Soviet Border Troops
Soviet Border Troops were the militarized border guard of the Soviet Union, subordinated to its subsequently reorganized state security agency: first to Cheka/OGPU, then to NKVD/MGB and, finally, to KGB. Accordingly, they were known as NKVD Border Troops and KGB Border Troops. Unlike border guards of many other countries, Soviet Border Troops also included the maritime border guarding units.
The mission of the Border Troops included repulsing armed incursions into Soviet territory; preventing illegal crossings of the border or the transport of weapons, explosives, contraband or subversive literature across the border; monitoring the observance of established procedures at border crossing points; monitoring the observance by Soviet and foreign ships of navigation procedures in Soviet territorial waters; and assisting state agencies in the preservation of natural resources and the protection of the environment from pollution. Border guards were authorized to examine documents and possessions of persons crossing the borders and to confiscate articles; to conduct inquiries in cases of violations of the state border; and to take such actions as arrest, search and interrogation of individuals suspected of border violations.
They became the Border Service of the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation on December 30, 1993.
History
In 1934, under the NKVD, Border Troops were immediately subordinated to the GUPVO. In 1939 they were reorganized into the GUPV.NKVD Border Troops consisted of infantry, cavalry, reconnaissance, naval and airforce units.
Since the 1920s, the distinctive part of Soviet Border Troops uniform was the medium-green colored parts of headwear and insignia. The color is also present on a maritime Border Troops ensign.
World War II
After the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the Border Troops assisted the pacification of the newly acquired Soviet territory adjoining the state border. The mass execution of Romanian civilians known as the Fântâna Albă massacre happened at this time.Border Troops units on the western USSR frontier saw particularly fierce combat in the first weeks of the German invasion of the USSR. They bore the brunt of the initial German assault, and due to this, suffered high casualty rates. Border Troop servicemen were among the defenders of the Brest Fortress.
On June 22, 1941, border guards of the NKVD of the BSSR entered into battle with the forces of Nazi Germany, which began the war with the USSR. For the courage and heroism shown in the battles for Belarus, thousands of border guards were awarded orders and medals, and 66 became Heroes of the Soviet Union, including six Belarus border guards.
The first border battles of June 22–23 were extremely fierce. The border guards had to fight with superior enemy forces, which possessed absolute superiority in military equipment, but not a single outpost departed without an order. The newspaper Pravda on the third day of the war, June 24, 1941, wrote: “Like lions, the Soviet border guards fought, taking the first sudden blow of a vile enemy. Chekist fighters have covered themselves with immortal glory. They fought hand-to-hand, and only through their dead bodies could the enemy advance an inch”. Georgy Zhukov said: “I do not believe in gods, but if they exist, then they are border guards. They performed a miracle”.
Defenders of the Brest Fortress covered themselves with unfading glory, where the personnel of the 17th detachment fought together with the soldiers of the Red Army.
The feat of the border guards of the 9th outpost under the command of Lieutenant Kizhevatov A.M. The 3rd outpost of the 86th Augustovski Detachment, commanded by Lieutenant Usov was also involved in heavy fighting for nine hours. Three artillery attacks and seven violent attacks were repelled by border guards. And only when the Soviet soldiers ran of armory, the Nazis were able to capture the trenches. In the last hand-to-hand fight, Lieutenant Usov was also killed.
Border troops from other parts of the Soviet border were also involved in the fighting of the war. Notably, the 105th, 157th, and 333rd Border Troops regiments took part in the Battle for Berlin in 1945.
During and after the war, 150 border guards were awarded the title of the Hero of the Soviet Union and over 13,000 of them were decorated with different orders and medals.
Post-War history
In wartime, the Border Troops would become a frontline combat service. The Border Troops also saw combat in 1969 in border clashes with Chinese soldiers on islands in the Ussuri River.After the formation of the KGB, Soviet Border Troops became subordinated to this agency and remained so until the dissolution of the Soviet Union. As such, the Troops were concentrating on the tasks of preventing espionage infiltrations. The Border Guards were involved in the Soviet–Afghan War and a number of them were even awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union for their bravery during these conflicts.
The Soviet border was the longest in the world and it comprised harsh terrain and climates; accordingly the Border Troops employed significant manpower, intensive maritime presence, and a dense and sophisticated system of field engineering devices. The most notable in that system was the trace-control strip - a primitive labour-demanding method making surface crossing virtually impossible.
The Border Troops consisted of conscripts drafted by the same system as for the Soviet Army, and a small number of professional enlistees. Officers were trained in specialized academies. Both conscripts and officer candidates for Border Troops were carefully selected and checked by the KGB. This made service in the troops privileged.
