In the District in 1988–89 were the 128th cadre Air Assault Brigade at Stavropol, subordinated directly to
Army General and his High Command of the Southern Military Direction at
Baku; several divisions (14th Tank; 110th Guards Artillery; 173rd Guards District Training Centre); other smaller formations and units all under district control; plus the formations and units in the 12th, 34th, and 42nd Army Corps. Headquarters and staff of the district were at
Rostov-on-Don.
Ground Forces •
14th Tank Division (
Novocherkassk) •
110th Guards Artillery Perekop Order of Kutuzov Division (
Buinaksk) - established in 1966 by being upgraded from the 32nd Guards Howitzer Artillery Brigade of High Power. • 160th Motor Rifle Division of the cadre; in 1989, it was reorganized into the 4770th Base for Storage of Weapons and Equipment (VKhVT). (
Yeisk) • 259th Reserve Motor Rifle Division of the cadre (
Grozny) • 239th Cadre Rear Guard Division (
Volgograd) •
47th Guards Rocket Zaporozhye-Odessa Order of Lenin, Red Banner, Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov Brigade (
Maikop) •
1st Rocket Brigade (
Yeysk) • The 102nd Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade (the brigade arrived from the Siberian Military District in 1988.) (
Eagle-Emerald) • 179th Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade (Yeisk) • 201st Self-Propelled Artillery Brigade (
Slavyansk-on-Kuban) • 227th artillery brigade of high power (Slavyansk-on-Kuban) • 11th Separate Communications Brigade of the High Command (
Novocherkassk) • 51st Separate Communications Brigade GKVYUN (Rostov-on-Don) • 131st Radio Engineering Brigade OSNAZ (Rostov-on-Don) • 128th separate airborne assault brigade of the GKVYUN (cadre) (
Stavropol) • 121st Engineer Brigade (
Kamensk-Shakhtinsky) • 3rd Road Commandant Brigade (Rostov-on-Don) • 75th brigade of material support (Novocherkassk) • 21st Chemical Protection Brigade (g
Frolovo) • 71st Separate Electronic Warfare Regiment (
Aksay) • 102nd Separate Electronic Warfare Regiment (
Mozdok) • 106th Separate Communications Regiment (
Aksay) • 433rd separate engineer-sapper battalion (
Aksai) • 408th separate pontoon-bridge battalion (Kamensk-Shakhtinsky) • 545th Separate Road Engineering Battalion (
Aksai) • 121st Separate Electronic Warfare Battalion (Grozny) • 860th separate flamethrower battalion (st.
Bagaevskaya) • 72nd communications center (Rostov-on-Don) • 799th separate company of the GRU special forces (
Novocherkassk) ;Training and reserve formations of district subordination • 283rd Reserve Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade (Yeisk) • 254th Reserve Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade • 260th reserve anti-tank artillery brigade • 1619th separate training battalion of communications • 236th separate training tank repair battalion (
Millerovo) •
173rd Guards District Training Yevpatoriya Red Banner Training Center for Junior Specialists (Motorized Rifle Troops) (
Grozny) ;Repair enterprises, property storage bases and warehouses of district subordination • 50th car repair plant • 234th mobile repair plant • 682nd mobile repair plant • 186th as-B; • 744th AB-B (
Novocherkassk) • 2699th automobile warehouse • 125th BRT • 91st Communications Repair and Storage Base (
Kropotkin) • 2013 property storage base (
Maikop) • 92nd engineering warehouse (
Georgievsk) • 4770th base for storage of weapons and equipment (Yeisk) ;
12th Army Corps • Corps Headquarters, 411th separate security and support company (
Krasnodar) •
9th Motorized Rifle Division of the Krasnodar Red Banner Order of Kutuzov and the Red Star Division named after the Supreme Soviet of the Georgian SSR (
Maikop), Commander
Dorofeev, Alexander Anatolyevich • 113th Motor Rifle Division of the cadre (
Hot Key) • 880th Territorial Training Centre (
Novorossiysk) (156th Motor Rifle Division was reorganized into the 880th TUTC in 1987. In 1989, the 880th TTC was reorganized into the 5383rd VKhVT. • 99th Missile Brigade (Krasnodar) •
