16th_Air_Army

16th Air Army

16th Air Army

Military unit


The 16th Red Banner Air Army (Russian: 16-я воздушная Краснознамённая армия) was the most important formation of the Special Purpose Command. Initially formed during the Second World War as a part of the Soviet Air Force, it was from its 2002 reformation to its 2009 disbandment the tactical air force component of the Moscow Military District. The 16th Air Army took part in the Battle of Berlin with 28 Aviation divisions and 7 Separate aviation regiments, and was located with the GSFG in East Germany until 1994. Withdrawn to Kubinka in that year, the army was disbanded and reformed as a corps in 1998. From 1949 to 1968, it was designated as the 24th Air Army.

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World War II

The army began forming on 8 August 1942 during the Battle of Stalingrad and originally included the 220th Fighter Aviation Division (IAD) and 228th Assault Aviation Division (ShAD) of the 8th Air Army, as well as two separate aviation regiments. Around the end of August and the beginning of September, the 283rd IAD and 291st Mixed Aviation Division (SAD) arrived from the Reserve of the Supreme High Command. On 4 September, the army had 152 serviceable aircraft, composed of Yakovlev Yak-1 and Lavochkin-Gorbunov-Gudkov LaGG-3 fighters, Ilyushin Il-2 Shturmovik ground attack aircraft, and Petlyakov Pe-2 dive bombers.

It took part in Operation Uranus, the counteroffensive that successfully cut off German troops in Stalingrad, as part of the Don Front during November and December 1942, under the command of Major General Sergei Rudenko.[1] On 19 November, when the offensive began, the army had a total of 249 serviceable aircraft.[2]

It was involved in the Battle of Kursk, and was part of the First Belorussian Front for the liberation of Belarus, the Lublin-Brest Offensive, and the assault on Berlin.

In Germany

On 29 May 1945, Stavka directive No. 11095 was issued (effective from 10.6.45), by which order the 1st Belorussian Front became the Group of Soviet Occupation Forces in Germany. The order also promulgated the new structure of 16th Air Army:[3]

  • 3rd Bomber Aviation Corps (Finow, East Germany)
  • 6th Bomber Aviation Corps (Szprotava, Poland)
  • 6th Assault Aviation Corps (Finsterwalde, East Germany)
    • 197th Assault Aviation Division (Strausberg, East Germany)
    • 198th Assault Aviation Division (East Germany)
    • 2nd Guards Assault Aviation Division (Wittstock/Rechlin, East Germany)
  • 9th Assault Aviation Corps (Finsterwalde, East Germany)
    • 3rd Guards Assault Aviation Division (Finsterwalde, East Germany)
    • 300th Assault Aviation Division (Cottbus, East Germany)
    • 11th Guards Assault Aviation Division (Jüterbog-Altes Lager, East Germany)
  • 1st Guards Fighter Aviation Corps (Perleberg, East Germany)
    • 3rd Guards Fighter Aviation Division (Ludwigslust, East Germany)
    • 4th Guards Fighter Aviation Division (Perleberg, East Germany)
    • 240th Fighter Aviation Division (Tutow, East Germany)
  • 3rd Fighter Aviation Corps (Lager Döberitz-Falkensee, East Germany)
    • 265th Fighter Aviation Division (Brandenburg, East Germany)
    • 278th Fighter Aviation Division (Elstal, East Germany)
    • 286th Fighter Aviation Division (Dallgow, East Germany)
  • 13th Fighter Aviation Corps (Halle/Leipzig area, Germany)
    • 193rd Fighter Aviation Division (Altenburg, East Germany)
    • 283rd Fighter Aviation Division (Köthen or Halle, East Germany)
    • 282nd Fighter Aviation Division (Grossenhain, East Germany)
  • 9th Guards Night-Bomber Aviation Division (Straussberg, East Germany)
  • 16th independent Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment (Schönwalde, East Germany)
  • 93rd independent Artillery Correction Regiment (Fürstenwalde, East Germany)
  • 98th independent Artillery Correction Regiment (Zerbst, East Germany)
  • 226th Separate mixed wing (Sperenberg Airfield, East Germany)
  • 62nd Guards Aviation Regiment GVF (Berlin-Adlershof, East Germany)
  • 919th independent Communications Aviation Squadron (East Germany)

For a long period after the war, the army was stationed with the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, headquartered at Zossen-Wünsdorf. In 1949, it was renamed the 24th Air Army, but was reformed as the 16th in 1968.

Withdrawal from Germany

Armies of the Western Group of Forces, 1991
Sperenberg airfield, one of the main bases of the air army

The 16th Air Army ceremonially said farewell to Germany at the Sperenburg Open Day on 27 May 1994.[4] On that day the Air Army Headquarters was moved to Kubinka in the Moscow Military District.[5] However the last aircraft from the 226th Separate Mixed Aviation Regiment did not leave Sperenberg Airfield until 6 September 1994. A visiting Il-76MD was the last aircraft movement three days later.

