List of Russian aircraft losses in the Second Chechen War
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The following is an incomplete list of Russian aircraft losses in the Second Chechen War. It includes both helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft.
The general Russian aircraft losses 1999–2007 consisted of about 45 helicopters (23 Mi-8, 16 Mi-24, three Mi-26 and three others[1]) and 8 fixed-wing aircraft (two Su-24 fighter-bombers and six Su-25 ground-attack aircraft).
1999
- August 9, 2 Mi-8 helicopters were hit, on the ground at Botlikh airfield, Dagestan, by anti-tank guided missiles, one killed.
 
In a different accident in the same day a Russian border guards Mi-8 suffered tail separation on take-off in Dagestan. Three crew members were injured – status unknown.
- August 11, an Mi-8MT shot down by gunfire near the village of Novokuli, killing three.
 - September 9, a Su-25 crashed near the village of Buinaksk in Dagestan, due to mechanical malfunction. Pilot ejected and rescued.
 - September 11, a Russian military helicopter downed shot down near the Dagestani village of Duchi while on a reconnaissance mission.[2]
 - September 24, an Mi-26 heavy transport helicopter crash-landed and exploded in Dagestan with reported no casualties.
 - October 3, a Su-25 was shot down by a missile during a reconnaissance mission over the village of Tolstoy-Yurt killing its pilot.
 - October 4, a Su-24 shot down near the Chechen capital Grozny while searching for the Su-25 attack plane crashed the day before; the pilot was killed while the navigator was captured.[3]
 - December 13, a Su-25 ground attack plane went down in the morning in the area of Bachi-Yurt. Russian military officials said that the aircraft went down due to one of its S-13 unguided rockets jamming in the launcher and causing serious damage to the plane. The pilot, Sergei Borisyuk, ejected safely and was rescued after 26 hours.
 - Later in the same day a Mi-24 and a Mi-8 were destroyed while searching for the Su-25 plane that crashed earlier. The Mi-24 crashed in heavy fog killing two crew members. A Mi-8 was able to locate and pickup the pilot of the Su-25, however two Mi-8s returned to the Mi-24's crash site and were attacked by Chechen rebels near the village of Staryye Atagi, while carrying out a low altitude flight. One of the Mi-8s was shot down and crashed, killing four people on board.
 
2000
- January 12, two Mi-8 pilots, including the Hero of the Soviet Union Nikolay Maidanov, killed in an ambush as they prepared to land at Grozny Khankala airfield; the machine was crash-landed by the flight technician.
 - January 22, one Mi-8 helicopter suffered mechanical malfunction and crash-landed; no casualties. Another Mi-8 suffered mechanical malfunction and crash-landed; several injured.
 - January 29, two Russian Mi-8 transport helicopters came under fire over southern Chechnya, killing one man and severely wounding another.
 - February 18, a Russian army Mi-8 transport helicopter was shot down in the south of Chechnya, killing 15 people aboard.[4]
 - February 21, an Mi-24 assault helicopter was heavily damaged by ground fire near Shatoi and crash-landed; no casualties.
 - May 7, a Su-24MR reconnaissance plane crashed into a mountain in dense fog near the village of Benoi-Vedeno during a target-acquisition mission for a flight of several Su-25; the crew of two were killed.
 - May 14, an Mi-8 crashed on take-off due to a technical problem; 15 people on board were injured.
 - June 12, a Russian army transport helicopter crashed near Grozny, killing the crew of four.
 - August 6, an Mi-8 downed by ground fire, killing one airborne soldier.
 
2001
- May 31, an Mi-8 with 15 passengers aboard damaged by ground fire; pilot died from wounds after landing the damaged helicopter.
 - June 1, two members of the State Duma's defence committee Alexei Arbatov and Yevgeny Zelenov injured in an attack near the border with Chechnya; the pilot of the helicopter was fatally wounded, and the co-pilot was forced to make an emergency landing.[5]
 - June 14, two Russian Air Force Su-25 planes simultaneously crashed into a mountain while on a combat mission, killing both pilots. The two aircraft crashed due to low visibility and difficult terrain.
 - June 14, one Mi-8 heavily damaged by ground fire and made emergency landing; crew unharmed.
 - July 19, a Russian Interior Ministry helicopter crashes near Engenoi, killing nine special forces troops and wounding five.[6]
 - August 4, an Mi-8 transport helicopter crashes near the village of Tuskhoroi in Chechnya, killing three and injuring five.
 - August 15, a Mi-25 gunship shot down by an RPG near Tsa Vedeno, killing both pilots.[7]
 - August 17, Chechen fighters claim to shoot down a helicopter, a claim denied by Russian officials.[8][9]
 - September 2, Russian military helicopter Mi-8 crashed down near the Chechen village of Khindoy, killing four Russian service men and wounding two.
 - September 17, a surface-to-air missile shot down a VIP Mi-8 helicopter over central Grozny killing 13. The explosion killed several high-ranking Army officers, Major-General Anatoli Pozdnyakov (member of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces), Major-General Pavel Varfolomeyev (deputy director of staff of the Defence Ministry of Russia), eight colonels, and three crew members.[10][11][12]
 
