Internal troops
Internal troops, also translated as interior troops, are paramilitary gendarmerie forces subordinated to ministries of internal affairs, primarily in post-Soviet states, charged with maintaining public order, suppressing riots and internal rebellions, combating terrorism, and securing critical state infrastructure such as prisons, borders, and government facilities.[1] These units, often equipped with military-grade weaponry and trained to military standards, function as a bridge between regular police and the armed forces, enabling rapid deployment against domestic threats without invoking full martial law.[1] In Russia, the Internal Troops (Vnutrenniye Voyska) exemplified this role, numbering over 300,000 personnel at their peak and participating in counterinsurgency operations, including the First Chechen War where they supported efforts to restore federal control amid separatist violence.[1][2] Originating in the Soviet era under the NKVD and later the MVD, internal troops evolved from guarding revolutionary order in 1919 to broader security mandates during World War II, where they secured rear areas and combated sabotage, demonstrating their utility in hybrid internal-external threats. Post-1991, in the Russian Federation, they reinforced police during economic turmoil and ethnic conflicts, though their expansion raised concerns over militarization of domestic policing and potential for suppressing political dissent, as evidenced by deployments against protests and in regional hotspots.[3] Controversies included allegations of excessive force in crowd control and involvement in high-casualty operations, underscoring the tension between order enforcement and civil liberties in centralized states.[2] A pivotal reorganization occurred in 2016 under President Vladimir Putin, merging the Internal Troops—approximately 140,000 strong—into the newly created National Guard (Rosgvardia), directly commanded by the interior minister with presidential oversight, to consolidate internal security amid perceived instability risks like color revolutions.[4][5] This shift enhanced their operational autonomy and firepower, including armored vehicles and aviation, but critics from think tanks noted it as a personalization of loyalty mechanisms, prioritizing regime protection over decentralized law enforcement.[2] Similar structures persist in countries like Azerbaijan and Mongolia, adapting the model for local contexts such as border patrols and disaster response.[1]Definition and Primary Role
Core Functions and Mandate
The mandate of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) of Russia centered on safeguarding internal stability and augmenting civilian law enforcement capabilities, as codified in the Federal Law No. 1026-1 of March 19, 1993, "On Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation" (later amended, including by Federal Law No. 134-FZ of February 6, 1997). This legislation delineated their primary role as a paramilitary auxiliary to the MVD, distinct from regular armed forces, with emphasis on non-combat internal security rather than external defense. Their functions prioritized empirical threat response over expansive military engagements, reflecting a causal focus on preventing domestic disorder from escalating into broader instability.[6][7] Core tasks included joint operations with MVD police to maintain public order and security, particularly in suppressing mass riots, armed rebellions, or organized criminal threats that exceeded regular police capacity; by 2011, such deployments involved over 300,000 personnel in peak readiness for urban unrest scenarios. They were also responsible for physically securing vital state infrastructure—such as nuclear power plants, government communications hubs, and transportation networks—along with escorting high-risk special cargoes like radioactive materials, with dedicated divisions maintaining continuous armed perimeters at approximately 1,000 key sites nationwide as of the early 2000s. Guarding MVD facilities and correctional colonies formed another pillar, encompassing the convoying of over 500,000 prisoners annually and quelling prison riots, which reduced escape incidents by bolstering institutional control.[8][9] Further mandates encompassed active counter-terrorism and anti-extremist measures, including rapid-response raids and intelligence-supported operations against separatist or radical groups, as evidenced in their role during the North Caucasus conflicts where specialized units neutralized over 200 terrorist cells between 1999 and 2014. The troops provided territorial defense support in wartime, assisting regular forces in rear-area security, and aided Federal Border Service operations during incursions or smuggling surges. In non-combat contingencies, they executed emergency response duties under Russia's civil defense framework, such as flood relief in 2010 (deploying 15,000 troops for evacuation and logistics) and counter-narcotics patrols along smuggling routes. These functions underscored a mandate grounded in immediate, localized threat mitigation, with legal constraints prohibiting offensive actions absent presidential decree.[10][11]Legal and Constitutional Basis
The constitutional foundation for the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation is rooted in Article 59 of the 1993 Constitution, which mandates that defense of the Fatherland is the duty of citizens and specifies that military service is performed in the Armed Forces as well as in the internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, in accordance with federal law.[12] This provision integrates the Internal Troops into the federal structure of national security, distinguishing them from regular armed forces while subjecting them to the same compulsory service obligations. Article 71 further delineates federal competence over defense and security matters, encompassing the establishment and regulation of such paramilitary formations to protect state integrity and public order.[13] The primary statutory basis was Federal Law No. 1026-1 of February 6, 1993, "On Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Russian Federation," which outlined their legal status, organizational principles, tasks (including guarding important state facilities, combating terrorism, and assisting in emergency situations), rights, and operational standards.