Commanders of the Soviet Border Guards
- Nikolai Stakhanov, 1942–1952
- Pavel Zyryanov, 1952–1956
- Timofey Strokach, 1956–1957
- Pavel Zyryanov, 1957–1972
- Vadim Matrosov, 1972–1989
- Ilya Kalinichenko, 1989–1991
Legal authority
Structure
The Border Troops strength was estimated in 1989 to be in the range of 230,000 men. Although under the operational authority of the KGB, the Border Troops were conscripted as part of the biannual call-up of the Ministry of Defense, and their induction and discharge were regulated by the 1967 Law on Universal Military Service, which covered all armed forces of the Soviet Union.On top of the Border Troops stood the Main Directorate of the Border Troops, which played a role similar to that of the General Staff for the armed forces. The Main Directorate was subordinated to the First Deputy Chairman of the KGB. The Commander of the Border Troops normally held the rank of Lieutenant general when he took over the position and later was promoted to Colonel general. Out of the three officers who commanded the troops the second one has reached the rank of Army general at that position. The Commander had several Lieutenant generals and Major generals as his deputies. The Main Directorate administered approximately nine border districts, which covered the nearly 63,000 kilometers of the state border and additional smaller formations and independent units. Border district boundaries were distinct from civil or military district boundaries. At the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the Border Troops included the following operational forces:
Main Directorate of the Border Troops
Main Directorate of the Border Troops
Main Directorate of the Border Troops- Command
- * Commander - Lieutenant general / Colonel general; Office of the Commander
- Secretariat
- Staff - Lieutenant general
- Military Political Directorate - Major general / Lieutenant general
- Combat Training Directorate - Major general
- Operations Directorate - Lieutenant general
- Naval Directorate - Rear admiral / Vice admiral
- Engineering Technical Directorate - Lieutenant general
- Personnel Directorate - Major general / Lieutenant general
- Automotive and Armored Fighting Vehicles Department - Major general
- Aviation Department - Major general of aviation
- Military Construction Department - Major general
- Military Education Establishments Department - Major general / Lieutenant general
- Military Scientific Directorate - Major general / Lieutenant general
- Military Medical Department - Major general
- Military Veterinary Service
- Financial Department - Major general
- Rear Services - Major general / Lieutenant general
Border Troops Staff
Border Troops Staff- Chief of Staff / 1st Deputy Commander of the Border Troops - Lieutenant general
- * First Deputy Chief of Staff - Lieutenant general
- 1st Directorate - Major general / Lieutenant general
- Directorate of Organization and Mobilization - Major general
- 3rd Department - Major general
- Department of Information and Analysis - Major general
- Directorate of Border-crossing Checkpoints - Major general
- Department of Programs in Planning - Major general
Directly subordinated to the MDBT
Border Districts
The Border Districts were combined arms formations of the KGB, which included border guards similar to motor-rifle infantry, border crossings and their organic aviation units, signals, combat engineers, construction engineers, medical, repair and supply units. The districts bordering oceans and seas also included brigades of guard ships. The personnel of the Naval Service within the Border Troops held navy style ranks. The Chief of the Naval Directorate within the Main Directorate of the Border Troops was the highest ranking officer in the service with the rank of Rear admiral / Vice admiral. The Maritime Border Troops of the Russian Border Troops operated within the twelve-mile limit of Soviet territorial waters. It was equipped with frigates and corvettes, fast patrol boats, hydrofoils, helicopters, and light aircraft. In 1991 the Border Troops numbered ten Border Districts :Note: The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise, starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union.
Northeastern Border District
The Northeastern Border District had its headquarters in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. It guarded the easternmost territories of the Soviet Union from Wrangel Island and Mys Shmidta on the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait, the coastline of the Chukotka and Kamchatka Peninsulas to the island of Simushir, where it met the Pacific Border District's AOR. The security of the Sea of Okhotsk was also within the tasks of the NEBD and from Simushir its AOR ran in a strait line to the northern tip of Sakhalin and from there it continued to the mainland and the village of Ayan, Russia.Land units:
- 110th Koenigsbergskiy, awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment — Anadyr
- 60th Awarded the Order of Lenin and the Order of Alexander Nevsky Vilnius Kuril Islands Border Detachment — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
- 61st Magadanskiy Border Detachment — Magadan
- 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
- * 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships
- * 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships
- * Supply Ships Battalion
- 15th Separate Aviation Regiment — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky – Yelizovo Airport
- * Detachment at Klyuchi-1 Air Base
- 21st Separate Aviation Squadron — Magadan – Sokol Airport
- * Forward Operating Location at Okhotsk
- 7th Separate Aviation Squadron — Providence Bay Airfield
- * Forward Operating Locations at Anadyr Airport, Mys Shmidta Airport, Cape Dezhnev, Vankarem, Kresta Bay, Saint Lawrence Bay and Egvekinot
Red Banner Pacific Border District
Land units:
- 114th Rushtukskiy, Awarded the Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky Border Detachment — Goryachiy Plyazh, Kunashir, Kuril Islands
