2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade
The 2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade was a military parade that took place in Moscow's Red Square on 24 June 2020 to commemorate the 75th Diamond Jubilee of both the capitulation of Nazi Germany in the Second World War in 1945 and the historic Moscow Victory Parade of 1945.
For the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the resumption of military parades in 1995, this is the first parade to be cancelled on a holiday itself. Originally scheduled to take place on May 9, the Kremlin decided to postpone the parade to a later date amid the COVID-19 pandemic in the country. Close to 3.6 million Muscovites watched the live broadcast of the parade.
Events
Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered his seventeenth holiday address to the nation after the parade inspection presided over by Minister of Defense General of the Army Sergey Shoygu, accompanied by the parade commander General of the Army Oleg Salyukov, Commander-in-Chief of the Ground Forces, who will be in the parade for the seventh consecutive year. The ceremonies honoured the 1945 parade, with the bands playing the Jubilee Slow March "25 Years of the Red Army" at the outset of the inspection stage. Every year, for several days of Victory Day celebrations, a dress rehearsal of the Parade is held in the Armed Forces' Alabino Training Range in Moscow Oblast, which exactly repeats the holiday program itself. On this day, huge columns of military personnel, cadets and representatives of law enforcement agencies, legendary and modern military equipment take to the streets, and dozens of modern planes and helicopters appear in the skies above the federal capital. All actions of rehearsal participants are usually so coordinated that what is happening is called a mini-parade.For the first time, 20 samples of the latest armoured and aviation equipment, including the Kurganets-25 infantry fighting vehicles and the latest S-300V4 and S-350 air defense systems, took part in the parade which involved 1,250 bandsmen, an estimated 16,000 personnel in the ground column, 4,500 in the mobile column of around 250 plus vehicles, and 600 aircraft crew personnel of the 80-strong flypast.
Foreign troops
In addition to troops from the Russian Armed Forces, contingents from 20 foreign countries were also planned be on parade, groups from the Commonwealth of Independent States, as well as contingents from China, India, Serbia, France, the United Kingdom, United States, Poland and Mongolia, returning after a 5 to 10-year hiatus. Parade groups from Belarus, Egypt, Israel, and Iran were planned to be invited. Many of these plans however were scratched in light of the coronavirus pandemic. The original contingent from Kyrgyzstan was supposed to be provided by the Honour Guard of the National Guard of Kyrgyzstan. However, this was scrapped after it became known that one of its members had become infected with the coronavirus. A contingent from the General Staff represented the country in their place. Days before the parade, it was reported that multiple members of the Belarusian contingent had become ill with the coronavirus.The Turkmen contingent consisted of two color guards riding in two GAZ-M20 Pobeda cars brought in from the Turkmen capital. After their appearance, the contingent were quarintined at a hospital in Turkmenabad. Other Red Army banners that were carried by foreign contingents included the banners of the 89th Rifle Division, the 8th Guards Motor Rifle Division, the Zheleznyak Partisan Detachment, and three units who participated in the Minsk Offensive.
Invited attendees
Summary
The first official invitations came during the 2019 G20 Osaka summit, with invitations going to US President Donald Trump, French president Emmanuel Macron, German chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The invitation to President Trump was reiterated in a phone call with Putin later that year. However, Mr Trump would later decline the invitation in a diplomatic cable to Moscow.. In December 2019, an official invitation was sent to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey by the Russian Embassy in Ankara. President Putin has also at various times invited multiple heads of state from the CIS and the CSTO.In January 2020, former Polish President Lech Walesa expressed a willingness to come to Moscow for the parade if he received an invitation. In an interview with an Estonian news agency, Estonian Defence Minister Jüri Luik alluded to the parade by saying that he would not recommend that President Kersti Kaljulaid visit on such an occasion. United Nations General Assembly President Tijjani Muhammad-Bande said in an interview to Sputnik that he would be "honored" to attend the parade if invited. In early June 2020, despited having accepted the invitation earlier this year, Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe announced that he will skip the parade due to the 46th G7 summit. It is currently unknown who will represent Japan at the parade.
