enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Military academies in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_academies_in_Russia

    List of Russian military educational institutions; Military Education, list of military schools and academy at the official Ministry of Defence web site) (in Russian) Moscow Defense Brief, 1/2006, January 2006 on current status ; History of GLITs (NII VVS)Testpilot Russia (Russian) Soviet Aviation Test Facilities; Scott, William F., and Harriet ...

  3. Military education in the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_education_in_the...

    Soviet military education was aimed at training of officer-specialists in narrowly-defined military occupational specialties, and it differed greatly from American military education system in which newly-qualified second lieutenants receive particular specialties in the framework of their "career branch" only after graduation from military ...

  4. Military commissioning schools in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_commissioning...

    The Russian military education system, inherited from the Soviet Union, trains officer-specialists in narrowly-defined military occupational specialties. [1] Modern Russian military educational institutions conducting commissioning programmes may have different names (academy, institute, higher school), it stems from tradition and has no effect on the content of aforementioned programmes.

  5. Peter the Great Military Academy of the Strategic Missile ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_the_Great_Military...

    In 1845 the school was given the honorific of Mikhailovsky after the Grand Duke. In 1925, it became the Red Army's Military-Technical Academy. In 1934, it became the Felix Dzerzhinsky Artillery Academy and four years later, it was transferred to Moscow. During the Second World War, it was stationed in the city of Samarkand in the Uzbek SSR. In ...

  6. Nicaraguan Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicaraguan_Armed_Forces

    Nicaragua has a small military force with only 9,412 members as of 2010. This number includes 1,500 officers (16%), 302 non-commissioned officers (3%), and 7,610 troops (81%). [ 19 ] This relatively small armed force is supported by an extremely small $41 million-dollar defense budget (2010). [ 20 ]

  7. List of Russian military bases abroad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Russian_military...

    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 ...

  8. Nicaragua–Russia relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NicaraguaRussia_relations

    After the 1979 Sandinista revolution, Nicaragua significantly relies on Soviet and Russian military equipment. In February 2025, the country received 5 Mil Mi-17 helicopters, 3 Antonov An-26 military-transport aircraft, as well as 18 ZU-23 AE modernized air defense artillery systems as donations from Russia.

  9. Military training centers of civilian universities (Russia)

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_training_centers...

    Column of students of South-West State University marching on the parade ground during military training center's exercises. The military training center (Russian: военный учебный центр) is a division within civilian university or other higher education institution, intended for training commissioned officers from among students, currently widespread in Russian Federation.