- Military of Kyrgyzstan
-
Military of Kyrgyzstan
Military guard of honor near a monument in Bishkek's main squareFounded circa 1992 Service branches Land Forces, Air Forces, Border Guards, Interior Troops, Ministry of Emergency Situations Headquarters Bishkek Leadership Commander-in-Chief Roza Otunbayeva Minister of Defence Ismail Isakov[1] First Deputy Defence Minister and Chief of General Staff Colonel General Alik Mamyrkulov Manpower Military age 18 Conscription 18 months Available for
military service1,234,457 (2002 est.), age 15–49 Fit for
military service1,001,274 (2002 est.), age 15–49 Reaching military
age annually50,590 (2002 est.) Active personnel 15,500 (IISS 2007) Reserve personnel 10,000 Expenditures Budget 1.4 billion soms (IISS 2007) The armed forces of Kyrgyzstan, originally formed from former Soviet forces of the Turkestan Military District stationed in the newly independent state, includes the Army/Land Forces, the Air and Air Defence Forces, the Northern and Southern Groups of Forces, Interior Troops, Agency of National Security and Border Troops.
For much of the Soviet period, since 1967, the 8th Guards 'Panfilov' Motor Rifle Division was the main military force in the country, and the Division was only disbanded in January 2003.[2] In 1967 the Division had been moved to Bishkek from the Baltic Military District, where it had previously been based.
In terms of foreign presence, the U.S.-led Operation Enduring Freedom coalition use the Manas Air Base (Bishkek's international airport) while Russia has the 999th Air Base at Kant which was set up by Moscow to counter the American military presence in the Former Soviet state.
Contents
Army
The Army of Kyrgyzstan includes the 1st Motor Rifle Brigade (Mountain) at Osh, a brigade at Koy-Tash, in the Bishkek area, the 25th Special Forces Brigade, independent battalions at Karakol and Naryn, a brigade at Balykchi, and other units.
Two Groups of Forces, the Southern, and more recently the Northern, have been active during Kyrgyzstan's history. In 2004, the Northern Group of Forces was reported as consisting of the Balykchynsky brigade, the brigade deployed in suburb of Bishkek, separate battalions in Karakol and Naryn,and other army units.[3]
Equipment
Tanks
- T-72 - 150
AIFV / APC
Artillery
Towed
- 100mm field gun BS-3 - 18
- 100mm antitank gun T-12 - 18
- 122mm howitzer D-30 - 72
- 122mm howitzer M-30 - 35
- 152mm howitzer D-1 - 16
Self-Propelled
Towed Mortars
Multiple Rocket Launchers
- BM-21 "Grad" - 15
Light equipment
- Makarov PM pistol
- TT-33 pistol
- PP-2000 submachine gun (elite units only)
- AK-47 assault rifle
- AKM assault rifle
- AK-74 assault rifle
- AK-101 assault rifle (elite units only)
- AKS-74U carbine
- SKS carbine
- RPK light machine gun
- PKM general purpose machine gun
- NSV heavy machine gun
- DShK heavy machine gun
- Dragunov SVD sniper rifle
- RPG-7 rocket launcher
- GP-25 grenade launcher
- AGS-17 automatic grenade launcher
- SPG-9 recoilless rifle
Special Forces
Subordinated to the Ministry of Defense
- 25th Special Force Brigade Scorpion. This brigade was formed in 1994. It began as the 525th Special Company, and now Scorpion is the best brigade in the country. Soldiers of this brigade use modern weapons and equipment.
- "Ilbirs" brigade. Ilbirs means Tiger in the Kyrgyz language. It was formed in April 1999. At that period it was the 24th Special Forces Battalion.
National Guard Special Forces
- The National Guard of Kyrgyzstan has an Airborne Battalion, Panther.
- Bars (Барс) and Edelweiss units
Agency of National Security
- Alfa is an anti-terrorist unit. Almost all former Soviet countries' National Security Agencies have special teams called "Alfa". "Alfa" is a top-secret unit; there is no information available about it.
Ministry of the Interior
- "SOBR" (СОБР) is a special team, similar to the American SWAT teams. SOBR also exists in Russia and many other post-Soviet countries.
Air force
The Air and Air Defense Force includes a regiment of MiG-21s and L-39s, four Antonov transports, and a helicopter regiment (apx 23 Mi-8, 9 Mi-24). Estimates for the numbers of MiG-21s range from 48 to 60-odd. However, only a few L-39s and the helicopters are capable of flight. All Kyrgyz military aircraft are reportedly based at Kant, alongside the Russian 999th Air Base.
Because of expense and military doctrine, Kyrgyzstan has not developed its air capability; a large number of the MiG-21 interceptors that it borrowed from Russia were returned in 1993, although a number of former Soviet air bases remain available. In 1996 about 100 decommissioned MiG-21s remained in Kyrgyzstan, along with ninety-six L-39 trainers and sixty-five helicopters. The air defense forces have received aid from Russia, which has sent military advisory units to establish a defense system. The Russians also help patrol Kyrgyz airspace as part of the Joint CIS Air Defense System Presently Kyrgyzstan has twenty-six SA-2 and SA-3 surface-to-air missiles in its air defense arsenal.
Aircraft inventory
Aircraft Origin Type Versions In service[5] Notes Fighter Aircraft Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21 Fishbed Soviet Union fighter MiG-21 0 flyable[6] 100 acquired from ex-USSR. Transport and Liaison Aircraft Antonov An-12 Cub Soviet Union transport An-12 2 Antonov An-26 Curl Soviet Union transport An-26 2 Trainer Aircraft Aero L-39 Albatros Czechoslovakia light attack/trainer L-39 4 96 acquired from ex-USSR. Attack Helicopters Mil Mi-24 Hind Soviet Union attack Mi-24 9 31 in storage Transport and Utility Helicopters Mil Mi-8 Hip
Mil Mi-17 Hip-HSoviet Union transport/attack Mi-8
Mi-1723 2 in storage Air defense
- SA-2, SA-3 - 20
- SA-4 - 12
- SA-7
- ZSU-23-4SP - 24
- S-60 - 24
References and links
- ^ Military Technology, World Defence Almanac Vol. XXXII, Issue 1, 2008, p.248
- ^ http://www8.brinkster.com/vad777/sng/kirgizia.htm - accessed Aug 2007 and Jan 2008
- ^ Vad777, accessed July 2008, reporting http://www.sk.kg/2004/n19/7.html - 2004, a dead link
- ^ Jane's Armour and Artillery 1997-98 ISBN 0-7106-1542-6
- ^ Kyrgyzstan Air Force at globalsecurity.org
- ^ World Defence Almanac 2008, p.248
- CIA World Factbook, 2003 edition.
- IISS Military Balance, 2007 edition
Further reading
- O'Mallery, William D., and McDErmott, Roger N., 'Kyrgyzstan's Security Tightrope,' Journal of Slavic Military Studies, Vol. 16, No. 3, September 2003, 72-111
- Martha Brill Olcott, Library of Congress Country Study Kyrgyzstan, National Security, 1996
- Henry Plater-Zyberk, Kyrgyzstan - Focusing on Security, Conflict Studies Research Centre K41, November 2003
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