2002
- January 27, a Russian Interior Ministry Mi-8 was shot down in Nadterechny District and exploded, killing 14 people including the crew. Among those killed in the crash were Russian Deputy Interior Minister Lieutenant-General Mikhail Rudchenko (responsible for security in the Southern Federal District), and deputy commander of the Internal Troops Major-General Nikolai Goridov, as well as several other high-ranking officers including colonels Oriyenko, Stepanenko, and Trafimov.[13]
 - February 7, a Russian military helicopter crashed and exploded shortly after take-off from Grozny, killing eight to 10 people aboard.[14]
 - April 29, a Russian Su-25 jet fighter crashed over the Vedeno region of southeast Chechnya, killing the pilot.[15]
 - August 9, the resistance fighters shot down an Mi-8 military helicopter near the village of Dyshne-Vedeno, killing up to three crew members.[16]
 - August 19, an overloaded Mi-26 transport helicopter crashes into a mine field near the main Russian army base of Khankala, killing 127 soldiers aboard after being hit by a rebel missile. As of 2008, is the greatest loss of life in the history of helicopter aviation.[17][18] A day of mourning was declared in Russia in connection with the catastrophe.[19]
 - August 31, Russian forces announced that an Mi-24 was shot down by enemy fire near Nozhai-Yurt, killing both crew members, as the 36th helicopter lost since September 1999.[20]
 - October 18, a military helicopter crashed into the Terek river in Chechnya, killing at least one.[21]
 - October 29, an Mi-8 helicopter crashed during an attempted landing near Grozny, killing three crew members and an onboard officer.[22]
 - September 1, a Russian military Mi-24 helicopter was shot down by a missile near the mountain village of Meskhety, with both crew members killed.[23]
 - September 27, an Mi-24 gunship helicopter was shot down over Galashki in Ingushetia during a fierce firefight with rebels, killing two airmen.[24]
 - November 3, Chechen rebels shot down an Mi-8, killing nine servicemen. The helicopter was struck by a portable ground-to-air missile fired from a building near Grozny shortly after its take-off from Khankala.
 
2003
- March 20, two Mi-24 went missing during a combat mission in Chechnya.[25]
 - July 7, an Mi-8 military helicopter crashed outside the village of Novogroznensky, killing four and injuring 11 servicemen.
 - August 7, an Mi-8 helicopter came under fire from the ground and crashed in the area of the Dyshne-Vedeno, killing one and seriously injuring two.[26]
 
2004
- September 5, an Mi-8 belonging to the MVD was found crashed into a mountain near the Ingush village of Karabulak, killing two and injuring one.
 - September 14, Chechen rebels shot down an Mi-24 helicopter, both crew members survived and landed safely.[27]
 
2005
- March 10, a Russian Mi-8 helicopter crashes en route to Khankala, after hitting a power line (bullet holes were later reportedly found in the wreckage.[28]). The crash killed 15 of the 16 people aboard, including members of the spetsnaz commando unit, Khabarovsk FSB, and the crew,[29]
 - March 22, a Russian Mi-8 military helicopter crashed near Khankala, with some reports saying six people on board were killed.[30]
 - July 16, a Russian border guard Mi-8 helicopter crashed in the Chechen mountains, resulting in eight dead, with one survivor.[31]
 
2006
- September 11, three army generals, including chief of logistics of Russia's North Caucasus Military District, Major-General Vladimir Sorokin, died when an army Mi-8 crashed in a suburb of Vladikavkaz, killing at least 12. A North Ossetian Islamic rebel group claimed they shot down the helicopter, but the defence ministry say the aircraft struck a tree in thick fog.[32]
 
2007
- April 27, a Russian military Mi-8 helicopter with special forces was downed by automatic rifle fire in Chechnya, killing all 20 people aboard.[33]
 
See also
- 2001 Grozny Mi-8 crash
 - 2002 Khankala Mi-26 crash
 - 2002 Shelkovskaya Mi-8 crash
 - 2007 Shatoy Mi-8 crash
 
References
- ↑ (Russian) "Игла" в стоге сена
 - ↑ Russian helicopter downed in Dagestan
 - ↑ http://www.aeronautics.ru/chechnya/losses/losses.htm
 - ↑ Russians say Chechens down helicopter
 - ↑ MPs hit in Chechen helicopter attack
 - ↑ Chechnya helicopter crash kills nine
 - ↑ Chechens down Russian helicopter
 - ↑ Crisis in Chechnya – August 2001
 - ↑ Russia's whistle blower
 - ↑ Russian Officers Are Killed in Helicopter Crash in Chechnya
 - ↑ Top Russians die in Chechnya crash
 - ↑ Chechen gang targeting generals eliminated
 - ↑ INTERIOR MINISTRY HELIOCOPTER CRASHES.
 - ↑ Russian helicopter crashes in Chechnya
 - ↑ Chechnya jet crashes: pilot dead
 - ↑ Chechen guerrillas attack the federal army in Chechnya and Ingushetia
 - ↑ 100 die as Russian helicopter crashes in Chechnya
 - ↑ Chechen gets life for killing 127 Russian soldiers
 - ↑ Russia to mourn helicopter dead
 - ↑ Helicopter downed in Chechnya
 - ↑ Helicopter Crashes in Chechnya, One Dead
 - ↑ Russian helicopter 'downed' in Chechnya
 - ↑ Russian Military Helicopter Shot Down in Chechnya
 - ↑ Helicopter Shot Down in Ingushetia
 - ↑ Russian helicopters 'lost' in Chechnya
 - ↑ Helicopter crashes in Chechnya
 - ↑ Rebels Down Chopper, 2 Killed
 - ↑ INVESTIGATORS FIND BULLET HOLES IN DOWNED CHOPPER
 - ↑ Helicopter crash in Chechnya kills 14 Russian military men
 - ↑ Russian chopper down in Chechnya
 - ↑ Helicopter crash in Chechnya kills 8; possibly shot down
 - ↑ Rebels 'shot Russian helicopter'
 - ↑ Death toll in Chechnya copter crash reaches 20
 
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