37th Air Army
The 37th Air Army of the High Supreme Command was the strategic bomber force of the Russian Air Force from 1998 to 2009. It was equipped with Tupolev Tu-95MS and Tu-160 armed with nuclear cruise missiles, and the intermediate range Tu-22M3 bombers.
It was the successor to the Soviet Union's Long Range Aviation, which once had several Air Armies, including the 37th. The 37th Air Army was originally formed in 1949 by redesignating the 4th Air Army in the Northern Group of Forces in Poland. It was active there until 1968. It was reformed by a decree of 13 March 1980, along with the 24th, 30th, and 46th Air Armies, which together replaced the Long Range Aviation headquarters, which was disbanded. It appears the decree may have been put into effect and the headquarters actually reformed on 1 August 1980.
Strategic aviation is the sole Russian Air Force component which was actually increased in the 1990s rather than being cut, as was the case with military services. Following the break-up of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, only 22 Tu-95MS bombers remained on Russian territory; at that time the only Tu-160s were in test units or with the manufacturers. However, manufacture of the Tu-160 continued, and between 1992 and 1995, the Engels regiment received six Tu-160s before the production rate slowed considerably. More aircraft, 43 Tu-95MSes, and 8 Tu-160s were exchanged, or bought back from Kazakhstan and Ukraine. The Russian Air Force currently has 64 Tu-95MS and 16 Tu-160 bombers, and these are being upgraded by changing the navigation and fire-control suites and installing new weapons, including non-nuclear cruise missiles, Kh-55 and standoff missiles.
On September 10, 2008 two Tu-160 bombers made flight from a basing place to airdrome Libertador in Venezuela, using as airdrome of jumping up airdrome Olenegorsk in Murmansk area. Onboard were training rockets with which the sortie's task was fulfilled. It is the first case of use in the history of the Russian Federation by Long-Range Aviation aircraft of airdromes located in the territory of the foreign state. While in Venezuela the aircraft made training flights over neutral waters in the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean sea.
In 2009 the 37th Air Army of the Supreme Command was disbanded as part of a large scale reorganisation of the Air Force and has been reformed into the Long Range Aviation Command.
List of structure by year
2007
- 37th Air Army – Moscow
- *43rd Centre for Combat and Flight Personnel Training – Ryazan – operates the Tu-22M3, Tu-95MS, Tu-134UBL and An-26;
- *22nd Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation Division – HQ at Engels;
- **121st Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Engels – Tu-160 in service;
- **184th Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Engels – Tu-95MS;
- **52nd Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Shaykovka – Tu-22M3;
- **840th Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Soltsy – Tu-22M3;
- *326th Heavy Bomber Aviation Division – HQ at Ukrainka;
- **182nd Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Ukrainka – Tu-95MS;
- **79th Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Ukrainka – Tu-95MS;
- **200th Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Belaya – Tu-22M3, Tu-22MR;
- **444th Heavy Bomber Air Regiment – Vozdvizhenka – Tu-22M3;
- *203rd Independent Aviation Regiment of Tanker Aircraft – HQs at Ryazan – Il-78 and Il-78M in service. Originally 412 AP flying Pe-8s in World War II. See Petlyakov Pe-8#Wartime operational service;
- *181st Independent Air Squadron – Irkutsk – An-12 and An-30;
- *199th Air Base – Ulan-Ude;
- *3119th Air Base – Tambov;
- *Unknown Air Base – Tiksi;
2000
- Headquarters, Moscow
- ? independent Communications Regiment
- 43rd Center for combat training and retraining of crews with Tu-22M3, Tu-134UBL and An-26
