In 1988, dispositions within the District were as follows: •
171st Guards District Training Centre,
Tbilisi - disbanded June 1992 •
7th Guards Army, HQ Yerevan,
Armenian SSR - disbanded 14 August 1992 •
15th Motor Rifle Division,
Kirovakan - disbanded June 1992. The equipment was partly handed over to Armenia - traditions, honors and awards were transferred to the
5209th Weapons and Equipment Storage Base (Nizhneudinsk,
Transbaikal Military District). • 127th Motor Rifle Division,
Leninakan (now
Russian 102nd Military Base) •
164th Motor Rifle Division, Yerevan - disbanded June 1992. • 7th Fortified Area, Leninakan • 9th Fortified Area, Echmiadzin •
4th Army, HQ Baku,
Azerbaijan SSR •
23rd Guards Motor Rifle Division,
Kirovabad •
366th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment,
Stepanakert • 368th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment, Kirovabad • 370th Guards Motor Rifle Regiment, Kirovabad • 131st Guards Tank Regiment, Kirovabad • 1071st Artillery Regiment, Kirovabad • 1057th Anti-Aircraft Missile Regiment, Kirovabad • 60th Motor Rifle Division,
Lenkoran •
75th Motor Rifle Division,
Nakhichevan •
295th Motor Rifle Division,
Baku - disbanded June 1992. •
31st Army Corps, HQ Kutaisi,
Georgian SSR •
10th Guards Motor Rifle Division,
Akhaltsikhe, Georgian SSR •
145th Motor Rifle Division,
Batumi,
Adjara •
147th Motor Rifle Division,
Akhalkalaki, Georgian SSR • 152nd Motor Rifle Division (mobilisation)
Kutaisi, Georgian SSR • 6th Fortified Area (Akhaltsikhe, Georgian SSR) • 8th Fortified Area (Batumi (Erge), Adzharskaya ASSR) •
21st Air Assault Brigade, Kutaisi, Georgian SSR • 325th Separate Helicopter Regiment – (Tsulukidze now
Khoni) Mi-8Т, Mi-6 • 793rd Separate Helicopter Regiment –
Telavi Mi-8Т, Mi-6 In addition, the
104th Guards Airborne Division of the
Soviet Airborne Forces was stationed at
Kirovabad, directly subordinated to VDV Headquarters. The division was withdrawn to Ulyanovsk and this process was in progress by spring 1993. The 75th Motor Rifle Division was reassigned to the
KGB Border Guards in January 1990. On September 23, 1991, on the basis of the directive of the General Staff of August 28, 1991 No. 314/3/042Sh, it was returned to the Ministry of Defence. In February 1992, Russian president
Boris Yeltsin sent General
Boris Gromov, First Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Ground Forces, and Admiral
Vladimir Chernavin, Commander-in-Chief of the Navy, to negotiate military issues with Azerbaijan. As a result, Azerbaijan received a helicopter squadron, the Baku Combined Arms Command School, and a large part of the
Rear Services (combat service support) units of the Fourth Army.
34th Air Army The
Soviet Air Forces' presence in the district consisted of the 34th Air Army. It was established in Tbilisi as the 11th Air Army in 1946, redesignated as the 34th Air Army in 1949, redesignated the Air Forces of the Transcaucasian Military District (VVS ZKVO) in 1980, and then given the name 34th Air Army again in 1988. It was made up of the
36th Bomber Aviation Division,
283rd Fighter Aviation Division and six independent aviation regiments, totaling twelve aviation regiments. The formation's
Military Unit Number was 21052. Army composition: • 80th Separate Assault Aviation Regiment –
Sitalchay Military Airbase,
Sukhoi Su-25 "Frogfoot" - seized by Azeri troops in August 1992 • 313th Separate Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment Berlin
Order of the Red Banner,
Order of Kutuzov'
Vaziani Su-17R (former 93rd Separate Observation and Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment) • 882nd Separate Reconnaissance Regiment –
Dollyar Su-24МR, MiG-25RB •
36th Bomber Aviation Division – Bolshoye Shiraki • 34th Bomber Aviation Regiment 'Tashkent Red Banner,
Order of Kutuzov'
Kirovabad Su-24 (Russian: 34 бап) • 143rd Bomber Aviation Regiment –
Kopitnari Su-24М • 168th Separate Guards Bomber Regiment – Shiraki Su-24M • 976th Bomber Aviation Regiment Insterburg Orders of Suvorov and Kutuzov
Kyurdamir Air Base Su-24, Su-17 (former 976th Fighter Aviation Regiment) • 283rd Kamyshin Red Banner Fighter Aviation Division (
Vaziani; 283 инад) (
