Geographical location of the European territory of the USSR. The USSR. physical-geographical countries. History of the Byelorussian SSR

Greater Russia- The Soviet Union was a unique state - the largest state on Earth. The territory of its possessions in Europe was 5.57 million square meters. km. In Asia, its territory corresponded to 16.83 million square meters. km. The total length of the borders of Greater Russia was 67 thousand km, of which 20 thousand were land, and 47 thousand were water borders. It should be noted that in comparison with the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union was only slightly inferior to it in terms of territory size.

A feature of the Soviet period, first of all, was that Soviet authority took care of the legal definition of the concept of state border. In old Russian law there was no such definition, although the term itself was certainly used.

In the legislation of the USSR on the state border, we can successively distinguish three stages. The first - pre-war - is characterized by the absence of a single act regulating the state border regime. In general, issues related to the border were resolved by the Regulations on the Protection of the State Border of the USSR in 1927, editorial changes in 1935 ( NW USSR. 1927. N 62. Art. 624, 625 And NW USSR. 1935. N 45. Art. 377). This should also include the Regulations on entry into the USSR and on exit from the USSR of 1925. (NW USSR. 1925. N 37. Art. 277). The second - post-war - is significant for its unique codification of the rules of law on this issue. As a result, in 1960, the Regulations on the Protection of the State Border of the USSR were issued. (Ved. VS USSR. 1960. N 34. Art. 321). Significant editorial changes to the Regulations were made in 1971 by Decree of the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces (Ved. VS USSR. 1971. N 24. Art. 254). Finally, the third was marked by the adoption of no longer a Regulation, which in the nomenclature of Soviet sources of law indicated the adoption of such a norm by the executive and administrative body of the supreme body state power- the Central Executive Committee of the Union of the USSR or the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Council, and the law - an act adopted by the supreme body state power. The Law on the State Border of the USSR was adopted in 1982. (Ved. VS USSR. 1982. N 48. Art. 891). Separate norms regarding the border regime could also be found in the Criminal Codes of the Union Republics, the Customs and Air Codes of the USSR.

The legal definition of the border appears only in the 1960 Regulations; the 1927 act only used the term itself, without giving it a definition. So, according to Art. 1 Pol. 1960. the state border was “a line defining the boundaries of the land and water territory of the USSR. The vertical surface passing along this line is the boundary of the airspace of the USSR.” This definition, undoubtedly adopted from the one in force at that time international law, spoke of the gradual adaptation of power to the realities of the world community. Also in this Regulation, for the first time we encounter definitions of internal waters, historical waters, territorial sea - in a word, what had already been codified by 1958 in the form of the relevant UN conventions on the law of the sea. Also, the influence of international law on Soviet law in this matter is evidenced by the new edition of the definition of the order of counting the width of the territorial sea (Article 3 of the 1960 Regulations). (Ved. VS USSR. 1971. N 24. Art. 254)). The 1982 Law can be considered as an act that in many ways introduced only editorial changes, albeit significant ones, to the previous regulatory material. For example, in Art. 1 this Law mentioned subsoil, which was also subject to the state border regime.


In general, regarding the width of the territorial sea, internal law was based on the norm established back in 1909. State Duma Russian Empire, - 12 nautical miles. The Bolsheviks were consistent and already in 1918 they confirmed this position (SU RSFSR. 1918. N 44. Art. 539). In 1921, by a joint resolution of the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, this norm was repeated. The well-known incident with the so-called Curzon ultimatum is connected with the implementation of this provision. Great Britain, both in 1910 and in 1923, when the Soviet government resumed the old practice, declared non-recognition of this width of the territorial sea, insisting on the usual norm of three nautical miles. The conflict concerned the area White Sea. Only the growth of the military power of the USSR forced its neighboring countries to respect the Soviet point of view.

The only issue that remained unresolved for a long time concerned the so-called right of peaceful passage of foreign military vessels through the territorial waters of the USSR. The USSR has always recognized the possibility of exercising such a right, for example Art. 24 Pol. 1927. However, from the very beginning, the USSR insisted on a permitting procedure for such passage. However, many countries followed the same practice. However, international maritime law Since 1958, it has taken the path of establishing a notification procedure for the right to peaceful passage through the territorial sea.

This conflict of legal orders became especially acute after 1983, when US Navy warships frequently entered Soviet territorial waters with “peaceful” passage. These incidents became particularly acute in 1986 and 1988, when ships of the Soviet Navy were forced to literally ram warships Americans and push them out of Soviet territorial waters. The issue was settled in 1989 in the spirit of the so-called new thinking. This year, the USSR and the USA exchanged letters regarding the monotonous interpretation of the concept of the right of innocent passage, which in fact meant another diplomatic defeat for the USSR. The US promise to no longer have any intentions of entering the USSR territorial sea in the Black Sea sounded like little consolation.