[14] This law positioned the Internal Troops as a distinct component of the federal executive branch, subordinate to the Ministry of Internal Affairs while ultimately under the President's authority as Supreme Commander-in-Chief, enabling their deployment for internal security without infringing on civilian rights except as prescribed by law.[15] Subsequent amendments, including those in Federal Law No. 153-FZ of 2016, refined their functions prior to reorganization, ensuring alignment with evolving threats like organized crime and mass unrest.[16] In practice, the legal framework emphasized proportionality and legality in operations, with troop actions governed by federal constitutional laws on states of emergency (Article 56 of the Constitution) and martial law, restricting deployments to scenarios threatening constitutional order or public safety.[13] Judicial oversight was implicit through general constitutional protections of human rights (Chapter 2), though enforcement relied on internal disciplinary mechanisms and Ministry accountability to the federal government.[17] This basis reflected a balance between centralized control for national defense and decentralized execution under ministerial command, as affirmed in military doctrine documents referencing constitutional principles.[18]Historical Development
Origins and Soviet Era (1918–1991)
The Internal Troops of the Soviet Union trace their origins to the chaotic period following the Bolshevik Revolution and the ensuing Russian Civil War. Formed as the Internal Security Troops of the Republic (VOKhR), they were established by a decree of the Council of Workers' and Peasants' Defense on May 23, 1919, titled "On Auxiliary Troops," which consolidated existing detachments responsible for safeguarding revolutionary order, protecting vital infrastructure such as railways and factories, and combating banditry and counter-revolutionary activities.[19] These units, numbering around 50,000 personnel by late 1919, operated under the Cheka (the Bolshevik secret police) and played a supportive role in the Red Army's campaigns, focusing on rear-area security rather than frontline combat.[20] Their mandate emphasized maintaining internal stability amid widespread peasant revolts and White Army advances, often employing harsh measures to enforce Bolshevik control over the countryside. In the 1920s and early 1930s, the VOKhR evolved into more structured formations under the Joint State Political Directorate (OGPU), with a 1922 reorganization integrating them into the Soviet state's security apparatus. By 1930, they were divided into distinct Internal Troops and Border Troops branches under OGPU oversight, tasked with guarding forced labor camps, convoying prisoners, and suppressing rural unrest during collectivization drives that resulted in millions of deaths from famine and repression.[20] The 1934 merger of OGPU into the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD) transformed them into the NKVD Troops, which expanded to over 200,000 personnel by the mid-1930s. During the Great Purge of 1937–1938, these troops facilitated mass arrests, executions, and deportations, executing operational orders that liquidated perceived enemies of the state, including military officers and party officials, in a campaign that claimed an estimated 700,000 lives overall.[20] During World War II, NKVD Internal Troops divisions, such as the 1st Motorized Rifle Division, were redeployed to the front lines, participating in the defense of Moscow in 1941 and subsequent counteroffensives, suffering heavy casualties while simultaneously maintaining rear security, guarding over 1.5 million Gulag prisoners, and suppressing collaborationist activities.[20] Postwar, reorganized under the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) in 1946 as Vnutrenniye Voyska MVD, they focused on domestic order, combating nationalist insurgencies in the Baltic states and western Ukraine through the 1950s, where units conducted anti-partisan operations that neutralized thousands of armed resistors but at the cost of widespread civilian reprisals. By the 1960s–1980s, with forces peaking at approximately 300,000–500,000 troops organized into divisions, regiments, and specialized units for convoy, railway protection, and riot control, they enforced stability during events like the 1962 Novocherkassk uprising, quelling worker protests with lethal force that killed at least 24 civilians.[20] The Troops remained a key pillar of the Soviet regime's coercive apparatus until the USSR's dissolution in December 1991, after which their structures fragmented among successor states.Post-Soviet Adaptation (1991–2016)
Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, the Internal Troops were reestablished under the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs, inheriting the majority of Soviet-era units stationed within the Russian Federation and adapting their mandate to address emerging domestic threats such as ethnic separatism, organized crime, and political instability amid economic turmoil. Personnel strength in the mid-1990s reached estimates of 250,000 to 350,000, though only approximately 70,000 comprised combat-ready mechanized infantry equipped with artillery and armored vehicles, with the remainder largely dedicated to guarding prisons, factories, and infrastructure.[3][21] During the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, Internal Troops units were mobilized alongside police forces to encircle the White House (parliament building) and support President Boris Yeltsin's decree dissolving the [Supreme Soviet](/page/Supreme Soviet), contributing to the suppression of anti-Yeltsin demonstrators and the eventual storming of the facility on October 4, which solidified executive authority but highlighted the troops' role in domestic political enforcement.