- 106th Guards Airborne Division (Russia)
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=16th Guards Airborne Division (1944)
106th Guards Rifle Division (1944-45)
106th Guards Airborne Division (1945-present)
caption=106th Guards Airborne Division shoulder insignia
country=Soviet Union ,Russian Federation
allegiance=
type=Division
branch=Soviet Army ,Russian Army
dates=January 1944 – present
specialization=Airborne force
command_structure=
size=
current_commander=Andrey Serdyukov
garrison=Tula
ceremonial_chief=
nickname=Tula Division
motto=
colors=
march=
mascot=
battles=World War II Soviet-Afghan War First Chechen War Second Chechen War
notable_commanders=Alexander Lebed
anniversaries=The 106th Guards "Tula" Red Banner Twice Order of Kutuzov Airborne Division, more generally referred to as the Tula Division, is one of the four airborne divisions - along with the 7th "Cherkassk", 76th "Pskov" and 98th "Svirsk" Guards - that make up the bulk of theRussia nairborne forces , theVDV (Russian: Воздушно-десантные войска, "Vozdushno-desantnye voyska"). Based in the city ofTula , to the south ofMoscow , it is located within theMoscow Military District but does not fall within any of its command structures, as the VDV constitutes a separate branch ("Rod") of theRussian armed forces (roughly comparable, for example, to theUnited States Marine Corps ).As of 2005 , itscommanding officer isMajor-General Andrey Serdyukov.History 1944-1991
The Division was founded in January 1944 as the 16th Guards Airborne Division, and from then until the end of the
Second World War fought inHungary ,Austria andCzechoslovakia (including in Prague), mostly with 38th Guards Rifle Corps of 9th Guards Army. It became the 106th Guards Rifle Division in December 1944, as all the original VDV divisions andbrigades were being reconstituted as Guards Rifle formations. The Division's apparent honorifics are 'Red Banner, Order of Kutuzov', (Feskov et al 2004, p.74) though an early Western writer reported them as 'Dneipr-Transbaikal' at one point in its history. [Mark L. Urban, Soviet Land Power, 1985]As the attention of the
Soviet leadership began to shift towards their ability to project force overseas, the need for a rapidly deployable force to spearhead large-scale operations became apparent and the VDV was once again built up as such an air assault force. The Tula Division, from that point until the present day, was to be one of the most frequently-used elements of it. Two of itsregiments took part in theSoviet war in Afghanistan . Asnationalist unrest grew in the southern republics of theUSSR throughout the end of the 1980s, the division was deployed toBaku ,Azerbaijan , in 1988 and toFergana ,Uzbekistan , in 1990. Throughout this time the division was commanded by GeneralAlexander Lebed .In 1991, an attempted coup against the
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev took place inMoscow . As the coup faltered, and the plotters lost the initiative while support forBoris Yeltsin , the President of theRussian SFSR , grew, the plotters called in reinforcements from the Tula Division, in the form of abattalion from the 137th Parachute LandingRegiment . When they arrived, Lebed stated that he had orders to secure the Parliament building, where Yeltsin's supporters were barricaded. He did not, however, give the order for his men, equipped withBMD armoured vehicles, to launch an attack. This may have been because at that point in the coup, theTamanskaya Division was in the process of switching its own allegiance from the plotters to the parliamentarians, but whatever Lebed's rationale, the episode helped to boost his own public profile immensely. Following the failure of the coup and thecollapse of the Soviet Union , in 1992, he was appointed commander of the Russian 14th Army inMoldova .History since 1991
In 1994, the
