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It was formed in November 1942 on the basis of the Air Forces of the Southwestern Front. It included 1st Mixed Air Corps (incl 267 Assault Aviation Division (ShAD), 288 FAD), two fighter (282 FAD, and 288 FAD in 1 MAC), one bomber (221 BAD), and the 262nd Night Bomber Aviation Division. Regiments and squadrons included 208 and 267 AARs; 282 Mixed Aviation Regiment; 371 Long-Range Bomber Aviation Regiment; 10th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron; and 34th and 35th корректировочная авиационная эскадрилья (Corrective Aviation Squadrons, CASs).[1]
It immediately took part in the Battle of Stalingrad. On 19 November 1942 during the battle of Stalingrad it was under the command of general-mayorStepan Krasovsky.
On 1 April 1943, as part of the Southwestern Front, it comprised the
From March 1943 until the end of the war Vladimir Sudets commanded the 17th Air Army.[3]
From 1943-45 it participated in the Ostrogozhsk–Rossosh Offensive, Left and Right Bank Ukraine operations, and the capture of Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, and Austria.
Over 200,000 sorties were flown.[4]
Between 1945 and 1947 the 17th Air Army was the aviation component of the Soviet occupation forces in Romania, the Southern Group of Forces, and had its headquarters in Bucharest. Afterwards it returned to the Kiev Military District and established its headquarters in Kyiv.[7]
The 39th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment was transferred to Samarkand and the 6th Air Army in 1947.[8]
Air Force Colonel General Sergey Goryunov was commander of 17th Air Army between 1946 and 1949.[9]
In February 1949 it was redesignated the 69th Air Army.
In April 1964 the 69th Air Army became the Air Forces of the Kiev Military District.
In April 1968 the Air Forces of the Kiev Military District became the 69th Air Army once more.
In April 1972 the 69th Air Army was redesignated the 17th Air Army.
In June 1980 the 17th Air Army became the Air Forces of the Kiev Military District.
In May 1988 the Air Forces of the Kiev Military District became the 17th Air Army.
In 1992 the air army became part of the Armed Forces of Ukraine; by 1996 it appears to have been dissolved.
The 24th Air Army of the High Command (Operational Purpose) (24-я ВА ВГК ОН) was based in the area of responsibility of the Kiev Military District. During peacetime it was subordinated directly to the Air Force High Command and in wartime it would transfer to the High Command of the South-Western Strategic Direction and deploy to airbases in Bulgaria and Romania and attack targets in Greece and Italy.[11]
The 24th AA took part in training exercises with the forces of the Kiev MD, which allowed for the military district's own 17th Air Army to become mostly a training formation with control over three air force officer schools and kept as a force-in-being, to convert its training air regiments into combat units during wartime.
In the late 1980s its headquarters was at Kiev. By 1989 the air army had the following structure:[7]
Directly subordinated to 17th Air Army HQ:
135th Separate Signals and Automatized Command and Control Regiment (Kiev (city))
228th Separate Electronic Warfare Helicopter Squadron (Borispol, military part of Boryspil IAP): 15 Mi-8PPA/SMV[13]
190th Fighter Aviation Regiment (Kanatovo), flying MiG-23 (disbanded in 1989)
452nd Separate Ground Attack Aviation Regiment (Blyznetsy, Kharkiv Oblast): Su-25/UB (planned to relocate to Aleksandriia once the 51st Separate Guards Transport and Combat Helicopter Regiment (an army aviation regiment of the Kiev MD) based there disbanded. This never happened and the helicopter regiment became a separate helicopter brigade of the UNG in 1992)
94th Separate Squadron of UAV Reconnaissance Assets (Kharkiv), flying Tu-141 (disbanded in 1989, some sources claim the unit existed until the autumn of 1996[citation needed])
161st Separate Squadron of UAV Reconnaissance Assets (Honcharivske), flying Tu-141 (disbanded in 1990)
? Separate Squadron of UAV Reconnaissance Assets (Dnepropetrovsk), flying Tu-141 (disbanded in 1990)
^ЮГВ, подполковник Зайцев (1945-07-05). "Журнал боевых действий ЮГВ". Память народа (in Russian). Retrieved 2020-05-04.
^ abDrozdov, Sergey (Jan 2016). "Была такая авиация... Эхо былой воздушной мощи [There Was Such an Aviation... Echo of Air Power Past]". Авиация и космонавтика [Aviation and Spaceflight magazine]. 01–2016: 14.
^Drozdov, Sergey (Feb 2016). "Была такая авиация... Эхо былой воздушной мощи [There Was Such an Aviation... Echo of Air Power Past]". Авиация и космонавтика [Aviation and Spaceflight magazine]. 02–2016: 14.