[22] In the First Chechen War (1994–1996), Internal Troops participated in the federal invasion launched on December 11, 1994, supporting Ministry of Defense operations in urban combat and post-capture administration, but demonstrated limited effectiveness due to inadequate training for guerrilla and street fighting—originally oriented toward crowd control—resulting in poor coordination, high casualties during Chechen counteroffensives (e.g., over 500 dead in Grozny assaults by August 1996), and reliance on Ministry of Defense handovers for key areas.[23] The Second Chechen War (1999–2000) saw improved unified command structures, with Internal Troops securing northern Chechen territories, conducting cleanup operations in Grozny after February 2000 Ministry of Defense withdrawals, and establishing control posts, though challenges persisted including ambushes (e.g., 20 killed near Grozny on March 2, 2000) and 50% company-level casualties from incompatible communications and residual rebel threats; specialized subunits like OMON performed better in localized engagements.[23] These conflicts underscored adaptations toward counter-insurgency, with troops increasingly integrated into North Caucasus operations against terrorism and banditry, incurring significant losses that prompted evaluations of their combat readiness.[3] Reforms in the 2000s aimed to streamline operations amid budget constraints and shifting priorities, including planned reductions to 140,000–150,000 personnel by 2000 and further to 120,000 by 2006 through transferring non-combat roles (e.g., prison guarding to the Justice Ministry); by 2008, district commands were reorganized into seven operational-territorial entities to enhance mobility and response to internal disturbances.[3][16] This period emphasized professionalization for riot suppression, protection of critical infrastructure, and anti-terrorist duties, reflecting a post-Soviet pivot from mass mobilization to targeted internal security amid reduced external threats and fiscal pressures, though persistent underfunding and equipment obsolescence limited full implementation.[3]Reform and Dissolution (2016)
On 5 April 2016, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed Decree No. 183, establishing the Federal Service of Troops of the National Guard of the Russian Federation (Rosgvardiya) as a new federal executive body directly subordinate to the president. This reform transformed the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) into the primary military component of the National Guard, effectively dissolving their prior independent command structure under the MVD's Main Directorate. The move centralized authority over internal security forces, integrating not only the Internal Troops but also specialized police units such as OMON (special purpose mobile units) and SOBR (rapid response squads), which together numbered over 200,000 personnel.[24][25][26] Viktor Zolotov, previously head of the Presidential Security Service, was appointed Director of the National Guard on the same date, overseeing an initial force drawn largely from the Internal Troops' approximately 170,000 troops equipped with armored vehicles, artillery, and aviation assets. The reform's official rationale focused on streamlining responses to terrorism, extremism, organized crime, and public disorders, with enhanced powers including the right to use lethal force and check documents without court warrants. By July 2016, the National Guard had assumed operational control, participating in counter-terrorism operations that reportedly neutralized over 100 militants that year under the National Anti-Terrorism Committee's coordination.[9][4][27] On 30 September 2016, Putin issued Decree No. 510, which formalized the National Guard's organization, functions, and statutes while explicitly revoking the 2003 regulations that had governed the Internal Troops' Main Command. This completed the legal transition, reassigning all Internal Troops units, bases, and equipment—valued at billions of rubles in assets—to Rosgvardiya without disbandment of personnel, though some administrative redundancies were eliminated. Security analyses, such as those from the Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, interpret the reform as a strategic consolidation to bolster regime loyalty and counter potential unrest, given the National Guard's direct reporting line to the president and Zolotov's personal ties to Putin, rather than purely enhancing MVD efficiency. Official Rosgvardiya records affirm continuity in tasks like guarding critical infrastructure, with no reported mass demobilizations.[28][29][30]Organizational Structure
Command and Control Hierarchy
The Internal Troops of Russia operated under the direct authority of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD), with their Commander-in-Chief serving as a Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs to ensure integrated oversight of internal security functions.[31] This positioning maintained a distinct chain of command separate from the Ministry of Defense, allowing the troops to focus on domestic stability while reporting solely to MVD leadership.[32] The Minister exercised ultimate control, delegating operational command to the Commander-in-Chief, who coordinated with MVD's collegial bodies for policy alignment.[33] At the apex of the operational hierarchy stood the Main Command of the Internal Troops, comprising the Commander-in-Chief's office, the Main Staff (responsible for planning, intelligence, and operations), and specialized directorates for personnel, combat training, armaments, logistics, communications, and engineering.[33] [34] These entities handled centralized functions such as troop mobilization, resource allocation, and doctrinal development, with the Main Staff maintaining real-time situational awareness through automated control systems. Subordinate to the Main Command were regional commands, reorganized in 2008 from prior military okrugs into seven entities aligned with Russia's federal districts: Central, Northwestern, Southern, Volga, Ural, Siberian, and Eastern.[9] Each regional command, led by a commander reporting to the Commander-in-Chief, oversaw territorial units including divisions, brigades, and regiments tailored to local threats, facilitating decentralized execution of missions like riot control and facility protection.[9] [34]- Central Regional Command: Headquartered in Moscow, managing units in the Central Federal District.
- Northwestern Regional Command: Based in St. Petersburg, covering northwestern territories.
- Southern Regional Command: Located in Rostov-on-Don, focused on southern regions including counter-insurgency zones.
- Volga Regional Command: In Nizhny Novgorod, overseeing Volga Federal District operations.
- Ural Regional Command: Headquartered in Yekaterinburg, handling Ural industrial security.
- Siberian Regional Command: In Novosibirsk, responsible for Siberian expanse.
- Eastern Regional Command: In Khabarovsk, addressing Far Eastern border-adjacent duties.[9]
Key Units and Formations
The Internal Troops' key units and formations were categorized into operational-purpose (for rapid intervention and combat), guard (for securing facilities and cargo), convoy (for prisoner escort), and specialized support elements, comprising approximately 180,000 personnel by the mid-2000s across districts subordinated to regional commands.[21] Operational formations, including divisions and brigades, constituted the mobile reserve capable of independent maneuvers, typically structured with motorized rifle regiments, tank battalions, artillery, and engineer subunits equipped for riot control, counter-insurgency, and territorial defense.[36] These were distributed across eight operational-territorial directorates, with central subordination for elite units.[21] The Separate Operational Purpose Division (ODON), named after Felix Dzerzhinsky and based in Moscow Oblast's Reutov and Vidnoye, stood as the flagship formation since its motorized rifle roots in 1956, evolving from NKVD guards into a rapid-deployment force with 2nd and 23rd Special Purpose Regiments, 116th Separate Special Purpose Brigade (for high-risk operations), and support assets like the 310th Reconnaissance Battalion and 752nd Engineer-Sapper Battalion.[37] Numbering around 15,000 troops, ODON handled VIP protection, anti-terrorist assaults, and federal reinforcements, notably deploying in the 1993 Moscow crisis and North Caucasus conflicts before integration into the National Guard in 2016.[38] Regional operational units included the 2nd Division (headquartered in Novosibirsk for Siberian coverage), 7th Division (in Verkhnyaya Salda, Urals), 27th Brigade (Volgograd), and 34th Division (Rostov-na-Donu), each with 4,000-6,000 personnel in regiment-based structures for localized threat response, such as the North Caucasus insurgency where the 46th Separate Operational Purpose Brigade conducted urban combat patrols from 1999 onward.[21] Guard formations, like the Federal Railway Troops Brigade, secured transport infrastructure with fortified detachments, while convoy divisions—such as the 36th in Moscow—managed over 500,000 annual prisoner transports using armored convoys and specialized trains until reforms emphasized lighter mobile groups.[36]Personnel and Training
The Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs comprised both conscript and contract-based personnel, with recruitment drawing from mandatory military service obligations for male citizens aged 18 to 27, supplemented by voluntary contracts that provided competitive salaries, housing allowances, and career advancement incentives to attract professionals for longer terms.[1] Conscripts typically served 12-month terms, while contract soldiers, who formed an increasing proportion amid Russia's broader military professionalization efforts in the 2000s and 2010s, committed to multi-year engagements and underwent enhanced selection processes emphasizing psychological resilience and prior experience.[39] Personnel strength prior to the 2016 dissolution hovered around 200,000 to 300,000 total, though operational combat-ready units represented a fraction of this figure, with the majority allocated to static guard duties. Analyses indicate that 100,000 to 150,000 troops were dedicated to securing prisons, factories, and infrastructure, limiting the force's maneuver capabilities, while approximately 70,000 personnel in mechanized infantry formations possessed integrated artillery and armored personnel carriers for mobile operations.[3] This composition reflected the Troops' dual role in routine internal security and contingency response, though officer shortages persisted since the late 1990s due to retention challenges and competition with the regular armed forces.[1] Training regimens mandated comprehensive professional, legal, physical, and tactical preparation, requiring all personnel to master standard-issue weapons, non-lethal special equipment, and protocols for crowd control, counter-insurgency, and facility protection.[40] Basic training for conscripts emphasized high-intensity drills simulating urban unrest and internal threats, incorporating principles of intellectual, volitional, and physical stress to foster initiative and endurance under operational duress.[41] Specialized units, including special forces (OMSN), received advanced courses in mountain warfare, aviation support, and joint exercises with regular military branches, with international cooperation initiated in 2009 for enhanced mountaineering and tactical skills.[1] Officer candidates and mid-level commanders trained at dedicated Ministry of Internal Affairs institutions, such as the Nizhny Novgorod Academy and St. Petersburg University, where programs integrated theoretical lectures on law enforcement doctrine, seminars on constitutional mandates, practical combat simulations, and mandatory field internships.[42][43] Legal preparation was formalized through directives requiring regular instruction on federal laws governing internal security, ensuring compliance during deployments.[44] Physical conditioning formed a core component, with empirical correlations established between superior fitness levels and operational efficacy in patrol, post, and riot suppression duties.[45] Rear-echelon and logistics personnel followed tailored protocols focused on sustainment under disrupted conditions, as outlined in Ministry guidelines for operational readiness.[46]Operational History