- 52nd Sakhalinskiy Rizhskiy, Awarded the Order of Lenin Border Detachment — Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, Sakhalin
- 62nd Nakhodkinskiy Sea Border Detachment — Nakhodka
- 59th Khasanskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of Kutuzov Border Detachment — Posyet
- 58th Grodekovskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of Kutuzov Border Detachment — Pogranichny
- 69th Kamen-Rybolovskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Kamen-Rybolov
- 57th Ussuriyskiy Red Banner and awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour, "V. R. Menzhinsky" Border Detachment — Dalnerechensk
- 12th Training Border Detachment — Perevoznaya
- Vladivostok Border Entry Seaport — Vladivostok
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Nakhodka»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Vladivostok»
- 8th Awarded the Order of the Red Star Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Malokurilskoye, Shikotan, Kuril Islands
- 9th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Korsakov, Sakhalin
- 19th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Nevelsk, Sakhalin
- 16th Sakhalinskaya Red Banner Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Nakhodka
- 10th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Vladivostok
- 15th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Dalnerechensk
- 11th Separate Aviation Regiment — Vladivostok – Knevichi Airport
- * Detachment at Sovetskaya Gavan Airfield
- * Forward Operating Locations at Dalnerechensk, Kamen-Rybolov, Spassk-Dalny Airfield and Pogranichny
- 16th Separate Aviation Regiment — Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk – Khomutovo Airport
- * Detachment at Yuzhno-Kurilsk Mendeleyevo Airport
Red Banner Far Eastern Border District
Land units:
- 77th Bikinskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Bikin, Khabarovsk Krai
- 70th Kazakevichevskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Kazakevichevo, Khabarovsk Krai
- 63rd Birobidzhanskiy Border Detachment — Birobidzhan, Jewish Autonomous Oblast
- 75th Raychikhinskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Raychikhinsk, Amur Oblast
- 56th Blagoveshchenskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Blagoveshchensk, Amur Oblast
- 78-й Shimanovskiy, Awarded the Order of Alexander Nevsky Border Detachment — Shimanovsk, Amur Oblast
- 55-й Skovorodinskiy, Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment — Skovorodino, Amur Oblast
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Nikolayevsk-on-Amur»
- 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Kazakevichevo, Khabarovsk Krai
- 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Leninskoye, Jewish Autonomous Oblast
- 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Blagoveshchensk
- 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Dzhalinda
- 16th Separate Aviation Squadron — Khabarovsk Airport
- 19th Separate Aviation Squadron — Blagoveshchensk Airfield
Red Banner Trans-Baikal Border District
Land units:
- 74th Sretenskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Kokuy, Chita Oblast
- 54th Priargunskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Priargunsk, Chita Oblast
- 53rd Khinganskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Dauriya, Chita Oblast
- 51st Kyakhtinskiy Border Detachment — Kyakhta, Buryat Autonomous SSR
- 29th Kyzylskiy Border Detachment — Kyzyl, Tuva Autonomous SSR
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Zabaykalsk»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Irkutsk»
- mostly land border, no naval units
- 18th Separate Aviation Squadron — Chita – Cheremushki Airfield
- * Detachment at Kyzyl Airport
Red Banner Eastern Border District
Land units:
- 134th Kurchumskiy Border Detachment — Kurshim, Kazakh SSR
- 50th Zaysanskiy Краснознаменный Border Detachment — Zaysan, Kazakh SSR
- 30th Makanchinskiy Краснознаменный Border Detachment — Makanchi, Kazakh SSR
- 130th Uch-Aaralskiy Border Detachment — Usharal, Kazakh SSR
- 49th Panfilovskiy Краснознаменный Border Detachment — Zharkent, Kazakh SSR
- 132nd Chundzhinskiy Border Detachment — Chundzha, Kazakh SSR
- 29th Przhevalskiy Border Detachment — Karakol, Kirghiz SSR
- 96th Narynskiy Border Detachment — Naryn, Kirghiz SSR
- 131st Oshskiy Border Detachment — Osh, Kirghiz SSR
- 35th Murghabskiy Border Detachment — Murghab, Tajik SSR
- mostly land border, no naval units
- 10th Separate Aviation Regiment — Almaty – Burunday Airfield
- 22nd Separate Aviation Squadron — Usharal Airfield
Red Banner Central Asian Border District
Land units:
- 118th Ishkashimskiy Border Detachment — Ishkoshim, Tajik SSR
- 66th Khoroghskiy Border Detachment — Khorogh, Tajik SSR
- 117th Moskovskiy Border Detachment - Moskovskiy, Tajik SSR
- 48th Pyandzhskiy Border Detachment — Panj, Tajik SSR
- 81st Termezskiy Border Detachment — Termez, Uzbek SSR
- 47th Kerkinskiy Border Detachment — Kerki, Turkmen SSR
- 68th Tahta-Bazarskiy Border Detachment — Tahta-Bazar, Turkmen SSR
- 45th Serakhskiy Border Detachment — Serakhs, Turkmen SSR
- 46th Kaakhanskiy Border Detachment — Kaakha, Turkmen SSR
- 71st Baherdenskiy Border Detachment — Baherden, Turkmen SSR
- 67th Kara-Kalinskiy Border Detachment — Kara-Kala, Turkmen SSR
- 135th Nebit-Dagskiy Border Detachment — Nebit-Dag, Turkmen SSR
- 17th Training Border Detachment — Dushanbe, Tajik SSR
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Mary»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Termez»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Irkutsk»
- 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Termez, Uzbek SSR
- 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships — Krasnovodsk, Turkmen SSR
- 17th Separate Aviation Regiment — Mary-3 Airfield
- * Detachment at Nebit-Dag Airfield
- 23rd Separate Aviation Regiment — Dushanbe Airport
Red Banner Trans-Caucasus Border District
Land units:
- 44th Lenkoranskiy Border Detachment — Lankaran, Azeri SSR