According to the 1960 Regulations, the internal waters of the USSR included the waters of ports, bays, bays, etc., if the width of the passage in them did not exceed 24 nautical miles (v. 4). The same provision was repeated in the 1982 Law. (v. 6) with the addition to internal waters of the space lying outside the straight baselines from which the width of the territorial sea is measured, as well as the waters of rivers, lakes and other bodies of water, the banks of which belong to the USSR. With regard to internal waters, it is worth noting the Resolution of the USSR Council of Ministers of 1957, which included the territories of the Kara Sea, the Laptev Sea, the East Siberian Sea and the Chukchi Sea as internal waters of the USSR. As modern ecologists testify, these are the cleanest seas on the globe. However, today we have to admit that Russia’s legal claims to these seas were secured then, as now, exclusively by the right to pilotage foreign ships along the Northern Sea Route. The USSR allowed the passage of foreign ships along the Northern Sea Route in 1990 with mandatory pilotage (Post. Council of Ministers of the USSR dated July 1, 1990). In fact, the Caspian Sea could be classified as the internal waters of the USSR, since Russia and only Russia, since the time of the Gulistan Peace Treaty with Persia in 1812, had the right to maintain warships on this sea! In 1991, this status disappeared like smoke.

The 1960 Regulations and the 1982 Law included waters that historically belonged to the USSR as historical waters. In fact, this norm of Soviet law contained a reference to the imperial law of Russia, which established such a regime for the waters of some bays, for example, the waters of Peter the Great Bay in the Sea of ​​Japan, which status these waters received back in 1901 in the Rules of Marine Fishing in Territorial Waters , published by the Amur Governor-General. Consistently by acts of 1907, 1928 and 1944. this status was confirmed.

For the first time, the economic zone of the USSR on the high seas (200 nautical miles) was established by the Decree of the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces of February 28, 1984. (Ved. VS USSR. 1984. N 9. Art. 177). The Decree of the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces dated February 6, 1968 established the width of the continental shelf claimed by the Soviet Union. The USSR did not have any particular disputes with its neighbors regarding the zone and shelf, with the exception of Sweden, Norway and the USA. Negotiations with Sweden lasted 20 years and ended with the signing in 1988 of an Agreement on the demarcation of the possessions of both countries in the Baltic Sea. It is worth noting here that, in the spirit of “new thinking,” the Swedish point of view on where this demarcation line should be held won. The same “success” was achieved by Soviet diplomacy of the Gorbachev era in 1990 when resolving the issue of demarcation of possessions in the Bering Sea between the USSR and the USA. The only small consolation is the fact that this agreement was neither on the part of the USSR nor on the part of modern Russia was never ratified. In the Barents Sea, Russia inherited a territorial dispute with Norway that lasted 30 years (since 1977). The situation is complicated by the fact that this dispute concerned the border of the Russian sector in the Arctic and the status of the Spitsbergen archipelago. The defense aspects of this dispute are also very serious. Its decision to infringe upon Russia's interests could directly affect the combat capabilities of the Russian Northern Fleet. In the spring of 2010, it was announced that the territorial dispute between Russia and Norway would be resolved along the median line. To what extent this compromise confirms the old Soviet "sectoral" point of view is anyone's guess.

In general, the state borders of the USSR at the time of January 1, 1991 looked as follows. The land border with Norway has actually been inherited since imperial times. Its clarification and demarcation were carried out in accordance with the 1949 agreement and the 1957 agreement, which established the delimitation in the waters of the Varangerfjord.

The border regime with Finland was first defined by the Yuryev Peace Treaty of 1920, according to which Soviet Russia ceded to Finland all of Western Karelia and the Pechenga region on the Kola Peninsula. Subsequently, by the treaty of 1940 and the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947, Finland was returned to its current borders. The exception was that, according to the 1940 agreement, the Pechenga (Petsamo) region was returned to Finland with a guarantee of free transit to Norway, but according to the 1947 agreement, this region finally ceded to Russia. However, this does not prevent overzealous Finnish politicians from presenting territorial demands to Russia from time to time. The peak of the latter occurred during Yeltsin's timelessness.

The Baltic states were temporarily lost to Russia according to the Yuryev Treaties of 1920, successively concluded with each of the former Baltic provinces. At the same time, Russia made unjustified territorial concessions to Estonia and Latvia. In 1940, these territories were returned to the USSR. It should be noted that at the same time, the territory of Lithuania increased significantly due to the annexation of the Vilna district, which had previously been torn away from it by Poland.

In 1945, according to agreements at the Potsdam Conference, part of the territory of the former East Prussia became part of Russia. Accordingly, the 1945 treaty with Poland established the border between the USSR and Poland in this area of ​​the southern Baltic.

The border of Russia with Poland is established according to the terms of the Riga Peace Treaty of 1920. As a result of its aggression against the exhausted world and civil wars The Poles were able to annex the territories of the western part of Belarus and Ukraine. In fact, it was a Pyrrhic victory, since national minorities in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth after that began to make up about 45% of its total population! In 1939, as a result of the abolition of the Polish state in connection with its defeat in the war with Germany, the USSR regained the territories lost in 1920. In fact, modern Poland is the legal successor of the Polish People's Republic (PPR), therefore, has no legal connection with the pre-war state. The Soviet-Polish border was demarcated successively in 1945, 1948 and 1961. In 1957 and 1958 the border was drawn in the waters Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Gdansk, respectively.

