Uzbek Ground Forces

The Uzbek Ground Forces are the land component of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan.

Operating since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the army is made up of former Soviet Army units that were in the territory of Uzbekistan. As of 2006, it had around 40,000 active personnel. Much of the equipment it uses is also old Soviet material, and the government of Uzbekistan has not given much effort to replace it with modern equipment.

Uzbek Ground Forces
O'zbekiston quruqlik qo'shinlari
Сухопутные войска Узбекистана
Founded1992
CountryUzbek Ground Forces Uzbekistan
TypeArmy
Size40,000 (est. 2006)
Part ofArmed Forces of the Republic of Uzbekistan
HeadquartersTashkent
Nickname(s)Uzbek Land Forces
Colors  Steel Blue
AnniversariesDefender of the Motherland Day - January 14
EngagementsTajik Civil War
Batken Conflict
War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

History

The armed forces were created in 1992, and along with the army, the air and air defense forces, national guard, and border service were created. Islam Karimov, the President of Uzbekistan, had begun calling native Uzbeks in the Soviet Armed Forces back to Uzbekistan to fill the ranks of the newly created ground forces, though many refused to return and renounced their citizenship. Russians made up the majority of the officer corps, while the enlisted personnel were mainly Uzbek.

Uzbekistan then became the only Central Asian state that did not allow Russian Federation citizens to serve in the army, and began to replace the Slavic officers with ethnic Uzbeks. At independence, Slavic officers made up the command of the army, and thus an effort was made to give Uzbeks higher positions, giving Slavics lower ranks. The Slavs who stayed in Uzbekistan accepted Uzbek passports.

Three major Soviet military academies, the Tashkent Higher All-Arms Command School, the Chirchiq Higher Tank Command and Engineering School, and the Samarkand Higher Military Automobile Command School, were located in Uzbekistan. This caused the government to not send Uzbek officers to Russia for training. In 1994, they established the joint Armed Forces Academy, to train officers of all branches. Though the Uzbek language was becoming more in use by the army, Russian remained the main language used in training officers, due to the fact that most manuals were in Russian and that the Central Asian Turkic languages did not have proper military vocabulary.

In 1997, the United States CENTRASBAT program paid over $5 million to fund a training exercise between Uzbek and American troops that were going to be stationed in the country. Later in 1998, a US general attended an Uzbek base that had a unit which took part in the training. After asking for a show of hands of who took part in it, only two raised them. Most Uzbek soldiers leave the service when their mandatory conscription ends. The US forces have found this to be the case in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan as well. The army was similarly run to the Soviet one, in terms of command, service, and equipment. Senior commanders gave strict orders that allowed little freedom of decision.

In 2003, the defense ministry announced that the conscription time was lowered from 18 months to 12, and those who attended officer schools only had to serve nine months. It was encouraging higher ranking personnel to serve longer. Many young Uzbeks bribed recruitment officials to not draft them into the army, as dedovshchina was widespread.

Organization

Districts

Uzbek Ground Forces 
Uzbek soldiers practice hand to hand maneuvers

The Army includes five military districts, the Northwest at Nukus, the Southwest Special Military District at Karshi, the Central Military District at Dzhizak, and the Eastern Military District at Ferghana. In 2001, the Tashkent Garrison was transformed into the Tashkent Military District.

Formation Headquarters Location Notes
Northwest Military District HQ Nukus Karakalpakstan, Xorazm Province
Southwest Special Military District HQ Karshi Qashqadaryo Province, Surxondaryo Province, Bukhara Province, Navoiy Province
Central Military District HQ Dzhizak Dzhizak Province, Samarqand Province, Sirdaryo Province
Eastern Military District HQ Ferghana Fergana Province, Andijan Province, Namangan Province
Tashkent Military District HQ Tashkent Tashkent Province, Established 2001

Specialties

  • Motor Rifle Units
  • Tank Forces
  • Special Operations Forces
  • Reconnaissance
  • Engineering
  • Chemical units
  • Signals
  • Electronic warfare units
  • Logistics
  • Topogeodetic

List of Formations

There are four motor rifle brigades, and the 17th Air Assault Brigade at Fergana (the former 387th Airborne Training Regiment of the Soviet Airborne Forces). Motorized brigades are located around Bukhara, Samarqand, Termez, Nukus, and Andijan. The subordinate brigades listed below have been attributed to the various military districts either because they are located in the same city as the military district headquarters or are clearly within the military districts' area of responsibility.

Uzbek Ground Forces 
The Honour Guard Battalion at the Ministry of Defense.

Army Headquarters (Tashkent)

Regular Army

Facilities

  • Kattakurgan Training Ground
  • Gurumsaray Training Ground
  • Farish Mountain Training Area
  • Shorsu Training Ground
  • Angren Training Ground
  • Nuristan Training Ground
  • Termez Training Ground
  • Nukus Training Ground

Exercises

Uzbek Ground Forces 
Uzbek soldiers in the Exercise Cooperative Osprey '98

Uzbek troops participated in Partnership for Peace Exercise Cooperative Osprey '96 at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, hosted by the United States Marine Corps. They then participated as well in Exercise Cooperative Osprey '98.

