brigade Air units 15th Separate Aviation Regiment 15 j OAP Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Yelizovo Airport helicopters detached to Yelizovo Khalakhtyrka Airfield Detachment at Klyuchi 1 Air Base 21st Separate Aviation Squadron 21 ya OAE Magadan Sokol Airport Forward Operating Location at Okhotsk 7th Separate Aviation Squadron 7 ya OAE Providence Bay Airfield Forward Operating Locations at Anadyr Airport Mys Shmidta Airport Cape Dezhnev Vankarem Kresta Bay Saint Lawrence Bay and EgvekinotRed Banner Pacific Border District edit The Red Banner Pacific Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Tihookeanskij pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Vladivostok It guarded the coastline of the larger southern Kuril Islands from Simushir to Kunashir through the southern tip of Sakhalin it reached the Asian mainland at the border between the Khabarovsk Krai and Primorsky Krai From there the district s AOR followed the coastline the border with North Korea and the border with China to the place where the territory of the Primorsky Krai met the territory of the Khabarovsk Krai and the AOR of the Red Banner Far Eastern Border District Land units 114th Rushtukskiy Awarded the Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky 2nd grade Border Detachment 114 j POGO Goryachiy Plyazh Kunashir Kuril Islands 52nd Sakhalinskiy Rizhskiy Awarded the Order of Lenin Border Detachment 52 j POGO Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Sakhalin 62nd Nakhodkinskiy Sea Border Detachment 62 j MPOGO Nakhodka 59th Khasanskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of Kutuzov 2nd grade Border Detachment 59 j POGO Posyet 7 1st Border outpost Mramornaya 2nd Border outpost named after Ovchinnikov 3rd Border outpost Sinny Utyos 4th Border outpost Slavyanka land 5th Border outpost Ryazanovka 6th Border outpost Shkolnaya 7th Border outpost Ugolovaya 8th Border outpost Verkhnya 9th Border outpost named after Krainov 10th Border outpost Ugolnaya 11th Border outpost Utinaya 12th Border outpost Zareche 13th Border outpost named after A E Makhalin 14th Border outpost named after P F Tereshkin 15th Border outpost Pesechanaya 16th Border outpost Zarubino 17th Border outpost Slavyanka sea 18th Border outpost Barabash 19th Border outpost Kraskino 20th Border outpost Checkpoint Khasan 21st Border outpost Posyet Checkpoint 58th Grodekovskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of Kutuzov 2nd grade Border Detachment 58 j POGO Pogranichny 69th Kamen Rybolovskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 69 j POGO Kamen Rybolov 57th Ussuriyskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour V R Menzhinsky Border Detachment 57 j POGO Dalnerechensk 12th Training Border Detachment 12 j UPOGO Perevoznaya Vladivostok Border Entry Seaport Vladivostokskij MPP Vladivostok Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Nakhodka OKPP Nahodka Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Vladivostok OKPP Vladivostok Naval units 8th Awarded the Order of the Red Star Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 8 ya OBrPSKR Malokurilskoye Shikotan Kuril Islands 9th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 9 ya OBrPSKR Korsakov Sakhalin 19th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 19 ya OBrPSKR Nevelsk Sakhalin 16th Sakhalinskaya Red Banner Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 16 ya OBrPSKR Nakhodka 10th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 10 ya OBrPSKR Vladivostok 15th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 15 ya OBrPSKR Dalnerechensk river patrol Air units 11th Separate Aviation Regiment 11 j OAP Vladivostok Knevichi Airport Detachment at Sovetskaya Gavan Airfield Forward Operating Locations at Dalnerechensk Kamen Rybolov Spassk Dalny Airfield and Pogranichny 16th Separate Aviation Regiment 16 j OAP Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo Airport Detachment at Yuzhno Kurilsk Mendeleyevo AirportRed Banner Far Eastern Border District edit The Red Banner Far Eastern Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Dalnevostochnyj pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Khabarovsk It guarded the Chinese border in the Amur Oblast from the Primorsky Krai to the Zabaykalsky Krai where it met the AOR of the Red Banner Trans Baikal Border District Land units 77th Bikinskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 77 j POGO Bikin Khabarovsk Krai 70th Kazakevichevskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 70 j POGO Kazakevichevo Khabarovsk Krai 63rd Birobidzhanskiy Border Detachment 63 j POGO Birobidzhan Jewish Autonomous Oblast 75th Raychikhinskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 75 j POGO Raychikhinsk Amur Oblast 56th Blagoveshchenskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 56 j POGO Blagoveshchensk Amur Oblast 78 j Shimanovskiy Awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky Border Detachment 78 j POGO Shimanovsk Amur Oblast 55 j Skovorodinskiy Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment 55 j POGO Skovorodino Amur Oblast Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Nikolayevsk on Amur OKPP Nikolaevsk na Amure Naval units 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 14 ya OBrPSKR Kazakevichevo Khabarovsk Krai river patrol 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 13 ya OBrPSKR Leninskoye Jewish Autonomous Oblast river patrol 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 12 ya OBrPSKR Blagoveshchensk river patrol 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 11 ya OBrPSKR Dzhalinda river patrol Air units 16th Separate Aviation Squadron 16 ya OAE Khabarovsk Airport 19th Separate Aviation Squadron 19 ya OAE Blagoveshchensk AirfieldRed Banner Trans Baikal Border District edit The Red Banner Trans Baikal Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Zabajkalskij pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Chita Zabaykalsky Krai It guarded the eastern part of the Soviet Chinese border from the Amur Oblast to Mongolia and the Mongol Soviet border At the Chinese Mongol Soviet border three point in the Gorno Altai Autonomous Oblast near Khuiten Peak its AOR met the AOR of the Red Banner Eastern Border District Land units 74th Sretenskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 74 j POGO Kokuy Chita Oblast 54th Priargunskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 