9th Tank Division (Soviet Union)
The 9th Tank Division was the designation of two separate formations of the Soviet Army. The original 9th Tank Division was formed in 1940 and later reorganized into a different division. During World War II, the Soviet Army formed the 9th Tank Corps, which was renamed the 9th Tank Division after the defeat of Germany in 1945. This second instance of the 9th Tank Division served with the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany from 1945 until about 1991, when it was disbanded.
9th Tank Division (1940) and follow on units
The 9th Tank Division was a formation of the Red Army that saw action briefly in 1941. It was formed in Mary, Turkmenistan, Central Asian Military District in the summer of 1940. In April 1941 the division joined the newly formed 27th Mechanised Corps. However, on 28 June 1941 the division was separated from its parent corps and re-designated the 104th Tank Division. The 104th Tank Division underwent its own organizational evolution, becoming first the 145th Tank Brigade and later the 43rd Guards Tank Brigade.Glantz writes in Stumbling Colossus that the 145th Tank Brigade was destroyed at Vyazma in October 1941.
9th Tank Corps
The 9th Tank Corps was formed on 12 May 1942 in the Moscow Military District. It fought in Russia, Poland, and Germany until 1945. In 1945 the 9th Tank Corps was redesignated the 9th Tank Division.1942
Initial Composition:- 23rd Tank Brigade
- 95th Tank Brigade
- 187th Tank Brigade
- 10th Motorized Rifle Brigade
In August 1942, the corps took part in a counterattack against the enemy in the area of Sukhinichi and Kozel'sk.
In September 1942 the 10th Motorized Brigade was removed to form a mechanized unit. The brigade was finally replaced in November 1942 with the assignment of the 8th Motorized Brigade from the 8th Tank Corps. The corps remained in reserve until February 1943. During this time the 187th Tank Brigade left the corps and was replaced by the 108th Tank Brigade.
1943
In March 1943 the corps was transferred to the Central Front, on the northern edge of the Kursk Salient in the area of Arseniyevsky, Trubitsyn, and Sergeevskie. On 7 May 1943 the corps was reinforced by the 133rd Guards Mortar Battalion and the 730th Antitank Battalion.It was sent to the front line on 7 July 1943 reinforced with the 1454th and 1455th Assault Gun Regiments. On the afternoon of 8 July, the corps entered combat. On 15 July, the leading elements fought their way into Buzuluk, not far from Maloarkhangelsk. On the same day, the corps broke into Maloarhangelsk. On 1 August, the corps led the offensive 14 kilometers south of Kromy in the settlements of Gostoml' and Shosse. On 2 August the corps reached the area of Parnyy, nine kilometers south of Kromy. By the end of 3 August, the fighting was at the Kolki-Sharikino road bend. On 4 August the corps crossed the Kroma River and was fighting to expand a bridgehead near Glinki-Leshnya 11 kilometers southwest of Kromy. The corps was temporarily reinforced by the 1540th Heavy SU Regiment during August.
During the Chernigov-Pripyat Offensive the corps was introduced into battle in a surprise attack on 27 August south of Sevsk. On 30 August the 9th Tank Corps took part in the liberation of Hlukhiv, then continued the offensive in a south-westerly direction until 7 September, with the corps located on the Desna River. 9th Tank Corps was finally withdrawn for rest, reequipping, and reorganization in November 1943.
1944
The corps remained in STAVKA Reserves until April 1944 when it return to action with the following organization:- 23rd Tank Brigade
- 95th Tank Brigade
- 108th Tank Brigade
- 8th Motorized Rifle Brigade
- 1455th SU Regiment
- 1508th SU Regiment
- 218th Guards Mortar Regiment
- 216th Antiaircraft Regiment
- 90th Motorcycle Battalion
- 286th Guards Mortar Battalion
- 109th Engineer Battalion
- 696th Signal Battalion
- 8th Aviation Signal Company
- U/I Aviation Signal Company
- 76th Chemical Company
- 34th Maintenance Company
- 79th Field Tank Repair Base
- 102nd Field Motor Vehicle Repair Base
- 31st Field Bakery Section
- 925th Field Post
- 1935th Field Office of the State Bank
In October 1944 the corps received its final reinforcement of the war with the assignment of the:
- 36th Guards Heavy Tank Regiment
- 868th Light Artillery Regiment
1945
On 14 January 1945, the corps attacked as part of the offensive out of the Pulawy bridgehead on the west bank of the Vistula River, south of Warsaw. On 23 January, the corps took part in the capture of Bydgoszcz.During the East Pomeranian Offensive the corps was subordinated to the 3rd Shock Army and from 1 March 1945 the tank brigades were used to support infantry formations.
