The Military-Industrial Commission of the USSR or VPK () commission under the Soviet Council of Ministers from 1957 to 1991. The VPK was a Commission of the Presidium of the Council of Ministers, and a deputy chairman of the Council headed it. The Soviet VPK's primary function was to facilitate plan fulfillment by easing bottlenecks, enforcing inter-ministerial cooperation, and overseeing the availability of resources.
On December 6, 1957, the Central Committee of the CPSU and the Council of Ministers of the USSR issued a joint resolution on the establishment of the Commission on Military-Industrial Issues under the Presidium of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. In 1957, in addition to the USSR Ministry of Defense, the Commission included representatives of the ministries of defense industries (MOOP) - medium mechanical engineering of the USSR, aviation industry of the USSR, defense industry of the USSR, general mechanical engineering of the USSR, radio industry of the USSR, communications industry of the USSR, shipbuilding industry of the USSR, electronic industry of the USSR, as well as the KGB under the CM of the USSR, the State Committee for the Use of Atomic Energy, the Main Directorate of State Material Reserves, the Main Technical Directorate of the State Committee for Foreign Economic Relations, Glavspetsstroy under Gosmontazhspetsstroy, organization P.O. Box No. 10, DOSAAF, the Central Committee "Dynamo" and the All-Army Military Hunting Society. The Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission had at his disposal a secretariat, deputies, a Scientific and Technical Council, and an apparatus, which at different times consisted of 10-15 departments.
The Deputy Chairmen of the Military-Industrial Commission were vested with the rights of the First Deputy Minister of the USSR, and the heads of departments with the rights of a Deputy Minister of the USSR. The apparatus of the Military-Industrial Commission did not exceed 250 people.
The Scientific and Technical Council of the Military-Industrial Commission was headed for many years by Academician of the USSR Academy of Sciences A. N. Shchukin, who held the rank of Deputy Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission. The Scientific and Technical Council of the Military-Industrial Commission consisted of 10-12 sections on the main problems of developing weapons and military equipment. They employed 200-250 members of the Scientific and Technical Council from the defense industry, research institutes of the USSR Ministry of Defense, the USSR Academy of Sciences, and higher educational institutions. One of the sections of the Scientific and Technical Council, which included academicians and corresponding members of the USSR Academy of Sciences, was officially called the "Presidium".
The decisions of the Military-Industrial Commission were mandatory for all ministries and departments developing and producing military products, regardless of their departmental subordination.
In 1985, the previously created commission was transformed into the State Commission of the Council of Ministers of the USSR on Military-Industrial Issues, and in 1991, into the State Military-Industrial Commission of the Cabinet of Ministers of the USSR.
Coordination of the work of the defense industries, other ministries and departments of the USSR involved in the creation and production of weapons and military equipment;
Members of the Commission: