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Aleksandr Vasilevsky

Aleksandr Mikhaylovich Vasilevsky (Russian: Алекса́ндр Миха́йлович Василе́вский) (30 September 1895 – 5 December 1977) was a Soviet career-officer in the Red Army who attained the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union in 1943. He served as the Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces (1942–1945) and Deputy Minister of Defense during World War II, and as Minister of Defense from 1949 to 1953. As the Chief of the General Staff from 1942 to 1945, Vasilevsky became involved in planning and coordinating almost all the decisive Soviet offensives in World War II, from the Operation Uranus of November 1942 to the assaults on East Prussia (January–April 1945), Königsberg (January–April 1945) and Manchuria (August 1945).

Aleksandr Vasilevsky
Алекса́ндр Василе́вский
Vasilevsky in 1944
Minister Of War
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
In office
25 February 1950 – 15 March 1953
PremierJoseph Stalin (1950–1953)
Georgy Malenkov (1953)
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
(Post re-established as Ministry of Defence, with Nikolai Bulganin succeeding)
Minister of the Armed Forces
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
In office
24 March 1949 – 25 February 1950
PremierJoseph Stalin
Preceded byNikolai Bulganin
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born(1895-09-30)30 September 1895
Novaya Golchikha, Vichuga, Russian Empire
Died5 December 1977(1977-12-05) (aged 82)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union (2)
Order of Victory (2)
Order of Suvorov, 1st Class
Order of Lenin (8)
Order of the Red Banner (2)
Virtuti Militari
Military service
Allegiance Russian Empire (1915–1917)
 Soviet Russia (1917–1922)
 Soviet Union (1922–1959)
Years of service1915–1959
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union
CommandsChief of the General Staff
3rd Belorussian Front
Far East Command
Battles/wars

Vasilevsky began his military career during World War I, earning the rank of captain by 1917. After the October Revolution of 1917 and the start of the Civil War of 1917–1922 he was conscripted into the Red Army, taking part in the Polish-Soviet War of 1919–1921. In peacetime he quickly rose through the ranks, becoming a regimental commander by 1930. In this position he showed great skill in organizing and training his troops. Vasilevsky's talent was noticed,[by whom?] and in 1931 he was appointed a member of the Directorate of Military Training. In 1937, following Stalin's Great Purge, he was promoted to become a General Staff officer.

At the start of the 1943 Soviet counteroffensive of World War II, Vasilevsky coordinated and executed the Red Army's offensives on the upper Don, in the Donbas, Crimea, Belarus and the Baltic states, ending his war in Europe with the capture of Königsberg in April 1945. In July 1945 he was appointed Commander-in-Chief of Soviet forces in the Far East. He executed the Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation (August 1945). After the war he became the Soviet Defense Minister from 1949 to 1953, a position he held until after Stalin's death in 1953. With Nikita Khrushchev's rise to pre-eminence in the mid-1950s, Vasilevsky began losing power and was eventually pensioned off. After his death he was buried in the Kremlin Wall necropolis in recognition of his past service and contributions to his country.

Biography

Childhood and early years

Vasilevsky was born on September 30, 1895 in Novaya Golchikha in the Kineshma Uyezd (now part of the city of Vichuga in the Ivanovo Oblast) in a family of Russian ethnicity.[1] Vasilevsky was the fourth of eight children.[2] His father, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Vasilevsky, was a priest to the nearby St. Nicholas Church. His mother, Nadezhda Ivanovna Sokolova, was the daughter of a priest in the nearby village of Ugletz. Vasilevsky reportedly broke off all contact with his parents after 1926 because of his Communist Party membership and his military duties in the Red Army; three of his brothers did so also. However, the family resumed relations in 1940, following Joseph Stalin's suggestion that they do so.[3][4]