- 203rd Guards Aviation Regiment of Tanker Aircraft with Il-78
- 6212th Aviation Technical Base for discarded aircraft with Tu-22
- 22nd Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation Division
- 326th Heavy Bomber Aviation Division
1991
- Headquarters, Moscow
- 364 Separate Mixed Aviation Squadron
- 73rd Heavy Bomber Air Division at Ukrainka, Amur Oblast with:
- *40th TBAP with Tu-95K and Tu-95K-22
- *79th TBAP with Tu-95K and Tu-95K-22
- 79th Heavy Bomber Aviation Division at Dolon, Semipalatinsk area with:
- *1023rd TBAP with Tu-95MS
- *1026th TBAP with Tu-95MS
- 106th Heavy Bomber Aviation Division at Uzin, Kiev Oblast with:
- *409th APSZ with Il-78 tankers
- *1006th TBAP with 21 Tu-95MS-16
- 201st Heavy Bomber Aviation Division at Engels-2, Saratov Oblast
- *182nd Guards Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment
- *184th Guards 'Poltava-Berlin' Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment
- *1230th Air Refuelling Regiment
1980
- ? independent Communications Regiment
- 364th independent Mixed Aviation Squadron with Mi-8 and An-24/26
- 73rd Heavy Bomber Aviation Division
- 79th Heavy Bomber Aviation Division
- 201st Heavy Bomber Aviation Division
1960 – 1992 in Poland
37th Air Army
- 19th independent Communications Regiment and Automated Control Regiment – October 1992 withdrawn from Legnica, Poland
- 245th independent Mixed Aviation Squadron with Mi-4, An-12, An-26, and Mi-8 – October 1992 withdrawn from Legnica, Poland
- 164th independent Guards Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment with Il-28R, MiG-25 and Su-24 – October 1992 withdrawn from Legnica, Poland
- 330th independent Reconnaissance Regiment with MiG-15R – activated the 215th independent Aviation Squadron for Tactical Reconnaissance in 1960 and was disbanded
- 215th independent Aviation Squadron for Tactical Reconnaissance – activated from 330th independent Reconnaissance Regiment in 1960 with MiG-21R, Yak-28PP, MiG-25BM, MiG-25RU, 1992 taken over by Belorussia, disbanded January 1993
- 149th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Division – July 1992 withdrawn from Poland
- * 3rd Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with Su-7B and MiG-17, MiG-27, Su-24M – 1990 transferred to Lebyashe, disbanded 1992
- * 18th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with MiG-17, Su-17, Su-24 – 1992 transferred to Siverskaya, disbanded 1993
- *42nd Guards Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with MiG-15F/PF, MiG-17, Su-24M – disbanded 1992
- 239th Fighter Aviation Division – July 1992 withdrawn from Poland, disbanded May 1, 1998
- * 159th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment with MiG-17 and Yak-25M, Su-27 – 1992 transferred to Besovets, disbanded 1998
- * 582nd Fighter Aviation Regiment with MiG-15, Su-27 – 1992 transferred to Smolensk, disbanded 1992
- * 871st Fighter Aviation Regiment with MiG-15 and MiG-19, MiG-23MLD – 1991 transferred to Smolensk, disbanded 1992
- 172nd Fighter-Bomber Aviation Division, disbanded July 1961
- * 189th Guards Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with MiG-15, MiG-17, disbanded July 1961
- * 669th Guards Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with MiG-15, MiG-17, disbanded July 1961
- * 756th Guards Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment with MiG-15, MiG-17, disbanded July 1961
- 183rd Bomber Aviation Division, disbanded July 1960
- * 131st Bomber Aviation Regiment, disbanded July 1960
- * 1101st Bomber Aviation Regiment, disbanded July 1960
- * 1107th Bomber Aviation Regiment, disbanded July 1960
Commanders
- Lieutenant-General I. V. Gorbunov, 1980–1985
- Lieutenant-General Pyotr Stepanovich Deynekin, 1985–1988
- Lieutenant-General Igor Mikhailovich Kalugin, 1988–1997
- Lieutenant-General Mikhail Mikhailovich Oparin, 11.97 – 11.02
- Lieutenant-General Igor Ivanovich Khvorov, 15.11.02 – unknown