The southern corner of the USSR borders on westward with such states as Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Romania, was established in accordance with the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947. In relation to Romania, however, it should be noted that in 1940 it returned the territory of Bessarabia illegally occupied after the revolution, as well as the annexation of Northern Bukovina to the USSR . The last acquisition was more than strange, since this territory was never part of the Russian Empire. One can only assume that the Soviet government in this matter was guided solely by ethnographic considerations - the region was inhabited by Ukrainians. As a note from the Soviet government dated June 26, 1940 stated, “The USSR Government considers the issue of the return of Bessarabia to be organically connected with the issue of transferring to the Secular Union that part of Bukovina, the vast majority of whose population is connected with Soviet Ukraine both by a common historical destiny and a common language and national composition." Despite the fact that the Entente never recognized Romania’s occupation of Bessarabia as legal, although it repeatedly made such a request, Romania stated in a response note that it “sees itself forced to evacuate.” But this compulsion became a constant after the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947.

In Transcaucasia, Soviet Russia was unable to take full advantage of the legacy of the Empire. First of all, this concerns the border with Turkey. It was significantly changed not in favor of Russia by the Treaty of Kars in 1921. In fact, Russia gave the territory to the so-called Turkish Armenia, the result was geographical nonsense: national symbol Armenia - Mount Ararat - is located in Turkey! This kind of compliance is also explained this time by ideological reasons. In the early 1920s. For some reason, the Bolsheviks were convinced that Turkey, which had just experienced the civilizational revolution of Kemal Ataturk, even if it did not follow the path of the world revolution, could become the vanguard of the anti-colonial struggle. According to this idea, advances of this kind were made to her. A detailed demarcation of the border was carried out in 1967. Territorial delimitation in the Black Sea was carried out in 1973. The Treaty of Kars of 1921 also determined the special status of the Batumi vilayet (Adjara ASSR) within the Georgian SSR. This special status cannot be canceled by unilateral actions of the Georgian authorities.

The Transcaucasian border with Persia (Iran) nevertheless remained unchanged. The border with Iran in the Trans-Caspian region was not changed either. Here the Soviet Union inherited the regime of the 1881 treaty. The renewal of this regime took place according to the 1954 treaty.

The inclusion of the territory of the Bukhara and Khiva khanates into Russia in 1920 put the issue of the Soviet-Afghan border on the agenda. This issue was settled only in 1922. In 1946, a new treaty was concluded, giving Afghanistan access to the Pyanj and Amu Darya rivers. Until this year, Afghanistan was deprived of such an option. The state border regime is finally established between the USSR and Afghanistan under the 1958 agreement.

The regime of the Soviet-Chinese border remained unchanged from pre-revolutionary times until the collapse of the USSR. At the same time, it should be noted that as a result of the problems that arose in the late 1950s. disagreements between the leadership of both countries, China began to put forward territorial claims against the Soviet Union, challenging the fairness of the border drawn under the Qin government. In general, China in different years laid claim to a territory of 1.5 to 2.1 million square meters. km. The situation was aggravated by open armed clashes on the border. Russia had to make a number of territorial concessions in 1990 and 2005 in order to consider the Chinese territorial claims exhausted.

The border between the USSR and Mongolia deserves special mention. Before 1912, Mongolia as such did not exist in political map peace. However, in this year, Mongolia, with the support of Russia, managed to achieve the status of a vassal state in relation to China. Mongolia became a virtually independent state in 1920 as a result of the invasion of its territory by the troops of the notorious Baron Ungern von Sternberg. However, following the baron’s army, units of the Red Army invaded the territory of Mongolia, resulting in the Sovietization of Mongolia. In 1921, China officially recognized the independence of this country, and at the same time the Soviet-Mongolian border was demarcated. In fact, its line corresponded to the border treaties concluded by the Russian Empire with Qin China.

Russia’s border with Korea also followed the line of previous treaties, which was confirmed in the Treaty of 1957.

The state border of Russia with Japan in the 20th century. went through a series of dramatic changes. In 1905, Japan managed to establish a border on the island of Sakhalin along the 50th parallel as a result of an unfortunate war for Russia. As a result of the now military defeat of Japan in 1945, Russia regained the southern part of Sakhalin Island and all the Kuril Islands. In fact, the border between Russia and Japan to this day lies in the La Perouse Strait, but the legal status of this border still does not exist. In 1956, the USSR agreed to transfer two islands from the southern Kuril ridge to the Japanese in exchange for concluding a peace treaty. However, this question still remains open.

The question remains open about the demarcation line of the economic zone and the continental shelf between Russia and the United States in the Bering and Chukchi Seas (see above). Nevertheless, the maritime border between the USSR and the USA in the Bering Strait corresponds to the treaty of 1867. This regime remains effective to this day.

