TheMinistry of Armament (Russian:Министерство вооружения СССР) was agovernment ministry in theSoviet Union. Before 1946 it was known as thePeople's Commissariat of Armament of the USSR (Народный комиссариат вооружения СССР).
The Ministry of Armaments was subordinate to theUSSR Council of Ministers and was located on Mayakovskogo Street in Moscow.[1]
On January 11, 1939 thePeople's Commissariat of Defence Industry of the USSR (Народный комиссариат оборонной промышленности) was divided into several departments, among which was the People's Commissariat of Armament.
It oversaw the work of 28 manufacturing plants and eight design offices. In 1939 it employed 204,458 workers.[citation needed]
It played a leading role in the whole complex of arms which devotes major attention to the head ofLavrenty Beria. In 1946 the office was renamed theMinistry of Arms of the USSR (Министерство вооружения СССР – МВ).
The ministry was in charge of the production of weapons equipment and ammunition for theUSSR Armed Forces; it had under its administration all plants factories and workshops manufacturing any armaments or ammunition, regardless whether this production represented the main or secondary occupation of such plants.[1]
There were few plants in the Soviet Union that were strictly military plants, and since the tendency was to keep the production of war materials as secret as possible, it was customary to assign some peacetime production line to any plant manufacturing armaments. All such plants, even though they were concerned with the production of peacetime goods, were put under the administration of the Ministry of Armaments. Each plant working for the Ministry of Armaments was assigned a number that was used in official correspondence, e.g., Kirov Plant 304 and Plant 707.[1]
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