As of 14 June 2020, a total of 31 foreign heads of state and government, along with 4 multilateral leaders, had accepted the invitation to this year’s parade. However, following the rescheduling of the event to 24 June 2020, more than two-thirds of the leaders had withdrawn their invitation. The Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei Lavrov said that only 12 heads of state had confirmed their attendance to the rescheduled event.
Guest list
Original composition
Over 30 guests accepted the invitation to the 2020 parade. However, most of them had done this before the postponement. The following names indicate leaders either who did not reconfirm their attendance to the rescheduled 24 June parade or leaders who reconfirmed but decided to cancel their attendance the week prior to the parade:- Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan
- President of Austria Alexander Van der Bellen
- President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev
- President of Bulgaria Rumen Radev
- President of Croatia Zoran Milanović
- President of Cuba Miguel Diaz-Canel
- President of the Czech Republic Milos Zeman
- President of Egypt Abdel Fattah el-Sisi
- President of France Emmanuel Macron
- Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi
- Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz
- Prime Minister of Italy Giuseppe Conte
- Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe
- Grand Duke of Luxembourg Henri
- President of Mongolia Khaltmaagiin Battulga
- President of North Macedonia Stevo Pendarovski
- President of Palestine Mahmood Abbas
- President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan
- President of Turkmenistan Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow
- National Security Advisor of the United States Robert O'Brien
- President of Venezuela Nicolas Maduro
- President of Vietnam Nguyễn Phú Trọng
Final list
The following is a list of leaders who confirmed their attendance to the 24 June parade. The guest list includes 10 heads of state and government of different European and Asian nations, among other heads of international organizations.Many foreign leaders who could not attend the 24 June parade sent their defence and foreign ministers as well as ambassadors to the parade in their place:
- President of Abkhazia Aslan Bzhania
- Chief of Staff of the Algerian People's National Army Major General Saïd Chengriha
- Minister of Defence of Armenia David Tonoyan
- Minister of Defence of Azerbaijan Colonel General Zakir Hasanov
- President of Belarus Aleksander Lukashenko
- Serb Member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina Milorad Dodik
- Minister of National Defense of the People's Republic of China General Wei Fenghe
- Czech Ambassador Vitezslav Pivonka
- Ambassador of Egypt Ihab Nasr
- French Ambassador Pierre Levy
- German Ambassador Géza Andreas von Geyr
- Foreign Minister of Hungary Peter Szijjarto
- Minister of Defence of India Rajnath Singh
- Minister of Defence of Indonesia Lieutenant General Prabowo Subianto
- President of Kazakhstan Kassym-Jomart Tokayev
- President of Kyrgyzstan Sooronbay Jeenbekov
- President of Moldova Igor Dodon
- Commander-in-Chief of the Myanmar Armed Forces Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
- President of Serbia Aleksandar Vucic
- President of South Ossetia Anatoly Bibilov
- President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon
- Minister of Defence of Turkmenistan Major General Begench Gundogdyev
- Ambassador of USA John J. Sullivan
- President of Uzbekistan Shavkat Mirziyoyev
- Minister of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela Jorge Arreaza
- Secretary General of CIS Sergei Lebedev
- Secretary-General of the Collective Security Treaty Organization Stanislav Zas
- Chairman of the Eurasian Economic Commission Mikhail Myasnikovich
Preparation