Internal Security and Riot Control
The Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) were primarily tasked with safeguarding public order and state security within Russia, including the protection of critical infrastructure such as government buildings, prisons, and communication facilities. In the realm of internal security, they conducted patrols, secured borders against illegal crossings, and supported law enforcement in combating organized crime and terrorism precursors. Their riot control functions involved reinforcing regular police units during mass disturbances, employing non-lethal and lethal measures to disperse crowds, and preventing escalation into armed conflicts. These operations emphasized rapid deployment of specialized divisions, such as the Dzerzhinsky Division, equipped for urban crowd management.[21][47] During the Soviet era, Internal Troops operational units executed riot control duties, including the suppression of subversive groups, worker strikes, and localized revolts, often in coordination with local militias. For instance, they were authorized for emergency interventions to restore order in industrial centers facing unrest, utilizing armored vehicles and infantry tactics to contain and neutralize threats without broader military involvement. This role extended to protecting transportation hubs and utilities from sabotage amid civil disturbances. Post-1991, the Troops adapted to Russia's fragmented political landscape, focusing on ethnic tensions and economic protests, with units trained in de-escalation techniques alongside forceful dispersal methods like water cannons and tear gas deployment.[20][47] A notable deployment occurred during the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, when MVD Internal Troops units were mobilized to Moscow on October 3, assembling near the White House (parliament building) to support President Yeltsin's forces against anti-government demonstrators and armed parliamentary loyalists. Approximately 10,000-15,000 Interior Ministry personnel, including Internal Troops elements, helped seal off the area, block reinforcements, and suppress barricades, contributing to the crisis resolution after clashes that resulted in over 140 deaths. Their involvement underscored a doctrine prioritizing regime stability over parliamentary opposition, with Troops providing firepower and logistics absent from regular police capabilities. In subsequent years, such as during 1990s regional unrest in the North Caucasus, they assisted in quelling riots tied to economic hardship, deploying riot squads to major cities like Grozny and Vladikavkaz.[22][21] Training for these roles emphasized psychological resilience and tactical restraint, with exercises simulating mob behavior and urban chokepoints to minimize casualties while ensuring compliance. By 2016, prior to their integration into the National Guard, the Troops had conducted thousands of such operations annually, logging over 50,000 internal security engagements in peak years like 1994-1995 amid hyperinflation protests. Effectiveness was measured by swift restoration of order, though critiques from independent analysts noted occasional overreach in non-lethal force application.[47]Counter-Insurgency and Anti-Terrorism Roles
The Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (VVMVD) played a central role in Russia's counter-insurgency efforts during the First and Second Chechen Wars, as well as the ongoing insurgency in the North Caucasus, where they conducted the majority of ground operations against separatist and Islamist militants.[48] These operations often involved zachistka (mop-up) sweeps to identify, capture, or neutralize insurgents in populated areas, a tactic integrated into broader federal strategies blending counter-terrorism with population control.[49] Deployments intensified after the declaration of a counter-terrorist regime in Chechnya on December 31, 1999, with VVMVD units securing rear areas, patrolling borders, and engaging rebel forces alongside regular army elements.[16] In anti-terrorism specifically, specialized detachments within the Internal Troops, such as the "Rus" special forces unit under the Separate Operational Purpose Division (ODON), focused on direct action against high-value terrorist targets and crisis response in the North Caucasus.[50] Since 1999, over 11,000 VVMVD personnel participated in counter-terrorism missions across the region, contributing to the suppression of jihadist networks linked to groups like the Caucasus Emirate.[16] These efforts overlapped with counter-insurgency, as terrorist tactics—such as ambushes and bombings—were employed by insurgents, prompting VVMVD units to prioritize rapid-response operations and intelligence-driven raids.[49] By the mid-2000s, such deployments helped reduce large-scale attacks, though sporadic violence persisted until the Troops' reorganization in 2016.[51]Notable Deployments and Engagements