During the Battle of Berlin the corps again was subordinated to the 3rd Shock Army as a mobile group and on 16 April 1945 was sent into action at 10:00 AM, advancing on the Seelow Heights, but did not have a significant impact on the offensive. On 18 April, in support of the 79th Rifle Corps, 9th Tank Corps crossed the Frielander waterway, the 23rd and 95th Tank Brigades in cooperation with the 150th Rifle Division captured Kunersdorf, and at the end of April 1945, stormed the Reichstag building.
1945–1957 9th Tank Division
In common with all other Soviet tanks corps, the 9th Tank Corps was reorganised as the 9th Tank Division in mid-late 1945. As part of the occupation forces, the 9th Tank Division was assigned to the ต๋อม.1957–1965 13th Heavy Tank Division
In 1957, it was reorganized and re-designated as the 13th Heavy Tank Division. It reverted to its original 9th Tank Division designation in 1965.1965–1991 9th Tank Division
The division retained this designation until the Soviet withdrawal from Germany in 1991 when it was moved to Smolensk and disbanded. Its divisional headquarters during the Cold War was based at Riesa.At the beginning of 1991, the division included two tank and two mechanized infantry regiments. It was equipped with T-80 tanks.
- 1st Guards Tank Chertkovsky double Order of Lenin Red Banner Orders of Suvorov. Kutuzov and Bogdan Khmelnitsky regiment them. Marshal of Armored Forces Mekatvkova : 89 T-80, 60 BMP, 18 2S1 Gvozdika self-propelled howitzers, 6 BMP-1KSH, 2 PRP-3, 4, 3 RHM, 1 BREM-2, 2 PU-12, 3 MT-55A
- 70th Guards Tank Proskurov-Berlin Red Banner Order of Lenin Order of Kutuzov regiment im.G.I.Kotovskogo : 90 T-80, 60 BMP, 18 2S1, 6 BMP-1 KSH, 2 PRP-3, 4, N RHM, 1 BREM-2, 2 PU-12, 1 R-145BM, 2 MT-55A
- 302nd Motor Rifle Regiment : 30 T-80, 147 BMP, 24 armored personnel carriers, 18 2S1, 18 2S12, 9 BMP-1KSH, 3 PRP-3, 4, 3 RHM, 2 BREM-2, 2 PU-12, 6 MT-LBT
- 1321st Motor Rifle Glukhovskoy-Rechitsa Order of Lenin Red Banner Order of Suvorov Regiment : 29 T-80, 152 BMP, 18 2S1, 18 2S-12, 9 BMP-1KSH, 3 PRP-3, 4, 3 RHM, 2 BREM-2, 3 PU-12, 6 MT-LBT
- 96th Self-Propelled Artillery Regiment : 54 2S5 "Acacia", 18 BM-21 "Grad"; 5 PRP-3/4, 3 1V-18, 1 1V-19, 2 R-145 BM, 1 R-156 BTR
- 216th Anti-Aircraft Rocket Regiment : in addition to a SAM P-145BM or 1 P-156 armored personnel carrier
- 13th Reconnaissance and Electronic Warfare Battalion : 17 BMP-2, 7 BRM-1K; 1 BMP-1KSH, 2 R-145 BM, 1 R-156 BTR
- 696th Battalion : 10 R-145BM, 1 P-156 armored personnel carriers, 2 P-2AM
- 109th Engineer Battalion : 2 IRM, 2 MT-55A
- 112th Chemical Protection Battalion
- 1071st independent battalion for material support
- 68th Repair Battalion
- 200th Medical Battalion
- 238 tanks
- 443 BMP
- 24 APCs
- 126 self-propelled guns
- 36 mortars "Sani"
- 18 MLRS BM-21 "Grad"
Honorifics
Commanders
- Major-General of Tank Troops Alexey Kurkin
- Major-General of Tank Troops Alexander Alexandrovich Shamshin
- Major-General of Tank Troops, Semyon Bogdanov Promoted to Lieutenant-General of Tank Troops 7 June 1943? or 6 July 1943
- Major-General of Tank Troops Gregory S. Rudchenko
- Major-General of Tank Troops Boris S. Bakharov
- Major-General of Tank Troops Nikolai Ivanovich Voyeikov
- Lieutenant-General of Tank Troops Ivan Kirichenko