Since November 2019, preparations for the parade have been well attended at the unit level. Individual and unit practices were held in the various unit locations. In March 2020 the days of full parade rehearsal and practice run throughs at the training center at Alabino, Moscow Oblast formally commenced the national preparations for the diamond jubilee celebrations, with the ground and mobile columns first to take their practice rounds in front of the national and international press representatives. The flypast segment of the parade began its preparations in early June just weeks from the main parade itself, first in Kubinka airfield and later on joining the Alabino run-through.Timeline for preparatory activities in Moscow
- 24 March towards 14 April – beginning of parade practice runs in Alabino, Moscow Oblast
- 8 June up to 14 June – General practice run-through in the Alabino training field, including flypast
- 17 and 18 June - evening parade practice run-throughs at Red Square
- 20 June – the general parade practice run at 10 AM MST, including flypast
Impact of the coronavirus pandemic
Postponement and replacement celebrations on 9 May
On 16 April 2020, President Vladimir Putin announced the postponement of the Victory Day parade, which is supposed to be held on 9 May. The day before, representatives of Russian veterans associations asked Putin to postpone the celebrations to a later date. The Immortal Regiment march, which is supposed to be held on the same day, has also been postponed. On April 28, President Putin announced that an air military parade would be held on 9 May in Moscow as well as in other cities of Russia. Two days later, an official in the Western Military District announced that an air show would also be held at the Kubinka air base. Many veterans had their very own "personal parades", being organized at their homes by soldiers of local military units.On the morning of 9 May, Putin inspected a small parade of the Kremlin Regiment of the Federal Protective Service at Cathedral Square of the Moscow Kremlin. He then went to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier to attend a wreath laying ceremony.
Full order of the 2020 parade
Bold indicates first appearance, italic indicates multiple appearances, Bold and italic indicate returning appearance, all indicated unless otherwise noted.- General of the Army Sergey Shoigu, Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation
- General of the Army Oleg Salyukov, Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Ground Forces
Military bands
- Massed Military Bands of the Armed Forces under the direction of the Senior Director of Music of the Military Band Service of the Armed Forces of Russia, Major General Timofey Mayakin
- Corps of Drums of the Moscow Military Music College - Led by the College Commandant, Colonel Alexander Gerasimov
Infantry column
- 154th Preobrazhensky Independent Commandant's Regiment Colour Guard
- 1st Honour Guard Company of the 1st Honor Guard Battalion, 154th PICR - Led by Colonel Sergey Beassanov
- Front standards and historical colours
- Historical units
- * Infantrymen
- * Aviators
- * Sailors
- * Combat engineers
- * Reconnaissance
- * Border Troops of the NKVD
- * Militiamen
- * Combined Don Cossacks Company - Led by Head of the All-Russian Cossack Society, Cossack General Nikolai Doluda
- * Company of servicemen in the 1945 Victory Parade - Led by Lieutenant General Andrey Toporov
- Foreign contingents on parade, in the order of their appearance
- * Azerbaijani peacekeeping forces - Led by Major Samik Namedov
- * Separate Regiment of Protection, Armed Forces of Armenia - Led by Colonel Ashot Hakobyan
- * Honor Guard of the Armed Forces of Belarus - Led by First Lieutenant Vladislav Shepelevich
- * Tri-Services Guard of Honour - Led by Colonel Anil Kumar from the Sikh Light Infantry
- * 36th Air Assault Brigade, Kazakh Airmobile Forces - Led by Lieutenant Colonel Ulan Nurgaziyev
- * Military Institute of the Armed Forces of the Kyrgyz Republic - Led by Colonel Bekkazy Tumenbaev