The Internal Troops were deployed during the First Chechen War (1994–1996) to reinforce police efforts against separatist forces, but their operations were hampered by insufficient heavy armament and experience in sustained field combat, contributing to overall Russian setbacks.[52] In the subsequent Second Chechen War (1999–2009), they assumed a more prominent counterinsurgency role in the North Caucasus, conducting patrols, securing infrastructure, and engaging militants, with over 11,000 personnel awarded state honors for participation, including 72 posthumously.[53] Units like the 2nd Separate Operational Division operated in high-risk areas such as Grozny, supporting the transition from large-scale assaults to targeted stabilization efforts.[54] In the Soviet era, the Internal Troops suppressed worker unrest in Novocherkassk on June 1–2, 1962, following protests at the NEVZ locomotive plant over a 30–35% wage reduction; troops from Rostov-on-Don, including snipers and machine gunners, fired on demonstrators, resulting in at least 24 deaths and over 87 injuries, with more than 200 arrests.[55] This engagement exemplified their mandate for rapid response to domestic disorders, though it drew later scrutiny for excessive force amid economic grievances.[56] The Troops also contributed to internal security during post-Soviet conflicts like the Tajikistani Civil War (1992–1997), providing reinforcements under CIS frameworks to guard borders and key sites amid factional fighting that claimed 20,000–150,000 lives.[57] Their roles extended to riot control in events such as the 1986 Alma-Ata disturbances, where they helped quell ethnic and nationalist riots triggered by leadership changes.[20]Equipment and Armament
Ground Vehicles and Armored Assets
The Internal Troops maintained a fleet of wheeled armored personnel carriers (APCs) suited for rapid deployment in internal security operations, primarily the BTR series derived from Soviet-era designs. These vehicles provided mobility and light protection against small arms fire, enabling motorized rifle units to respond to civil unrest, border patrols, and counter-insurgency tasks. By 2015, the troops received 9 new BTR-82A APCs, each costing approximately 27.9 million rubles, allocated to the 50th Brigade in Rostov and regional police directorates in Sverdlovsk and Tver.[58] Additionally, 15 BTR-82AM variants were planned for modernization from existing BTR-80 stocks at the 81st Armored Repair Plant in Armavir, at a unit cost of 23.4 million rubles, enhancing firepower with improved 30mm autocannons while retaining amphibious capabilities.[58] Earlier models like the BTR-70 and BTR-80 formed the backbone of operational units, with maintenance manuals specifically adapted for Internal Troops training as of 2003. Light armored vehicles supplemented APCs for reconnaissance and special operations, emphasizing speed over heavy armor. Variants of the GAZ Tigr (VPK-23314) included the SPM-1 (11 units delivered in 2010), SPM-2 (17 units in 2010), and SBM VPK-233136 (10 units in 2014 at 9.5 million rubles each, with 11 more planned for 2015), configured for mine resistance and mounting machine guns or grenade launchers.[58] These 4x4 platforms supported rapid intervention forces, with over 40 units integrated by mid-decade for enhanced tactical mobility in urban and rural environments.[58] Heavy armored assets, including tanks, were historically limited and primarily used for training or high-threat contingencies like the Chechen conflicts. In the late 1980s and 1990s, units received around 100 T-62/T-62M tanks and over 100 PT-76 light tanks from Ministry of Defense transfers, forming dedicated battalions in locations such as Balashikha and Nalchik; by 1999, the 93rd Mechanized Regiment operated 69 T-62s and about 50 PT-76s.[59] These were deployed in combat roles during the First and Second Chechen Wars but faced obsolescence, leading to the phase-out of PT-76 by 2004 and transfer of T-62s back to the armed forces by 2006.[59] Infantry fighting vehicles like BMP-2 were occasionally assigned to operational formations, though in smaller numbers compared to regular army units, reflecting the troops' focus on internal rather than conventional warfare.[59]| Vehicle Type | Key Models | Quantity (Examples) | Primary Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armored Personnel Carriers | BTR-82A, BTR-82AM, BTR-80 | 9 BTR-82A (2015); 15 BTR-82AM planned (2015) | Troop transport, fire support | Wheeled, amphibious; 30mm cannon on newer variants[58] |
| Light Armored Vehicles | Tigr (SPM-1/2, SBM VPK-233136) | 11 SPM-1, 17 SPM-2 (2010); 10+11 SBM (2014-2015) | Reconnaissance, rapid response | 4x4, mine-resistant; light armament[58] |
| Tanks (Historical) | T-62/T-62M, PT-76 | ~100 T-62s, >100 PT-76s (1989-1990s) | High-threat support | Phased out by 2006; used in Chechnya[59] |
Aviation and Support Assets
The aviation units of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia were formed on March 3, 1978, pursuant to a decree of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Council of Ministers of the USSR, to provide air transport, reconnaissance, and limited fire support capabilities for internal security missions.[60] These units included an aviation regiment based in the Moscow region and separate squadrons in select federal districts, focusing on rapid deployment of personnel and equipment to hotspots of unrest or counter-insurgency operations.[61] Fixed-wing aircraft in the inventory encompassed heavy transport models such as the Ilyushin Il-76M and Il-76MD, utilized for long-range troop and logistics movement, alongside medium transports like the Antonov An-12, An-26, and An-72 for shorter-haul operations.[62] Passenger-configured aircraft, including Tupolev Tu-134 and Tu-154 variants, supported command and control by ferrying high-level personnel and light cargo.