- 43rd Prishibskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Prishib, Azeri SSR
- 42nd Gadrutskiy Red Banner Border Detachment - Hadrut, Azeri SSR
- 127th Meghrinskiy Border Detachment — Meghri, Armenian SSR
- 41st Nakhichevanskiy Border Detachment — Nakhchivan, Azeri SSR
- 125th Artashatskiy Border Detachment — Artashat, Armenian SSR
- 40th Oktemberyanskiy "A. I. Mikoyan" Border Detachment — Armavir, Armenian SSR
- 39th Leninakanskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Gyumri, Armenian SSR
- 38th Akhaltsikhskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Akhaltsikhe, Georgian SSR
- 10th Hichaurskiy Border Detachment — Shuakhevi, Georgian SSR
- 37th Batumskiy Red Banner "Bulgarian-Soviet Combat Fellowship" Border Detachment — Batumi, Georgian SSR
- 36th Sukhumskiy Border Detachment — Sukhumi, Georgian SSR
- 32nd Novorossiyskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Novorossiysk, Russian SFSR
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Novorossiysk»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Batumi»)
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Tbilisi Airport»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Astara»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Julfa»
- 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Ochamchire, Georgian SSR
- 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Baku, Azeri SSR
- 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Poti, Georgian SSR
- 12th Separate Training Aviation Regiment — Tbilisi Airfield
Red Banner Western Border District
Land units:
- 16th Grodnenskiy Border Detachment — Grodno, Belarussian SSR
- 86th Brestkiy Red Banner "F. E. Dzerzhinsky" Border Detachment — Brest, Belarussian SSR
- 7th Karpatskiy, Awarded the orders of the Red Star, of Kutuzov and of Alexander Nevsky Border Detachment — Lviv, Ukrainian SSR
- 27th Mukachevskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Mukachevo, Ukrainian SSR
- 98th Chernovitskiy Border Detachment — Chernivtsi, Ukrainian SSR
- 79th Nizhnednestrovskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Chișinău, Moldavian SSR
- 26th Odesskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Odessa, Ukrainian SSR
- 107th Simferopolskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Simferopol, Crimea, Ukrainian SSR
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Kiev»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Mariupol»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Brest»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Mostyska»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Odessa»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Chop»
- Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Izmail»
- 5th Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Balaklava, Crimea, Ukrainian SSR
- 18th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Odessa, Ukrainian SSR
- 24th Separate Aviation Squadron — Odessa – Shkolniy Airfield
Red Banner Baltic Border District
- Land units:
- * 95th Koenigsbergskiy, Awarded the orders of Lenin and of the Red Star Border Detachment — Pravdinsk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 23rd Klaipėdskiy Border Detachment — Klaipėda, Lithuanian SSR
- * 8th Ventspilsskiy Border Detachment — Ventspils, Latvian SSR
- * 11th Kuresaarskiy Border Detachment — Kuressaare, Estonian SSR
- * 106th Tallinnskiy Border Detachment — Tallinn, Estonian SSR
- * 6th Gdynskiy, Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment — Rakvere, Estonian SSR
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Kaliningrad»
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Tallinn»
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Riga»
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Vilnius»
- Naval units:
- * 4th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Liepāja, Latvian SSR
- * 20th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Ventspils, Latvian SSR
- * 3rd Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Tallinn, Estonian SSR
- Air units:
- * 20th Separate Aviation Squadron — Rakvere Airfield
- ** detachments at Riga – Skulte and Ventspils airfields
Red Banner Northwestern Border District
- Land units:
- * 5-й Leningradskiy пограничный отряд имени Ю. В. Андропова Border Detachment — Sosnovy Bor, Leningrad Oblast
- * 102-й Vyborgskiy Red Banner пограничный отряд имени С. М. Кирова Border Detachment — Vyborg, Leningrad Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 1-й Sortavalskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Sortavala, Karelian ASSR, Russian SFSR
- * 80-й Suoyarvskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Suoyarvi, Karelian ASSR, Russian SFSR
- * 73-й Rebolskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Repola, Karelian ASSR, Russian SFSR
- * 72-й Kalevalskiy, Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment — Kalevala, Karelian ASSR, Russian SFSR
- * 101-й Alakurttinskiy Border Detachment — Alakurtti, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 100-й Nikelskiy, Awarded the Order of the Red Star Border Detachment — Nikel, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 82-й Murmanskiy Red Banner Border Detachment — Murmansk, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 4-й Arkhangelskiy Border Detachment — Arkhangelsk, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Leningrad»
- * Separate Border-crossing Checkpoint «Vyborg»
- Naval units:
- * 1st Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Kuvshinskaya Salma, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- * 2nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Vysotsk, Leningrad Oblast, Russian SFSR
- Air units:
- * 14th Separate Aviation Regiment — Petrozavodsk
Separate Border Detachments
- 4th Arkhangelsk Border Detachment
- Separate Arctic Border Detachment
- The Separate Arctic Border Detachment had its headquarters in Vorkuta. The district did not have naval units. It had border outposts from Kolguyev Island to Mys Shmidta and a separate arctic aviation regiment.
