Soviet Army photograph

Soviet Army

Use attributes for filter !
Size3,668,075 active (1991); 4,129,506 reserve (1991)
Nickname(s) "Red Army"
FoundedSoviet Union
ColorRed and yellow
Disbanded25 December 1991
Engagements Vietnam War
Korean War
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID994486
Send edit request

About Soviet Army


The Soviet Army was the main land-based branch of the Soviet Armed Forces between February 1946 and December 1991, when it was replaced with the Russian Ground Forces, although it was not fully abolished until 25 December 1993.

Ukraine war: Cannabis in focus for veterans treatment

Ukraine war: Cannabis in focus for veterans treatment
Sep 27,2023 1:11 am

... At one end, a plaque commemorates Ukrainian soldiers who died while fighting for the Soviet Army in Afghanistan...

Ukraine: The soldiers who can't leave the front line until the war is over

Ukraine: The soldiers who can't leave the front line until the war is over
Sep 26,2023 6:31 am

... What could he know about modern warfare? As it happens, the 24th Brigade s 152mm Akatsiya (or Acacia) howitzers are so ancient that they re the same kind as the one Hryb commanded while serving with the Soviet Army in East Germany in the early 1990s...

Ukraine war: The men who don't want to fight

Ukraine war: The men who don't want to fight
Aug 22,2023 3:01 am

... He watched his father suffer from mental health issues after fighting with the Soviet Army in Afghanistan...

Valery Zaluzhny, the man behind Ukraine's counteroffensive

Valery Zaluzhny, the man behind Ukraine's counteroffensive
Jun 14,2023 7:20 am

... Born into the family of a Soviet serviceman, Valery Zaluzhny once said he was always committed to distancing himself from the excessive hierarchy of the Soviet Army...

What attacks have there been on dams in Ukraine?

What attacks have there been on dams in Ukraine?
Jun 10,2023 8:20 pm

... In August 1941, the Soviet Army was retreating rapidly as the German army advanced eastwards...

Ukraine war: Russians in Germany split over Putin's invasion

Ukraine war: Russians in Germany split over Putin's invasion
May 13,2023 10:10 pm

... Many came to Treptower Park on 8-9 May to offer thanks for the Soviet Army liberating Germany from fascism, and were less concerned with the present...

Ukraine war: 80 years on, we are facing German tanks again - Putin

Ukraine war: 80 years on, we are facing German tanks again - Putin
Feb 2,2023 11:41 am

... Mr Putin was in Volgograd to mark the anniversary of the end of the Battle of Stalingrad, the World War Two conflict which saw the Soviet Army capture nearly 91,000 German troops and turn the tide of the war...

Ukraine war: Auschwitz anniversary marked without Russia

Ukraine war: Auschwitz anniversary marked without Russia
Jan 27,2023 1:41 pm

... Russia is usually represented at the event, as the camp in occupied Poland was liberated by the Soviet Army...

Ukraine war: Cannabis in focus for veterans treatment

May 11,2022 12:15 am

By Paul AdamsBBC Diplomatic Correspondent in Kyiv

In a modest Kyiv apartment, off-duty soldiers meet to smoke Cannabis and forget, for a moment, The things they have seen.

They don't want to be identified. The drug is frowned upon in The military, even here, far from The Front .

One of The Soldiers is being treated for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

" For me, Cannabis is helpful, " he says. " Without it, I can't sleep. It helps me to relax. Everybody should be able to get it. "

After 18 Months of full-scale war, and eight years of simmering conflict before that, Ukraine's physical and psychological wounds run deep. The State 's resources are stretched to The Limit .

The War has triggered an epidemic of pain and trauma, among soldiers and civilians alike.

Last Year , The health ministry estimated that 57% of Ukrainians were At Risk of developing PTSD.

But Cannabis , widely accessible on The Street and decriminalised in small amounts for personal use, is still not available for medical research, despite evidence that it can help.

