| Minister of Defence of Ukraine | |
|---|---|
| Міністр оборони України (Ukrainian) | |
since 14 January 2026 | |
| Member of | |
| Reports to | President of Ukraine |
| Nominator | Verkhovna Rada |
| Appointer | President of Ukraine |
| Precursor | People's Commissar of Defense (1944–1945) People's Minister of Military Affairs (1918–1927) |
| Inaugural holder | Kostiantyn Morozov |
| Deputy | First Deputy Minister |
Theminister of defense of Ukraine (Ukrainian:Міністр оборони України,romanized: Ministr oborony Ukrainy) is the head of theMinistry of Defence, which is in charge of theArmed Forces of Ukraine, the second-largest military power in Europe after its Russian counterpart. The Minister of Defence is appointed by thepresident, but this has to be confirmed by a majority vote in theVerkhovna Rada, the parliament of Ukraine.[1] From 1 January 2019, Ukraine has hadcivilian control of the military by requiring that the Minister of Defence be a civilian, although they may have recently resigned from the military.[2]
SinceUkrainian independence from theSoviet Union in 1991, there have been 17 defense ministers (not including acting ones).
| No. | Portrait | Minister of Defense | Took office | Left office | Time in office | Party | Defence branch | President(s) served under | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Morozov, KostyantynColonel general Kostyantyn Morozov (born 1944) | 3 September 1991 | 30 September 1993 | 2 years, 27 days | Independent | Leonid Kravchuk | [3][4][5][6] | ||
| – | Bizhan, IvanColonel general Ivan Bizhan (born 1941) Acting | 4 October 1993 | 8 October 1993 | 4 days | Independent | Leonid Kravchuk | [6] | ||
| 2 | Radetskyi, VitalyiGeneral of the Army Vitalyi Radetskyi (born 1944) | 8 October 1993 | 25 August 1994 | 321 days | Independent | Leonid Kravchuk Leonid Kuchma | [7][8][9] | ||
| – | Shmarov, ValeriyValeriy Shmarov (1945–2018) Acting | 25 August 1994 | 10 October 1994 | 46 days | Independent | None | Leonid Kuchma | [9][10] | |
| 3 | Shmarov, ValeriyValeriy Shmarov (1945–2018) | 10 October 1994 | 8 July 1996 | 1 year, 272 days | Independent | None | Leonid Kuchma | [10][11][12][13] | |
| 4 | Kuzmuk, OleksandrGeneral of the Army Oleksandr Kuzmuk (born 1954) | 11 July 1996 | 24 October 2001 | 5 years, 105 days | Party of Regions | Leonid Kuchma | [11][14][15][16][17] [18][19][20][21] | ||
| 5 | Shkidchenko, VolodymyrGeneral of the Army Volodymyr Shkidchenko (born 1948) | 12 November 2001 | 25 June 2003 | 1 year, 224 days | Independent | Leonid Kuchma | [22][23][24] | ||
| 6 | Marchuk, YevhenGeneral of the Army Yevhen Marchuk (1941–2021) | 25 June 2003 | 23 September 2004 | 1 year, 90 days | Independent | Leonid Kuchma | [25][24][26] | ||
| 7 | Kuzmuk, OleksandrGeneral of the Army Oleksandr Kuzmuk (born 1954) | 24 September 2004 | 3 February 2005 | 133 days | Party of Regions | Leonid Kuchma Viktor Yushchenko | [27][28] | ||
| 8 | Hrytsenko, AnatoliyColonel Anatoliy Hrytsenko (born 1957) | 4 February 2005 | 18 December 2007 | 2 years, 317 days | Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc | Viktor Yushchenko | [29][30][31] | ||
| 9 | Yekhanurov, YuriyYuriy Yekhanurov (born 1948) | 18 December 2007 | 5 June 2009 | 1 year, 169 days | Revival | None | Viktor Yushchenko | [32][30][33] | |
| – | Ivashchenko, ValeriyColonel Valeriy Ivashchenko (born 1956) Acting | 5 June 2009 | 11 March 2010 | 279 days | Independent | Viktor Yushchenko Viktor Yanukovych | – | ||