- Separate Detachment for Border Control "Moscow" - The detachment carried out border control duties at the major Moscow airports - 12 border control sections operated at Sheremetyevo-2 Airport and one section each at Sheremetyevo-1 Airport cargo terminal, Vnukovo Airport, Domodedovo Airport and Chkalovsky Airport.
- 105th Separate Red Banner Detachment Spetsnaz - The detachment was previously the sole Regiment of the Border Troops, legacy from the time when it belonged to the Soviet Ministry of the Interior. It consisted of one battalion, four separate companies and assorted support units and carried out security tasks at the Soviet embassy in East Germany, the main HQ of the KGB in East Germany and several field offices spread across the country. In 1989 the regiment was upgraded to a border detachment. With this its battalion was upgraded to a Motor-Maneuver Group and the companies were upgraded to Border Outposts in line with KGB Border Troops nomenclature.
Combined Arms troops
- the Soviet Ground Forces' 75th Motor Rifle Division - from January 4, 1990 until September 23, 1991
- the Soviet Airborne Forces' 103rd Guards Airborne Division - from January 4, 1990 until September 23, 1991
District forces
The border detachments consisted of Border Command Posts , Separate Bordercrossing Control Points and various combat support and combat service support units. A Border Command Post consisted of several Border Outposts and corresponded roughly to a battalion of the armed forces and was therefore commanded by a Lieutenant colonel. The main forces of a BCP accounted several regular Border Outposts, also informally called Line Border Outposts, as each had a section of the state border assigned to it. In the rear area of the BCP there was also a Reserve Border Outpost acting as the operational reserve of the commander. It had the same structure as the line Border Outposts, but was not permanently deployed at the border. In a situation of increased threat its function was to take over the threatened section of the border, thus becoming a line outpost itself. The equivalent of a BCP in the naval service of the Border Troops was a Battalion of Guard Ships, commanded by a Captain 2nd rank.
The Border Outpost was the smallest unit of the Border Troops, which was directly involved in the task of securing the state border. The TO&E called for 41 officers, NCOs, Sergeants and border guards, organised in a staff group, 2 rifle sections, a service canine section and a signals and remote sensoring section. Around the time of the Sino-Soviet border conflict a reinforced TO&E with an additional rifle section was introduced and later, during the Soviet–Afghan War a new TO&E with a fourth rifle section was introduced, increasing the manpower to 64 men. The border outposts were equal in status to separate combat companies of the Ground Forces, with a Major as the CO.
A specific operational reserve unit was the Motor Maneuver Group. As the name implied, this was a maneuver element, organized similarly to an army motor rifle battalion, with its own infantry fighting vehicles, armored personnel carriers, mortars and anti-tank weapons. The MMG was a temporary task force fielded by the border detachment by combining personnel from its various units. On an operational deployment an MMG could act both as a classic BCP or as a mechanized warfare unit, the Soviet–Afghan War being the perfect example for this versatility. A typical example for a motor maneuver group was the MMG-1 of the Termez Border Detachment, deployed to Afghanistan. It had:
- command section with one BTR-60 and one UAZ-469
- 3 border outposts, each consisting of 50 men, including three officers, two Sergeant-Majors and seven Sergeants, further divided into
- * 5 sections with one BTR-60 each
- mortar battery of 64 men, including five officers and a Sergeant-Major. The battery had one BTR-60 and fifteen GAZ-66 trucks.
- 6 mortar sections, each armed with one PM-120 and one BM-82 mortar
- reconnaissance platoon of 13 men, including one officer and two Sergeants. It had two sections - the first was armed with a BRM-1, the second - with a BTR-60
- anti-tank platoon of 18 men, including one officer and three Sergeants. The platoon had 4 SPG-9 and 4 GAZ-66 in two sections of two AT teams each.