54 j POGO Priargunsk Chita Oblast 53rd Khinganskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 53 j POGO Dauriya Chita Oblast 51st Kyakhtinskiy Border Detachment 51 j POGO Kyakhta Buryat Autonomous SSR 29th Kyzylskiy Border Detachment 29 j POGO Kyzyl Tuva Autonomous SSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Zabaykalsk OKPP Zabajkalsk Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Irkutsk OKPP Irkutsk Naval units mostly land border no naval unitsAir units 18th Separate Aviation Squadron 18 ya OAE Chita Cheremushki Airfield Detachment at Kyzyl AirportRed Banner Eastern Border District edit The Red Banner Eastern Border District had its headquarters in Almaty It guarded the western part of the Chinese Soviet border and a small section of the Afghan Soviet border along the Wakhan District after which began the area of responsibility of the Central Asian Border District Land units 134th Kurchumskiy Border Detachment 134 j POGO Kurshim Kazakh SSR 50th Zaysanskiy Krasnoznamennyj Border Detachment 50 j POGO Zaysan Kazakh SSR 30th Makanchinskiy Krasnoznamennyj Border Detachment 30 j POGO Makanchi Kazakh SSR 130th Uch Aaralskiy Border Detachment 130 j POGO Usharal Kazakh SSR 49th Panfilovskiy Krasnoznamennyj Border Detachment 49 j POGO Zharkent Kazakh SSR 132nd Chundzhinskiy Border Detachment 132 j POGO Chundzha Kazakh SSR 29th Przhevalskiy Border Detachment 29 j POGO Karakol Kirghiz SSR 96th Narynskiy Border Detachment 96 j POGO Naryn Kirghiz SSR 131st Oshskiy Border Detachment 131 j POGO Osh Kirghiz SSR 35th Murghabskiy Border Detachment 35 j POGO Murghab Tajik SSRNaval units mostly land border no naval unitsAir units 10th Separate Aviation Regiment 10 j OAP Almaty Burunday Airfield 22nd Separate Aviation Squadron 22 ya OAE Usharal AirfieldRed Banner Central Asian Border District edit The Red Banner Central Asian Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Sredneaziatskij pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Ashgabad It guarded the Afghan Soviet without the strip along the Wakhan District and the Iranian Soviet border The sea border of the district extended halfway along the southern line of Soviet territorial waters in the Caspian Sea until it met the AOR of the Red Banner Trans Caucasus Border District Land units 118th Ishkashimskiy Border Detachment 118 j POGO Ishkoshim Tajik SSR 66th Khoroghskiy Border Detachment 66 j POGO Khorogh Tajik SSR 117th Moskovskiy Border Detachment 117 j POGO Moskovskiy Tajik SSR 48th Pyandzhskiy Border Detachment 48 j POGO Panj Tajik SSR 81st Termezskiy Border Detachment 81 j POGO Termez Uzbek SSR 47th Kerkinskiy Border Detachment 47 j POGO Kerki Turkmen SSR 68th Tahta Bazarskiy Border Detachment 68 j POGO Tahta Bazar Turkmen SSR 45th Serakhskiy Border Detachment 45 j POGO Serakhs Turkmen SSR 46th Kaakhanskiy Border Detachment 46 j POGO Kaakha Turkmen SSR 71st Baherdenskiy Border Detachment 71 j POGO Baherden Turkmen SSR 67th Kara Kalinskiy Border Detachment 76 j POGO Kara Kala Turkmen SSR 135th Nebit Dagskiy Border Detachment 135 j POGO Nebit Dag Turkmen SSR 17th Training Border Detachment 17 j UPOGO Dushanbe Tajik SSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Mary OKPP Mary Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Termez OKPP Termez Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Irkutsk OKPP Tashkent Naval units 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 22 ya OBrPSKR Termez Uzbek SSR river patrol 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships 46 j ODnPSKR Krasnovodsk Turkmen SSRAir units 17th Separate Aviation Regiment 17 j OAP Mary 3 Airfield Detachment at Nebit Dag Airfield 23rd Separate Aviation Regiment 23 j OAP Dushanbe AirportRed Banner Trans Caucasus Border District edit The Red Banner Trans Caucasus Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Zakavkazskij pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Tbilisi It guarded the western half of the Caspian Sea section of the Iranian Soviet border the western Iranian Soviet land border the Turkish Soviet border and the Black Sea coastline from the Turkish border to the Kerch Strait where the Red Banner Western Border District took over Land units 44th Lenkoranskiy Border Detachment 44 j POGO Lankaran Azeri SSR 43rd Prishibskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 43 j POGO Prishib Azeri SSR 42nd Gadrutskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 42 j POGO Hadrut Azeri SSR 127th Meghrinskiy Border Detachment 127 j POGO Meghri Armenian SSR 41st Nakhichevanskiy Border Detachment 41 j POGO Nakhchivan Azeri SSR 125th Artashatskiy Border Detachment 125 j POGO Artashat Armenian SSR 40th Oktemberyanskiy A I Mikoyan Border Detachment 40 j POGO Armavir Armenian SSR 39th Leninakanskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 39 j POGO Gyumri Armenian SSR 38th Akhaltsikhskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 38 j POGO Akhaltsikhe Georgian SSR 10th Hichaurskiy Border Detachment 10 j POGO Shuakhevi Georgian SSR 37th Batumskiy Red Banner Bulgarian Soviet Combat Fellowship Border Detachment 37 j POGO Batumi Georgian SSR 36th Sukhumskiy Border Detachment 36 j POGO Sukhumi Georgian SSR 32nd Novorossiyskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 32 j POGO Novorossiysk Russian SFSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Novorossiysk OKPP Novorossijsk Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Batumi OKPP Batumi Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Tbilisi Airport OKPP Tbilisi aeroport Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Astara OKPP Astara Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Julfa OKPP Dzhulfa Naval units 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 6 ya OBrPSKR Ochamchire Georgian SSR 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 17 ya OBrPSKR Baku Azeri SSR 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 21 ya OBrPSKR Poti Georgian SSRAir units 12th Separate Training Aviation Regiment 12 j OUAP Tbilisi AirfieldRed Banner Western Border District edit The Red Banner Western Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Zapadnyj pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Kiev It guarded the Black Sea coastline to the west of the Kerch Strait the borders with Romania Hungary Czechoslovakia and the Ukrainian and Belarusian sections of the Polish Soviet border To the north began the AOR of the Red