In 1926, Soviet Russia notified its rights to the northern sector of the Arctic Ocean, actually repeating word for word Stürmer’s famous note of 1916. The Decree of the USSR Central Executive Committee dated April 15, 1926 stated:

“All lands and islands, both open and capable of being discovered in the future, which at the time of publication of this Resolution do not constitute the territory of any foreign states recognized by the Government of the USSR, located in the Arctic Ocean, north of the coast of the USSR, are declared to be the territory of the USSR to the North Pole within the limits between the meridian thirty-two degrees four minutes thirty-five seconds east longitude from Greenwich, passing along the eastern side of the Vaida Bay through the triangulation mark on Cape Kekursky, and the meridian one hundred sixty-eight degrees forty-nine minutes thirty-five seconds west longitude from Greenwich, passing in the middle of the strait separating the islands of Ratmanov and Kruzenshtern from the group of Diomede islands in the Bering Strait."

The Soviet Union, it must be admitted, spent titanic efforts to confirm its rights in the Arctic.

On December 25, 1991, Russia’s state borders collapsed at once. Where the RSFSR did not border with foreign states, the state border began to run along the line of the administrative border. The situation was aggravated by the fact that the internal administrative borders of the republics could not be considered state borders in the true meaning of the word. The lines of these borders were sometimes drawn without sound government calculations in the area national policy. An example would be the story of the transfer of Crimea from the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954 in commemoration of 300 years of friendship between the Ukrainian and Russian peoples! This illegal decision was canceled by the decision Supreme Council RF in 1992... but it did not correct the situation. All this gives particular urgency to the issue of the legal basis for the status of the entities formed as a result of the collapse of the USSR.

Russia is the largest country in the world in terms of territory, which accounts for 1/7 of the entire landmass. Canada, which is in second place, is almost twice our size. What about the length of Russia's borders? What is she like?

Longer than the equator

The borders of Russia stretch from the Pacific Ocean through all the marginal seas of the Arctic Ocean in the north, through the Amur, many kilometers of steppes and the Caucasus mountains in the south. In the west they extend across the East European Plain and Finnish marshes.

According to data for 2014 (excluding accession Crimean peninsula), the total length of Russia's borders is 60,932 km: land extends for 22,125 km (including 7,616 km along rivers and lakes) and sea for 38,807 km.

Neighbours

Russia also holds the record among countries with the largest number of border states. The Russian Federation neighbors 18 countries: in the west - with Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, Belarus and Ukraine; in the south - with Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia and the DPRK; in the east - with Japan and the USA.

Border State

Length of land border, including river and lake borders (km)

Length of land border only (km)

Norway

Finland

Belarus

Azerbaijan

South Ossetia

Kazakhstan

Mongolia

North Korea

The length of Russia's maritime borders is about 38,807 km, including sections along the oceans and seas:

  • Arctic Ocean - 19724.1 km;
  • Pacific Ocean - 16997.9 km;
  • Caspian Sea - 580 km;
  • Black Sea - 389.5 km;
  • Baltic Sea - 126.1 km.

History of territory changes

How has the length of the Russian border changed? By 1914, the length of the territory of the Russian Empire was 4675.9 km in the direction from north to south and 10732.4 km from west to east. At that time, the total length of the borders was 69,245 km: of which 49,360.4 km were sea borders, and 19,941.5 km were land borders. At that time, the territory of Russia was 2 million km 2 larger than the modern area of ​​the country.

During the times of the USSR, the area of ​​the union state reached 22,402 million km 2. The country stretched for 10,000 km from west to east and 5,000 km from north to south. The length of the borders at that time was the largest in the world and amounted to 62,710 km. After the collapse of the USSR, Russia lost about 40% of its territories.

The length of the Russian border in the north

Its northern part runs along the coast of the Arctic Ocean. The Russian sector of the Arctic is limited by conventional lines running in the west from the Rybachy Peninsula and in the east from Ratmanov Island to North Pole. On April 15, 1926, a resolution was adopted by the Central Executive Committee and the Council of People's Commissars on the division of the Arctic into sectors based on the International Concept. It proclaimed the complete right of the USSR to all lands, including islands in the Arctic sector of the USSR.

Southern Frontier

The land border starts from which connects the Black and Azov Seas, passes through the territorial waters of the Black Sea to the Caucasian Psou River. Then it goes mainly along the Great Dividing Range of the Caucasus, then along the Samur River and further to the Caspian Sea. The land demarcation line between Russia, Azerbaijan and Georgia runs through this area. The length of the Caucasian border is more than 1000 km.

There are a huge number of problems in this area. Firstly, there is a conflict between Georgia and Russia over two self-proclaimed republics - South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Further, the border runs along the periphery of the Caspian Sea. In this area, there is a Russian-Iranian agreement on the division of the Caspian Sea, since during the Soviet era, only these two states divided the Caspian Sea. The Caspian states (Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan) demand an equal division of the waters of the Caspian Sea and its shelf, which is rich in oil. Azerbaijan has already started developing fields.

