Turkestan Military District

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Turkestan Military District
Здание штаба ТуркВО.jpg
Staff building of the Turkestan Military District, Tashkent, 1977
Active
  • 1867–1920
  • 1945–1992
CountryRussia Russian Empire (1867–1917)
 Soviet Union (1945–1992)
TypeMilitary district
Headquarters100 Maxim Gorky Avenue, Tashkent
Engagements
DecorationsOrder of the Red Banner Order of the Red Banner
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Ivan Yefimovich Petrov
In 1989

The Turkestan Military District (Russian: Туркестанский военный округ (ТуркВО), Turkestansky voyenyi okrug (TurkVO)) was a military district of both the Imperial Russian Army and the Soviet Armed Forces, with its headquarters at Tashkent. The District was first created during the 1874 Russian military reform when by order of Minister Dmitry Milyutin the territory of Russia was divided into fourteen military districts. Its first commander was Konstantin Petrovich von Kaufmann, who was also Governor-General of Russian Turkestan at the time.

History[]

Turkmen Horse Half-Regiment[]

The Turkmen Horse was a cavalry force forming part of the Imperial Russian Army prior to the Revolution of 1917. Numbering two squadrons in peacetime, it was recruited from the Moslem Tekin tribesmen of the Turkestan Military District. Recruitment was on a voluntary basis with the men providing their own horses and equipment, and the Czarist government paying an allowance and issuing weapons. The Half-Regiment was derived from various Turkmen mounted militias first raised in the 1880s. Its uniform was modeled on tribal dress and included a distinctive striped kaftan and shaggy fleeced hats.[1]

With the outbreak of World War I the native Turcoman cavalry recruited from Moslem volunteers was increased to a full division in strength. Following the overthrow of the Czarist regime the Turkmen Horse formed the bodyguard of General Lavr Kornilov.

Central Asian Military District[]

From 1918 to 1926 the District was referred to as the Turkestan Front as its forces were conducting active operations against the Basmachi Revolt throughout practically all the District's territory.

In October 1919, Gleb Bokii was sent by Cheka head Felix Dzerzhinsky to Tashkent to head the operations of the Cheka in the Turkestan Front.[2]

By USSR Order No. 304 of June 4, 1926, the Turkestan Front was renamed as the Central Asian Military District (САВО), which included the territories of the Turkmen and Uzbek SSRs and the Kirghiz and Tajik ASSRs. In connection with changes of administrative-territorial division of republics and areas of Central Asia, as of August 1940 the district included the Kazakh, Kirghiz, Tajik, Turkmen, and Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republics and their respective autonomous areas.

Turkestan Military District[]

This designation was re-created on 9 July 1945, after the division of the Central Asian Military District into the Turkestan and Steppe Military Districts. The new Turkestan and Steppe districts were formed from the headquarters of the 1st and 4th Shock Armies respectively. In September–October 1945 it included the 1st Rifle Corps (Ashkabad), with the 306th, 344th, and 357th Rifle Divisions, and the (Stalinabad ((Dushanbe)) with the 201st, 360th, and 374th Rifle Divisions.[3] In July 1946 the Steppe Military District was dissolved and its responsibilities transferred back to the Turkestan Military District.

In January 1958 from the abolished South Ural Military District the Turkestan District gained the territories of Aktyubinsk, Guryev and the West-Kazakhstan areas of the Kazakh SSR. In 1957 5th Guards Motor Rifle Division, the former 5th Guards Mechanised Corps that had ended the war in Germany with 4th Tank Army, moved to Kushka in the Turkmen SSR.

Initially it covered most of Soviet Central Asia, on June 24, 1969 the district was split to recreate the Central Asian Military District (SAVO) following difficulties between the USSR and the People's Republic of China, covering the Tajik SSR, the Kyrgyz SSR, and the Kazakh SSR with headquarters at Alma-Ata. SAVO eventually was merged back into the TurkVO. 73rd Air Army was reestablished to provide air support for the Central Asian Military District. 32nd Army's Second Formation was established at Semipalatinsk in 1981 on the basis of the 1st Army Corps,[4] moved from Ashkabad, almost simultaneously with the creation of the Central Asian Military District as a result of the tensions with China. The 32nd Army initially combined a former Ukraine-based division, the Turkmenistan-based 155th Motor Rifle Division (was the 16th Mech Div, then 15th Tank Division) and 78th Tank Division (was the 78th Rifle Division, then 19th Мech Div. and 15th Tank Div), and the 203rd Motor Rifle Division (based in Karaganda from 1969).[5]

To replace the 1st Army Corps which had been moved up to Semipalatinsk, the was created in Ashkabad. The corps was created in 1982. It comprised two divisions - the 88th (created after the transfer of the 5th Guards MRD to the 40th Army) and the 58th Motor Rifle Division.

Thus the Turkestan Military District covered only the Uzbek SSR and the Turkmen SSR. In the 1980s the District became part of the Southern Strategic Direction alongside the North Caucasus and Transcaucasus Military Districts. General Igor Rodionov commanded the District in 1985-6. Within the District's territory and under its command was the 40th Army, in Afghanistan, the 36th Army Corps, and other forces, totalling one Soviet Airborne Troops airlanding (the 105th Guards Airborne Division at Fergana) and 8 motor rifle divisions. Aviation support for the district was provided by the 49th Air Army, and air defence by the 12th Army of the Air Defence Forces.

