Order of Battle Each airborne corps was to have 8020 soldiers in total, armed with: • 4500 semi-automatic rifles (
SVT-40) • 1257 submachine guns (
PPD-40 and
PPSh-41) • 440 light machine guns (
DP) • 18 heavy machine guns • 111 50 mm mortars • 21 82 mm mortars • 39 45 mm anti-tank guns • 18 76,2 mm guns • 50 light tanks (
T-38 and
T-40) • 864 flamethrowers (
ROKS) • 241 automobiles
Units There were five airborne corps in total. Source soldat.ru forums. •
1st Airborne Corps: - became
37th Guards Rifle Division in August 1942 • Major General
Matvei Usenko (23 June – October 1941) • Colonel, 19 January 1942 Major General
Viktor Zholudev (15 December 1941 – July 1942) •
2nd Airborne Corps: - became
32nd Guards Rifle Division in May 1942. • Major General
Fedor Kharitonov (23 June – 9 September 1941) • Colonel
Iosif Gubarevich (May – October 1941) • Colonel, since 1942 Major General
Mikhail Tikhonov (September 1941 – May 1942). •
3rd Airborne Corps •
4th Airborne Corps •
5th Airborne Corps: (
:ru:5-й воздушно-десантный корпус (СССР)) - converted to
39th Guards Rifle Division • Major General
Ivan Bezugly (June – October 1941) • Colonel
Stepan Guryev (3 October 1941 – August 1942) From March to July 1942 5th Airborne Corps was in the
Reserve of the Supreme High Command (
Stavka reserve), training personnel, but at the beginning of August, due to the sharp deterioration of the situation in the southern sector of the Soviet-German front, the corps was immediately reformed as the 39th Guards Rifle Division (and joined the
Stalingrad Front). In the second half of 1942 under the Moscow the 5th Airborne Corps was formed again, but it did not see action, because in December 1942 it became the
7th Guards Airborne Division. This formation of the corps was commanded by Colonel
Fedor Afanasev (August – November 1942) and Major General of Shore Duty
Terenty Parafilo (25 November – December 1942). ==Airborne corps formed after 22 June 1941==