Banner Baltic Border District Land units 16th Grodnenskiy Border Detachment 16 j POGO Grodno Byelorussian SSR 86th Brestkiy Red Banner F E Dzerzhinsky Border Detachment 86 j POGO Brest Byelorussian SSR 7th Karpatskiy Awarded the orders of the Red Star of Kutuzov and of Alexander Nevsky Border Detachment 7 j POGO Lviv Ukrainian SSR 27th Mukachevskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 27 j POGO Mukachevo Ukrainian SSR 98th Chernovitskiy Border Detachment 98 j POGO Chernivtsi Ukrainian SSR 79th Nizhnednestrovskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 79 j POGO Chișinău Moldavian SSR 26th Odesskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 26 j POGO Odessa Ukrainian SSR 107th Simferopolskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 107 j POGO Simferopol Crimea Ukrainian SSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Kiev OKPP Kiev Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Mariupol OKPP Mariupol Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Brest OKPP Brest Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Mostyska OKPP Mostiska Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Odessa OKPP Odessa Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Chop OKPP Chop Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Izmail OKPP Izmail Naval units 5th Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 5 ya OBrPSKR Balaklava Crimea Ukrainian SSR 18th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 18 ya OBrPSKR Odessa Ukrainian SSRAir units 24th Separate Aviation Squadron 24 ya OAE Odessa Shkolniy AirfieldRed Banner Baltic Border District edit The Red Banner Baltic Border District Russian Krasnoznamyonnyj Pribaltijskij pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Riga It guarded the Lithuanian and Kaliningrad sections of the Polish Soviet border and the Kaliningrad Lithuanian Latvian and Estonian sections of the Baltic Sea Soviet coastline Land units 95th Koenigsbergskiy Awarded the orders of Lenin and of the Red Star Border Detachment 95 j POGO Pravdinsk Kaliningrad Oblast Russian SFSR 23rd Klaypyedskiy Border Detachment 23 j POGO Klaipeda Lithuanian SSR 8th Ventspilsskiy Border Detachment 8 j POGO Ventspils Latvian SSR 11th Kuresaarskiy Border Detachment 11 j POGO Kuressaare Estonian SSR 106th Tallinnskiy Border Detachment 106 j POGO Tallinn Estonian SSR 6th Gdynskiy Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment 6 j POGO Rakvere Estonian SSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Kaliningrad OKPP Kaliningrad Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Tallinn OKPP Tallin Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Riga OKPP Riga Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Vilnius OKPP Vilnyus Naval units 4th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 4 ya OBrPSKR Liepaja Latvian SSR 20th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 20 ya OBrPSKR Ventspils Latvian SSR 3rd Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 3 ya OBrPSKR Tallinn Estonian SSR Air units 20th Separate Aviation Squadron 20 ya OAE Rakvere Airfield detachments at Riga Skulte and Ventspils airfieldsRed Banner Northwestern Border District edit The Red Banner Northwestern Border District Krasnoznamyonnyj Severo Zapadnyj pogranichnyj okrug had its headquarters in Leningrad It guarded the Russian section of the Baltic coastline the Finnish Soviet border the Barents Sea White Sea and the Kanin Peninsula coastline Land units 5 j Leningradskiy pogranichnyj otryad imeni Yu V Andropova Border Detachment 5 j POGO Sosnovy Bor Leningrad Oblast 102 j Vyborgskiy Red Banner pogranichnyj otryad imeni S M Kirova Border Detachment 102 j POGO Vyborg Leningrad Oblast Russian SFSR 1 j Sortavalskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 1 j POGO Sortavala Karelian ASSR Russian SFSR 80 j Suoyarvskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 80 j POGO Suoyarvi Karelian ASSR Russian SFSR 73 j Rebolskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 73 j POGO Repola Karelian ASSR Russian SFSR 72 j Kalevalskiy Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment 72 j POGO Kalevala Karelian ASSR Russian SFSR 101 j Alakurttinskiy Border Detachment 101 j POGO Alakurtti Murmansk Oblast Russian SFSR 100 j Nikelskiy Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment 100 j POGO Nikel Murmansk Oblast Russian SFSR 82 j Murmanskiy Red Banner Border Detachment 82 j POGO Murmansk Murmansk Oblast Russian SFSR 4 j Arkhangelskiy Border Detachment 4 j POGO Arkhangelsk Arkhangelsk Oblast Russian SFSR Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Leningrad OKPP Leningrad Separate Border crossing Checkpoint Vyborg OKPP Vyborg Naval units 1st Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 1 ya OBrPSKR Kuvshinskaya Salma Murmansk Oblast Russian SFSR 2nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 2 ya OBrPSKR Vysotsk Leningrad Oblast Russian SFSR Air units 14th Separate Aviation Regiment 14 j OAP PetrozavodskSeparate Border Detachments edit The main forces of a border district were organised in formations called Border Detachments singular Pogranichnyj otryad abbr POGO These formations roughly corresponded to separate motor rifle brigades in the Soviet Army Ground Forces However unlike army motor rifle brigades which were commanded by Major generals the Border Detachments were commanded by Colonels Four of the border detachments were separate from the districts and reported directly to the Main Directorate 4th Arkhangelsk Border Detachment 4 j Arhangelskij POGO Separate Arctic Border Detachment Otdelnyj Arkticheskij POGO The Separate Arctic Border Detachment Russian Otdelnyj Arkticheskij pogranichnyj otryad had its headquarters in Vorkuta The district did not have naval units It had border outposts from Kolguyev Island to Mys Shmidta and a separate arctic aviation regiment Separate Detachment for Border Control Moscow Otdelnyj otryad pogranichnogo kontrolya Moskva The detachment carried out border control duties at the major Moscow airports 12 border control sections operated at Sheremetyevo 2 Airport and one section each at Sheremetyevo 1 Airport cargo terminal Vnukovo Airport Domodedovo Airport and Chkalovsky Airport 105th Separate Red Banner Detachment Spetsnaz 105 j otdelnyj Krasnoznamennyj otryad SpN The detachment was previously the sole Regiment of the Border Troops legacy from the time when it belonged to the