The Army was re-created on December 16, 1979, in the
Turkestan Military District on the directive of the
General Staff of the
Soviet Armed Forces.
General-Lieutenant Yuri Tukharinov, the first deputy commander of the Turkestan MD, was appointed as the army commander. To cover the boundary with unstable
Afghanistan, three motor rifle divisions (the
5th Guards,
108th and 68th) were deployed to the region. From December 3–16, 1979 two battalions of the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment and the special operation
GRU unit (
Muslim battalion) were deployed to
Bagram Airfield near Kabul as the situation in the Afghanistan had deteriorated. On December 8, 1979, a meeting between
Brezhnev,
Andropov,
Suslov, and
Gromyko took place to discuss the situation in
Afghanistan. In a couple of days, the Minister of Defence Marshal
Dmitriy Ustinov communicated to the Chief of the General Staff
Nikolai Ogarkov that the Politburo had adopted a decision on the temporary introduction of troops in the country and ordered to prepare somewhere around 75,000-80,000 concentration of force. Ustinov issued an oral order "No. 312/12/00133" on creation of a new general purpose army in the Turkestan MD. Only on December 12, 1979, the Politburo has officially adopted the decision on the introduction of the Soviet Army in Afghanistan. Next day an operative group of the Ministry of Defense was formed led by the deputy
Chief of the General Staff General
Sergei Akhromeyev, later replaced by the Marshal of the Soviet Union
Sergei Sokolov. On December 14 at 22:00 the operative group arrived to
Termez,
Tajik SSR, the same day the special KGB group "Grom" arrived to
Kabul to reinforce another group "Zenit-2". The field headquarters of the army was deployed in the Turkestan MD, while its aviation support by the 34th Mixed Aviation Corps in the Turkestan MD. On December 24, 1979 Minister of Defense Ustinov officially announced about the adopted decision to invade Afghanistan and signed the directive #312/12/001. Next day there were deployed around 100 different units. Out of the reserves were drafted additional 50,000 people from the republics of
Soviet Central Asia and the
Kazakh SSR, some 8,000 units of automobiles were transferred out of the public sector.
Units •
5th Guards Motor Rifle Zimovniki Division in
Kushka • 101st Motor Rifle Regiment • 12th Guard Motor Rifle Regiment (introduced in March 1985) • 371st Guards Motor Rifle Berlin Regiment • 373rd Guards Motor Rifle Regiment (transformed into 70th Separate Guard Motor Rifle Brigade in March 1980) • 24th Guards Tank Paris Regiment (introduced in October 1986) • 1060th Artillery Regiment • 1008th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Regiment (transformed into 1122nd Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment in February 1980) • 1122nd Anti-Aircraft Rocket Sevastopol Regiment (introduced in October 1986) •
108th Motor Rifle Nevel Division in
Termez • 177th Motor Rifle Dvina Regiment • 180th Motor Rifle Regiment • 181st Motor Rifle Regiment • 186th Motor Rifle Vyborg Regiment (in March 1980 transformed into 66th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade) • 285th Tank Uman-Warsaw Regiment (transferred from 201st Motor Rifle Gatchina Division, in March 1984 transformed into 682nd Motor Rifle Regiment) • 682nd Motor Rifle Uman-Warsaw Regiment • 1074th Lvov Artillery Regiment • 1049th Flak Artillery Regiment (introduced in November 1981) • 1415th Flak Missile Regiment (dropped in October 1986) • 353rd Gun Artillery Brigade • 2nd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade • 56th Guards Air Assault Brigade • 103rd Communications Regiment • 28th Rocket Artillery Regiment • 58th Motor Rifle Division (reserve) •
103rd Guards Airborne Division • 317th Airborne Regiment • 350th Airborne Regiment • 357th Airborne Regiment • 1179th Artillery Regiment •
345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment Turkestan MD Contingent •
860th Motor-Rifle Regiment • 186th Motor-Rifle Regiment (former 108th Motor-Rifle Division) • 68th Motor-Rifle Division (reserve) •
201st Motor Rifle Division (reserve)
Air Forces Eleven fighter aviation regiments (
IAP), seven fighter-bomber aviation regiments (
IBAP), a separate reconnaissance aviation regiment, a separate reconnaissance and tactical aviation squadron (
ortae), several assault aviation regiments, a separate assault aviation squadron (
oshae), a separate mixed aviation regiment (
osap), 4 separate helicopter aviation regiments (
OVAP), 6 separate helicopter aviation squadrons (
