Market103rd Separate Guards Airborne Brigade
Company Profile

103rd Separate Guards Airborne Brigade

The 103rd Separate Guards Airborne Brigade is an airborne brigade of the Belarusian Special Forces. Its predecessor unit was the 103rd Guards Airborne Division, which was a division of the Soviet Airborne Troops. It was established in 1946 and disbanded in 1993, a year after its transfer to the Armed Forces of Belarus. The division was formed from the 103rd Guards Rifle Division, which fought as infantry during the final months of World War II in the Vienna Offensive following its formation in late 1944.

History
World War II The original 103rd Guards Rifle Division was formed from the previous 13th Guards Airborne Division on 18 December 1944 in Bykhaw. The 3rd Guards Airborne Brigade became the 317th Guards Rifle Regiment, the 5th Guards Airborne Brigade became the 322nd Guards Rifle Regiment and the remaining rifle units became the 324th Guards Rifle Regiment. The division became part of the 37th Guards Rifle Corps and in February were embarked on trains and moved to positions south of Budapest. Between 16 March and 1 April, the division advanced along Lake Balaton after participating in the repulse of Operation Spring Awakening. On 23 March, the division helped capture Veszprém, on 26 March Devecser, on 28 March Sárvár and finally Szombathely on 29 March. On 2 April, the division captured Gloggnitz and then fought in Vienna. After the capture of Vienna in the Vienna Offensive, the division advanced westward, pursuing retreating German units. The division was assigned to rest and resupply in Baden bei Wien on 28 April. The division was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and the Order of Kutuzov 2nd class on 1 May. On the same day, its 317th and 324th Guards Rifle Regiments were awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky, and its 322nd Guards Rifle Regiment the Order of Kutuzov 2nd class. In 1956 the 350th and 357th Airborne Regiments joined the division from the disbanded 114th Guards Airborne Division. That same year (in June), the division was transferred to Vitebsk, still within the Belorussian Military District. It lost most of its support units, including the artillery regiment, but apparently the 20th Separate Equipment Maintenance and Recovery Battalion was retained. The division guarded the Soviet–Iranian border. In 1993, the Headquarters 103rd Guards Airborne Division was established as the headquarters Mobile Forces of the Republic of Belarus. The 317th Guards Airborne Regiment was upgraded to the 317th Separate Mobile Brigade on 1 September 1995. The brigade has been part of the Special Forces of Belarus since 2007. Unlike the Ground Forces, the Special Forces brigades of Belarus are maintained at full readiness and designated as rapid reaction units. The 103rd is designated as the primary peacekeeping unit of Belarus. As of 2021, it includes three airborne battalions equipped with BTR-70 and BTR-80 armored personnel carriers, and an artillery battalion with towed 120 mm Nona-M1 mortars and 122 mm D-30 towed howitzers. In 2014, the brigade participated in the Collective Security Treaty Organization exercise "Indestructible Brotherhood 2014" in Kyrgyzstan. They also were in the training exercise "Cooperation 2014", which took place in Kazakhstan. On 2 August 2016, the brigade was renamed the 103rd Guards Airborne Brigade, restoring its original designation, along with the 38th Guards Air Assault Brigade. On 14 January 2020, the Minister of Defense Andrei Ravkov granted the brigade the Vitebsk honorific after its base; it thus became the 103rd Vitebsk Separate Guards Airborne Order of Lenin, Red Banner, Order of Kutuzov 2nd degree, Brigade named after the 60th anniversary of the USSR. In March 2020, personnel of the 42 Commando of the British Royal Marines worked with the Peacekeeping Company of the brigade at the Losvido Training Areas during the two-week Exercise Winter Partisan. In response to the 2022 Kazakh unrest, Belarus was the first of the Collective Security Treaty Organization states to support Russia in its intervention in Kazakhstan, the suppression by force of anti-government protestors. The peacekeeping company of 100 servicemen from the brigade was dispatched to Kazakhstan on 6 January and returned to Belarus on 15 January after guarding strategic locations in the country. == Composition ==
Composition
• Headquarters • 317th Guards Airborne Battalion • 350th Guards Airborne Battalion • 357th Guards Airborne Battalion • Mixed Artillery Division • Anti-aircraft missile and artillery battery • Communications battalion • Reconnaissance landing company • Engineer-sapper company • Security and service company • Repair Company • Logistics Company • Medical company • CBRN defense platoon • Peacekeeping company 1947 composition In 1947, the division was composed of the following units. • 317th Guards Airborne Regiment • 322nd Guards Airlanding Regiment • 15th Guards Artillery Regiment • 572nd Guards Self-Propelled Artillery Battalion • 105th Guards Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion • 116th Guards Antitank Artillery Battalion • 112th Guards Reconnaissance Company • 13th Guards Communications Company • 130th Guards Engineering Battalion • 274th Supply Truck Battalion • 6th Air-Landing Security Company • 175th Medical & Sanitary Company • Separate Training Battalion == Commanders ==
Commanders
• Colonel Sergei Stepanov (1944–1945) • Major general Fedor Bochkov (1945–1948) • Major general Mikhail Denisenko (1948–1949) • Colonel Viktor Georgeyvich Kozlov (1949–1952) • Major general Ilarion Popov (1952–1956) • Major general Mikhail Aglitski (1956–1959) • Colonel Dmitry Shkrudnev (1959–1961) • Colonel Ivan Kobzar (1961–1964) • Major general Mikhail Kashnikov (1964–1968) • Major general Alexander Yatsenko (1968–1974) • Major general Nikolay Arsenevich Makarov (1974–1976) • Major general Ivan Ryabchenko (1976–1981) • Major general Albert Slyusarev (1981–1984) • Major general Yurantin Yarygin (1984–1985) • Major general Pavel Grachev (1985–1988) • Major general Evgeny Bocharov (1988–1991) • Colonel Grigory Kalabukhov (1991–1992) == References ==
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