Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ukraine)

The Rocket Forces and Artillery (Ракетні війська та артилерія) of the Ukrainian Ground Forces consist of units armed with tactical missiles, howitzers, cannons, mortars, jet-propelled and anti-tank artillery. They are tasked to destroy human resources, tanks, artillery, anti-tank weapons, aircraft, air defense and other important installations operations.

History
"Khmelnytskyi city, conducted the main examination of the year - the final test for 2010–2011. All servicemen passed a final exams for professional, military and physical training. The history of the brigade began in 1943 at Stalingrad by establishing the 7th Artillery brigade of the Reserve of the Supreme High Command. During the Great Patriotic War 27 soldiers, sergeants and officers of the division were nominated for the award 'Hero of the Soviet Union'. After the declaration of Ukrainian independence and choice of the non-nuclear status, servicemen swore allegiance to people of Ukraine. In November 1997, the division gained the status of a brigade and until 2004 it was subordinated to the 1st Rocket Division of the Ukrainian Ground Forces. For the last 8 years, the brigade is directly subordinated to the command of the land forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, armed with the 'Tochka' missile. [It] is the only rocket military unit in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.'"

Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union, a number of Soviet Army field artillery divisions, the 26th, 55th and 81st, were given to the young Ukrainian Ground Forces, the 26th would serve the country for a further two decades until its 2004 disbandment. Joining them were the field artillery regiments under divisions and a number of divisional field artillery MRLS and TBM brigades and separate formations.

The 1st Rocket Division was active at Khmelnytskyi, formed on the basis of the disbanding headquarters of the Soviet 43rd Rocket Army. It was formed in 1998 as a UGF formation and instead of ICBMs was made up of TBM systems and MLRS. At least two brigades were part of the division, the 19th at Khmelnytskyi and the 107th at Kremenchug (107th Rocket Artillery Regiment, 6th Army Corps (Ukraine)). The division was disbanded in 2004. (Vad777)

The 11th Artillery Brigade was disbanded in December 2013. The 44th Artillery Brigade was created from scratch at Ternopil in September 2014. The 43rd Artillery Brigade was formed in February 2015 in Divychky, a village in Kyiv Oblast.

The 27th Reactive Artillery Regiment was upgraded to a brigade on 13 March 2015. The 40th Artillery Brigade was formed at Pervomaisk in August 2015.

Russia-Ukraine War
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Ukrainian Rocket Forces and Artillery were left over from the Cold War era. This means that most of its equipment is some 30 years old. There has been little development of new systems from 122mm or 152mm to 155 mm calibre. Of Ukrainian 155mm weapons built only the 2S22 Bohdana has been produced, with only one unit completed before the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The ammunition stockpiles that Ukraine inherited from the Soviet Union were the subject of sabotage. According to Radio Free Europe six stockpiles, a total of some 210,000 tons of ammunition, was destroyed between 2015 and 2019. Since late April 2022 the U.S. State Department has sold artillery ammunition to Ukraine. Ukrainian artillery has relied on old stockpiles in former Eastern Block countries for ammunition. Of 40 shells supplied by the Czech Republic only 3 worked. What the U.S. government calls "nonstandard ammunition" that can be fired from Ukrainian weapons such as 122 mm, 152 mm artillery shells, 120 mm mortar rounds and other smalls weapons. Ukraine claims that it is firing 6,000 projectiles daily in fighting. This compares to Russia firing an estimated 70,000 projectiles.

Ukraine has asked for and been supplied with various NATO artillery firing 155 mm calibre ammunition, such as the Panzerhaubitze 2000 and "M777, FH70, M109, AHS Krab, and the CAESAR self-propelled howitzer." The UK and Germany have supplied M270 MLRS to Ukraine and the U.S. has supplied the HIMARS system, however, in batches of single digits. Ukrainian forces consider 155 mm weapons such as the M777 to be superior to their older systems: "They work beautifully. They have the precision of a sniper rifle while firing a 155mm shell. Their range is much greater than our own weapons and we can hit their positions, supply lines, and munitions depots farther away." Russian Ministry of Defence has made point of showing the destruction of Western-supplied weapons, mainly the M777. While acknowledging their effect: "General Konashenkov stressed that in recent days the Ukrainian armed forces have used M777 intensively, subjecting massive artillery strikes to Russian positions in the region." Ukraine spends 30,000 rounds of 155 mm in two weeks, an amount fired by the US in a year.