291st Artillery Order of the Suvorov Brigade (
Maikop), Commander Markaryan, Pyotr Oganezovich. • 214th Engineer-Sapper Proskurovskaya Red Banner, orders of Bohdan Khmelnitsky and the Red Star Brigade • material support team (Krasnodar) • 943rd Reactive Artillery Regiment (Maikop) • 1128th anti-tank artillery regiment (Maikop) • 162nd Engineer Regiment (Krasnodar) • 573rd Separate Reconnaissance Artillery Battalion (Maikop) • 64th separate communications battalion (Krasnodar) • 170th separate air defense radio engineering battalion (Krasnodar) • 444th Separate Electronic Warfare Battalion (Krasnodar) • 5157th repair and restoration base (
Slavyansk-on-Kuban) ;34th Army Corps • Corps Headquarters (
Volgograd), chief of staff of the corps
Myachin L. S. (1986–1988) • 82nd Motor Rifle Division (Volgograd) In 1990, the 82nd Motor Rifle Division was reorganized into the 6654th Equipment Storage Base. • 345th Training Road Construction Brigade (Uryupinsk) (1966:
197th Motor Rifle Division, Cadre; 1987: 881st Training Centre; 1988: training road construction brigade. Transferred to the
Federal Road Construction Administration (
:ru:Федеральное_дорожно-строительное_управление). •
81st Cannon Artillery Tallinn Red Banner, Order of the Suvorov Brigade (
Uryupinsk) • brigade of material support (Volgograd) • 264th Anti-Tank Artillery Regiment (Kalachev) • 623rd separate communications battalion (Volgograd) • 138th separate battalion of radiation and chemical reconnaissance (Volgograd) • 4th Separate Chemical Defense Battalion (
Frolovo) • separate engineer sapper battalion (Volgograd) • 539th Separate Electronic Warfare Battalion (Volgograd) • separate air defense radio engineering battalion (Volgograd) • separate repair and restoration battalion (Uryupinsk) • 1616th repair and restoration base (Volgograd) • 794th separate company of the GRU special forces ;
42nd Army Corps • Corps Headquarters, 922nd Separate Security and Support Company (
Vladikavkaz) •
19th Motorized Rifle Division Voronezh-Shumlinskaya Red Banner, Orders of Suvorov and the Red Banner of Labor Division (
Vladikavkaz) • 887th Territorial Training Centre (Prokhladny)(Reorganized from the 268th Motor Rifle Division (Cadre) in December 1987. In 1989 to the 5853rd Equipment Storage Base. • 485th Cannon Artillery Brigade (Vladikavkaz) • 551st separate communications battalion (Vladikavkaz) • 395th Separate Radio Relay and Cable Battalion (Vladikavkaz) • 1919th Separate Electronic Warfare Battalion (Vladikavkaz) • 1656th separate radio engineering battalion OsNaz (Vladikavkaz) • 1996th separate air defense radio engineering battalion (Vladikavkaz) • 508th separate battalion of radiation and chemical reconnaissance (Vladikavkaz) • separate engineer-sapper battalion (Vladikavkaz) • separate helicopter squadron (
Nalchik) • 1542nd repair and restoration base (
Prokhladny, Kabardino-Balkarian Republic) • 5853rd property storage base (Prokhladny) • 876th separate company of the GRU special forces (Vladikavkaz)
Post 1989 In 1989, the 14th Tank Division was transferred to the MVD, and retitled as the
100th Motorised Division for Special Use MVD. Later the 100th Division was reduced in status to the 50th Separate Brigade of Operational Designation MVD, now part of the
National Guard of Russia. The official website underlines the importance of the District as a border formation with the task of securing the southern boundary of the
Russian Federation. The first conflict the District became involved in during the post Soviet period was the attempted secession of South Ossetia from Georgia to join North Ossetia, which is a federal subject of the Russian Federation. Soldiers from the District became involved in protecting installation in
Vladikavkaz from irregular fighters in late 1992. In 1990, there were three army corps in the district. The
12th Army Corps at
Krasnodar, briefly to become the
49th Army, commanded the