| 10 | Yezhel, MykhailoAdmiral Mykhailo Yezhel (born 1952) | 11 March 2010 | 8 February 2012 | 1 year, 334 days | Independent | Viktor Yanukovych | [34] | ||
| 11 | Salamatin, DmytroDmytro Salamatin (born 1965) | 8 February 2012 | 24 December 2012 | 320 days | Party of Regions | None | Viktor Yanukovych | [35] | |
| 12 | Lebedyev, PavloCaptain Pavlo Lebedyev (born 1962) | 24 December 2012 | 27 February 2014 | 1 year, 65 days | Party of Regions | Viktor Yanukovych Oleksandr Turchynov | [36] | ||
| – | Zamana, VolodymyrColonel general Volodymyr Zamana (born 1959) as Commissar | 22 February 2014 | 27 February 2014 | 5 days | Independent | Oleksandr Turchynov | – | ||
| – | Tenyukh, IhorAdmiral Ihor Tenyukh (born 1958) Acting | 27 February 2014 | 25 March 2014 | 26 days | Svoboda | Oleksandr Turchynov | – | ||
| – | Koval, MykhailoColonel general Mykhailo Koval (born 1956) Acting | 25 March 2014 | 3 July 2014 | 100 days | Independent | Oleksandr Turchynov Petro Poroshenko | – | ||
| 13 | Heletey, ValeriyColonel general Valeriy Heletey (born 1967) | 3 July 2014 | 14 October 2014 | 103 days | Independent | Petro Poroshenko | [1][37] | ||
| 14 | Poltorak, StepanGeneral of the Army Stepan Poltorak (born 1965) | 14 October 2014 | 29 August 2019 | 4 years, 319 days | Independent | Petro Poroshenko Volodymyr Zelenskyy | – | ||
| 15 | Zahorodniuk, AndriiAndrii Zahorodniuk (born 1976) | 29 August 2019 | 4 March 2020 | 188 days | Independent | None | Volodymyr Zelenskyy | [38] | |
| 16 | Taran, AndriyLieutenant general Andriy Taran (born 1955) | 4 March 2020 | 3 November 2021 | 1 year, 244 days[39] | Independent | Volodymyr Zelenskyy | [40] | ||
| 17 | Reznikov, OleksiiSergeant Oleksii Reznikov (born 1966) | 4 November 2021 | 5 September 2023 | 1 year, 305 days | Independent | Volodymyr Zelenskyy | [41] | ||
| 18 | Umerov, RustemRustem Umerov (born 1982) | 6 September 2023 | 17 July 2025 | 1 year, 314 days | Holos | None | Volodymyr Zelenskyy | [42] | |
| 19 | Shmyhal, DenysDenys Shmyhal (born 1975) | 17 July 2025 | 13 January 2026 | 180 days | Independent | None | Volodymyr Zelenskyy | ||
| 20 | Fedorov, MykhailoMykhailo Fedorov (born 1991) | 14 January 2026 | 30 days | Independent | None | Volodymyr Zelenskyy |
The current Minister of Defense isMykhailo Fedorov, since 14 January 2026. The longest-serving Minister of Defense isOleksandr Kuzmuk who served for five years, a total of 2,063 days.
The longest serving as an acting Minister of Defense isValeriy Ivashchenko who served for a total 279 days (over 9 months).
Created on 27 May 1992, the office of deputy ministers was expanded on 4 June 1992 with thechief of the General Staff holding the post until 8 February 2002. Since 10 September 2003, the post was "demilitarized", held only by civilian or retired military personnel. The first deputy serves as an acting minister in absence of officially appointed minister unless specified otherwise.
Historically, the ministry was preceding by various other governmental institutions. The very first Ukrainian representative in military affairs wasSymon Petlyura, appointed byVolodymyr Vynnychenko toGeneral Secretariat of Ukraine in the summer of 1917. Later in December 1917 after establishing the Bolshevik government inKharkiv the Military Secretary of Ukraine was opposed by the Military Secretary of Soviet Ukraine whom the first wasVasyl Shakhrai. Note that the first ministers of Ukraine were not specialists in military affairs, particularly such asMykola Porsh.