Ukraine has also received 36 towed 105 mm calibre L119 light guns, a variant of the L118 light gun, from the UK. Some 36,000 rounds of 105 mm ammunition has been promised to Ukraine by the US. The New Zealand Defence Force sent 30 soldiers to train Ukrainian forces on the L119 in the UK from May to July 2022.

In early July UK and New Zealand soldiers were training Ukrainian soldiers to use the L119 howitzer and the M270 MLRS in Wiltshire. The number of Ukrainian soldiers trained is listed as "hundreds".

Ukrainian artillery is heavily reliant on drones for observation. Russian forces rely on mass artillery strikes. Ukraine faces a shortage of shells used compared to Russia. Estimates from various sources put the Ukrainian usage of shells from as low as 2,000 to 7,000 at the highest. Russia's daily usage is between 20,000-60,000. Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary General of NATO, puts it at four Russian shells fired for every one Ukrainian shell fired. Ukraine relies on various drones linked to tablets that use NATO compatible software. This data shares locations and allows Ukrainian forces to correct fire more quickly.

The advisor to the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Oleksiy Arestovych said in March 2022 that it might take sixty to ninety shells to destroy a position. With drone guidance however it was reduced to just nine shells. Drones also allow one gun to be tasked to one target instead of several firing as a battery. It also allows other weapons from T-64 tanks down to AGS-17 Plamya grenade launcher to act in an indirect fire role

Lineage of the Ukrainian Field Artillery
The 26th, 55th and 81st FA Divisions of the UGF and its 1st Rocket Field Artillery Division, as well as the divisional and later brigade field artillery regiments, together with the divisional and later brigade anti-tank battalions (and sometimes regiments), constituted for years since independence the Rocket Forces and Field Artillery Corps of the UGF till the 55th Brigade was created on the basis of the 55th Division. All of these sans the anti-tank battalions under brigades kept until the 2010s Soviet orders and decorations until these were removed from unit titles and their colours. In the 2000s, the former divisional regiments became field artillery brigades and the field artillery regiments under the brigade framework.

Organization of the Ukrainian field artillery division until the 2000s

 * Division HQ and HQ Battery
 * Target Acquisition Battery
 * 3 × Field Artillery Brigades/Regiments
 * MLRS Field Artillery Brigade/Regiment
 * Tactical Missile Field Artillery Brigade/Regiment (within 1st Rocket Field Artillery Division (TBM))
 * Anti-Tank Artillery Regiment
 * Reconnaissance Battalion
 * Artillery Replacement Battalion
 * Maintenance Battalion
 * Forward Logistics Battalion
 * Ordnance and Armaments Battalion
 * Training Regiment/Brigade
 * Signals Battalion
 * Radar Company/Battalion

Organization of the Rocket Forces and Field Artillery
The RF&FA, as one of the UGF's paramount combat support branches, has been Westernized slowly following Euromaidan and in a faster pace since the Russian invasion in 2022. These brigades of the field artillery, a leftover from former Soviet practice, provide huge combat support capabilities to the men and women of formations of the Ukrainian Ground Forces in combat operations in wartime and peacetime exercises in support of its paramount missions to the nation.

Field Artillery Brigades are designed to provide heavy combat support to mechanized infantry and armored brigades during offensive and defensive operations in wartime and peacetime exercises, as well as provide reinforcement motorized infantry to operational duties in support of the principal missions of the Ground Forces. These may be armed with either towed and/or self-propelled field guns.

Multiple Rocket Launcher Field Artillery Brigades are designed to provide fires support to mechanized infantry and armored brigades and can easily deliver saturation fire over enemy positions in offensive operations or to rear areas in the defensive. This is the same mission of the 19th Missile Brigade, but its focus is also to destroy enemy ground installations.

The Brigade Field Artillery Regiments and Anti-Tank Artillery Battalions of the mechanized, motorized, mountain, assault infantry and rifle infantry and armored brigades provide direct fires support to their subordinate formations and anti-tank warfare ops. The two mountain infantry brigades' regiments operate the same systems but are used as mountain artillery.