In September 2004, the (then) Royal Welsh Regiment (now 3rd Bn The Royal Welsh) of the British Army participated with the Uzbek Army Peacekeeping Battalion in "Exercise Timurlane Express" in the Farish Mountain Training Area.[citation needed] This was a 3-week NATO sponsored Partnership for Peace training exercise.

Equipment

Reportedly, Uzbek armed forces' small arms include the AKM, AK-74, Dragunov sniper rifle, Makarov PM pistol and PK.

Current equipment
Name Photo Origin Type Quantity
Small arms
Makarov PM Uzbek Ground Forces  Soviet Union Semi-automatic pistol N/A
Fort-12 Uzbek Ground Forces  Ukraine Semi-automatic pistol N/A
AKM Uzbek Ground Forces  Soviet Union Assault rifle N/A
AK-74

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Assault rifle N/A
AKS-74U

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Assault rifle N/A
RPK Soviet Union Squad automatic weapon N/A
RPK-74

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Squad automatic weapon N/A
PKM

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union General-purpose machine gun N/A
SVD

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Designated marksman rifle N/A
Grenade launchers
RPG-7

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Rocket-propelled grenade launcher
RPG-16 Soviet Union Rocket-propelled grenade launcher
SPG-9

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Recoilless gun
Tanks
T-72

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Main battle tank 70
T-64B

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Main battle tank 100
T-62M/MV

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Main battle tank 170
Infantry fighting vehicles
BMP-1

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 180
BMP-2

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 270
BMD-1

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 120
BMD-2

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Infantry fighting vehicle 9
BRM-1K

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Reconnaissance vehicle 6
Infantry mobility vehicles
Oshkosh M-ATV

Uzbek Ground Forces 

United States MRAP, Infantry mobility vehicle 308
International MaxxPro Uzbek Ground Forces  United States MRAP, Infantry mobility vehicle 50
Typhoon-K Uzbek Ground Forces  Russia Armored combat vehicle 45+
Nurol Ejder (4x4 version) Turkey Infantry mobility vehicle 24 received (+1000 in order)
Personnel carriers
BTR-60

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 24
BTR-70

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 25
BTR-80

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 210
BTR-82A

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Russia Armoured personnel carrier 100
BTR-D

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Armoured personnel carrier 50
Armored car
BRDM-2

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Armored car 13
Rocket artillery
BM-21 Grad

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 122mm multiple rocket launcher 50
BM-27 Uragan

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 220mm multiple rocket launcher 48
Anti-aircraft
HQ-9

Uzbek Ground Forces 

China Long-range surface-to-air missile 1 battery
Self-propelled artillery
2S1 Gvozdika

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 122mm self-propelled howitzer 18
2S3 Akatsiya

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 152mm self-propelled howitzer 17
2S9 Nona

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Self-propelled 120 mm mortar 54
2S5 Giatsint-S

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 152mm self-propelled howitzer 17
2S7 Pion

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union 203mm self-propelled howitzer 48
Logistics and utility vehicles
UAZ-469

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union Light utility vehicle
ZIL-131

Uzbek Ground Forces 

Soviet Union General purpose truck

References

Tags:

Uzbek Ground Forces HistoryUzbek Ground Forces OrganizationUzbek Ground Forces List of FormationsUzbek Ground Forces FacilitiesUzbek Ground Forces ExercisesUzbek Ground Forces EquipmentUzbek Ground ForcesArmed Forces of the Republic of UzbekistanGovernment of UzbekistanSoviet ArmySoviet Union

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

ArgylleDassault Mirage IIIFranceApocalypse Now ReduxMark WahlbergDeepak ParambolPirates of the Caribbean (film series)The Age of AdalineJodie Comer2024 AFC Futsal Asian CupMike FaistLimoneneRebel WilsonRita OraAnunnakiChessCatherine, Princess of WalesJason MomoaSonia SotomayorLiam NeesonBMW 1602 Elektro-AntriebRaven-SymonéAaron Taylor-JohnsonMount TakaheDeadpool (film)The Jinx (miniseries)Sam PitrodaWatergate scandalKendrick LamarIndian Premier LeagueMaidaanPornhubGreenland sharkMadrid Open (tennis)BlackpinkJustin BieberWhatsAppFlipkartIndira GandhiD. John Sauer2024 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu2024 Indian general election in KarnatakaSophia BushMia KhalifaCaitlin ClarkGloster MeteorList of Indian Premier League seasons and resultsHeart (band)List of country calling codesRonan FarrowList of Marvel Cinematic Universe filmsBrazilJean-Philippe MatetaTyler HerroGeorge W. BushMichael JordanEuphoria (American TV series)YouTube KidsThe Moody BluesYoung SheldonChris PineChappell RoanMartin SheenDeaths in 2024Tottenham Hotspur F.C.Anthony Edwards (basketball)2021 NFL draft2024 Indian general electionRichard Williams (tennis coach)Stephen WarnockRichard Armitage (actor)Robert F. Kennedy Jr.Conor McGregorJohn CenaJack NicholsonGallipoli campaignColumbine High School massacreMegan Thee StallionOnlyFans🡆 More