According to Vasilevsky, his family was extremely poor. His father spent most of his time working to earn money, while the children assisted by working in the fields. In 1897, the family moved to Novopokrovskoe, where his father became a priest to the newly built Ascension Church,[5] and where Aleksandr began his education in the church school. In 1909, he entered Kostroma seminary,[6] which required considerable financial sacrifice on the part of his parents.[7] The same year, a ministerial directive preventing former seminarists from starting university studies initiated a nationwide seminarist movement, with classes stopping in most Russian seminaries. Vasilevsky, among others, was expelled from Kostroma, and only returned several months later, after the seminarists' demands had been satisfied.[8]

World War I and Civil war

 
Vasilevsky as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army in 1914

After completing his studies in the seminary and spending a few years working as a teacher, Vasilevsky intended to become an agronomist or a surveyor, but the outbreak of the First World War changed his plans. According to his own words, he was "overwhelmed with patriotic feelings"[9] and decided to become a soldier instead. Vasilevsky took his exams in January 1915 and entered the Alexander Military Law Academy in February. As he recalls, "I did not decide to become an officer to start a military career. I still wanted to be an agronomist and work in some remote corner of Russia after the war. I could not suppose that my country would change, and I would."[10][9] After four months of courses that he later considered to be completely outdated, theoretical, and inappropriate for modern warfare,[11] he was sent to the front with the rank of praporshchik, the highest non-commissioned rank in the Russian infantry, in May 1915.[12]

From June to September, Vasilevsky was assigned to a series of reserve regiments, and finally arrived at the front in September as a half-company commander (polurotny) in the 409th Novokhopersky regiment, 109th division, 9th Army.[13] In the spring of 1916, Vasilevsky took command of a company, which eventually became one of the most recognized in the regiment.[14] In May 1916, he led his men during the Brusilov offensive, becoming a battalion commander after heavy casualties among officers, and gaining the rank of captain by age 22.[15][16]

 
World War I Russian infantry.

In November 1917, just after the Russian Revolution, Vasilevsky decided to end his military career. As he wrote in his memoirs, "There was a time when I led soldiers to battle, thinking I was doing my duty as a Russian patriot. However, I understood that we have been cheated, that people needed peace.... Therefore, my military career had to end. With no remorse, I could go back to my favorite occupation, working in the field."[17] He travelled from Romania, where his unit was deployed in 1917, back to his own village.[citation needed]

In December 1917, while back at home, Vasilevsky learned that the men of the 409th regiment, which had been relocated to Ukraine, had elected him as their commander (at the start of the Russian Revolution, commanders were elected by their own men). However, the local military authorities recommended that he decline the proposal because of the heavy fighting taking place in Ukraine between pro-Soviet forces and the pro-independence Ukrainian government (the Central Rada). He followed this advice and became a drill instructor in his own Kineshma uezd.[18] He retired in September 1918 and became a school teacher in the Tula Oblast.[19]

In April 1919, Vasilevsky was again conscripted into the Red Army and sent to command a company fighting against peasant uprisings and assisting in the emergency Soviet policy of prodrazvyorstka, which required peasants to surrender agricultural surplus for a fixed price. Later that year, Vasilevsky took command of a new reserve battalion, and, in October 1919, of a regiment. However, his regiment never took part in the battles of the Russian Civil War, as Anton Denikin's troops never got close to Tula.[20] In December 1919, Vasilevsky was sent to the Western front as a deputy regimental commander, participating in the Polish-Soviet War.[6][21][22]

As deputy regimental commander of the 427th regiment, 32nd brigade, 11th division, Vasilevsky participated at the battle of Berezina, pulling back as the Polish forces had been slowly but steadily advancing eastward, and in the subsequent counterattack that began on May 14, 1920, breaking through Polish lines before being stopped by cavalry counterattacks.[23] Later, starting from July 4, 1920, he took part at the Soviet offensive towards Wilno, advancing to the Neman River despite heavy Polish resistance and German fortifications erected in the region during World War I. Vasilevsky's regiment arrived near Wilno by mid-July and stayed there on a garrison duty until the Treaty of Riga.[24]