The border with Kazakhstan is the longest - more than 7,500 km. There is still an old inter-republican border between the two states, which was proclaimed in 1922. The question was raised about the transfer to Kazakhstan of parts of the country’s neighboring regions: Astrakhan, Volgograd, Omsk, Orenburg, Kurgan and Altai. Kazakhstan had to cede part of the following territories: North Kazakhstan, Tselinograd, East Kazakhstan, Pavlodar, Semipalatinsk, Ural and Aktobe. From the population census data for 1989 it follows that more than 4.2 million Russians live in the above-mentioned territories of Kazakhstan, and more than 470 thousand Kazakhs live in the mentioned territories of Russia.

The border with China runs along rivers almost everywhere (about 80% of the entire length) and extends for 4,300 km. West Side The Russian-Chinese border is delimited, but not demarcated. It was only in 1997 that this area was demarcated. As a result, several islands, whose total area is 400 km 2, were left under joint economic management. And in 2005, all the islands within the river waters were demarcated. Claims for some areas Russian territory were presented to their maximum extent in the early 1960s. They included all Far East and Siberia.

In the southeast, Russia neighbors the DPRK. The entire border runs along the Tumannaya River, stretching only 17 km. Further along the river valley it reaches the shores of the Sea of ​​Japan.

Western Frontier

Almost along its entire length, the border has a clear expression of natural boundaries. It originates from the Barents Sea and extends to the Pasvik River valley. The length of Russia's land borders in this territory is 200 km. A little further south, the border line with Finland stretches 1,300 km through heavily swampy terrain, which stretches to the Gulf of Finland in the Baltic Sea.

extreme point Russian Federation is the Kalingrad region. It neighbors Lithuania and Poland. The total length of this line is 550 km. Most of the border with Lithuania runs along the Nemunas (Neman) River.

From the Gulf of Finland to Taganrog in the Sea of ​​Azov, the border line stretches for 3150 km with four states: Estonia, Latvia, Belarus and Ukraine. The length of the Russian border is:

  • with Estonia - 466.8 km;
  • with Latvia - 270.6 km;
  • with Belarus - 1239 km;
  • with Ukraine - 2245.8 km.

Eastern border

Like the northern part of the borders, the eastern part is completely maritime. It extends across the waters of the Pacific Ocean and its seas: Japan, Bering and Okhotsk. The border between Japan and Russia passes through four straits: Sovetsky, Izmena, Kushanirsky and La Perouse. They separate the Russian islands of Sakhalin, Kushanir and Tanfilyev from the Japanese Hokkaido. Japan claims ownership of these islands, but Russia considers them an integral part of itself.

The state border with the United States passes through the Bering Strait through the Diomede Islands. Only 5 km separates the Russian Ratmanov Island from the American Krusenstern. It is the longest maritime border in the world.

Geographical position of the USSR, orography, tectonics and geological history, climatic conditions, inland waters, soil cover, vegetation, animal world, main landscape, physical-geographical zoning

Lecture 1

Neighboring states - former republics of the USSR: geographical position, formation independent states, features of the borders between neighboring states and Russia (sea and land)

Territory former USSR lies in two parts of the world - in the eastern half of Europe and in Asia. Occupying 1/6 of the land, this state was a real giant on the planet.

Natural conditions are very diverse: from the ice zone in the north to the subtropics in the south of the country.

As for the relief features, plains predominate in the west and north-west of the country, and mountains predominate in the south and east.

The flat part of the USSR stretched from the Baltic Sea to the Lena and from the Arctic Ocean to the foot of the Kopetdag. It is occupied by the Russian (East European), Western Siberian, Turan lowlands and the Central Siberian plateau.

On the Russian Plain there is an alternation of hills (up to 300-400 m absolute height) with lowlands (no more than 150-200 m). Its southeast is occupied by the Caspian lowland, which lies below sea level; in the north-west it is limited by the mountain uplifts of the Kola Peninsula, reaching a height of 1191 m in the Khibiny Mountains . The Western Siberian Plain amazes with its exceptional monotony of relief and low altitude above sea level; only in very few places do absolute elevations on it reach 200 m or higher (Siberian ridges up to 285 m). The Russian Plain is separated from the Western Siberian Plain by the meridionally elongated low Ural Range; its maximum height is only 1894 m (Mount Narodnaya).

Between the Western Siberian Plain and the Turan Lowland there is a vast low-mountain country - the Kazakh small hills. Mount Aksoran in the southeast reaches 1565 m. In the west, the Kazakh small hills are separated from the Southern Urals by the Turgai plateau. It is a calm plain, elevated to 200-300 m, with a wide through hollow in the center connecting the Western Siberian Plain with the Turan Lowland.

The relief of the Turan Lowland is heterogeneous - depressions lying below sea level are located next to elevated plateaus such as the Ustyurt, and the remains of destroyed mountains often rise among the low-lying plains.

Huge territory between the Yenisei and Lena is an elevated plain - the Central Siberian Plateau. Its average height is 500-700 m above sea level. The flatness of the watersheds is combined on this plateau with deep and dense erosional dissection of the riverine areas. Its most elevated northwestern part is the Putorana Mountains (1701 m a.s.l.).