- * Beijing Capital Garrison Honor Guard Battalion, Central Theater Command, People's Liberation Army - Led by Major General Bao Zemin and Senior Colonel Han Jie
- * Honor Guard Company of the Moldovan National Army - Led by Captain Vitalie Josan
- * Mixed Unit of the Mongolian Armed Forces - Led by Colonel Batdelger Hasherdene
- * Serbian Guards Unit - Led by Lieutenant Colonel Dragan Jakovljević
- * Alumni Company of the Military Institute from the Honour Guard of the General Staff - Led by Colonel Faridun Mahmadalizoda
- * Color Guards of the Independent Honor Guard Battalion of the Ministry of Defence of Turkmenistan
- * Personnel of the Tashkent Military District of the Ministry of Defence of Uzbekistan - Led by Colonel Shokir Khairov
- Suvorov Military School
- Nakhimov Naval School
- Kronstadt Sea Cadet Corps
- Moscow Young Army Patriotic Cadets Unit
- Moscow National Pensions School Cadet Corps
- Combined Regiment of the Russian Ground Forces
- * Combined Arms Academy of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- * Military University of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation
- * Grand Duke Mikhailovskaya Military Artillery Academy
- * Military Academy of the Armed Forces Air Defense Branch "Marshal Alexander Vasilevsky"
- * Military Logistics Academy "General of the Army A. V. Khrulev"
- Combined regiment of female cadets of Armed Forces educational institutions
- * Female Cadets of the Ground Forces
- * Female Cadets of the Aerospace Forces
- Combined Regiment of the Russian Aerospace Forces
- * Zhukovsky - Gagarin Air Force Academy
- * Military Space Academy "Alexander Mozhaysky"
- Combined Regiment of the Russian Navy
- *Baltic Naval Institute "Admiral Feodor Ushakov"
- * Pacific Naval Institute "Admiral Sergei Makarov"
- * 336th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade of the Baltic Fleet
- Peter the Great Military Academy of the Strategic Missile Forces
- Combined regiment of the Russian Airborne Forces
- * Ryazan Guards Higher Airborne Command School "General of the Army Vasily Margelov"
- * 331st Guards Airborne Regiment, 98th Guards Airborne Division
- * 104th Air Assault Regiment, 76th Guards Air Assault Division
- Budyonny Military Academy of the Signal Corps
- 45th Guards Berlin Engineering Brigade
- 34th and 38th Independent Railway Brigades of the Russian Railway Troops
- NBC Protection Military Academy "Marshal Semyon Timoshenko"
- Civil Defense Academy of the Ministry of Emergency Situations
- Separate Operational Purpose Division of the National Guard Forces Command, Federal National Guard Troops Service of the Russian Federation "Felix Dzerzhinsky"
- Moscow Border Institute of the Border Service of the FSB of the Russian Federation "Moscow City Council"
- Combined regiment of the Greater Moscow units of the 1st Guards Tank Army, Western Military District
- * 2nd Guards Tamanskaya Motor Rifle Division "Mikhail Kalinin"
- * 4th Guards Kantermirskaya Tank Division "Yuri Andropov"
- Moscow Higher Military Command School "Supreme Soviet of Russia"''
Mobile column
- T-34/85 medium tank
- SU-100 tank destroyer
- GAZ-233114 "Tigr-M" infantry mobility vehicle
- GAZ-233114 "Tigr-M" with Arbalet-DM remote weapon station mounting a Kord heavy machine gun
- Kornet D/EM mobile ATGM system on the GAZ-233116 "Tigr-M" chassis
- Derivatsia-PVO Tracked, Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Artillery Vehicle
- BMP Kurganets-25 IFV
- T-15 Armata heavy IFV
- BMP-2 infantry fighting vehicle
- BMP-3 infantry fighting vehicle
- T-14 main battle tank
- BMPT Terminator armored support combat vehicle
- T-72B3M modernized main battle tank
- T-80BVM modernized main battle tank
- Т-90M modernized main battle tank
- BMD-4M air-droppable IFV
- BTR-MDM "Rakushka" APC
- 2S19 Msta-S tracked self-propelled howitzer
- BM-30 Smerch mobile MRL system
- 9K720 Iskander-M mobile tactical ballistic missile system
- TOS-1 Buratino multiple rocket launcher and thermobaric weapon mounted on the T-72 tank chassis