The interwar period

 
Regimental Commander Aleksandr Vasilevsky in 1928

After the Treaty of Riga, Vasilevsky fought against remaining White forces and peasant uprisings in Belarus and in the Smolensk Oblast until August 1921.[25] By 1930, he had served as the regimental commander of the 142nd, 143rd, and 144th rifle regiments,[6] where he showed great skill in organizing and training his troops. In 1928, he graduated from the Vystrel regimental commander's course.[6][26] During these years, Vasilevsky established friendships with higher commanders and Party members, including Kliment Voroshilov,[27] Vladimir Triandafillov[28] and Boris Shaposhnikov.[29] Shaposhnikov, in particular, would become Vasilevsky's protector until the former's death in 1945. Vasilevsky's connections and good performance earned him an appointment to the Directorate of Military Training in 1931.[30]

While at the Directorate of Military Training, Vasilevsky supervised the Red Army's training and worked on military manuals and field books. He also met several senior military commanders, such as Mikhail Tukhachevsky and Georgy Zhukov, then the Deputy Cavalry Inspector of the Red Army. Zhukov would later characterize Vasilevsky as "a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody."[31] In 1934, Vasilevsky was appointed to be the Senior Military Training Supervisor of the Volga Military District (Privolzhsky voyenny okrug).[6] In 1937, he entered the Academy of the General Staff,[32][33] where he studied important aspects of military strategy and other topics under experienced generals, including Mikhail Tukhachevsky.[34]

By mid-1937, Stalin's Great Purge eliminated a significant number of senior military commanders, vacating a number of positions on the General Staff. To his amazement, Vasilevsky was appointed to the General Staff in October 1937 and held "responsible for operational training of senior officers."[6][35] In 1938, he was made a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (a sine qua non condition for a successful career in the Soviet Union); in 1939, he was appointed Deputy Commander of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff, while holding the rank of divisional commander.[6] While in this position he and Shaposhnikov were responsible for the planning of the Winter War, and after the Moscow peace treaty, for setting the demarcation line with Finland.[36]

As a senior officer, Vasilevsky met frequently with Joseph Stalin. During one of these meetings, Stalin asked Vasilevsky about his family. Since Vasilevsky's father was a priest and thus a potential "enemy of the people", Vasilevsky said that he had ended his relationship with them in 1926. Stalin, surprised, suggested that he reestablish his family ties at once, and help his parents with whatever needs they might have.[3][4]

World War II

Start and Battle of Moscow

 
Vasilevky (left) and Nikita Khrushchev inspect German equipment destroyed near Stalingrad, 1943

By June 1941, Vasilevsky was working around the clock in his General Staff office.[37] On June 22, 1941, he learned of the German bombing of several important military and civilian objectives,[38] starting Operation Barbarossa. In August 1941, Vasilevsky was appointed Chief of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff and Deputy Chief of the General Staff,[39] making him one of the key figures in the Soviet military leadership. At the end of September 1941, Vasilevsky gave a speech before the General Staff, describing the situation as extremely difficult, but pointing out that the northern part of the front was holding, that Leningrad still offered resistance, and that such a situation would potentially allow some reserves to be gathered in the northern part of the front.[40]

In October 1941, the situation at the front was becoming critical, with German forces advancing towards Moscow during Operation Typhoon. As a representative of the Soviet General Staff (Stavka), Vasilevsky was sent to the Western Front to coordinate the defense and guarantee a flow of supplies and men towards the region of Mozhaisk,[41] where Soviet forces were attempting to contain the German advance. During heavy fighting near the outskirts of Moscow, Vasilevsky spent all of his available time both in the Stavka and on the front line trying to coordinate the three fronts committed to Moscow's defense.[42] When most of the General Staff (including its chief Marshal Shaposhnikov) was evacuated from Moscow, Vasilevsky remained in the city as liaison between the Moscow Staff and the evacuated members of the General Staff.[42] In his memoirs, Nikita Khrushchev described Vasilevsky as an "able specialist" even so early in the war.[43] On October 28, 1941, Vasilevsky was promoted to Lieutenant General.[44]