Soviet Ministry of the Interior It consisted of one battalion four separate companies and assorted support units and carried out security tasks at the Soviet embassy in East Germany the main HQ of the KGB in East Germany and several field offices spread across the country In 1989 the regiment was upgraded to a border detachment With this its battalion was upgraded to a Motor Maneuver Group moto manevrennaya gruppa and the companies were upgraded to Border Outposts singular zastava in line with KGB Border Troops nomenclature Combined Arms troops edit In times when the border troops were facing increased external threat or actual local conflict they were reinforced with conventional units from the Soviet Ground Forces which were directly integrated in their structure Such example were tank and artillery battalions during the period of increased hostility during and immediately after the Sino Soviet border conflict In the final years of the USSR due to the mounting instability in the Caucasus region the Border Troops took over from the Armed Forces the Soviet Ground Forces 75th Motor Rifle Division 75 ya Motostrelkovaya diviziya from January 4 1990 until September 23 1991 the Soviet Airborne Forces 103rd Guards Airborne Division 103 ya Gvardejskaya vozdushno desantnaya diviziya from January 4 1990 until September 23 1991District forces edit The main forces of the border districts were the Border Detachments Russian Pogranichnyj otryad abbr POGO singular Each detachment covered a specific section of the border and had a Colonel as its commanding officer The territorial waters were patrolled by brigades of guard ships Russian Brigada storozhevyh korablej abbr BSKR singular and were commanded by Captains 1st rank All the guard ship brigades were separate except for the 1st and the 2nd which formed the 1st Division of Guard Ships Russian 1 ya Diviziya storozhevyh korablej in Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky due to the vastness of the assigned area of operations in the Pacific Ocean The border detachments consisted of Border Command Posts or Commandatures Russian Pogranichnaya komandatura singular Separate Bordercrossing Control Points Russian Otdelnyj kontrolno propusknoj punkt abbr OKKP singular and various combat support and combat service support units 8 A Border Command Post consisted of several Border Outposts and corresponded roughly to a battalion of the armed forces and was therefore commanded by a lieutenant colonel The main forces of a BCP accounted several regular Border Outposts Russian Pogranichnaya zastava abbr POGZ singular also informally called Line Border Outposts as each had a section of the state border assigned to it In the rear area of the BCP there was also a Reserve Border Outpost acting as the operational reserve of the commander It had the same structure as the line Border Outposts but was not permanently deployed at the border In a situation of increased threat its function was to take over the threatened section of the border thus becoming a line outpost itself The equivalent of a BCP in the naval service of the Border Troops was a Battalion of Guard Ships Russian Divizion storozhevyh korablej commanded by a Captain 2nd rank The Border Outpost Russian Pogranichnaya zastava abbr POGZ was the smallest unit of the Border Troops which was directly involved in the task of securing the state border The TO amp E called for 41 officers NCOs Sergeants and border guards organised in a staff group 2 rifle sections a service canine section and a signals and remote sensing section Around the time of the Sino Soviet border conflict a reinforced TO amp E with an additional rifle section 50 men in total was introduced and later during the Soviet Afghan War a new TO amp E with a fourth rifle section was introduced increasing the manpower to 64 men The border outposts were equal in status to separate combat companies of the Ground Forces with a major as the CO A specific operational reserve unit was the Motor Maneuver Group Russian Moto manevrennaya gruppa MMG As the name implied this was a maneuver element organized similarly to an army motor rifle battalion with its own infantry fighting vehicles armored personnel carriers mortars and anti tank weapons The MMG was a temporary task force fielded by the border detachment by combining personnel from its various units On an operational deployment an MMG could act both as a classic BCP or as a mechanized warfare unit the Soviet Afghan War being the perfect example for this versatility A typical example for a motor maneuver group was the MMG 1 AKA the Transcaucasus later Mazar i Sharif later the Marmoly MMG of the Termez Border Detachment deployed to Afghanistan It had 9 command section with one BTR 60 and one UAZ 469 3 border outposts each consisting of 50 men including three officers two Sergeant Majors and seven Sergeants further divided into 5 sections with one BTR 60 each mortar battery of 64 men including five officers and a Sergeant Major The battery had one BTR 60 R 145BM Chayka command variant and fifteen GAZ 66 trucks 6 mortar sections each armed with one PM 120 120 mm and one BM 82 82 mm mortar reconnaissance platoon of 13 men including one officer and two Sergeants It had two sections the first was armed with a BRM 1 the second with a BTR 60 anti tank platoon of 18 men including one officer and three Sergeants The platoon had 4 SPG 9 and 4 GAZ 66 in two sections of two AT teams each combat engineer platoon of 20 men including one officer one Sergeant Major and five Sergeants The platoon had BTR 60 ZIL 131 GAZ 66 and heavy engineering machinery divided among two sapper sections and one engineering section signals platoon with two BTR 60s R 145BM Chayka command variant and an R 140 radio mounted on a ZIL 157 medical aid post with a medical officer a Sergeant Major and an ambulance driver Each of the three border outposts and the mortar battery had a paramedic operationally subordinated to the medical officer logistical platoon of 29 men including two Sergeant Majors and three Sergeants The platoon was subdivided into a supply a transport and a repair sectionsThe MMG numbered a total personnel of ca 300 men In case the area of operation covered mountainous terrain the border detachments could form heliborne task forces called Air Assault Maneuver Groups Russian Desantno shturmovaya manevrennaya gruppa abbr DShMG singular The personnel received parachute and helicopter assault training and adopted Soviet Airborne Forces and Ground Forces Air Assault Troops tactics weapons and equipment to such an extent that these units used the traditional VDV patch of two cargo airplanes a parachute and a red star These units utilized the organic Mi 8 helicopters of the Border Troops aviation branch Due to their airborne role and the restricted cargo capacity of their aviation assets as compared to the mechanized MMGs these units normally counted ca 120 men An example for such a unit is theAAMG formed by the same Termez Border Detachment for operations in Afghanistan It had 10 command section 3 air assault border outposts mortar platoon AGS 17 grenade launcher platoon grenade launcher flamethrower platoon combat engineer platoon signals platoonThe border area was divided into a border zone which included the territory of the district and settlements adjacent to the state border and the border strip which was approximately two kilometers in depth running directly along the border Only permanent residents or those who had obtained special permission from the MVD could enter the border zone Entry into the border strip was forbidden without special permission from the Border Troops 11 Border Troops Naval Service edit The Border Troops had their own naval assets They were subordinated administratively to the Sea Directorate of the Border Troops Morskoe upravlenie pogranichnyh vojsk headed by a Rear admiral Vice admiral Operationally the naval units were subordinated to the border districts The patrol ships of the naval service were much heavier armed than similar sized ships of coast guards around the world They lacked the sophisticated anti air and anti ship missile systems but were armed with artillery as heavy as the AK 100 and for their ASW they carried anti submarine mortars torpedoes and even anti submarine missile systems Soviet and Russian naval classification did not follow Western convention for smaller major surface combatants While Western navies use classification based on the ship s size aviso corvette frigate destroyer the Soviet Navy and by extension the KGB s naval service used classification based on the ship s function Thus the corvette and frigate sized warships of the Navy and the Naval Service were classified as guard ships sing storozhevoj korabl abbreviated SKR SKR To distinguish the ships of the border troops from those of the navy the former are classified as border guard ships sing pogranichnyj storozhevoj korabl abbreviated PSKR PSKR and to distinguish between the larger and smaller units in their fleet the corvette and frigate sized units were classified as ships sing korabl abbreviated KR KR while the smaller patrol craft were classified as cutters sing kater abbreviated KA KA The types of ships in the Border Troops fleet included border guard ship pogranichnyj storozhevoj korabl PSKR patrol corvettes and frigates border guard cutter pogranichnyj storozhevoj kater PSKA patrol craft border support ship pogranichnyj korabl obespecheniya PKO replenishment ships patrol vessel patrulnoe sudno PS fishery patrol ships border ship in special service pogranichnyj korabl specialnoj sluzhby PKSS corvette frigate sized official government yachts border cutter in special service pogranichnyj kater specialnoj sluzhby PKASS small guard craft used for the security of coastal areas of official government sea residences and government yachtsNote The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union Naval Service fleet 12 Northeastern Border District SVPO HQ in Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships 1 ya KDPSKR Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships 1 ya BrPSKR single ship project 52K PSKR 010 Purga retired on 16 03 1990 patrol icebreakers of project 97P Iceberg PSKR 161 Aysberg PSKR 083 Dunay patrol tugboats of project 745P PSKR 135 Brest PSKR 081 Sakhalin PSKR 070 Kamchatka 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships 2 ya BrPSKR patrol frigates of project 11351 PSKR 097 Dzerzhinskiy PSKR 059 Vorovskiy PSKR 103 Kedrov PSKR 060 Imeni 70 letiya Pogranvoisk PSKR 077 Imeni 70 letiya VChK KGB patrol corvettes of project 1124M PSKR 055 Bditelniy PSKR 014 Bezuprechniy PSKR 058 Zorkiy PSKR 067 Reshitelniy PSKR 052 Smeliy former navy minesweepers of project 264A citation needed PSKR 035 Vorovskiy PSKR 066 Dzerzhinskiy PSKR 046 Menzhinskiy PSKR 032 Kirov PSKR 015 Kedrov PSKR 010 Hokhryakov PSKR 105 Starshiy leytenant Lekarev PSKR 083 Fyodor Mitrofanov PSKR 059 Vasiliy Gromov PSKR 080 Malakhit PSKR 076 Korund Supply Ships Battalion DnKO 3 sealift ships of project 1595 Pevek citation needed PKO 063 Nikolay Sipyagin PKO 071 Sergey Sudeyskiy PKO 016 Nikolay Starshinov Red Banner Pacific Border District KTPO HQ in Vladivostok 8th Awarded the Order of the Red Star Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 8 ya OBrPSKR Malokurilskoye Shikotan Kuril Islands patrol tugboats of project 745P Chukotka Neman Amur Bug patrol tugboat of project 733 PSKR 467 PSKR 482 patrol boats of project 10410 PSKR 907 PSKR 908 PSKR 914 fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 675 677 678 679 682 685 686 687 688 689 691 tugboats of project 1496 2 units fast patrol boats of project 1408 1 3 units liaison boats of project 371U 1 unit 9th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 9 ya OBrPSKR Korsakov Sakhalin fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 673 680 681 683 687 690 19th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 19 ya OBrPSKR Nevelsk Sakhalin patrol tugboats of project 745P Zabajkale patrol boats of project 10410 PSKR 903 Holmsk PSKR 907 PSKR 915 Nevelsk fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 672 674 680 681 683 684 692 693 694 tugboats of project 1496 PSKA 277 16th Sakhalinskaya Red Banner Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 16 ya OBrPSKR Nakhodka patrol frigates of project 11351 PSKR Menzhinskiy Imeni XXVII Syezda KPSS patrol tugboats of project 745P Primore fast patrol craft corvettes of project 12412 PSKR 800 Berkut PSKR 801 Voron PSKR 803 Kondor PSKR 805 Korshun PSKR 807 Kobchik PSKR 809 Krechet PSKR 812 Sokol PSKR 816 Yastreb PSKR 818 Nahodka sobstvennye imena poluchili v 1996 g fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 670 PSKR 674 PSKR 676 PSKR 678 tugboats of project 1496 PSKA 580 PSKA 582 PSKA 586 PSKA 587 PSKA 590 PSKA 591 PSKA 592 PSKA 594 liaison boats of project 371 