From June 1, 1989, the Central Asian Military District was dissolved and its territory again incorporated into the Turkestan Military District, as part of the unilateral reductions which Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev had announced at the United Nations on 7 December 1988.[6]

After the withdrawal from Afghanistan the 40th Army was disbanded. But in June 1991 it was reformed at Semipalatinsk from 32nd Army. Immediately prior to its dissolution, the 32nd Army consisted of the 78th Tank Division (Ayaguz); the 5202nd Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (VKhVT) Semipalatinsk, (prior to 1989 - the 71st Motor Rifle Division); the 5203rd VKhVT Ust-Kamenogorsk (prior to 1989, the 155th Motor Rifle Division); and the 5204th Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment at Karaganda (prior to 1989 - the 203rd Zaporozhye Khingan Motor Rifle Division).

The District was finally dissolved on June 30, 1992 with the demise of the Soviet Union, when its forces were distributed between 5 new Central Asian countries — Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. The most powerful grouping went to become the core of the Military of Kazakhstan which acquired all the units of the 40th (the former 32nd) Army and part of the 17th Army Corps, including six land force divisions, storage bases, the 14th and 35th Guards Air Assault Brigades, two rocket brigades, 2 artillery regiments and a large amount of equipment which had been withdrawn from over the Urals after the signing of the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe.

The Museum of history of The Turkestan Military District is on Gorki Avenue in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.[7]

Commanders[]

Russian Empire[]

  • Adjutant General, Engineer-General Konstantin Petrovich von Kaufmann; (07.1867 - 04.1882)
  • Lieutenant General Mikhail Chernyayev; (05.1882 - 02.1884)
  • Lieutenant General Nikolai Rozenbakh; (02.1884 - 10.1889)
  • Lieutenant General Baron Alexander Borisovich Vrevsky; (10.1889 - 03.1898)
  • General of Infantry Sergei Mikhailovich Dukhovsky (03.1898 - 01.1901)
  • General of the cavalry Nikolai Alexandrovich Ivanov; (01.1901 - 05.1904)
  • General of the cavalry Nikolai Nikolaevich Tevyashev; (06.1904 - 11.1905)
  • Lieutenant General Dejan Subotić (11.1905 - 08.1906)
  • General Evgeny Osipovich Matsievsky; (08.1906 - 12.1906)
  • General of Infantry Nikolai Ivanovich Grodekov; (12.1906 - 03.1908)
  • General of artillery Pavel Mishchenko; (05.1908 - 03.1909)
  • General of the cavalry Alexander Samsonov; (03.1909 - 07.1914)
  • General of Infantry Fyodor Vladimirovich Martson; (10.1914 - 07.1916)
  • infantry general Mikhail Romanovich Erofeev; (07.1916)
  • Adjutant General, General of Infantry Aleksey Kuropatkin (07.1916 - 02.1917)
  • Colonel Leonty Nikolaevich Cherkes (03.1917).

Soviet Union[]

  • Ivan Petrov - Army General: July 1945 - July 1952
  • Alexei Radzievsky - Lieutenant General: July 1952 - April 1953
  • Alexander Luchinsky - Colonel-General, from August 1955 Army General : April 1953 - October 1957
  • Ivan Fedyuninsky - Army General : December 1957-December 1965
  • Nikolai Lyashchenko - Colonel-General, from February 1968 Army General : December 1965 - June 1969
  • Stepan Belonozko - Colonel-General : January 1970 -December 1978
  • Yuri Maksimov - Colonel-General, December 1982 Army General : January 1979 -September 1984
  • Nikolai Popov - Colonel-General, Army general from February 1988 : September 1984 -January 1989
  • Ivan Fuzhenko - Colonel-General : January 1989 -December 1991
  • Georgi Kondratyev - Lieutenant General, Colonel-General from 1992 : December 1991 -June 1992.

Composition[]

In 1988-9, these forces included the:[8]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Cornish, Nik. The Russian Army 1914-18. p. 46. ISBN 1-84176-303-9.
  2. ^ Leggett, The Cheka, pg. 225.
  3. ^ Feskov et al 2013, 537.
  4. ^ Michael Holm. "32nd Combined Arms Army". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  5. ^ Michael Holm. "203rd Motorised Rifle Division". www.ww2.dk. Retrieved 2016-03-18.
  6. ^ Odom, 1998, p.182, citing Izvestia, 3 June 1989
  7. ^ Tel: 624-646, http://www.tashkent.org/uzland/museum.html, Aug 2007
  8. ^ Feskov et al 2004, p.63-64
  9. ^ Feskov et al 2013, pp. 549–550.

References[]

  • David Glantz, Companion to Colossus Reborn, University Press of Kansas, 2005
  • William E Odom, The Collapse of the Soviet Military, Yale, 1998
  • A.G. Lenskiy & M.M. Tsybin, The Soviet Ground Forces in the last years of the USSR, St Petersburg, B&K, 2001
  • Feskov, V.I.; Golikov, V.I.; Kalashnikov, K.A.; Slugin, S.A. (2013). Вооруженные силы СССР после Второй Мировой войны: от Красной Армии к Советской [The Armed Forces of the USSR after World War II: From the Red Army to the Soviet: Part 1 Land Forces] (in Russian). Tomsk: Scientific and Technical Literature Publishing. ISBN 9785895035306.

Further reading[]

  • Коллектив авторов. Краснознамённый Туркестанский / Под общ. ред. генерала армии Н. И. Попова. — 2-е изд., испр. и доп. — М.: Воениздат, 1988. — 414 с. — 35 тыс, экз. — ISBN 5-203-00036-0
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