The Battle of Moscow was a very difficult period in Vasilevsky's life, with the Wehrmacht approaching close enough to the city for German officers to make out some of Moscow's buildings through their field glasses. As he recalls, his workday often ended at 4 a.m.[45] Moreover, with Marshal Shaposhnikov having fallen ill, Vasilevsky had to make important decisions by himself.[46] On October 29, 1941, a bomb exploded in the courtyard of the General Staff. Vasilevsky was slightly wounded but continued working. The kitchen was damaged by the explosion, and the General Staff was relocated underground without hot food. Nevertheless, the Staff continued to function.[47] In December 1941, Vasilevsky coordinated the Moscow counteroffensive, and by early 1942, the general counteroffensive in the Moscow and Rostov directions, further motivated in his work by the return of his evacuated family to Moscow.[48] In April 1942, he coordinated the unsuccessful elimination of the Demyansk pocket, the encirclement of the German 2nd Army Corps near Leningrad. On April 24, with Shaposhnikov seriously ill again, Vasilevsky was appointed as acting Chief of Staff and promoted to Colonel General on April 26.[citation needed]

Summer and fall 1942

 
Vasilevsky (center) with Colonel-General Filipp Golikov (right) coordinating operations during the Voronezh–Kharkov offensive, 1943

In May 1942 one of the most controversial episodes in Vasilevsky's career occurred: the Second Battle of Kharkov, a failed counteroffensive that led to a stinging Red Army defeat, and ultimately to a successful German offensive (Operation Blue) in the south. After repelling the enemy from Moscow, Soviet morale was high and Stalin was determined to launch another general counteroffensive during the summer. However, Vasilevsky recognized that "the reality was more harsh than that."[49] Following Stalin's orders, the Kharkov offensive was launched on May 12, 1942. When the threat of encirclement became obvious, Vasilevsky and Zhukov asked for permission to withdraw the advancing Soviet forces. Stalin refused,[50][51] leading to the encirclement of the Red Army forces and a total defeat. In his memoirs, Khrushchev accused Vasilevsky of being too passive and indecisive, as well as being unable to defend his point of view in front of Stalin during that particular operation.[52] As he wrote, "It was my view that the catastrophe... could have been avoided if Vasilevsky had taken the position he should have. He could have taken a different position... but he didn't do that, and as a result, in my view, he had a hand in the destruction of thousands of Red Army fighters in the Kharkov campaign."[52]

In June 1942, Vasilevsky was briefly sent to Leningrad to coordinate an attempt to break the encirclement of the 2nd Shock Army led by General Andrei Vlasov. On June 26, 1942 Vasilevsky was appointed Chief of the General Staff, and, in October 1942, Deputy Minister of Defense.[39] He was now one of the few people responsible for the global planning of Soviet offensives. Starting from July 23, 1942, Vasilevsky was a Stavka representative on the Stalingrad front, which he correctly anticipated as the main axis of attack.[53]

The battle of Stalingrad was another difficult period in Vasilevsky's life. Sent with Zhukov to the Stalingrad Front, he tried to coordinate the defenses of Stalingrad with radio links working intermittently, at best.[54] On September 12, 1942, during a meeting with Stalin, Vasilevsky and Zhukov presented their plan for the Stalingrad counteroffensive after an all-night planning session.[55][56] Two months later, on November 19, with Stalingrad still unconquered, Operation Uranus was launched. Since Zhukov had been sent to near Rzhev to execute Operation Mars (the Rzhev counteroffensive), Vasilevsky remained near Stalingrad to coordinate the double-pincer attack that ultimately led to the German defeat[39] and annihilation of the armies entrapped in the cauldron, all a result of the plan he had presented to Stalin on December 9.[57][58] This plan sparked some debate between Vasilevsky and Rokossovsky, who wanted an additional army for clearing Stalingrad, which Rokossovsky continued to mention to Vasilevsky even years after the war.[59] The army in question was Rodion Malinovsky's 2nd Guards' which Vasilevsky committed against a dangerous German counter-attack launched from Kotelnikovo by the 57th Panzer corps that was designed to deblockade the Stalingrad pocket.[citation needed]