1 unit liaison boats of project 343 1 unit 10th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 10 ya OBrPSKR Vladivostok PKO proekt 1595 Ivan Lednyov Mikhail Konovalov Vyacheslav Denisov Ivan Evteev Neon Antonov PKO project 1545 PKO Ivan Golubets PKO Sovetskiy Pogranichnik fishery patrol vessels of project 850285 Komandor Heoluf Bidstrup Manchzhur Shkiper Gek fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 110 15th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 15 ya OBrPSKR Dalnerechensk river patrol riverine monitors of project 1249 PSKR used as command ship riverine monitors of project 1204 325 liaison boats of project 371 no less than 9 unitsRed Banner Far Eastern Border District KDPO HQ in Khabarovsk 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 14 ya OBrPSKR Kazakevichevo Khabarovsk Krai river patrol riverine monitors of project 1249 PSKR 52 PSKR 58 used as command ship riverine monitors of project 1248 PSKR 313 PSKR 314 riverine monitors of project 1208 im 60 letiya VChK im 60 letya Oktyabrya im 60 letiya pogranvojsk Vyuga riverine monitors of project 1204 313 332 336 337 350 351 354 359 360 376 378 382 riverine patrol boats of project 1408 1 liaison boats of project 371 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 13 ya OBrPSKR Leninskoye Jewish Autonomous Oblast river patrol riverine monitors of project 1249 1 unit used as command ship riverine monitors of project 1248 PSKR 300 PSKR 301 PSKR 302 PSKR 303 PSKR 304 PSKR 305 PSKR 306 PSKR 308 PSKR 311 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 12 ya OBrPSKR Blagoveshchensk river patrol riverine monitors of project 1249 1 unit used as command ship riverine monitors of project 1248 riverine monitors of project 1204 330 333 340 341 348 349 353 355 356 357 362 365 367 369 370 372 380 386 riverine patrol boats of project 1408 1 liaison boats of project 371 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 11 ya OBrPSKR Dzhalinda river patrol riverine monitors of project 1204 unknown quantityRed Banner Trans Baikal Border District KZabPO HQ in Chita mostly land border no naval unitsRed Banner Eastern Border District SVPO HQ in Almaty mostly land border no naval unitsRed Banner Central Asian Border District KSAPO HQ in Ashgabat 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 22 ya OBrPSKR Termez Uzbek SSR river patrol riverine monitors of project 1204 unknown quantity 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships 46 j ODnPSKR Krasnovodsk Turkmen SSR fast patrol boats of project 1400 M 5 6Red Banner Trans Caucasus Border District KZakPO HQ in Tbilisi 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 6 ya OBrPSKR Ochamchire Georgian SSR fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 616 PSKR 631 PSKR 638 PSKR 641 PSKR 644 PSKR 649 PSKR 657 PSKR 659 PSKR 721 PSKR 723 fast patrol craft of project 201 PSKR 252 PSKR 261 fast patrol craft of project 125A PSKR 152 PSKR 162 PSKR 163 PSKR 165 fast patrol craft of project 133 PSKR 100 PSKR 101 PSKR 102 fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 275 PSKA 510 PSKA 520 PSKA 525 PSKA 559 PSKA 576 PSKA 577 Battalion GUK Group of Training Cutters fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 500 PSKA 501 PSKA 502 PSKA 503 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 17 ya OBrPSKR Baku Azeri SSR fast patrol craft of project 10410 PSKR 902 PSKR 905 fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 603 PSKR 605 PSKR 609 PSKR 610 PSKR 617 PSKR 618 PSKR 624 PSKR 625 PSKR 656 PSKR 658 PSKR 664 PSKR 666 PSKR 669 fast patrol boats of project 1400 6 unknown units former Navy minesweepers of 264 2 unknown units 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 21 ya OBrPSKR Poti Georgian SSR fast patrol craft corvettes of project 12412 PSKR 808 Grif PSKR 811 Orlan PSKR 814 Sarych PSKR 291 Novorossiysk formerly Navy MPK 291 small ASW ship PSKR 292 Kuban formerly Navy MPK 292 small ASW ship fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKA 651 PSKA 660 PSKA 665 PSKA 695 PSKA 700 PSKA 715 fast patrol craft of project 133 PSKR 109 PSKR 110 fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 513 PSKA 516 PSKA 553 PSKA 554 PSKA 563Red Banner Western Border District KZapPO HQ in Kiev 5th Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 5 ya OBrPSKR Balaklava Crimea Ukrainian SSR fast patrol craft corvettes of project 1124P PSKR Dnepr PSKR Izmail fast patrol craft corvettes of project 12412 PSKR 813 Gr Kuropyatnikov PSKR 815 Gr Gnatenko fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 623 PSKR 629 PSKR 630 PSKR 635 PSKR 636 PSKR 637 PSKR 642 PSKR 645 PSKR 722 fast patrol craft of project 133 PSKR 103 PSKR 105 PSKR 108 PSKR 115 fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 125 PSKA 141 PSKA 508 PSKA 510 PSKA 523 PSKA 524 PSKA 525 PSKA 534 18th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 18 ya OBrPSKR Odessa Ukrainian SSR fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 643 PSKR 648 PSKR 650 PSKR 652 PSKR 702 PSKR 705 PSKR 709 PSKR 720 fast patrol craft of project 125A PSKR 165 fast patrol boats of project 1400 PSKA 509 PSKA 511 PSKA 512 PSKA 513 PSKA 516 PSKA 517 PSKA 518 PSKA 519 PSKA 520 PSKA 526 PSKA 527 PSKA 528 PSKA 529 PSKA 531 PSKA 546 PSKA 547 PSKA 550 PSKA 555 PSKA 558 PSKA 562 PSKA 574 PSKA 579Red Banner Baltic Border District KPPO HQ in Riga 4th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 4 ya OBrPSKR Liepaja Latvian SSR fast patrol craft corvettes of project 1124P PSKR 626 Nikolay Kaplunov fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 600 PSKR 602 PSKR 606 PSKR 614 PSKR 615 PSKR 639 PSKR 646 PSKR 663 PSKR 710 PSKR 713 PSKR 717 fast patrol craft of project 125A PSKR 153 PSKR 154 patrol tugboat of project 745P Yan Berzin 20th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 20 ya OBrPSKR Ventspils Latvian SSR fast patrol craft corvettes of project 12412 PSKR 810 N Kaplunov PSKR 815 Sobol PSKR 817 Jaguar fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 613 PSKR 619 PSKR 620 PSKR 621 PSKR 622 PSKR 634 PSKR 696 PSKR 697 PSKR 698 PSKR 703 PSKR 706 PSKR 714 PSKR 724 patrol tugboat of project 745P Ural 3rd Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 3 ya OBrPSKR Tallinn Estonian SSR fast patrol craft corvettes of project 12412 PSKR 802 Kunitsa PSKR 804 Toliatti PSKR 806 Kaliningrad fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 601 PSKR 608 PSKR 627 PSKR 628 PSKR 632 