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The list includes overseas Russian airbases including those in Russian occupied Crimea. It can be compared with the List of Soviet Air Force bases; virtually no new airbase construction has taken place since 1991. The main air armies are the: 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army which is part of the Southern Military District
Orenburg-2 air base Orenburg Oblast Il-76MD Il-22PP An-12BK-PPS. Bolshoye Savino air base Perm Krai MiG-31/MiG-31BM Danilovo air base Mari El Republic Samara Samara Oblast 568th Anti-Aircraft Regiment S-400; Troekurovka air base Samara Oblast Syzran Higher Military Aviation School: Ulyanovsk Vostochny air base Ulyanovsk Oblast An-124 Il-76MD/Il ...
Russian 102nd Military Base in Gyumri and the Russian 3624th Airbase in Erebuni Airport near Yerevan. Est. 3,214 [5] to 5,000 [6] Belarus: Russian military presence in Belarus: The Baranavichy Radar Station, [4] [7] [8] the Vilyeyka naval communication centre near Vilyeyka and a joint Air Force and Air Defense training center in Baranovichi [9 ...
This category is intended to list air force bases belonging to the Russian Air Force (1991 onward). Pages in category "Russian Air Force bases" ...
Russian Air Force bases (172 P) Russian military radars (19 P) Pages in category "Military installations of Russia" The following 44 pages are in this category, out ...
Kamenny Ruchey (also Mongokhto, Alekseyevka, and Mongohto) (Russian: Монгохто, Каменный Ручей) (ICAO: UHKG) is an air base in Russia located 29 km north of Sovetskaya Gavan. [1] Located just north of Vanino, it is a major military naval airfield that has 63 hardened areas. The airfield is designated by CAICA as Kamenny ...
Up until late 2009 it was the home of the 105th Composite Aviation Division and 455th Bomber Aviation Regiment, [3] both with 16th Air Army/Special Purpose Command, the air forces command of the Moscow Military District. Following the air force reforms of 2009–10, it became the headquarters of the 7000th Air Base.
The military districts in Russia serve as administrative divisions for the Russian Armed Forces. Each has a headquarters administering the military formations within the Russian federal subjects that it includes. As of March 2024, there are five military districts in Russia: Leningrad, Moscow, Central, Eastern, and Southern.