- Tor-M2U SAM complex on tracked chassis
- Buk-M2 mobile tracked SAM system
- Pantsir-S1 mobile SAM system on wheeled chassis
- S-350E Vityaz 50R6 mobile SAM system on wheeled chassis
- S-400 Triumf SAM launch system on 5P85SM2-01 transporter-erector launcher
- 3K60 Bal coastal defense mobile missile system on wheeled chassis
- Kamaz 53949 Typhoon-K light MRAP
- Ural Typhoon MRAP
- Patrul-A MRAP
- Ural-VV MRAP
- RS-24 Yars ICBM on 15U175M wheeled transporter-erector launcher
- VPK-7829 Bumerang wheeled APC
Air fly-past columnhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/russia-holds-victory-day-military-parade-and-for-a-day-forgets-the-grinding-pandemic/2020/06/24/609b2954-b549-11ea-9a1d-d3db1cbe07ce_story.html
- Mil Mi-26
- Mil Mi-8
- Mil Mi-35
- Kamov Ka-52
- Mil Mi-28N
- Beriev A-50
- Ilyushin Il-76
- Tupolev Tu-95MS
- Tupolev Tu-160
- Tupolev Tu-22M3
- Ilyushin Il-78
- Tupolev Tu-160
- Mikoyan MiG-29
- Sukhoi Su-24
- Mikoyan MiG-31K
- Sukhoi Su-57
- Sukhoi Su-35
- Sukhoi Su-34
- Sukhoi Su-30
- Sukhoi Su-30SM from flight demonstration squadron Russian Knights
- Mikoyan MiG-29 from flight demonstration squadron Swifts
- ''Sukhoi Su-25
Other parades
In Russia
As per tradition, 27 other Russian major cities are expected to hold commemorative parades on the same day as Moscow's, and joint civil-military parades were hosted by over 20 other towns and cities nationwide, with three cities moving their parades to other dates in Perm Krai, Belgorod Oblast and Oryol Oblast. The new dates for the parades there, respectively, are on 3 September, 12 July, and 5 August. The parade in Komi was set for 4 September on the occasion of the republic's 99th anniversary. The website Znak.com reported that at least 40 regions in Russia had cancelled their parades or held them without spectators due to the virus, where 30 major cities had cancelled their parade. Once more, marking a historic anniversary since the victory in Europe, for the second straight year the mobile column of the St. Petersburg parade on Palace Square, one of the biggest regional parades outside Moscow, displayed Soviet unit banners perpetuating the Second World War lineage and service of the formations that provided the vehicles. This happened for the first time in Yekaterinburg's 1905 Square during the mobile column segment. The Head of the Joint Operative Headquarters of the Norwegian Armed Forces Rune Jakobsen lead the delegation at the parade in Murmansk at the invitation of the Commander of the Northern Fleet.In early 2020, it was confirmed that foreign servicemen from the armed forces of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan will take part in the parade in Yekaterinburg, as well a 80-man contingent from Armenia in Rostov-on-Don, and a contingent from Norway in Murmansk, plans which were later scrapped.
In other countries
Celebrations of the holiday were held in almost all the former republics of the Soviet Union in celebration of this milestone anniversary, including in the following cities:- Belarus: 9 May
- Ukraine: 9 May
- Kazakhstan: 7 May
- Kyrgyzstan: 9 May
- Georgia: 9 May
- Armenia : 9 May
- Azerbaijan: 9 May
- Tajikistan: 9 May
- Turkmenistan: 9 May
- Moldova: 23 August
Belarus and Turkmenistan were the only nations in the Commonwealth of Independent States to hold diamond jubilee parades on 9 May. In Turkmenistan, the 75th anniversary of the victory in the war was celebrated with a military parade for the first time. being held at a square in front of the Halk Hakydasy Memorial Complex, with a special appearance by the banner of the 748th Infantry Regiment of the 206th Rifle Division of the 2nd Ukrainian Front, which was brought into the capital from Moscow. When speaking on the decision to hold the parade in Minsk, President Alexander Lukashenko described it as "an emotional, deeply ideological thing". There were reports that suggested university students were offered incentives to attend the parade.