BBC

At The Forest Glade Centre for Psychological Health and Rehabilitation of Veterans, just outside Kyiv, treatment takes many forms.

In one room, a soldier plays a video game while a doctor monitors his brain activity.

Elsewhere, There 's acupuncture, physical therapy and Group Counselling .

But The staff say they need more tools.

" Our soldiers on The Front Line need different powerful weapons. It's exactly The same With Us , " says Kseniia Voisnitsina, Forest Glade's director.

" We need an arsenal as well. The broader it is, The more effective our treatment can be. "

Ms Voisnitsina is among those pushing for Cannabis , MDMA (ecstasy) and psychedelics like psilocybin to be explored in The Treatment of traumatic brain injury and PTSD.

She says many veterans are already self-medicating.

" They take it not to get high, but to get rid of The symptoms which bother them, " she says. " Of course they often do it More Than they need, but at The Moment , There 's No Other way. Unfortunately. "

Danylo Yevtukhov says smoking Cannabis got him through some of his darkest days.

He suffered terrible burns to his face and hands during The Russian siege of Chernihiv in northern Ukraine, in The early weeks of The War .

Seven operations and 18 Months later, wearing a forage cap and tinted glasses to protect his damaged eyes, he's almost matter-of-fact when he recalls The searing pain.

" Everybody Knows pain when it burns. Multiply that by 20 or 50, " Danylo says when we meet in a park in Kyiv's Podil neighbourhood.

" It was terrible because it was on my face. "

The Park is small but full of reminders of conflict.

At one end, a plaque commemorates Ukrainian soldiers who died while fighting for The Soviet Army in Afghanistan. At The Other , There 's a cross to remember those killed in Ukraine since 2014, when fighting broke out in The south-eastern Donbas region.

In The early days, Danylo says Cannabis was more effective than painkillers. It helped him to sleep, eat and feel less nervous.

" It was like being able to switch off. When I thought about my injuries, I thought 'yes that's painful', but my attention started to be more flexible. "

The Doctors , He Said , generally turned a Blind Eye .

Around The World , research has long suggested Cannabis may be useful in The Treatment of pain and PTSD. But here in Ukraine, The Law gets in The Way . The production of marijuana, including for medical research, is banned.

Professor Viktor Dosenko from The National Academy of Science, is frustrated.

" We have to do Clinical Research , to get more convincing evidence that it works, " he says, " because we really are The global epicentre of PTSD. "

BBC

" Unfortunately, none of this research was ever done in Ukraine because we have a law that forbids it. "

President Volodymyr Zelensky wants to change The Law . Addressing parliament on 28 June, he called for legalising Cannabis -based medicine, scientific research and what he called " controlled Ukrainian production".

" All The World 's best practices… no matter how difficult or unusual they may seem to us, should be applied in Ukraine so that Ukrainians, men and women… do not have to endure The Pain , stress and trauma of war, " He Said with evident passion.

A draft law aimed at creating a regulated domestic industry for medical Cannabis passed a first reading in mid-July, but did not change The status of Cannabis as a prohibited substance, causing widespread confusion.

It also banned The import of raw ingredients until 2028, which critics say will not help to address The current emergency.

" The Law is not about Helping People today, " says Sergei Vlasenko, of The opposition Motherland Party .

" The Law is about growing marijuana in Ukraine and making that big business, private business. "

With The country in The midst of an existential crisis and The Police frequently accused of corruption, Mr Vlasenko says President Zelensky's proposed reforms are dangerous.

" Today, in The period of war, such risky businesses should be controlled directly by The government, " he says.

Without strict government controls, Mr Vlasenko believes, The Law could become a vehicle for corruption and criminal activity.

According to one recent opinion poll, 70% of Ukrainians favour The legalisation of Cannabis for medical purposes.

But with The government divided on How To move forward - The health ministry in favour of licensed production and The Interior ministry opposed to The Draft bill - There 's no obvious sign of a solution.

For those seeking relief from pain and trauma, self-medication remains, for now, The only option.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Soviet Army Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