Russian Army was ordered into the breakaway southern republic ofChechnya by Yeltsin, thenPresident of the Russian Federation , after the refusal of theseparatist government tosurrender to Moscow's authority, beginning theFirst Chechen War .Battalions of the Tula Division were attached to 'Group West' (the western element of the three-prongedinvasion of Chechnya). They took part, in December that year, in the first Battle of Grozny, helping to capture the city's centralrailway station , which had proved to be one of the most difficult and costly strategic points in Grozny for the Russians to capture.In March 1995, the battalions were transferred to the command of 'Group North' and continued fighting, notably around
Argun . In May, they withdrew from Chechnya. The division's losses in the first war are unclear: 36 of itssoldiers have been confirmedkilled in action , but the numbermissing in action is around 200.The
Second Chechen War began in 1999. With Moscow determined to avoid a repeat of the quagmire that the first war had become, the Russian force committed in 1999 was larger, better equipped and better organised. The Tula Division's contribution to that force was the 51st and 119th Parachute LandingRegiments . Its losses in this war were still considerable but less than in the first: 67 of its soldiers were reported either killed ormissing in action . For its actions in the second campaign, the Tula Division was awarded the MoD Pennant.In 2001, after the
September 11 terrorist attacks in theUnited States ,paratroopers from the division were sent toAfghanistan to evacuate the staff of the Russianembassy inKabul , so as to ensure their safety in the face of the American military campaign in support of the Northern Alliance's advance towards the city.On
26 April 2004 , the Tula Division celebrated its 60thanniversary .Subordinate units and fighting strength
Modern Russian airborne divisions are considerably smaller formations, in
manpower terms, than their American counterparts (the 82nd Airborne and 101st Air Assault); typically, they number around over 5,000 men. The Tula Division was until 2005 the exception to this rule, numbering over 7,000 men. The reason for this was that it included 3 Parachute LandingRegiment s, whereas the other 3VDV divisions had only two such regiments. In 2005, however, the 119th Parachute Landing Regiment was disbanded and the division was thus bought essentially into line with the other 3 divisions.As of 2006 , thesubordinate units of the division are as follows:*51st Parachute Landing Regiment, Tula
*137th Parachute Landing Regiment,Ryazan
*1182ndArtillery Regiment,Efremov
*107th Independent Air Defence Regiment, Donskoy
*322nd IndependentEngineer Battalion, Tula
*731st Independent Communications Battalion, Tula
*43rd Independent Repair Battalion, Tula
*110th IndependentTransport Squadron , TulaCommanding officers, 1943-2006
*Major-General Aleksandr Fyodorovich Kazankin (1943-1944)
*Major-General Ivan Nikolayevich Vindushev (1944-1946)
*Major-General Ivan Nikitich Konev (1946-1947)
*Major-General Afanasiy Romanovich Kopichko (1947-1949)
*Colonel Aleksandr Dimitriyevich Yepanshin (1949-1951)
*Major-General Aleksandr Akimovich Gerasimov (1951-1955)
*Major-General Aleksandr Andreyevich Koreshchenko (1955-1960)
*Major-General Magamet Tankayevich Tankayev (1960-1961)
*Colonel Konstantin Yakovlevich Kurochnik (1961-1964)
*Major-General Yuri Mikhailovich Potapov (1964-1969)
*Major-General Aleksandr Ivanovich Pitkov (1969-1972)
*Major-General Anatoly Mikhailovich Dobrovolsky (1972-1976)
*Major-General Yevgeny Nikolayevich Podkolzin (1976-1980)
*Major-General Gennady Vasilyevich Filatov (1980-1984)
*Major-General Fyodor Ivanovich Serdechny (1984-1988)
*Major-GeneralAleksandr Ivanovich Lebed (1988-1991)
*Major-General Aleksandr Petrovich Kolmakov (1991-1993; now overall commander of theVDV )
*Major-General Yevgeny Yuryevich Savilov 1993-2004)
*Major-General Andrey Nikolayevich Serdyukov (2004-present day)See also
*
Air assault
*Russian Armed Forces
*Russian Guards
*Soviet coup attempt of 1991
*Alexander Lebed Sources and references
* [http://warfare.ru/?lang=&catid=239&linkid=2241 Warfare.ru: Airborne Troops (VDV)]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,157765,00.html "Time": "Postmortem Anatomy of a Coup"]
* [http://www.cdi.org/russia/johnson/5395.html Johnson's Russia List 5395]
* [http://www.zavdv.com "For VDV" - Russian language website on the VDV]
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