PSKR 633 PSKR 634 PSKR 640 PSKR 643 PSKR 647 PSKR 655 PSKR 708 PSKR 716 PSKR 718 PSKR 719 PSKR 725 fast patrol craft of project 201 PSKR 032 PSKR 071 fast patrol craft of project 133 PSKR 094 PSKR 080 PSKR 072 fast patrol craft of project 125A 2 unknown units fast patrol craft of project 1400 2 unknown units patrol tugboat of project 745P Viktor Kingisepp Red Banner Northwestern Border District KSZPO HQ in Petrozavodsk 1st Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships 1 ya OBrPSKR Kuvshinskaya Salma Murmansk Oblast Russian SFSR patrol corvettes of project 1124P PSKR 015 Brilliant PSKR 048 Zhemchug PSKR 022 Izumrud PSKR 028 Rubin PSKR 055 Ametyst PSKR 036 Sapphir PSKR 097 Provorniy PSKR 079 Predanniy PSKR 047 Nadezhdniy PSKR 066 Dozorniy patrol tugboats of project 745P PSKR Karelia PSKR Zapolyarye PSKR Enisey patrol icebreakers of project 97P Iceberg PSKR 036 Imeni XXVI syezda KPSS patrol tugboat of project 733 PSKR 460 13 2nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships 2 ya OBrPSKR Vysotsk Leningrad Oblast Russian SFSR fast patrol craft of project 205P PSKR 604 PSKR 611 PSKR 612 PSKR 633 PSKR 653 PSKR 654 PSKR 661 PSKR 662 PSKR 667 PSKR 699 PSKR 701 PSKR 704 PSKR 707 PSKR 711 PSKR 712 patrol tugboats of project 745P PSKR Ladoga Border Troops Aviation edit The Border Troops had their own aviation assets Administratively they fell under the Aviation Department of the Border Troops Aviacionnyj otdel pogranichnyh vojsk with a Major general Lieutenant general as its chief Operationally the aviation units were subordinated to the border districts Unlike its predecessor the Border Troops of the NKVD which fielded their own bombers and ground attack aircraft prior to and during World War II the air arm of the Border Troops of the KGB played a combat support role to the border guards and the patrol ships The only purely combat aircraft type in service was the Mil Mi 24 attack helicopter The mainstay of the BT air fleet the Mil Mi 8 had limited ground attack capabilities The Border Troops aviation s main role was to deliver supplies and troops to remote border outposts to deliver foot patrols in remote areas and to mount heli borne assaults in combat operations Kamov Ka 27PS helicopters supported the operations of the Border Troops naval arm The service also had a small number of Ilyushin Il 76 heavy troop transport jets which could deliver reinforcements between the various border districts The Il 76s Tu 154s and Yak 40s of the Moscow Special Purpose Aviation Unit were also tasked with rapid deployment of the KGB s special operations units Alpha Group Vympel Group Sigma Group etc A secondary role of the service was to provide executive air transport for the KGB as a whole for which it also had Tupolev Tu 134 later Tupolev Tu 154 and Yakovlev Yak 40 in its inventory At the time of the Soviet Union s collapse the Border Troops aviation had the following structure 14 Note The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union Units directly reporting to the Main Directorate of the Border Troops Separate Special Purpose Aviation Unit OAO SN based at Moscow Sheremetyevo 2 Airport 2 Tupolev Tu 154 2 Tupolev Tu 134 4 Ilyushin Il 76 4 Antonov An 72 1 Yakovlev Yak 40 4 Mil Mi 8 Combat Training Center of the Border Troops Aviation CBP APV based at Stavropol Shpakovskoye Airport combat training was carried out at the 12th Separate Training Air Regiment of the Caucasus Border District in TbilisiSeparate Arctic Border Detachment OAPO HQ in Vorkuta 1st Separate Arctic Aviation Regiment 1 j OAAP based at Vorkuta Airport 3 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 40 Mil Mi 8 2 Mil Mi 26 4 Kamov Ka 27PS detachments at Tiksi Airport and Chersky Airport Forward Operating Locations at Murmansk Airport Naryan Mar Airport Khatanga Airport Chokurdakh Airport and Sredny Ostrov AirfieldNortheastern Border District SVPO HQ in Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky 15th Separate Aviation Regiment 15 j OAP based at Petropavlovsk Kamchatsky Yelizovo Airport the helicopters were based in a detachment at Yelizovo Khalakhtyrka Airfield 2 Antonov An 26 6 Antonov An 72 20 Mil Mi 8 4 Kamov Ka 27PS 4 Kamov Ka 25 2 Mil Mi 26 Detachment at Klyuchi 1 Air Base 21st Separate Aviation Squadron 21 ya OAE based at Magadan Sokol Airport 1 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 4 Mil Mi 8 Forward Operating Location at Okhotsk 7th Separate Aviation Squadron 7 ya OAE based at Providence Bay Airfield 1 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 2 Kamov Ka 27PS 4 Mil Mi 8 Forward Operating Locations at Anadyr Airport Mys Shmidta Airport Cape Dezhnev Vankarem Kresta Bay Saint Lawrence Bay and EgvekinotRed Banner Pacific Border District KTPO HQ in Vladivostok 11th Separate Aviation Regiment 11 j OAP based at Vladivostok Knevichi Airport 3 Antonov An 26 1 Yakovlev Yak 40 22 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24 3 Kamov Ka 27PS Detachment at Sovetskaya Gavan Airfield Forward Operating Locations at Dalnerechensk Kamen Rybolov Spassk Dalny Airfield and Pogranichny 16th Separate Aviation Regiment 16 j OAP based at Yuzhno Sakhalinsk Khomutovo Airport 2 Antonov An 26 4 Antonov An 72 1 Yakovlev Yak 40 20 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24 4 Kamov Ka 27PS Detachment at Yuzhno Kurilsk Mendeleyevo AirportRed Banner Far Eastern Border District KDPO HQ in Khabarovsk 16th Separate Aviation Squadron 16 ya OAE based at Khabarovsk Airport 1 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 1 Yakovlev Yak 40 4 Mil Mi 8 19th Separate Aviation Squadron 19 ya OAE based at Blagoveshchensk Airfield 1 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 4 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24Red Banner Trans Baikal Border District KZabPO HQ in Chita 18th Separate Aviation Squadron 18 ya OAE based at Chita Cheremushki Airfield 1 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 4 Mil Mi 8 Detachment at Kyzyl AirportRed Banner Eastern Border District SVPO HQ in Almaty 10th Separate Aviation Regiment 10 j OAP based at Almaty Burunday Airfield 2 Antonov An 72 2 Antonov An 26 2 Yakovlev Yak 40 18 Mil Mi 8 8 Mil Mi 24 2 Mil Mi 26 22nd Separate Aviation Squadron 22 ya OAE based at Usharal Airfield 15 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24Red Banner Central Asian Border District KSAPO HQ in Ashgabat 17th Separate Aviation Regiment 17 j OAP based at Mary 3 Airfield 2 