In 1989 it consisted of subordinate units and formations as follows:[6]

Headquarters, Zossen-Wünsdorf
See also

Airfields on German territory

The list below contains the main airfields of the 16th Air Army. The appropriate airfield call sign with the correlating nickname of the communications center is put in "quotation marks":

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In the Russian Federation

On 1 June 1998, the 16th Air Army was disbanded and its units incorporated into the Moscow District of VVS and PVO, in accordance with the amalgamation of the Air Forces and the Russian Air Defence Forces (former Soviet Air Defence Forces).[5] This was quickly reversed and on 25 November 1998, the 16th Mixed Aviation Corps was formed from the former units of the army. The corps was reformed as the 16th Air Army on 1 February 2002.[9]

Savasleyka is another airbase within the Moscow Military District's boundaries, but its exact operational status is currently unclear, as the formerly resident unit, the 54th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment, was not listed as operational in the most widely available recent survey of Russian air power, which was done by Air Forces Monthly in August and September 2007. The 54th Regiment had previously been withdrawn from Vainode Air Base in Latvia.[10] Russian internet sources now say it has been reorganised as the 3958th Air Base.[11]

The 16th Air Army was planned in 2007 to receive two regiments of the advanced Sukhoi Su-34 Fullback fighter-bombers.[citation needed]

As part of the extensive reorganization of the Russian Air Force in 2009, the army was withdrawn from the Special Purpose Command on 1 July, and its disbandment was completed by 1 December.[12] Most of its units were transferred to the 1st Air and Air Defence Forces Command.

2007 structure

16th Air ArmyKubinka[13]

Commanding generals

Commanding generals of the 16th Air Army were as follows:

  1. Pavel Stepanov, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1942)
  2. Sergey Rudenko, Colonel general of the aviation (1942-1947)
  3. Filipp Agaltsov, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1947-1949)
  4. Vyatseslv Zabaluev, Major general of the aviation (1949-1950)
  5. Konstantin Vershinin, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1950-1951)
  6. Ivan Podgorny, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1951-1954)
  7. Evgeny Loginov, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1954-1956)
  8. Geory Zimin, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1956-1960)
  9. Ivan Pstygo, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1960-1967)
  10. Aleksey Katrits, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1967-1973)
  11. Aleksandr Babaev, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1973-1978)
  12. Vladimir Korotskin, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1978-1983)
  13. Aleksey Goryaniov, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1983-1987)
  14. Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1987-1988)
  15. Anatoly Trasenko, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1988-1993)
  16. Boris Kazatsky, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1993-1998)
  17. Valery Retunsky, Lieutenant general of the aviation (1998-2007)
  18. Aleksandr Belevits, Major general of the aviation (2007-2009)

References

Citations

  1. "Uranus Order of Battle". Archived from the original on 2008-05-18. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
  2. Holm, Michael. "16th Red Banner Air Army". ww2.dk. Retrieved 23 April 2016.
  3. Chris Lofting & Kieron Pilbeam, 'Sperenburg,' Air Forces Monthly, February 1995, p. 41.
  4. Pyotr Butowski, Air Power Analysis: Russian Federation, Part 2, International Air Power Review, AIRTime Publishing, No.13, Summer 2004, ISBN 1-880588-84-6, p.87
  5. Советские войска в Германии, 1945-1994 : памятный альбом / Sowjetische Truppen in Deutschland : 1945-1994 : Gedenkalbum [Soviet Troops in Germany, 1945–1994: Memorial Album] (in Russian and German). Moscow: Molodaya Gvardiya. 1994. p. 22. ISBN 5-235-02221-1. Archived from the original on 2017-02-13. Retrieved 2017-02-12.
  6. See also Michael Holm, 105th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Division, accessed November 2011
  7. Separate units list is translated from http://www.genstab.ru/gsvg_16.htm Archived 2016-10-26 at the Wayback Machine, translation of base names from Orbat.com, Archive – Warsaw Pact in 1989 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  8. Bozhyeva, Olga (7 February 2002). Возвращение Знамени [Return of the Banner]. Krasnaya Zvezda (in Russian). Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  9. 'Twin Base Training,' Air Forces Monthly, December 2002
  10. Vad777. 16-я воздушная армия [16th Air Army]. ww8.brinkster.com (in Russian). Archived from the original on 10 January 2008. Retrieved 15 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. Завершается история Шестнадцатой воздушной армии [Story of the 16th Air Army Ends]. vesti.ru (in Russian). 8 August 2009. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  12. Butowski, Piotr (July 2007). "Force Report: Russian Air Force". Air Forces Monthly. p. 82.

Bibliography


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