[60] These assets enabled the Internal Troops to sustain operations in remote or contested areas without reliance on external military aviation branches. The rotary-wing fleet primarily consisted of Mil Mi-8 series helicopters for multi-role transport, capable of carrying up to 24 troops or equivalent cargo for insertion into urban or rugged terrain during riot control or anti-terrorist actions.[63] Armed variants included the Mil Mi-24 attack helicopters, equipped with rocket pods, machine guns, and anti-tank missiles for close air support against insurgent positions or fortified threats.[63] Heavy-lift capability was provided by the Mil Mi-26, the largest production helicopter globally, for evacuating heavy equipment or large troop contingents in disaster response or major internal conflicts.[60] Support assets integrated with aviation operations encompassed dedicated maintenance depots, forward refueling points, and specialized ground crews trained for rapid turnaround in austere environments, ensuring operational tempo during extended deployments such as those in the North Caucasus. These elements were transferred intact to the National Guard upon the Internal Troops' dissolution in 2016, with minimal initial changes to the core inventory.[60]Infantry Weapons and Logistics
The infantry components of the Russian Internal Troops, organized as light motorized units akin to regular army formations, were primarily armed with Kalashnikov-pattern assault rifles chambered in 5.45×39mm, reflecting standard Soviet-era designs adapted for internal security roles emphasizing close-quarters reliability over long-range precision. The AK-74 served as a core service rifle, with the modernized AK-74M variant providing improved ergonomics, optics compatibility, and plastic furniture for enhanced durability in urban patrols and riot suppression. Shorter-barreled carbine variants like the AKS-74U were issued to vehicle crews and special detachments for maneuverability in confined spaces. Older AK models remained in limited use for training and reserve units.[64][65][66] Specialized subunits, including counter-terrorism and rapid-response teams, employed suppressed and compact firearms such as the AS Val integrally silenced assault rifle in 9×39mm subsonic for stealth operations, and the 9A-91 compact rifle for low-signature engagements. The OC-14 Groza bullpup rifle, integrating a grenade launcher, was allocated to assault groups for breaching and fire support in high-threat internal conflicts. Machine guns like the PK and PKM provided squad-level suppressive fire, while pistols such as the Makarov PM were standard sidearms across formations. These armaments prioritized mass production, ease of maintenance, and ammunition commonality with broader MVD forces, enabling rapid resupply during extended deployments.[67][68][69]| Weapon Type | Model Examples | Caliber | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assault Rifle | AK-74, AK-74M | 5.45×39mm | Primary infantry weapon for patrols and engagements[65] |
| Carbine | AKS-74U | 5.45×39mm | Close-quarters and vehicle-mounted use[66] |
| Suppressed Rifle | AS Val | 9×39mm | Special operations and stealth missions[67] |
| Compact Rifle | 9A-91 | 9×39mm | Compact fire support in urban settings[68] |
| Bullpup Rifle | OC-14 Groza | 9×39mm | Assault with integrated grenade capability[69] |
Controversies and Debates
Criticisms of Excessive Force and Human Rights Issues
The Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) faced accusations of excessive force during the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, when units under MVD command participated in the operation to dissolve the Supreme Soviet by shelling the White House parliamentary building on October 3-4. Tanks from the Kantemirovskaya Division and Taman Division, coordinated with MVD internal troops securing the perimeter, fired over 300 rounds into the structure, igniting a fire that contributed to an estimated 146-187 deaths, including civilians and lawmakers inside.[70][22] Human rights organizations, such as Amnesty International, later described the operation as involving disproportionate violence against political opponents, with reports of snipers targeting fleeing individuals and inadequate distinction between armed resistors and non-combatants.[71] In the Chechen conflicts of the 1990s and 2000s, Internal Troops units were deployed for counterinsurgency operations, where they were implicated in widespread human rights violations including arbitrary detentions, torture, and extrajudicial killings. Human Rights Watch documented cases in 2008 where Internal Troops blocked villages like Ali-Yurt before dawn on July 28, 2002, facilitating sweeps that resulted in enforced disappearances and punitive house burnings, with over 300 homes destroyed in similar MVD-led actions across Chechnya between 2000 and 2009 as collective punishment for alleged rebel support.[72][73] Amnesty International reported in 1997 that Internal Troops personnel were rarely investigated for torture and ill-treatment of detainees, contributing to a pattern of impunity; for instance, in 1995-1996 filtration camps run by MVD forces held thousands, where beatings and mock executions were routine, leading to hundreds of undocumented deaths.[74] These abuses were attributed by advocacy groups to systemic failures in command accountability, though Russian authorities maintained such measures were necessary responses to separatist insurgency.[75] Criticisms extended to high-casualty counter-terrorism operations, such as the 2002 Nord-Ost theater siege, where MVD-affiliated special units supported the assault involving a fentanyl-based gas that killed at least 129 hostages due to respiratory failure and inadequate post-operation medical triage, with no prior public disclosure of the agent to allow for antidotes.