Military Unit Number 06941) • 176th Fighter Aviation Regiment 'Berlin Red Banner' Miha Tskhakaya (
Tskhakaia) MiG-29 (в/ч 42080) • 841st Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment 'Baranovichsk
Red Banner, Order of Suvorov' Meria (Makharadze) Su-17 (30 гв. иап 1945) • 982nd Fighter Aviation Regiment –
Vaziani (Rustavi) MiG-23MLD (982 FAR 1945) (в/ч 40501) The
Soviet Air Defence Forces had the
19th Army of Air Defence Forces located in the District. ==Russian Transcaucasus Group of Forces== By Ukaz No. 260 of the
president of the Russian Federation of 19 March 1992 the Soviet Transcaucasian Military District and the
Caspian Flotilla were transferred to the jurisdiction of the
Russian Federation. On 26 September 1992 the district was disbanded. Another, earlier report said on 1 January 1993, the District became the Group of Russian Forces in the Transcaucasus (Russian Группа российских войск в Закавказье – ГРВЗ; GRVZ). After many of the divisions listed above had disbanded or become part of the former republics' armed forces, in the mid 1990s the GRVZ's dispositions were: • Headquarters,
Tbilisi •
12th Military Base,
Batumi,
Adjara AR,
Georgia • 62nd Military Base,
Akhalkalaki,
Samtskhe-Javakheti, Georgia. Former 147th Motor Rifle Division. In October 1999, the base had: – personnel – 1,964 servicemen – equipment – 41 MBT, 114 AIFV/APC (BMP and BTR); 46 various military vehicles; 61 artillery systems; and 2 pontoon-bridging vehicles. The base includes the 409th and 412th motor-rifle regiments; the 817th artillery regiment; the 889th communication battalion; and the 65th artillery detachment. •
102nd Military Base,
Gyumri, Armenia • 137th Military Base,
Vaziani Military Base, Georgia (former
171st Guards District Training Centre) In October 1999, it was reported to have the 405th Motor Rifle Regiment with 773 servicemen; 31 MBT; 70 AIFV/APC; 16 artillery systems; and one pontoon-bridging vehicle; the 566th communication battalion – 193 servicemen; 5 mobile radio stations P-145BM; and the 311th Separate Helicopter Squadron – 161 servicemen, 5 Mi-24 attack helicopters and 5 Mi-8MT transport helicopters. The 405th MRR had been absorbed from the
10th Guards Motor Rifle Division formerly headquartered in
Kutaisi. • 142nd Tank Repair Factory,
Tbilisi. In October 1999, it was reported to have 20 servicemen; and equipment including 28 MBT (T-72), 103 AIFV/APC and two self-propelled howitzers 2C3 "Acatsia". • Khelvachauri-based (Adjaria) military depot. In October 1999, it had 56 servicemen. 29 AIFV – 5 BMP-1 and 24 BMP-2 – were stored there. • Other smaller formations and units, including an independent helicopter squadron General Major Aleksander Studenikin, former deputy commander of the
Moscow Military District's 20th Army, commanded the Group in 2004 with General (Major?) Andrei Popov as his deputy. The Russian presence at Vaziani was withdrawn in the late 1990s and an agreement over the withdrawal of the 12th and 62nd Bases by 2007–08 was made in 2005. The Akhalkalaki 62nd base was officially transferred on schedule to Georgia on 27 June 2007. The
12th Military Base in Batumi was transferred earlier than scheduled; scheduled for February 2008, it was transferred on 13 November 2007. The 'Zvezda' command post (probably the former District war headquarters) in the town of
Mtskheta, just north of Tbilisi, was handed over by early September 2005. Due to the
espionage conflict between Russia and Georgia, the Transcaucasus Group of Forces headquarters in Tbilisi was closed down ahead of schedule. Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov said that 387 servicemen and 484 civilians would leave early. Lenta.ru referred to
Rian.ru. Even after the GRVZ was totally withdrawn, Russian troops continue to remain in peacekeeping roles in
Abkhazia and
South Ossetia, de jure parts of Georgia. There are about 1,600 men on the Abkhazian-Georgian boundary (serving alongside
UNOMIG) and a battalion in South Ossetia. According to the Russian authorities, the
Gudauta military base is also now used by the peacekeeping forces, but no international monitoring has ever been allowed there. == See also ==