Neha Patil (Editor)

Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ukraine)

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Active
  
1992—present

Type
  
Artillery

Country
  
Ukraine

Anniversaries
  
November 3

Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ukraine)

Branch
  
Ukrainian Ground Forces

Current commander
  
Colonel Andriy Kolennikov

The Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ukrainian: Ракетні війська та артилерія, Raketni Viys’ka ta artyleriya) of the Ukrainian Ground Forces consist of units armed with tactical missiles, howitzers, cannons, mortars, jet-propelled and anti-tank artillery. They are tasked to destroy human resources, tanks, artillery, anti-tank weapons, aircraft, air defense and other important installations operations.

Contents

"On the eve of the professional holiday, the 19th rocket brigade, which is stationed in Khmelnytskyi city, conducted the main examination of the year - the final test for 2010-2011. All servicemen passed a final exams for professional, military and physical training. The history of the brigade began in 1943 at Stalingrad by establishing the 7th Artillery brigade of the Reserve of the Supreme High Command. During the Great Patriotic War 27 soldiers, sergeants and officers of the division were nominated for the award "Hero of the Soviet Union". After the declaration of Ukrainian independence and choice of the non-nuclear status, servicemen swore allegiance to people of Ukraine. In November 1997, the division gained the status of a brigade and until 2004 it was subordinated to the 1st Rocket Division of the Ukrainian Ground Forces. For the last 8 years, the brigade is directly subordinated to the command of the land forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, armed with the "Tochka" missile. [It] is the only rocket military unit in the Armed Forces of Ukraine."

Previously the 1st Rocket Division was active at Khmelnytskyi, formed on the basis of the disbanding headquarters of the Soviet 43rd Rocket Army. It was seemingly formed in 1998. At least two brigades were part of the division, the 19th at Khmelnytskyi and the 107th at Kremenchug (107th Rocket Artillery Regiment, 6th Army Corps (Ukraine)). The division was disbanded in 2004. (Vad777)

The 11th Artillery Brigade was disbanded in December 2013. The 44th Artillery Brigade was created from scratch at Ternopil in September 2014. The 43rd Artillery Brigade was formed in February 2015 in Divychky, a village in Kyiv Oblast. The 27th Reactive Artillery Regiment was upgraded to a brigade on 13 March 2015. The 40th Artillery Brigade was formed at Pervomaisk in August 2015.

Current structure

  • 19th Rocket Brigade - Khmelnytskyi
  • 26th Artillery Brigade - Berdychiv
  • 27th Artillery Brigade (former 27th Reactive Artillery Regiment) - Sumy
  • 40th Artillery Brigade - Pervomaisk
  • 43rd Artillery Brigade - Divychky, Kyiv Oblast
  • 44th Artillery Brigade - Ternopil
  • 45th Artillery Brigade
  • 55th Artillery Brigade - Zaporizhia
  • 15th Reactive Artillery Regiment - Drohobych
  • 107th Rocket Artillery Regiment - Kremenchuk
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 14th Mechanized Brigade (former 51st Mechanized Brigade)
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 24th Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 28th Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 30th Mechanized Brigade
  • 55th Brigade Artillery Group of 72nd Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 92nd Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 93rd Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 128th Mechanized Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 1st Armored Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 17th Armored Brigade
  • Brigade Artillery Group of 25th Airborne Brigade
  • Equipment

  • Tochka U missile complexes of operational-tactical and tactical missiles
  • Grad, Uragan, Smerch multi-launcher rocket systems
  • Gvozdika, Akatsiya, Giatsint, Pion, Msta-S self-propelled artillery
  • 122 mm D-30, 152 mm D-20, Msta-B, Giatsint-B towed howitzers
  • 9K114 Shturm, 9M113 Konkurs, 2A29/MT-12 Rapira anti-tank weapons
  • 82 mm and 120 mm mortars
  • References

    Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ukraine) Wikipedia