- combat engineer platoon of 20 men, including one officer, one Sergeant-Major and five Sergeants. The platoon had BTR-60, ZIL-131, GAZ-66 and heavy engineering machinery divided among two sapper sections and one engineering section
- signals platoon with two BTR-60s and an R-140 radio mounted on a ZIL-157
- medical aid post with a medical officer, a Sergeant-Major and an ambulance driver. Each of the three border outposts and the mortar battery had a paramedic, operationally subordinated to the medical officer
- logistical platioon of 29 men, including two Sergeant-Majors and three Sergeants. The platoon was subdivided into
- * a supply, a transport and a repair sections
AAMG formed by the same Termez Border Detachment for operations in Afghanistan. It had:
- command section
- 3 air assault border outposts
- mortar platoon
- AGS-17 grenade launcher platoon
- grenade launcher / flamethrower platoon
- combat engineer platoon
- signals platoon
Border Troops Naval Service
The Border Troops had their own naval assets. They were subordinated administratively to the Sea Directorate of the Border Troops, headed by a Rear admiral / Vice admiral. Operationally the naval units were subordinated to the border districts. The patrol ships of the naval service were much heavier armed than similar-sized ships of coast guards around the world. They lacked the sophisticated anti-air and anti-ship missile systems, but were armed with artillery as heavy as the AK-100 and for their ASW they carried anti-submarine mortars, torpedoes and even anti-submarine missile systems. Soviet and Russian naval classification did not follow Western convention for smaller major surface combatants. While Western navies use classification based on the ship's size, the Soviet Navy used classification based on the ship's function. Thus the corvette and frigate-sized warships of the Navy and the Naval Service were classified as guard ships. To distinguish the ships of the border troops from those of the navy, the former are classified as border guard ships and to distinguish between the larger and smaller units in their fleet the corvette and frigate-sized units were classified as ships, while the smaller patrol craft were classified as cutters. The types of ships in the Border Troops fleet included:- border guard ship - patrol corvettes and frigates
- border guard cutter - patrol craft
- border support ship - replenishment ships
- patrol vessel - fishery patrol ships
- border ship in special service - corvette / frigate-sized official government yachts
- border cutter in special service - small guard craft, used for the security of coastal areas of official government sea residences and government yachts
Naval Service fleet:
Northeastern Border District - HQ in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
- 1st Red Banner Division of Border Guard Ships — Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky
- * 1st Brigade of Border Guard Ships
- ** single ship project 52K - PSKR-010 "Purga"
- ** patrol icebreakers of project 97P "Iceberg" - PSKR-161 "Aysberg", PSKR-083 "Dunay"
- ** patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR-135 "Brest", PSKR-081 "Sakhalin", PSKR-070 "Kamchatka"
- * 2nd Brigade of Border Guard Ships
- ** patrol frigates of project 11351 - PSKR-097 "Dzerzhinskiy", PSKR-059 "Vorovskiy", PSKR-103 "Kedrov", PSKR-060 "Imeni 70-letiya Pogranvoisk", PSKR-077 "Imeni 70-letiya VChK—KGB"
- ** patrol corvettes of project 1124M - PSKR-055 "Bditelniy", PSKR-014 "Bezuprechniy", PSKR-058 "Zorkiy", PSKR-067 "Reshitelniy", PSKR-052 "Smeliy"
- ** former navy minesweepers of project 264А - PSKR-035 "Vorovskiy", PSKR-066 "Dzerzhinskiy", PSKR-046 "Menzhinskiy", PSKR-032 "Kirov", PSKR-015 "Kedrov", PSKR-010 "Hokhryakov", PSKR-105 "Starshiy leytenant Lekarev", PSKR-083 "Fyodor Mitrofanov", PSKR-059 "Vasiliy Gromov", PSKR-080 "Malakhit", PSKR- 076 "Korund"
- * Supply Ships Battalion
- ** 3 sealift ships of project 1595 "Pevek" - PKO-063 "Nikolay Sipyagin", PKO-071 "Sergey Sudeyskiy", PKO-016 "Nikolay Starshinov"
- 8th
- 14th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Kazakevichevo, Khabarovsk Krai
- *riverine monitors of project 1249 - PSKR-52, PSKR-58
- *riverine monitors of project 1248 - PSKR-313, PSKR-314
- *riverine monitors of project 1208 - "им. 60-летия ВЧК", "им. 60-летя Октября", "им 60-летия погранвойск", "Вьюга"
- *riverine monitors of project 1204 - 313, 332, 336, 337, 350, 351, 354, 359, 360, 376, 378, 382,
- *riverine patrol boats of project 1408.1
- *liaison boats of project 371
- 13th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Leninskoye, Jewish Autonomous Oblast
- *riverine monitors of project 1249 - 1 unit used as command ship
- *riverine monitors of project 1248 - PSKR-300, PSKR-301, PSKR-302, PSKR-303, PSKR-304, PSKR-305, PSKR-306, PSKR-308, PSKR-311
- 12th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Blagoveshchensk
- *riverine monitors of project 1249 - 1 unit used as command ship