In the north, the plateau, with a steep cliff, adjoins the North Siberian (Yenisei-Khatanga) lowland, and in the south it borders the Sayan Mountains and the Baikal and Abbaikalia ridges.

Mountains bordering the territory of the former Soviet Union, in the west are represented by the Carpathians. Their highest point is 2061 m high (Mount Goverla).

In the south of the Crimean peninsula, the Crimean Mountains drop steeply to the Black Sea with a highest elevation of 1545 m (Roman-Kosh). Relatively close to the east of them, between the Black and Caspian seas, stretch high Caucasus Mountains. Some of their peaks, crowned with glaciers, rise above 5000 m above sea level (Elbrus - 5642 m).

East of the Caspian Sea, in the south of Turkmenistan, lies a ridge of medium height - the Kopet Dag. Its southern slopes belong to Iran. Even further to the east, in the upper reaches of the Amu Darya, is the highest and most inaccessible mountainous country of the former USSR - the Pamirs. Some of its ridges rise more than 7000 m above sea level. The eastern part of the Pamirs has the character of a high plateau, in which even the river valleys lie at an altitude of about 4000 m .

Northeast of the Pamirs, up to 7000 m and higher, the Tien Shan ranges rise, extending beyond the USSR in the east. Despite the enormous height, many ridges of the Central Tien Shan are weakly dissected and flat-topped. The tectonic depression of the Ili River valley separates the Dzungarian Alatau ridge (4464 m) from the Tien Shan, and to the north-northeast of it in the latitudinal direction the Tarbagatai ridge (2992 m) stretches.

In the southeast of western Siberia up to 4500 m The Altai Mountains rise (Belukha - 4506 m). Their northern protrusion is the Kuznetsky Alatau ridge, the eastern continuation is the Mongolian Alatau, which lies entirely within Mongolia. The Western and Eastern Sayan and Tannu-Ola ranges are in close contact with Altai. The Sayan ranges are characterized by flat peaks and medium heights.

The mountainous country of the Baikal region and 3Abaikalia consists of large number ridges of medium height (1500-2500 m): Baikalsky, KhamarDaban, Ulan-Burgasy, Barguzinsky, Verkhneangarsky, North and South Muysky, Malkhansky, Yablonovy, Borschovochny and many others. All of them are elongated in the northeast direction and are mostly flat-topped. The ridges in Transbaikalia alternate with numerous plateaus and highlands. In the Stanovoye Highlands, altitudes reach almost 3000m (2999 m).

To the east of the mountains of Transbaikalia, the Stanovoy Range (2412 m) stretches from west to east. To the southeast of it are the ridges of the Amur Region and Southern Primorye.

The relief of the USSR was formed as a result of the complex geological development of the territory. Modern plains, lowlands and mountains are the product of powerful tectonic movements, occurring both in very distant and recent geological times.

Due to the peculiarities of tectonic development, mountain building in some areas ended long ago (such areas have existed as stable platforms since the Paleozoic era), in others mountain building occurred much later, and in others it has not ended even now. The most ancient structural elements on the territory of the former USSR there are two platforms: Russian in the west and Siberian in the east. Both of them are composed of ancient crystalline rocks at their base, folded and cut by intrusions. On top of this hard crystalline basement lie loose sedimentary rocks of various ages - from the Lower Paleozoic to the Neogene and Quaternary.

Geological events The Quaternary period determined many important features of the nature of the territory of the former USSR. In Quaternary time, modern landscapes were finally formed. It is during this period that a person appears.

The most important events of Quaternary time are continental glaciations, accumulation of loess, marine transgressions and recent tectonic movements.

The Ice Age was accompanied by the spread of ice on the northern plains and mountainous regions of the USSR. The most significant glaciation was on the Russian Plain. Four independent glacial epochs have been established here: Oka (the oldest), Dnieper, Moscow and Valdai, which were separated by long and warm interglacial epochs: Likhvin, Roslavl and Mikuln.

The entire territory of the USSR can be divided into 18 landscape countries:

Island Arctic country.

Fennoscandia (Kola-Karelian) The country is part of the Baltic crystalline shield. Taiga and swamp landscapes predominate, turning into forest-tundra and tundra in the north. In some places, the altitudinal zonation of the landscapes can be traced.

Russian Plain has a clearly defined landscape zonation from tundra in the north to deserts in the south. Of the latitudinal zones, dark coniferous taiga is most widely represented here, turning into mixed and broad-leaved forests in the south.

Ural Mountains (Ural Country)- a medium-altitude mountainous country that underwent folding in the Upper Paleozoic. From north to south, the Urals are crossed by five latitudinal landscape zones, according to which tundra, forest-tundra, taiga, forest-steppe and steppe types are successively replaced on its territory altitudinal zonation.

Carpathians- medium-altitude, young in age (alpine orogeny) mountainous country. The Ukrainian Carpathians are characterized by the widespread development of forests of the Western European type.