TheUkrainian People's Army was in terrible condition and it was not until the power in the country was taken over by the former head of theRussian Imperial Retinue and hereditary Ukrainian CossackPavlo Skoropadsky, under leadership of which the new minister became Aleksandr Rogoza (also known as Oleksandr Rohoza). Rogoza was instrumental in restructuring the ministry and recruiting numerous former Russian Imperial generals who pledged their allegiance to the government of Ukraine. By the end of 1918 Bolsheviks recreated the Ukrainian Soviet government and to its office of military affairs was appointedNikolai Podvoisky, formernarkom of Military Affairs ofSoviet Russia who played a key role in theOctober Revolution. Around that time there was created the government of theWest Ukrainian People's Republic, the office of military affairs of which was headed byDmytro Vitovsky who was a specialist inspecial operations, particularly themountain warfare. Vitovsky played a key role in securing the city ofLviv and ensuring the proclamation of independence of the new Ukrainian state from the disintegratingAustro-Hungary.
| Military Rank | Name | Term of Office | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start | End | ||
| Chiefotaman | Symon Petlyura | 28 June 1917 | 1 January 1918[44] |
| Mykola Porsh | 1 January 1918 | 17 January 1918 | |
| Ivan Nemolovsky | 18 January 1918 | 28 January 1918 | |
| Colonel | Oleksandr Zhukovsky | 28 January 1918 | 29 April 1918 |
| Major General | Oleksander Hrekov (temporary) | 29 April 1918 | 3 May 1918 |
| Colonel | Oleksandr Slyvynsky (temporary) | May 3, 1918 | May 8, 1918 |
| Major General | Oleksandr Lignau (temporary) | May 8, 1918 | May 16, 1918 |
| General of the Infantry | Alexander Ragoza | May 16, 1918 | November 14, 1918 |
| Lieutenant General | Borys Shutsky (temporary) | November 14, 1918 | December 14, 1918 |
| Podporuchik | Mykola Galagan | December 14, 1918 | December 26, 1918 |
| Major General | Oleksander Osetsky | December 26, 1918 | January 9, 1919 |
| Major General | Oleksander Hrekov (temporary) | January 9, 1919 | February 14, 1919 |
| Podporuchik | Hryhoriy Syrotenko (acting) | February 14, 1919 | February 22, 1919 |
| Colonel | Oleksandr Shapoval | February 22, 1919 | April 9, 1919 |
| Podporuchik | Hryhoriy Syrotenko (acting) | April 9, 1919 | June 20, 1919 |
| Podporuchik | Hryhoriy Syrotenko | June 20, 1919 | July 4, 1919 |
| Major General | Oleksandr Shaible (temporary) | July 4, 1919 | July 14, 1919 |
| General | Vsevolod Petriv (temporary) | July 14, 1919 | November 5, 1919 |
| Major General | Volodymyr Salsky | November 5, 1919 | July 25, 1920 |
| Colonel General | Oleksiy Halkin (temporary) | July 25, 1920 | December 24, 1920 |
| Colonel General | Mykola Yunakiv (temporary) | December 24, 1920 | February 8, 1921 |
| Lieutenant General | Serhiy Dyadyusha (temporary) | February 8, 1921 | March 24, 1921 |
| Lieutenant General | Mykhailo Pavlenko (temporary) | March 24, 1921 | May 11, 1921 |
| Major General | Marko Bezruchko (temporary) | May 23, 1921 | August 5, 1921 |
| Major General | Viktor Pavlenko (temporary) | August 5, 1921 | November 15, 1921 |
| Lieutenant General | Petro Yeroshevych (temporary) | November 3, 1921 | November 14, 1921 |
| Major General | Andriy Vovk (temporary) | 14 November 1921 | 22 May 1922 |
| Colonel General | Mykola Yunakiv | 22 May 1922 | 1927 |
| Colonel General | Oleksandr Udovychenko | ||