Equipment

 * Tochka U, Maritime Brimstone tactical ballistic missiles
 * S-200 Angara converted surface-to-surface short-to-medium range cruise missile
 * M270 ATACMS MLRS, M142 HIMARS-ATACMS tactical ballistic missiles/heavy MLRS
 * AGM-114 Hellfire Land-based man-portable semi-activelaser homing anti-materiel missile, can also be truck mounted
 * BM 21-Grad, BM-21 Bastion-1, APR-40, Tornado-G, BM-21 Verba, BM-27 Uragan, BM-27 Bastion-3, BM-27 Burevyi, BM-30 Smerch, BM-30 Vilkha, M270 LRU, M142 HIMARS, M142 HIMARS-GLSDB, RM-70, TRG-230, S-8 truck mounted multiple rocket launcher systems
 * M270, M270 GLSDB, TOS-1 Buratino, MT-LB S-8, MLT-LB S-5, MT-LB Grad, MT-LB Grad-1 tracked multiple rocket launcher systems
 * 2S1 Gvozdika, 2S3 Akatsiya, 2S5 Giatsint-S, 2S7 Pion, 2S19 Msta-S, PzH 2000, M109, AHS Krab, AS-90, T-155 Fırtına, MT-LB D-44, MT-LB D-30 tracked self-propelled artillery howitzers
 * 2S22 Bohdana, CAESAR, Archer Artillery System, 152mm SpGH DANA, 155 mm SpGH Zuzana wheeled self-propelled artillery howitzers
 * D-30, D-20, M-46,2A65 Msta-B, 2A36 Giatsint-B, M114, M777, M101, FH70, L119, M119, TRF1, OTO Melara Mod 56 towed howitzers
 * 9K114 Shturm, 9M113 Konkurs, 2A29/MT-12 Rapira towed anti-tank guns
 * MT-LB-12 (TD) tracked tank destroyers
 * Pansarvärnspjäs 1110 anti-tank towed recoilless rifles
 * 82 mm and 120 mm mortars (both from Western and Soviet manufacture)
 * 2S9 Nona, Panzermörser M113 and Bars-8MMk tracked self propelled mortars (the first also used by the Air Assault Forces)
 * M120 Rak wheeled self-propelled mortars

Under development for the RF&A:


 * Korshun-2 cruise missile
 * Hrim-2 and Sapsan tactical ballistic missile
 * Bohdana-B towed howitzer

Future acquisitions:


 * Boxer RCH-155 wheeled self-propelled artillery howitzers
 * Eva wheeled self-propelled artillery howitzers (to be produced under license)

Potential acquisitions:

Retired from the RF&A:


 * R-17 Elbrus tactical ballistic missile

Brigades



 * 15th Separate Artillery Reconnaissance Brigade SSI (with tab).png 15th Artillery Reconnaissance Brigade "Kyiv", in Drogobych (BM-30 Smerch, M142 HIMARS)
 * 19 ОРБр.svg 19th Missile Brigade "Saint Barbara", in Khmelnytskyi (Tochka-U)
 * 26 ОАБр к.svg 26th Artillery Brigade "Roman Dashkevich", in Berdychiv (AHS Krab, PzH 2000)
 * 27 ОРеАБр.svg 27th Rocket Artillery Brigade "Petro Kalnyshevsky", in Sumy (BM-27 Uragan, M142 HIMARS)
 * 38th Artillery Brigade, in Popilnia (2A36 Giatsint-B, 2A65 Msta-B, MT-12 Rapira)
 * 40th Separate Artillery Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 40th Artillery Brigade "Grand Knyaz Vytautas", in Pervomaisk (M777)
 * 43rd Separate Artillery Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 43rd Artillery Brigade "Hetman Taras Triasylo", in Pyriatyn (2S7 Pion, PzH 2000)
 * 44th Separate Artillery Brigade SSI (var. 2, no tab).svg 44th Artillery Brigade "Danylo Apostol", in Ternopil (M777, FH70)
 * 45logoclean.svg 45th Artillery Brigade, in Yavoriv (M777)
 * 47th arty.png 47th Artillery Brigade, in Kharkiv (2A36 Giatsint-B, 2A65 Msta-B, MT-12 Rapira)
 * 48th Separate Artillery Brigade.png 48th Artillery Brigade, in Poltava (2A36 Giatsint-B, 2A65 Msta-B, MT-12 Rapira)
 * 49arty.png 49th Artillery Brigade "Mstislav the Brave", in Chernihiv (AS-90, TRG-230)
 * 55 ОАБр.svg 55th Artillery Brigade "Zaporozhian Sich", in Zaporizhzhia (CAESAR, CAESAR 8x8)
 * Ємблема 107РАБ.png 107th Rocket Artillery Brigade, in Kremenchuk (BM-30 Smerch, Vilkha, M270A1 MLRS)