- *riverine monitors of project 1248
- *riverine monitors of project 1204 - 330, 333, 340, 341, 348, 349, 353, 355, 356, 357, 362, 365, 367, 369, 370, 372, 380, 386,
- *riverine patrol boats of project 1408.1
- *liaison boats of project 371
- 11th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Dzhalinda
- *riverine monitors of project 1204 - unknown quantity
- mostly land border, no naval units
- mostly land border, no naval units
- 22nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Termez, Uzbek SSR
- *riverine monitors of project 1204 - unknown quantity
- 46th Separate Battalion of Border Guard Ships — Krasnovodsk, Turkmen SSR
- *fast patrol boats of project 1400/M - 5 ~ 6
- 6th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Ochamchire, Georgian SSR
- * fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-616, PSKR-631, PSKR-638, PSKR-641, PSKR-644, PSKR-649, PSKR-657, PSKR-659, PSKR-721, PSKR-723
- *fast patrol craft of project 201 - PSKR-252, PSKR-261
- *fast patrol craft of project 125А - PSKR-152, PSKR-162, PSKR-163, PSKR-165
- *fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-100, PSKR-101, PSKR-102
- *fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-275, PSKA-510, PSKA-520, PSKA-525, PSKA-559, PSKA-576, PSKA-577
- *Battalion ГУК - fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-500, PSKA-501, PSKA-502, PSKA-503
- 17th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Baku, Azeri SSR
- *fast patrol craft of project 10410 - PSKR-902, PSKR-905
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-603, PSKR-605, PSKR-609, PSKR-610, PSKR-617, PSKR-618, PSKR-624, PSKR-625, PSKR-656, PSKR-658, PSKR-664, PSKR-666, PSKR-669
- *fast patrol boats of project 1400 - 6 unknown units
- *former Navy minesweepers of 264 - 2 unknown units
- 21st Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Poti, Georgian SSR
- *fast patrol craft of project 12412 - PSKR-808 "Grif", PSKR-811 "Orlan", PSKR-814 "Sarych", PSKR-291 "Novorossiysk", PSKR-292 "Kuban"
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKA-651, PSKA-660, PSKA-665, PSKA-695, PSKA-700, PSKA-715
- *fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-109, PSKR-110
- *fast patrol boats of project 1400 - PSKA-513, PSKA-516, PSKA-553, PSKA-554, PSKA-563
- 5th Separate
- 4th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Liepāja, Latvian SSR
- * fast patrol craft of project 1124P - PSKR-626 "Nikolay Kaplunov"
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-600, PSKR-602, PSKR-606, PSKR-614, PSKR-615, PSKR-639, PSKR-646, PSKR-663, PSKR-710, PSKR-713, PSKR-717
- *fast patrol craft of project 125A - PSKR-153, PSKR-154
- *patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Yan Berzin"
- 20th Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Ventspils, Latvian SSR
- *fast patrol craft of project 12412 - PSKR-810 "N. Kaplunov", PSKR-815 "Sobol", PSKR-817 "Jaguar"
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-613, PSKR-619, PSKR-620, PSKR-621, PSKR-622, PSKR-634, PSKR-696, PSKR-697, PSKR-698, PSKR-703, PSKR-706, PSKR-714, PSKR-724
- *patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Ural"
- 3rd Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Tallinn, Estonian SSR
- *fast patrol craft of project 12412 - PSKR-802 "Kunitsa", PSKR-804 "Toliatti", PSKR-806 "Kaliningrad"
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-601, PSKR-608, PSKR-627, PSKR-628, PSKR-632, PSKR-633, PSKR-634, PSKR-640, PSKR-643, PSKR-647, PSKR-655, PSKR-708, PSKR-716, PSKR-718, PSKR-719, PSKR-725
- *fast patrol craft of project 201 - PSKR-032, PSKR-071
- *fast patrol craft of project 133 - PSKR-094, PSKR-080, PSKR-072
- *fast patrol craft of project 125A - 2 unknown units
- *fast patrol craft of project 1400 - 2 unknown units
- *patrol tugboat of project 745P - "Viktor Kingisepp"
- 1st Separate Red Banner Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Kuvshinskaya Salma, Murmansk Oblast, Russian SFSR
- *patrol corvettes of project 1124P - PSKR-015 "Brilliant", PSKR-048 "Zhemchug", PSKR-022 "Izumrud", PSKR-028 "Rubin", PSKR-055 "Ametyst", PSKR-036 "Sapphir", PSKR-097 "Provorniy", PSKR-079 "Predanniy", PSKR-047 "Nadezhdniy", PSKR-066 "Dozorniy"
- *patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR- "Karelia", PSKR- "Zapolyarye", PSKR- "Enisey"
- *patrol icebreakers of project 97P "Iceberg" - PSKR-036 "Imeni XXVI syezda KPSS"
- *patrol tugboat of project 733 - PSKR-460
- 2nd Separate Brigade of Border Guard Ships — Vysotsk, Leningrad Oblast, Russian SFSR
- *fast patrol craft of project 205P - PSKR-604, PSKR-611, PSKR-612, PSKR-633, PSKR-653, PSKR-654, PSKR-661, PSKR-662, PSKR-667, PSKR-699, PSKR-701, PSKR-704, PSKR-707, PSKR-711, PSKR-712
- *patrol tugboats of project 745P - PSKR- "Ladoga"
Border Troops Aviation
Note: The border districts and their subordinated formations are listed clockwise, starting with the easternmost area of the Soviet Union.
