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Yeysk air base

Coordinates: 46°41′01″N 38°12′52″E / 46.6835°N 38.2145°E / 46.6835; 38.2145
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(Redirected from Eisk Airport)
Yeysk airbase

Аэропорт Ейск
Summary
Airport typeMilitary
OperatorRussian Aerospace Forces
Coordinates46°41′01″N 38°12′52″E / 46.6835°N 38.2145°E / 46.6835; 38.2145
Map
Yeysk airbase is located in Krasnodar Krai
Yeysk airbase
Yeysk airbase

Yeysk air base, also Yeysk Airport (IATA: EIK, ICAO: URKE), is a military air base and civilian airport[not verified in body] located near the city of Yeysk, Russia.

The base is home to the 859th Centre for Combat Application and Crew Training for Naval Aviation of Russian Naval Aviation.[1]

History

[edit]

It was the location of the 959th Bomber Air Regiment, part of the 4th Air and Air Defence Forces Army.[when?] The regiment has now been reorganised as an aviation base, part of the new 4th Command of Air Forces and Air Defence.

Yeysk was a mixed military/civilian airfield (ru:Ейск (аэропорт)),[citation needed] home to the Yeysk Higher Military Order of Lenin Aviation School during the Cold War[2] and the 10th Mixed Aviation Division (4th Air Army) during the 1990s.

After the disbandment of the 10th Mixed Aviation Division the headquarters[when?] of the 1st Guards Stalingrad, Svirsky Composite Air Division arrived. Also at the airport based aviation group Yeysk Higher Military Institute, equipped with L-39 aircraft.[citation needed]

In addition, the 959th Bomber Regiment was previously based at the airfield, which was part of the 1st Guards Composite Air Division. The 959th Bomber Aviation Regiment was previously the 959th Training Aviation Regiment.[3] In September 2009, due to the transfer of the airfield from the Air Force to the Navy, the regiment was disbanded, and its members were part of the aircraft Su-24 relocated to Morozovsk airfield (6970th Air Base, 7th Brigade of Aerospace Defence).

On 1 February 2010, the 859th Naval Aviation Training Center under the leadership of Major-General Alexei Serdyuk opened at the airfield. To ensure the educational process, training units were to be relocated from the Ostrov (air base) (Pskov Oblast) and the village of Kacha. For service center from the previously disbanded and civilian staff will be involved in more than one thousand people.[citation needed]

As of September 2024, the 190th Mixed Aviation Regiment was reported to be active at the base while the 859th Naval Aviation Combat Training and Retraining Center continued to be hosted there.[4]


On the night of 4-5 April 2024, Ukrainian drones are reported to have attacked the airport. According to Ukrainian intelligence they destroyed two Su-25s and killed four base personnel. Russia denied these claims.[5][6]

Waves of Ukrainian drones struck Yeysk airbase early in the morning of 29 September 2024, resulting in fires[7] and explosions.[8] Early reports do not clarify the battle damage, and official reports from the two militaries have not yet been released.

Airlines and destinations

[edit]

The Yeysk airfield has at some times[when?] been used as a civilian airport.[citation needed]

AirlinesDestinations
Smartavia Moscow–Sheremetyevo[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Russian Naval Aviation - Yeysk (URKE)". Scramble.nl. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Yeysk Higher Military order of Lenin Aviation School im. twice Hero of the Soviet Union Pilot-Cosmonaut V.M. Komarov (EVVAU)". 2015-01-01. Retrieved 2024-02-20.
  3. ^ Holm. "959th Training Aviation Regiment".
  4. ^ Explosions and Fires Reported Across Multiple Russian Regions, United24, 30 September 2024.
  5. ^ DARIA DMYTRIIEVA (5 April 2024). "Ukraine organizes attack on three Russian airfields, Tu-95MS damaged". RBC-Ukraine.
  6. ^ Chris York; Oleksiy Sorokin (5 April 2024). "Source: Ukraine hits Russia's Engels air base. Can it change how Russia attacks?". The Kyiv Independent.
  7. ^ Russia burning as massive Ukrainian attack devastates airfield 'killing Putin's butcher', Express, 29 September 2024.
  8. ^ Russia Engulfed by Fires as Drone Barrage Targets Air Bases, Military Towns, Newsweek, 29 September 2024.