The history of the airfield in Kant goes back to 1941, when the Odessa Military Aviation School of Pilots was evacuated to Kyrgyzstan. The School had been formed by an order of the
People's Commissar of Defence of the USSR dated February 23, 1941. After
Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the Soviet Union beginning on June 22, 1941, the school stopped training sessions, and its cadets began to perform combat missions on
I-15 aircraft to cover Odessa from air strikes by the Nazi German
Luftwaffe. In July 1941, the aviation school moved to
Stalingrad, and then to the suburbs of the city
Frunze, where military pilots were trained for the front. During the war years, 1507 pilots were trained at the aviation school, 7 of which were awarded the title
Hero of the Soviet Union. Subsequently, in 1947, the school in Kyrgyzstan was renamed the
Frunze Military Aviation School for Pilots of the USSR Air Force. A training
aviation regiment was formed in 1951 or 1952. From 1956, the school also trained foreign pilots. Among its graduates were
Egyptian former president
Hosni Mubarak and the late
Syrian president
Hafez al-Assad, as well as
India's Air Chief Marshal
Dilbagh Singh, and South Yemen Brigadier Pilot Shakib Khobani. In 1959, the regiment was transferred to the renamed 5th Central Course for Preparation and Improvement of Aviation Personnel. In 1992, following the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, control of the air base was transferred to Kyrgyzstan. == Present-day Russian base ==