Crimean-Caucasian country- a system of high mountain ranges of alpine folding, highlands and tectonic lowlands. Altitudinal zonation is highly complex and variable. On the plains of Transcaucasia there are subtropical landscapes - moist broad-leaved forests and semi-deserts, on the mountain tops there are subalpine and alpine meadows and glaciers.

Armenian Highlands and Kopetdag- parts of the country of the Western Asian Highlands.

Central Asian mountainous country- the highest in the USSR. Due to the dry climate, desert, semi-desert and steppe altitude zones rise high into the mountains. The forest belt is poorly developed and only on moist slopes of western and northern exposure.

South-Eastern Tien Shan and Pamir – parts of the country of the Central Asian highlands.

Central Asian lowland country includes deserts of temperate and subtropical zones of Southern Kazakhstan and Central Asia. Clayey, sometimes rocky desert plateaus alternate with sandy deserts in the lowlands.

Central Kazakhstan (Central Kazakhstan country), characterized by steppe and semi-desert landscapes with the beginnings of altitudinal zones.

Western Siberia ( West Siberian Plain) differs from the Russian Plain in its more continental climate and more uniform, weakly dissected topography. Latitudinal zonation here it resembles the zoning of the Russian Plain, however, due to poor drainage, the Western Siberian Plain is more swampy in the north and saline in the south.

Central Siberia characterized by a cold continental climate, the severity of which increases due to the elevated, sometimes mountainous terrain. The most typical landscape is light larch taiga with permafrost-taiga soils. In conditions of a sharply continental climate, elements of the steppe fauna and flora penetrate far to the north, deep into the taiga.

Altai-Sayan mountainous country (Mountains Southern Siberia) - a mountainous country with complex orography (Altai, Sayan Mountains, mountains of the Baikal region and Abaikalia). The folding processes ended at the end of the Proterozoic - lower Paleozoic. The climate here is sharply continental. Taiga, forest-steppe and steppe types of altitudinal zonation predominate. The dark coniferous mountain taiga, characteristic of the western part of the South Siberian mountains, is replaced in the east by light larch taiga and pine forests.

A powerful state spread over two parts of the world and occupying one sixth of the inhabited landmass.

A country washed by the waters of three oceans, the owner of countless natural treasures, beautiful in its unique diversity.

USSR was the most big country all over the globe. Its area is 22.4 million square meters. km.

The Soviet Union is the largest continental power that has ever existed by area. The USSR and a great maritime power: the country's shores were washed by the waves of 12 seas belonging to three oceans - the Atlantic, Arctic and Pacific. Closed bodies of water not connected with the World Ocean are also rightly called seas: the Aral Lake and the Caspian Lake, the largest in the world.

The maritime border of the Soviet Union is 47 thousand. km - almost two and a half times the total length of its land borders, stretching for 20 thousand km. On land, the Soviet Union bordered 19 countries.

The territory of the USSR stretches from west to east. Not far from Kaliningrad, on the Baltic Spit in the Gdansk Bay of the Baltic Sea, is the westernmost point of the Soviet land (now extreme point Russian Federation, located in an enclave of the country due to the collapse of the USSR), from here to its eastern extremity on the mainland - Cape Dezhnev in Chukotka is almost 10 thousand km. The easternmost point of the USSR territory is located on Ratmatov Island in the Bering Strait. There were 11 time zones on the territory of the USSR. IN winter time When the morning dawn was barely breaking over the western borders, it was already evening over the Pacific coast.

About half as much - about 5 thousand km - is the distance from the northern tip of the USSR territory on the mainland - Cape Chelyuskin to the southern - the village of Childukhter, located near the city of Kushki.

Great variety natural conditions Soviet Union: climate, relief, waters, soils, flora and fauna, mineral waters.

Before October revolution The subsoil of only a tenth of the country was studied. Separated and inaccessible areas remained completely unexplored. During the times of the Soviet Union, almost all territories of the country were traversed by geologists up and down. Yakut diamonds, Kolyma gold, underground treasures of the Pamirs, and the wealth of the Tyumen north were discovered.


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During the Soviet Union, the length of the state border was 67 thousand kilometers.
Of these, 20 thousand kilometers were on land and 47 thousand kilometers were water borders.
Along its entire length, the border was reliably protected both from military threats and from saboteurs and spies, and of course from smugglers and drug couriers. The expression “The border is locked” in the USSR was not just an expression and empty sound, but reflected the actual state of affairs.

After the collapse of the USSR, the total length of the Russian state border decreased slightly and is about 60 thousand km.

The longest borders remain the same - this is the maritime border in the Arctic and Pacific Oceans, as well as a land border with China and Mongolia.

The maritime border remained almost unchanged in length, but the border with China and other Asian countries was somewhat reduced due to the Central Asian republics leaving the USSR. The border was also reduced due to the exit of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia from the USSR.

In the West, the length was reduced due to the exit from the Soviet Union of Moldova and Belarus, the Baltic countries and Ukraine. 11 thousand kilometers of the state border fall on the borders with the former republics of the USSR, and 7.5 thousand kilometers of which fall on the so-called internal border with Kazakhstan.

