50th Rocket Army

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Remaining wall of the rocket base barracks near Vepriai, Lithuania. Construction date visible

The 50th Red Banner Rocket Army (Military Unit 55135) was an army of the Soviet, later Russian Strategic Rocket Forces. It was created in 1960. Its first commander was General Lieutenant Feodor Dobish (ru:Добыш, Фёдор Иванович). Its headquarters was located in Smolensk.

It was formed in September 1960, in accordance with the directive of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces based on the Long Range Aviation.[1]

History[]

Successive titles[]

  • [2] (from October 17, 1941), Military unit 49707;
  • 3rd Air Army (May 5, 1942);
  • (April 9, 1946), Military unit 55135 (after 04.1946);
  • (Long Range Aviation) (February 20, 1949);
  • 50th Rocket Army (August 1, 1960);

By September 1, 1960, the 50th Rocket Army had 46 medium-range rocket launchers on combat duty, and a year later their number had reached 144. By January 1, 1963, there were 296 launchers, by January 1, 1964, 330 (26 of them were mines), and by February 3, 1965, the program for the deployment of the north-western missile grouping was completed, which began to make up 351 launchers.[3]

Operation Anadyr[]

In 1962, elements of the 50th RA were sent to Cuba to participate in Operation Anadyr, among them:

  • with R-12 missiles (regiment commander Lieutenant Colonel I. S. Sidorov, deputy commander Lieutenant Colonel F. Z. Khachaturov);
  • 1018th RTB (Chief of RTB, Lieutenant Colonel I. V. Shishchenko, Chief Engineer Major E. M. Orlov);
  • The 1st Rocket Divizion of the 428th Rocket Regiment with R-14 missiles (division commander Lieutenant Colonel V. T. Polishchuk);
  • 1st Assembly Brigade (chief lieutenant colonel Bazanov from rtb colonel Balin).

The first missile regiment to arrive, in record time, on October 20, 1962, took up combat duty under Lieutenant Colonel I.S. Sidorov. And on October 28, all 36 launchers were prepared for launch.

Divisions[]

Võru was a deployment base for the 305th Regiment of the 23rd Rocket Division (from 1982 40th Division) of the 50th Army.[4]

The 29th Guards Rocket Division was part of the 50th Rocket Army from 1960 to 1986, and included the Plokštinė missile base, operated by the 79th Guards Missile Regiment.[5]

Composition 1988[]

In 1988 the 50th Rocket Army comprised:[6]

  • 7th Guards Rocket Division
  • (Gvardeysk, Kaliningrad Oblast),[7]
  • (Pinsk, Brest Oblast)(former 14th Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation Division, which became 83rd Guards Bryansko-Berlinskaya Aviation (Missile) Division, renumbered July 1, 1960). Disbanded 31 December 1990.
  • (Postavy, Vitebsk Oblast)
  • (Lida, Grodno Region, 1963 to 1990). 18th Guards Red Banner Stanislavsky-Budapest Rifle Corps was reorganised as Headquarters 49th Guards Rocket Division, presumably in 1960.
  • (Karmėlava, Lithuania) Activated 30.5.61 in Kaunas, Lithuania, from the 175th Fighter Aviation Division.[8] Amongst the division's regiments were:
    • 637th Rocket Regiment (Šiauliai, Lithuania), the complex R-12H until 1989, disbanded in 1989.
    • 324th Rocket Regiment (Ukmergė, Lithuania), a complex of R-12H until 1989, disbanded in 1989.
    • 42nd Rocket Regiment (Karmėlava, Lithuania), the complex R-12H until 1990 (it was the last regiment of the R-12 Dvina?)

Moved to Karmėlava on 30 June 1964, disbanded 8.1990.

The army was disbanded on 30 June 1990.

References[]

  1. ^ 50th Red Banner Missile Army.
  2. ^ Stavka Directive dated October 17, 1941.
  3. ^ © RVSN in Belarus.
  4. ^ See http://ruzhany.all-up.com/forum-f8/tema-t2.htm.
  5. ^ Michael Holm, 29th Guards Missile Division, accessed January 2013.
  6. ^ Michael Holm, 50th Missile Army
  7. ^ Previously 92 BON, then given the combined-arms designation of 22nd RVGK special-purpose brigade, then 72nd RVGK Engineer Brigade, and in 1960 the 24th Guards Division of the RVSN was formed on its basis. http://www.ww2.dk/new/rvsn/24gvmd.htm
  8. ^ Michael Holm
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