Units directly reporting to the Main Directorate of the Border Troops:
- Separate Special Purpose Aviation Unit, based at Moscow – Sheremetyevo-2 Airport: 2 Tupolev Tu-154, 2 Tupolev Tu-134, 4 Ilyushin Il-76, 4 Antonov An-72, 1 Yakovlev Yak-40, 4 Mil Mi-8
- Combat Training Center of the Border Troops Aviation, based at Stavropol – Shpakovskoye Airport
- * combat training was carried out at the 12th Separate Training Air Regiment of the Caucasus Border District in Tbilisi
- Separate Arctic Aviation Regiment, based at Vorkuta Airport: 3 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 40 Mil Mi-8, 2 Mil Mi-26, 4 Kamov Ka-27PS
- * detachments at Tiksi Airport and Chersky Airport
- * Forward Operating Locations at Murmansk Airport, Naryan-Mar Airport, Khatanga Airport, Chokurdakh Airport and Sredny Ostrov Airfield
- 15th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky – Yelizovo Airport : 2 Antonov An-26, 6 Antonov An-72, 20 Mil Mi-8, 4 Kamov Ka-27PS, 4 Kamov Ka-25 ?, 2 Mil Mi-26 ?
- * Detachment at Klyuchi-1 Air Base
- 21st Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Magadan – Sokol Airport: 1 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 4 Mil Mi-8
- * Forward Operating Location at Okhotsk
- 7th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Providence Bay Airfield : 1 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 2 Kamov Ka-27PS, 4 Mil Mi-8
- * Forward Operating Locations at Anadyr Airport, Mys Shmidta Airport, Cape Dezhnev, Vankarem, Kresta Bay, Saint Lawrence Bay and Egvekinot
- 11th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Vladivostok – Knevichi Airport: 3 Antonov An-26, 1 Yakovlev Yak-40, 22 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24, 3 Kamov Ka-27PS
- * Detachment at Sovetskaya Gavan Airfield
- * Forward Operating Locations at Dalnerechensk, Kamen-Rybolov, Spassk-Dalny Airfield and Pogranichny
- 16th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk – Khomutovo Airport: 2 Antonov An-26, 4 Antonov An-72, 1 Yakovlev Yak-40, 20 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24, 4 Kamov Ka-27PS
- * Detachment at Yuzhno-Kurilsk Mendeleyevo Airport
- 16th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Khabarovsk Airport: 1 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 1 Yakovlev Yak-40, 4 Mil Mi-8
- 19th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Blagoveshchensk Airfield: 1 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 4 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24
- 18th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Chita – Cheremushki Airfield: 1 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 4 Mil Mi-8
- * Detachment at Kyzyl Airport
- 10th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Almaty – Burunday Airfield: 2 Antonov An-72, 2 Antonov An-26, 2 Yakovlev Yak-40, 18 Mil Mi-8, 8 Mil Mi-24, 2 Mil Mi-26
- 22nd Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Usharal Airfield: 15 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24
- 17th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Mary-3 Airfield: 2 Antonov An-26, 36 Mil Mi-8, 16 Mil Mi-24, 2 Mil Mi-26
- * Detachment at Nebit-Dag Airfield
- 23rd Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Dushanbe Airport: 2 Antonov An-26, 24 Mil Mi-8, 12 Mil Mi-24, 2 Mil Mi-26
- 12th Separate Training Aviation Regiment, based at Tbilisi Airfield: 2 Antonov An-26, 2 Antonov An-72, 1 Yakovlev Yak-40, 4 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24, 2 Kamov Ka-27PS
- 24th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Odessa – Shkolniy Airfield: 15 Mil Mi-8, 4 Mil Mi-24
- 20th Separate Aviation Squadron, based at Rakvere Airfield: 2 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 4 Mil Mi-8, 2 Kamov Ka-27PS
- * detachments at Riga – Skulte and Ventspils airfields
- 14th Separate Aviation Regiment, based at Petrozavodsk: 3 Antonov An-26, 1 Antonov An-24, 24 Mil Mi-8
Training
Political Considerations
Soviet sources repeatedly stressed that a border guard was not only a soldier but also a defender of Soviet ideology. His mission entailed sensitive political tasks, such as detecting subversive literature. To ensure a high level of discipline among personnel of the Border Troops, much attention was devoted to political training and indoctrination. For this purpose, a network of political organs, the Political Directorate of the Border Troops, was established within the Border Troops. It had political departments within all the border districts, detachments, and education institutions, and a network of full-time party political officers worked among all troop units. They conducted political study groups, gave propaganda lectures, and worked to increase the level of combat effectiveness among the troops.Famous former Soviet Border Troops
- Alexander Lukashenko, the President of Belarus, served as an officer,
- Mikhail Saakashvili, the President of Georgia, served as a conscript.
- Vlad Filat, the Prime minister of Moldova, served as a conscript.
- Viktor Yushchenko, the 3rd President of Ukraine, served as a conscript.
- Konstantin Chernenko, the second last Soviet leader also served as a border guard on the USSR-Chinese border, before becoming more involved in politics.
Dissolution and legacy
.
In Russia and some other post-Soviet states, the Border Troops retained some Soviet traditions, most notably the green shoulder boards on their uniforms and "Border Guards Day", an official holiday celebrated both by active service and former border guards.