9th Motor Rifle Division, the 42nd Army Corps at
Vladikavkaz commanded the
19th Motor Rifle Division, and the 34th Army Corps at
Volgograd commanded the 82nd Motor Rifle Division. Units directly under district command included the 110th Guards Artillery Division at
Buynaksk, the 173rd District Training Centre at Groznyy one SSM, one SAM, one artillery, and one pipeline brigade. There were also reserve (no equipment) units: an artillery brigade, an anti-tank brigade, and a SAM brigade. From late 1991 into 1992 the 173rd Guards District Training Centre suffered huge losses of equipment to Chechen militants as it was pillaged in the process of removal of weapons to the Russian Federation proper; it was formally disbanded on 4 January 1992. The former
8th Guards Army of Stalingrad fame, was withdrawn from East Germany to the site of its greatest victory, now named
Volgograd, in May 1993. While being transferred to the Caucasus, it became 8th Guards Army Corps. Arriving in Volgograd, it absorbed the previous 34th Army Corps, which from May 1992 – June 1993 had been designated the 48th Combined Arms Army. On December 1, 1993, the 136th Motor Rifle Brigade was established at
Buynaksk,
Dagestan. In 1996–97, the brigade was merged with the
204th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment "Uman-Berlin" as the
136th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade. The 204th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment was transferred to the North Caucasus at some point during the transformation of the
94th Guards Motor Rifle Division, returning from the GSFG, to become the
74th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade in the
Siberian Military District. The
58th Combined Arms Army's creation was announced on April 26, 1995; previously there had only been corps headquarters in the District. The new 58th Army was formed from the previous 42nd Army Corps headquarters. 8th Guards Army Corps was disbanded in 1998. In 2006 the District included the
42nd Guards Motor Rifle Division at
Khankala, in the environs of
Grozny in Chechniya, the
20th "Prikarpatsko-Berlinskaya" Guards Motor Rifle Division (which may have absorbed the
56th Guards Air Assault Brigade), the 33rd Independent Motor Rifle Regiment (
Volgograd), the
131st Motor Rifle Brigade (
Maykop – former 9 MRD), the
58th Army (headquarters at
Vladikavkaz) with the
19th Motor Rifle Division, 136th "Umansko-Berlinskaya" Independent Guards Motor Rifle Brigade, and other brigades and regiments, the
4th Air Army, the
Transcaucasus Group of Forces, the
Caspian Flotilla, and other formations and units. These other formations and units included the newly forming 33rd and 34th Independent Motor Rifle Brigades (Mountain). The District was the primary Russian military formation responsible for managing the Chechen conflict throughout the
First and
Second Chechen Wars. Insurgent activity slowly decreased in the early 2000s. Twenty-six soldiers won the star of the
Hero of the Russian Federation in the first war, and 43 in the second. In the first decade of the 21st century, the Armed Forces did not have the primary role in directing the anti-terrorist effort in the North Caucasus region. The Regional Operational Headquarters (ROSh), chaired by the Deputy Director FSB RF (Head of the department for protection of the constitutional structure and the campaign against terrorism) directed and conducted the counter-terrorist operation. Subordinated to it was the Combined Grouping of Troops (OGV) in the North Caucasus drawing on the Armed Forces, the Interior Troops, the FSB, and other agencies. During the
2008 South Ossetia War, troops from this district were involved in combat operations in South Ossetia and inside Georgian territory. The
Southern Military District was formed on October 22, 2010, and the North Caucasus Military District was disbanded.
Lieutenant General Alexander Galkin took command of the Southern Military District. ==Commanders (1918–2010)==