Antonov An 26 36 Mil Mi 8 16 Mil Mi 24 2 Mil Mi 26 Detachment at Nebit Dag Airfield 23rd Separate Aviation Regiment 23 j OAP based at Dushanbe Airport 2 Antonov An 26 24 Mil Mi 8 12 Mil Mi 24 2 Mil Mi 26Red Banner Trans Caucasus Border District KZakPO HQ in Tbilisi 12th Separate Training Aviation Regiment 12 j OUAP based at Tbilisi Airfield 2 Antonov An 26 2 Antonov An 72 1 Yakovlev Yak 40 4 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24 2 Kamov Ka 27PSRed Banner Western Border District KZapPO HQ in Kiev 24th Separate Aviation Squadron 24 ya OAE based at Odessa Shkolniy Airfield 15 Mil Mi 8 4 Mil Mi 24Red Banner Baltic Border District KPPO HQ in Riga 20th Separate Aviation Squadron 20 ya OAE based at Rakvere Airfield 2 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 4 Mil Mi 8 2 Kamov Ka 27PS detachments at Riga Skulte and Ventspils airfieldsRed Banner Northwestern Border District KSZPO HQ in Petrozavodsk 14th Separate Aviation Regiment 14 j OAP based at Petrozavodsk 3 Antonov An 26 1 Antonov An 24 24 Mil Mi 8Training editEnlisted men were trained with their operational units whereas officers were trained in special Border Troops schools such as the Dzerzhinskii Higher Border Command School in Alma Ata Kazakh SSR and the Mossovet Higher Border Command School in Moscow Military political officers received training at the Voroshilov Higher Border Military Political School founded in the 1930s and located outside Leningrad In 1972 a higher border military political school was created in Golytsin near Moscow More recently higher border command faculties were set up at the Frunze Military Academy and the Lenin Military Political Academy The period of instruction at the Higher Border Command and Military Political Schools was four years Officer candidates who were screened carefully by their local KGB offices before admittance took general higher education courses along with specialized military and political studies Political considerations editSoviet sources repeatedly stressed that a border guard was not only a soldier but also a defender of Soviet ideology His mission entailed sensitive political tasks such as detecting subversive literature To ensure a high level of discipline among personnel of the Border Troops much attention was devoted to political training and indoctrination For this purpose a network of political organs the Political Directorate of the Border Troops was established within the Border Troops It had political departments within all the border districts detachments and education institutions and a network of full time party political officers worked among all troop units They conducted political study groups gave propaganda lectures and worked to increase the level of combat effectiveness among the troops Famous former members of Soviet Border Troops edit Alexander Lukashenko the President of Belarus served as an officer Mikhail Saakashvili the President of Georgia served as a conscript Vlad Filat the Prime minister of Moldova served as a conscript Viktor Yushchenko the 3rd President of Ukraine served as a conscript Konstantin Chernenko the second last Soviet leader Secretary General of the CPSU also served as a border guard on the USSR Chinese border before becoming more involved in politics Dissolution and legacy editWith the Dissolution of the Soviet Union Border Troops formations in most Soviet republics became border guards of the respective independent states These new guards mostly changed their name and subordination The new states of Armenia and Tajikistan are unique exceptions Tajikistan s border with Afghanistan was guarded by the Russian Border Guard engaging in heavy fighting until the late 1990s under a special treaty citation needed Armenia s border is still guarded by Russians under similar conditions citation needed nbsp Soviet era border guard reenactors during the 2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade In Russia and some other post Soviet states the Border Troops retained some Soviet traditions most notably the green shoulder boards on their uniforms and Border Guards Day Russian Den pogranichnika an official holiday celebrated both by active service and former border guards Successors edit State Border Service of Azerbaijan Armenian Border Guard Border Guard Service of Belarus Border Police of Georgia Border Service of Kazakhstan State Border Guard Service of Kyrgyzstan Moldovan Border Police Border Guard Service of Russia Tajik Border Troops State Border Service of Turkmenistan State Border Guard Service of Ukraine Border Troops of UzbekistanSee also editEastern Bloc emigration and defection Medal For Distinction in Guarding the State Border of the USSR Border Security Zone of RussiaReferences edit nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division Struktura i taktika dejstvij specpodrazdelenij pogranvojsk v Afganistane pv afghan narod ru Retrieved 2021 04 16 MMG 2 Talukan Struktura MMG PV KGB SSSR mmg kgb ucoz ru Retrieved 2021 04 16 http lcweb2 loc gov cgi bin query r frd cstdy field 28DOCID su0535 29 dead link http lcweb2 loc gov cgi bin query r frd cstdy field 28DOCID su0535 29 dead link http lcweb2 loc gov cgi bin query r frd cstdy field 28DOCID su0535 29 dead link Pogranichnye vojska shieldandsword mozohin ru Retrieved 2019 10 20 Zabroshennaya 17 ya pogranzastava Slavyanka Morskaya 59 go pogranichnogo otryada in Russian Retrieved 2023 01 19 http lcweb2 loc gov cgi bin query r frd cstdy field 28DOCID su0535 29 dead link MMG Zakavkazskaya Mazari Sharif Marmol Nachalo istorii 1981god Istoriya MMG Sajt MMG 1 Marmol mmg marmol ucoz ru Retrieved 2019 10 22 Cajt Termezskoj DShMG l s DShMG glavnaya termez desant ucoz ru Retrieved 2019 10 22 http lcweb2 loc gov cgi bin query r frd cstdy field 28DOCID su0535 29 dead link Pogranichnye Storozhevye korabli russ flot narod ru Retrieved 2019 10 30 E V Menyu Sergej Drozdov Byla takaya aviaciya rvsn ruzhany info Retrieved 2019 10 25 Further reading editLaszlo Bekesi Gyorgy Torok KGB and Soviet Security Uniforms and Militaria 1917 1991 in Colour Photographs Ramsbury UK 2002 ISBN 1 86126 511 5 External links editOral History A soldiers account of his service in the border guards and NKVD NKVD org information site about the NKVD Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soviet Border Troops amp oldid 1214066957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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