OVAE) rotated through supporting Soviet forces in Afghanistan. Among those units were: • 136th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment (
Sukhoi Su-17) deployed to
Kandahar 1982-83, and 1986-87. Otherwise located at
Chirchik,
Turkestan Military District. • 217th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment • 115th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment • 181st Helicopter Regiment • 218th Helicopter Regiment • 302nd Helicopter Squadron of the 5th Guard Motor-Rifle Division The army entered Afghanistan (as part of the beginning of the
Soviet–Afghan War) in December 1979 without the last division, but had the
201st Motor Rifle Division added to its composition during January 1980. Also with the force that entered Afghanistan were the 860th Motor Rifle Regiment, and the
56th Guards Air Assault Brigade. Later on the 201st and 58th Motor Rifle Divisions also entered the country, along with other smaller units. The Limited Contingent of Soviet Troops in Afghanistan was formed on the basis of the Army Headquarters. The Limited Contingent also included the 34th Aviation Corps (Russian: 34-го смешанного авиакорпуса), special troops of combat support, special troops of logistics support, including the 159th Road Construction Brigade which became the 58th Automotive Brigade, the 276th Pipeline Brigade of the
Pipeline Troops, and the 278th Road Commandant Brigade. The
Road Troops first deployed a separate road commandant battalion (army) and then from 1983 the
278th Separate Road Commandant Brigade (278 odkbr) at
Chaugani in
Baghlan Province, carried out the operational maintenance of the army's highway from the Soviet-Afghan border at
Hairatan to
Kabul to
Pul-e-Charkhi. There was also a large directorate of engineering for construction tasks, special forces of the KGB, a communications battalion of the KGB, elements of the
KGB Border Troops, including six border detachments and three aviation regiments, a river patrol, and special purpose detachments of the
Ministry of Internal Affairs. There was a large ammunition depot at
Puli Khumri, the 3704th Artillery Warehouse (3704 артиллерийский склад вооружения и боеприпасов,
Military Unit Number в/ч 77824), which blew up spectacularly in 1988. From August 8-10, 1988, there were fires and explosions in the depot, located in the Kelgai Valley near the town. The detonation of the explosives storage facility, according to eyewitnesses, resembled a nuclear one with the appearance of a characteristic nuclear "
mushroom cloud". Eight soldiers and one civilian cook may have been killed, with others wounded. Western sources reported that the Soviet
Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Soviet Union) denied there had been any casualties. Preparations for Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan (
:ru:вывод советских войск из Афганистана) were underway by 1988. But due to attempts by the Najibullah Afghan government to retain at least part of the 40th Army in Afghanistan, little withdrawals were made from September to December 1988. The army's units continued to concentrate in the two largest garrisons (Kabul and Shindand), which were supposed to leave last, and along the highways along which it was supposed to withdraw troops (in the west, Shindand - Kushka, in the east, Kabul - Termez). After long negotiations between the Afghan and Soviet leaders, the requests to retain troops were rejected and on January 27, 1989, the withdrawal resumed. The
108th Motor Rifle Division served as the rearguard. The last Soviet units left Afghanistan in February 1989. Army commander
Boris Gromov was the last Soviet soldier to cross back into the Soviet Union at
Termez on 15 February 1989, covered by the reconnaissance battalion of the 201st Motor Rifle Division. After the withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, 40th Army was reduced to 59th Army Corps. All veterans that participated in the Afghanistan campaign were known as the Warriors-Internationalists (воинов-интернационалистов).
Commanders of the 40th Army • General-Lieutenant Yuri Tukharinov (Тухаринов Юрий Владимирович) 5.1979 – 23.9.1980 • General Lieutenant Boris Tkach (Ткач Борис Иванович) 23.9.1980 – 7.5.1982 • General-Lieutenant Viktor Ermakov (Ермаков Виктор Федорович) 7.5.1982 – 4.11.1983 • General-Lieutenant Leonid Generalov (Генерал-лейтенант Генералов Леонид Евстафьевич) 4.11.1983 – 19.4.1985 • General-Lieutenant
Igor Rodionov 19.4.1985 – 30.4.1986 • General-Lieutenant
Viktor Dubynin 30.4.1986 – 1.6.1987 • General-Lieutenant
Boris Gromov 1.6.1987 – 15.2.1989 == Third formation and transfer to Kazakhstan ==