Two additional artillery brigades are part of the Ukrainian Air Assault Forces, respectively the Ukrainian Marine Corps:


 * 148 ОГСАДн к.svg 148th Artillery Brigade, in Zhytomyr (2S3 Akatsiya)
 * 406th Separate Artillery Brigade.png 406th Artillery Brigade "Oleksiy Almazov", in Mykolaiv (M777, 2A36 Giatsint-B)

Assigned to the Armored Corps and Mechanized Infantry

 * 1 ОТБр.svg 1st Tank Brigade Artillery Group
 * 3 ОТБр к.svg 3rd Tank Brigade Artillery Group
 * 4th Tank Brigade Patch.png 4th Tank Brigade Artillery Group
 * 5th Separate Tank Brigade.png 5th Tank Brigade Artillery Group
 * 10th Mountain Assault Brigade Insignia (UA).svg 10th Mountain Assault Brigade Artillery Group (Mountain)
 * 11th Motorized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 13th Separate Jager Brigade Insignia.png 13th Jaeger Brigade Artillery Group
 * 14 ОМБр.png 14th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 15th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 17th tank brigade insignia daily.svg 17th Tank Brigade Artillery Group
 * 21st Separate Mechanized Brigade.png 21st Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 22nd Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI (ver. 2, no tab).svg 22nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 23rd Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI.svg 23rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 24 ОМБр.svg 24th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 28 ОМБр к.svg 28th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 30 ОМБр.svg 30th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 31st Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 31st Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 32nd Separate Mechanized Brigade Insignia.webp 32nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 33rd mech.png 33rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 41st mech.png 41st Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 42nd Separate Mechanized Brigade.png 42nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 43rd Separate Mechanized Brigade.png 43rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 44th mech.png 44th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 47 Logo 23 RGB Black.png 47th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 53 ОМБр.svg 53rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 54th Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 54th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 56th Motorized Infantry Brigade SSI.svg 56th Motorized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 57th Motorized Brigade Patch.png 57th Motorized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 58th Separate Motorized Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 58th Motorized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 59th Separate Motorized Infantry Brigade SSI (no tab).png 59th Motorized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 60-та окрема піхотна бригада.png 60th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 61 ОПЄБр к.svg 61st Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 62nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 63-тя окрема механізована бригада.png 63rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 65th mech.png 65th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 66 ОМБр к.svg 66th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 67th mech.png 67th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 68th jager brigade.png 68th Jaeger Brigade Artillery Group
 * 72 ОМБр.svg 72nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 88th Separate Mechanized Brigade.png 88th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 92nd Separate Motorized Infantry Brigade SSI.svg 92nd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 93 ОМБр п.svg 93rd Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 110 brigade.png 110th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 115th Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 115th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 116th Separate Mechanized Brigade SSI (no tab).svg 116th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 117th mech.png 117th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 118mech.png 118th Mechanized Brigade Artillery Group
 * 128 ОГШБр.png 128th Mountain Assault Brigade Artillery Group (Mountain)
 * 141st Reserve Rifle Brigade Artillery Group
 * 142nd Separate Reserve Rifle Brigade SSI.svg 142nd Reserve Rifle Brigade Artillery Group
 * 143rd Separate Reserve Rifle Brigade SSI.svg 143rd Reserve Rifle Brigade Artillery Group
 * 144th Reserve Rifle Brigade Artillery Group

Assigned to other branches

 * Brigade Artillery Groups/Regiments of the UkrAAF
 * Marine Artillery Regiments of Marine Brigades under UkrMC

Other units

 * 6th Artillery Training Regiment, in Divychky

Outside the Armed Forces but operationally controlled in wartime

 * Field Artillery Battalions of the National Guard of Ukraine