Naturally, each new state from among the former Soviet republics has its own border guards.
And I would like to talk a little about some of them. After all, today they guard the former borders of the USSR, and whatever one may say, the security of Russia from external threats also depends on their service.

Tajikistan:


Border guards of Tajikistan also wear green caps and also celebrate their holiday on May 28.
They guard a 1,387 km section of the border. with Afghanistan and 522 km. with China. From 1992 to 2005, border troops helped them guard the border, then the border group of the Federal Border Service of the Russian Federation in the Republic of Tajikistan.
They then decided that they did not need the presence of Russian border guards, and since 2005, only a limited contingent of Russian border guards have remained on the Tajik border in the status of foreign advisers.
However, Tajik border guards are well equipped, but they have almost no special equipment and special equipment, and also lack modern weapons to protect the borders. Russia and other CSTO countries will provide them with all the necessary funds so that Tajik border guards will significantly strengthen border security.
At the same time, Tajikistan receives money for border protection from the United States; moreover, the Americans built a bridge across the Pyanj River, which connected Tajikistan and Afghanistan. Probably for better drug trafficking.

Turkmenistan:

The State Border Service of Turkmenistan is subordinate to the Ministry of Defense and guards the borders with Iran (1390 km) and Afghanistan (802 km). Border Guard Day is celebrated on August 11.
Just on the border of Turkmenistan with Afghanistan, the forces of radical Islamic militants are now building up. Moreover, there are clashes on the border every day.
The border troops of Turkmenistan include 12 border detachments, in the ranks of which 12 thousand soldiers and officers serve.
The general level of education, training and combat readiness of border guards is quite low. The technical equipment leaves much to be desired. Therefore, the level of organization of the protection of state borders of Turkmenistan in last years has deteriorated significantly, and some sections of the border with Afghanistan are not guarded at all.
Based on all this, the Turkmen leadership is now negotiating with Russia and China on the issue of assistance in organizing more effective protection of the state border of Turkmenistan.

Kazakhstan:


The border service of Kazakhstan, in addition to the border with Russia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan, has a border with China (1782 km). In total, Kazakhstan guards borders with a length of 12 thousand km.
Border Guard Day is celebrated on August 18.
According to the Kazakh authorities’ own admissions, they note that the republic’s border service has a large shortage of personnel at border posts, as well as poor training and low morale of border guards.
In addition, there are entire holes on the border itself, through which large quantities of contraband, including drugs, enter the country. And on the Chinese border, border guards are susceptible to corruption. Border guards there, together with customs officers, often resort to official fraud for the sake of their own profit.
But the Kazakh border service is undergoing a purge among the border guards, and the leadership of the service promises serious changes.

Azerbaijan:

The Azerbaijani Border Service guards the borders with Russia, Georgia, Armenia, as well as 765 km of the border with Iran and 15 km of the border with Turkey.
The service does not have its own official public holiday, but on May 28 Azerbaijan celebrates Republic Day. Although the border guards themselves, since 2000, still celebrate the Day of Creation of the Azerbaijan Border Troops on August 18. This year the troops will be 97 years old!
By the way, Mongolian border guards have been studying the experience of the Azerbaijani border service since last year. There is probably something to study.

Republic of Belarus:

The border guard authority in the republic is the State Border Committee of the Republic of Belarus.
Belarus borders Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. Border Guard Day is celebrated on May 28.
Among the former Soviet republics, along with Russia, Belarus has one of the most combat-ready border services.
In addition to high-tech security equipment, such as Eurocopters, Belarus has horse patrols in the most inaccessible areas of the border. Currently, Belarusian border guards have also strengthened security of the border with Ukraine, where there has been an increase in illegal migration and smuggling.

In Latvia, border security is in charge of the State Border Guard of the Republic of Latvia. The Border Guard reports to the Minister of Internal Affairs.
Latvian border guards guard the border with Russia, Belarus, Estonia and Lithuania. Border Guard Day is celebrated on November 7.
The most important area for Latvian border guards is the border with Russia. It was on it that Latvians began to build the “Great Wall of Latvia,” or simply a fence with barbed wire almost three meters high. The first kilometers have already been built. In addition, Latvian border guards do not allow Russians into the country without an insurance policy and deliberately slow down the process of registering vehicles.

Estonia:


Estonian Police and Border Guard Department.
This is the name of the body that guards the country’s borders. In the south, Estonia borders on Latvia, and in the east on Russia, on the northern side of the country there is the Gulf of Finland, which separates Estonia and Finland, and in the west, the Baltic Sea separates Estonia and Sweden.
Border Guard Day is not officially celebrated in Estonia, although they consider November 1 as Border Guard Day, the very day on which the very first head of the Estonian Border Department took office in 1922.
Just like Latvia, Estonia guards its border with Russia very vigilantly. Like Latvia, Estonians are planning to build barriers on some sections of the border with Russia.
This is roughly how things stand on the former borders of the Soviet Union.
To be continued...