25th Army Corps (Soviet Union)

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The 25th Army Corps was an army corps of the Soviet Ground Forces active from 1957-1960 and 1980-89. In its first period of existence it was in the Odessa Military District, and in its second period of existence it garrisoned the remote Kamchatka region and Chukotka Autonomous Okrug of the Soviet Far East.

The predecessor 25th Rifle Corps appears to have begun the Second World War in transit to the Kiev Fortified Region[citation needed] as part of the 19th Army, formed just before the war began. It comprised the 127th Rifle Division, the 134th Rifle Division, and the 162nd Rifle Division. Bonn and Glantz say the 25th Rifle Corps was active from June-July 1941 (first formation) and then from February 1943 (second formation), with a total of six commanders.[1] On 25 December 1944 it formed part of the 69th Army, with the 4th, 41st, 77th Guards, and 415th Rifle Divisions.[2] 4th Rifle Division within the corps took part in the fighting for the Puławy bridge in Poland in January 1945, and was much weakened.

Feskov et al 2013 indicates that on 10 July 1945, the corps, with 274th, 328th, and 370th Rifle Divisions, was part of 69th Army, in the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany, which had been formed the day before. However, the corps along with the remainder of 69th Army was disbanded in the summer of 1945.[3]

82nd Rifle Corps existed until 13 June 1955, when it was renamed 25th Rifle Corps, which included 20th Rifle Division at Zaporizhia.[4] On 25 June 1957 the corps was renamed 25th Army Corps (AK). Its headquarters was in Nikolayev with the 28th Guards Motor Rifle Division, 34th Guards Motor Rifle Division, 93rd Motor Rifle Division (Zaporizhia, 5.57-March 1959)[5] and the 95th Motor Rifle Division in the late 1950s. Disbanded 6.60.

The corps was reformed in February 1980 in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky.

Order of Battle in the 1980s

Authoritative Russian forum sources (Soldat.ru) report that in 1984 the corps comprised 22 MRD (Петропавловск-Камчатский) , 23rd Independent Motor Rifle Brigade (Гудым или Анадырь), and 138th Independent Motor Rifle Regiment (Магадан). Questions remain over a putative 101st Motor Rifle Division.

At the end of the 1980s the composition of the 25th Army Corps of the Far East Military District included:

Formation Location Remarks
25th Army Corps Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
22nd Motor Rifle Division Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky 'Krasnodar-Harbin Twice Red Banner'; 59th Tank Regt., 211 мсп, 246 мсп, 304 мсп, 157th Artillery Regt, 1006th Anti-Aircraft Rocket Regiment
87th Motor Rifle Division Chapaevka, Microdistrict of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky Mobilisation division, 'shadow' of 22 MRD. Disbanded 1987[6] The Chapaevka vehicle/equipment stores were located at 53 03 19N, 158 49 35E. Chapaevka began as a part of Yelizovsky District but was merged into Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky before 2001.
99th Motor Rifle Division Anadyr, Chukotka Formed from 23rd Independent Motor Rifle Brigade 1984. Consisted of 1324th and 1327th MRRs. Division converted on 1 June 1999 to the 3840th Military Technology Storage Base until it was disbanded on 1 December 2002.

Other Army-level troops reported by Feskov et al. 2013, as of 1988, included the 240th (Chapaevka) and 280th отдельный Уссурийский Engineer-Sapper Bаttalions (Anadyr), the Staff of the 25th Army Corps; 11th Mixed Aviation Squadron.[7]

References

  1. Keith E. Bonn, Slaughterhouse, 2005, 341.
  2. http://samsv.narod.ru/Arm/a69/arm.html
  3. Feskov et al 2013, 47.
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Holm, 93rd Motor Rifle Division
  6. Soldat.ru, History of the 40th Independent Motor Rifle Brigade and Holm, 87th Motor Rifle Division, 2015.
  7. Feskov et al 2013, 597, Table 31.5.1.

Further reading

  • Виктор ЛИТОВКИН, ЗАМОРОЖЕННАЯ ДИВИЗИЯ ДЛЯ ВЧЕРАШНЕЙ ВОЙНЫ ("Frozen divisions to yesterday's war"), Известия, 25 февраля 1997 - regarding storage park of 1324 MRR / 99 MRD, formed 1984.
  • Лопата А.В. Записки начальника Генерального штаба Вооружённых сил Украины. - К.: Издательский Дом "Военная разведка", 2014, pp.247-248.