Russian Missile Troops and Artillery

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Flag of the Missile Troops and Artillery of the Russian Federation.

The Missile Troops and Artillery (MT & A) are a Combat Arm of the Russian Ground Forces, They are the primary means of providing fire on the enemy during combined-arms operations. They are designed to perform the following main tasks:[1]

  • achieving and keeping fire superiority over the enemy;
  • defeat of its means of nuclear attack, manpower, weapons, military and special equipment;
  • disruption of troops and weapons’ control systems, reconnaissance and electronic warfare;
  • destruction of long-term defence installations and other infrastructure;
  • disruption of operational and military logistics;
  • weakening and isolation of the second echelons and reserves of the enemy;
  • destruction of tanks and other armoured vehicles of the enemy breaking into the depth of defence;
  • cover of open flanks and junctions;
  • participation in destruction of aircraft and amphibious assault forces of the enemy;
  • remote mining of areas and facilities;
  • light support of night actions of troops;
  • smoke-screening, blinding of enemy targets;
  • distribution of propaganda materials, etc.

Organisationally the MT & A consist of missile, rocket, artillery brigades, including high-power mixed, artillery battalions, rocket artillery regiments, separate reconnaissance battalions, as well as artillery of combined-arms brigades and military bases.[1]

Further development and increase of combat capabilities of the MT & A of the GF are put into life by means of creating reconnaissance-fire units, including on interim basis, ensuring defeat of targets in real time, equipment of formations and units of the MT & A with high-precision weapons, increasing of firing range and power of the ammunition used, and automation of processes for preparation and firing.[1]

Amongst the oldest combat branches of the Ground Forces with a history dating to 1392, its service anniversary is marked on Missile Troops and Artillery Day, November 27, honoring the gunners and MRL operators who in 1942 fired the first shots of the artillery counterattacks during the long Battle of Stalingrad against the German Sixth Army.

Current organization[]

Formerly organized into separate divisions today the MT&A are organized into one division, the 18th Machine Gun Artillery Division in the Eastern Military District, a number of divisional artillery (self-propelled gun and towed gun) regiments of motor rifle and tank divisions and independent brigades and regiments of field artillery (including MRL and tactical missile brigades).

Divisional artillery regiments[]

  • 99th Pomerania Guards Self-Propelled Regiment under the 3rd MRD, Boguchar
  • 275th Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment under the 4th GTD, Naro-Fominsk
  • 147th Guards Self-Propelled Artillery Simferopol Regiment under the 2nd GMRD, Kalininets
  • 856th Guards Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment under the 144th GMRD, Yelnya
  • 381st Guards Warsaw Artillery Regiment under the 150th MRD, Novocherkassk
  • 400th Transylvania Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment under the 90th GTD, Chebarkul
  • 50th Guards Artillery Regiment (Training) under the 42nd GMRD, Khankala
  • 872nd Artillery Regiment (Training) under the 127th MRD, Sergeyevka
  • 46th Machinegun Artillery Regiment under the 18th MGAD, Lagunnoe
  • 49th Machinegun Artillery Regiment under the 18th MGAD, Goryachie Klyuchi

Independent brigades and regiments[]

  • 79th Guards Rocket Artillery Brigade
  • 45th Svir High-Power Artillery Brigade
  • 112th Rocket Brigade
  • 288th Artillery Brigade
  • 9th Guards Artillery Brigade
  • 268th Guards Artillery Brigade
  • 448th Rocket Brigade
  • 291st Artillery Brigade
  • 1st Guards Rocket Brigade
  • 464th Rocket Brigade
  • 227th Artillery Brigade (Mountain)
  • 439th Perekop Guards Rocket Artillery Brigade
  • 119th Rocket Brigade
  • 120th Guards Artillery Brigade
  • 950th Rocket Artillery Regiment
  • 385th Guards Artillery Brigade
  • 200th Artillery Brigade
  • 338th Guards Reactive Artillery Brigade
  • 305th Artillery Brigade
  • 103rd Rocket Brigade
  • 107th Rocket Brigade
  • 165th Artillery Brigade

Commanders[]

  • Colonel-General Nikolai Dimidyuk (1991-1997)[2]
  • Colonel-General  [ru] (1997-2001)[2]
  • Colonel-General (2001-2008)[2]
  • Lieutenant-General (2009-2010)[2]
  • Lieutenant-General (2010-present)[2]

References[]

 This article incorporates text by Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation available under the CC BY 4.0 license.

  1. ^ a b c "Missile Troops and Artillery". Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e Yurkevich, Yevgenny; Ripenko, Yury; Chernukhin, Viktor; Vapilin, E. (2019). История отечественной артиллерии в лицах: военачальники, возглавлявшие артиллерию (ракетные войска и артиллерию) в 1700-2019 гг (in Russian). Litres. ISBN 9785041692490.

External links[]

Media related to Missile Troops and Artillery at Wikimedia Commons

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