The 98th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade was expanded into the 86th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Division on 22 August 1956, stationed at
Constanța. The
Special Mechanized Army became the 1st Separate Combined Arms Army in 1957, and in July 1958 withdrew from Romania to the
Kiev Military District. When air defense units were reorganized on 30 July 1960 due to the replacement of anti-aircraft guns by
surface-to-air missiles, the division was reorganized as the 108th Anti-Aircraft Rocket Brigade of the 1st Separate Army, a unit of the Air Defense of the Ground Forces. In July 1958, the army was moved from its headquarters in
Budapest to
Chernigov and renamed the 1st Combined Arms Army. The 108th AA Rocket Brigade was based at
Zolotonosha as the air defense brigade of the army for the rest of the
Cold War In 1960 the army consisted of the
72nd,
81st and
115th Guards Motor Rifle Divisions, as well as the
35th Guards Tank Division. On 5 October 1967, it was renamed the 1st Guards Combined Arms Army at the request of now-
Minister of Defense Grechko, who had commanded the army's third formation during World War II. On 22 February 1968, it was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner. For a period the army HQ was actually an operations group of the District. By this time it had been awarded the
Order of Lenin. It included among its forces the
72nd Guards Motor Rifle Division, and the
25th Guards Motor Rifle Division. After the collapse of the Soviet Union the Army leadership pledged allegiance to Ukraine which was formed out of the Soviet
union republic, the
Ukrainian SSR. In 1992 it was reduced to the 1st Army Corps of the
Ukrainian Ground Forces, and then
Territorial Directorate "North".
Commanders The following officers commanded the 1st Guards Combined Arms Army and the previous 1st Combined Arms Army. • Lieutenant General
Vasily Arkhipov (formation in 23 May 1960) • Colonel General
Alexander Rodimtsev (23 May 1960 – 18 March 1966) • Lieutenant General
Grigory Batalov (18 March 1966 – 13 June 1969) • Lieutenant General
Sergey Molokoedov (13 June 1969 – 2 September 1970) • Lieutenant General
Grigory Gorodetsky (2 September 1970 – 1973) • ?? (1973–1976) • Lieutenant General
Alexander Elagin (1976 – September 1979) • Lieutenant General
Aleksey Fyodorov (September 1979 – May 1982) • Lieutenant General
Alexey Demidov (May 1982 – April 1985) • Major General
Leonty Kuznetsov (May 1985 – May 1988; promoted major general 16 February 1988) • Lieutenant General
Valentin Bobryshev (May 1988 – 1 August 1991) • Major General
Andrei Nikolayev (1 August 1991 – February 1992) ==Notes==