Belarus government websites say that the Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Belarus is supported by Central Command Support Elements and the General Staff of the Armed Forces. Combat Support Elements of the Armed Forces included Reconnaissance, Electronic Warfare, Signals, Engineer, NBC Defence, Navigation and Topography, and Maintenance organisations. Logistic Elements of the Armed Forces provided Material Support, Logistic Support, Medical Support, Veterinarian Support, and Military Construction. In 1995 the Military Academy of Belarus was set up on the basis of two military educational institutions – the Minsk Air Defence and Rocket School of the
Soviet Air Defence Forces and the Minsk Higher Military Command School. Its 10 departments train officers of 38 specialties for practically all arms of service. Also in 1995 it was given the status of a government institution of secondary special military education for young men.
Branches Ground Forces A
Library of Congress study of national ground forces said that in 1994 Belarus had ground forces of 52,500. They were organized into three corps headquarters, two motor divisions, one airborne division, the
51st Guards Artillery Division at
Osipovichi, three mechanized divisions, one airborne brigade, three surface-to-surface missile brigades, two antitank brigades, one special duties brigade, and seven anti-aircraft missile brigades. Equipment included 3,108 main battle tanks (seventy-nine T-54, 639 T-55, 291 T-62, 299 T-64, eight T-80, and 1,800 T-72), 419 medium-range launchers, sixty surface to-surface missiles, and 350 surface-to-air missiles. In 1993 the 7th Tank Army was reorganised as the 7th Army Corps. In 1994 the 7th Army Corps was redesignated as the 65th Army Corps, still located at
Borisov. By January 1, 1995, the composition of the Belarusian ground forces had changed. On 21 December 2001, a major reorganisation of the Ground Forces produced two operational-territorial commands, formed from two former corps headquarters. All Belarus ground forces were now grouped within these two commands, the
Western Operational Command at
Grodno, former from the previous 28th Army Corps, the former Soviet
28th Army, and the
North Western Operational Command, the former 65th Army Corps, at
Barysaw (Borisov). Since about 2001, territorial defence forces, which as of 2002 number around 150,000, have been forming, organised into battalions, companies, and platoons spread across Belarus. In 2007, the Land Forces consisted of 29,600 soldiers (
6th Guards Mechanised Brigade (
Grodno),
11th Guards Mechanized Brigade at
Slonim, the
120th Guards Mechanised Brigade (
Minsk), 38th and 103rd Mobile Brigades (organized similarly to Soviet airborne regiments, not all of them are equipped with
BMD-1)),
5th Spetsnaz Brigade (
Maryina Horka), five artillery brigades and four regiments, two MRL regiments, 15th, 29th, 115th, 120th and 302nd SAM Brigades, two SSM brigades, two brigades and one regiment of engineers, 8th independent NBC Brigade, two signals brigades, 40th independent NBC battalion. Army equipment includes 1800 main battle tanks (MBT) and 2600 AFV/APC. The weapons and equipment storage bases include the 50th (Brest), 19th,
34th &
37th (former tank divisions),
3rd, and 28th (
Baranovichi). Weapons storage bases that have been disbanded include the 29th, 30th,
193rd, and the storage base that used to be the 8th Guards Tank Division at
Marina Gorka. In 2012 it was reported that there were six mechanised brigades in the Ground Forces: three full-strength, the 6th (Grodno), 11th (Slonim), and
120th Guards Mechanised Brigade at
Minsk. The others were at reduced strength, where there was one battalion, the 19th (Zaslonova), 37th, and 50th (Baranovichi). By 2017, the number of mechanised brigades had been further reduced to four, with two at full strength and two at reduced strength. In 2007 the
Air Force and Air Defence Force of Belarus (AF & ADF) consisted of 18,170 personnel (two fighter/interceptor bases, four FGA/reconnaissance squadrons, one transport air base, training aircraft, and attack and support helicopters, SAM units). Air Force equipment included in 2004 260 fighter-ground attack/training aircraft and 80 attack helicopters. According to Belarus government websites, the Air Forces now have two commands, the Western Operational-Tactical Command and the North-Western Operational-Tactical Command. The 61st and 927th Air Bases have now merged into the 61st (fighter) Air Base at
Baranovichi, flying
MiG-29s, and the 206th Air Base (Ross) has merged into the 116th Guards Assault Air Base at
Lida, flying
Su-25s.
Independent forces Special Forces The
Special Forces of Belarus is the
airmobile and
strategic deterrence force. It has been a participant in conflicts such as the
United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon and the
Libyan Civil War (2011). During an address by President
Alexander Lukashenko on 18 February 2016, he announced the allocation of arms and to the territorial forces and the minimum and maximum amount of district troops ranging from one company and a battalion. Personnel of these units are recruited from residents of their respective administrative-territorial regions.
Specialized forces Special troops are designed to support the combat activities of the Ground Forces and solve their inherent tasks. They include formations and military units of intelligence, communications, engineering, radiation, chemical and biological defense, electronic warfare, navigation and topographic. • Electronic Warfare Troops • Signal Corps • Engineer troops • NBC Protection Troops • Topographic Navigation Service In (2021?) the 1393rd Artillery Warehouse for Ammunition celebrated its 80th anniversary. The combat path of the mobile warehouse, formed on June 25, 1941 in the city of Mozhaisk, passed through the Moscow and Kaliningrad regions, Lithuania and East Prussia. In May 1945, the 1393rd Field Front-Line Artillery Depot was transferred to the village of
Pribor. Today, the unit repairs, stores, and maintains rocket and artillery weapons. == Security forces ==