[76] The European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2011 that Russian authorities, including MVD responders, violated Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights by failing to minimize hostage fatalities through poor planning and secrecy. Similarly, in the 2004 Beslan school siege, Internal Troops elements aided the storming that employed flamethrowers, grenade launchers, and tanks, resulting in 334 deaths including 186 children; a 2017 European Court of Human Rights judgment cited disproportionate force and operational delays as breaches of the right to life, with over 20 tons of explosives detonated in the gym.[77] Reports from groups like Human Rights Watch highlighted the lack of negotiation efforts and indiscriminate weaponry use, exacerbating civilian harm in enclosed spaces.[78]Achievements in Maintaining Stability
The Internal Troops played a key role in resolving the 1993 Russian constitutional crisis by deploying alongside other Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) forces to support President Boris Yeltsin's executive authority against the parliamentary opposition entrenched in the White House. On October 3-4, 1993, MVD troops, including Internal Troops units, assembled in Moscow to contain armed protesters and facilitate the operation that dislodged the holdouts, averting a potential descent into broader civil conflict and enabling the adoption of a new constitution that centralized power and stabilized the post-Soviet political framework.[22][79] This intervention, though forceful, is cited by analysts as instrumental in preventing the fragmentation of the nascent Russian Federation amid economic collapse and regional separatism.[80] In their mandate to safeguard critical infrastructure, the Internal Troops effectively guarded strategic sites such as nuclear facilities, transportation hubs, and government installations throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, preventing sabotage and disruptions that could have exacerbated domestic instability during periods of heightened crime and terrorism. By 2000, these units had secured over 100 key objects nationwide, contributing to the continuity of essential services like energy production and public administration at a time when organized crime groups targeted such assets for leverage.[21] Their presence deterred attacks on prisons and communication centers, reducing the risk of cascading unrest from localized breaches.[81] Additionally, the Troops supported counter-drug and counter-terrorism initiatives that indirectly bolstered public order by curtailing narcotics-fueled violence and extremist networks in restive areas, with operations in the North Caucasus from 1999 onward correlating with a decline in large-scale urban riots compared to the mid-1990s. In disaster response, they provided security and logistics during natural calamities, such as floods and industrial accidents, ensuring orderly evacuations and aid distribution without secondary disorders. These efforts, while not without operational challenges, maintained baseline societal cohesion amid Russia's turbulent transition.[16][21]Comparative Analysis with Other Internal Security Forces
The Russian Internal Troops (VV) functioned as a paramilitary entity akin to gendarmerie forces in nations like France and Italy, combining military organization with internal security mandates such as riot suppression, facility protection, and public order maintenance. Subordinated to the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD), the VV mirrored the dual civil-military nature of the French National Gendarmerie and Italian Carabinieri, which operate under interior or defense ministries to augment civilian police in high-threat scenarios. However, the VV's roles extended more explicitly to counter-insurgency and border convoy escorting, shaped by Russia's expansive territory and recurrent separatist threats in regions like Chechnya during the 1990s and 2000s.[3][82] Key divergences lay in subordination, armament, and accountability. The French Gendarmerie, integrated into the Ministry of Armed Forces with around 102,000 personnel as of recent assessments, emphasizes judicial policing in rural areas (covering 95% of France's territory) and participates in overseas deployments, equipped primarily for mobility rather than sustained combat.[82] In comparison, the VV—peaking at approximately 170,000 troops before their 2016 merger—possessed heavier assets like BTR armored vehicles and Mi-8 helicopters, prioritizing regime stability amid potential coups or ethnic unrest, with less emphasis on routine investigations. The Italian Carabinieri, numbering about 110,000 and formally part of the armed forces, balance similar duties but with stronger constitutional safeguards and EU interoperability, avoiding the VV's concentration on penitentiary guarding and special operations against organized crime syndicates.[3][83]| Force | Country | Approximate Size (Pre-2016/Recent) | Primary Subordination | Core Roles | Armament Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internal Troops (VV) | Russia | 170,000 | MVD (Interior) | Riot control, infrastructure guard, counter-insurgency | Heavy: armored personnel carriers, aviation assets[3] |
| National Gendarmerie | France | 102,000 | Armed Forces | Rural policing, judicial probes, mobile intervention[82] | Light-medium: vehicles, helicopters for patrol |
| Carabinieri | Italy | 110,000 | Defense Ministry | Public order, anti-mafia, territorial security[83] | Medium: small arms, specialized units for urban ops |