Soviet victory

 
Vasilevsky and Budyonny in the Donbas, 1943

In January 1943, Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives on the upper Don River near Voronezh and Ostrogozhsk, leading to decisive encirclements of several Axis divisions.[39][60] In mid-January, Vasilevsky was promoted to General of the Army and only 29 days later, on February 16, 1943, to Marshal of the Soviet Union.[citation needed]

In March 1943, after the creation of the Kursk salient and the failure of the Third Battle of Kharkov, Stalin and the Stavka had to decide if the offensive should be resumed despite this setback, or if it was better to adopt a defensive stance. Vasilevsky and Zhukov managed to persuade Stalin that it was necessary to halt the offensive for now, and wait for the initiative from the Wehrmacht.[61] When it became clear that the supposed German offensive was postponed and would no longer take place in May 1943 as expected, Vasilevsky successfully defended continuing to wait for the Wehrmacht to attack, rather than making a preemptive strike as Khrushchev wanted.[62] When the Battle of Kursk finally began on July 4, 1943, Vasilevsky was responsible for coordinating the Voronezh and Steppe Fronts.[39] After the German failure at Kursk and the start of the general counteroffensive on the left bank of the Dnieper, Vasilevsky planned and executed offensive operations in the Donbas region.[39][63] Later that year, he developed and executed the clearing of Nazi forces from Crimea.[64]

 
Marshal Vasilevsky (left) and General Ivan Chernyakhovsky interrogate captured Lieutenant General Alfons Hitter in Germany, 1944

At the start of 1944, Vasilevsky coordinated the Soviet offensive on the right bank of the Dnieper, leading to a decisive victory in eastern Ukraine. On April 10, 1944, the day Odessa was retaken, Vasilevsky was presented with the Order of Victory, only the second ever awarded (the first having been awarded to Zhukov).[65] Vasilevsky's car rolled over a mine during an inspection of Sevastopol after the fighting ended on May 10, 1944. He received a head wound, cut by flying glass, and was evacuated to Moscow for recovery.[66]

During Operation Bagration, the general counteroffensive in Belarus, Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives of the 1st Baltic and 3rd Belorussian Fronts.[67] When Soviet forces entered the Baltic states, Vasilevsky assumed complete responsibility for all the Baltic fronts, discarding the 3rd Belorussian.[68] On July 29, 1944, he was made Hero of the Soviet Union for his military successes.[39] In February 1945, Vasilevsky was again appointed commander of 3rd Belorussian Front to lead the East Prussian Operation, leaving the post of General Chief of Staff to Aleksei Antonov.[69] As a front commander, Vasilevsky led the East Prussian operation and organized the assaults on Königsberg and Pillau.[39] He also negotiated the surrender of the Königsberg garrison with its commander, Otto Lasch. After the war, Lasch claimed that Vasilevsky did not respect the guarantees made during the city's capitulation. Indeed, Vasilevsky promised that German soldiers would not be executed, that prisoners, civilians and wounded would be treated decently, and that all prisoners would return to Germany after the end of the war. Instead, Lasch remained in prison for 10 years and returned to Germany only in 1955, as did many of the Wehrmacht soldiers and officers, while all German population was expelled from Eastern Prussia.[70] For the brilliant successes at Königsberg and in Eastern Prussia, Vasilevsky was awarded his second Order of Victory.[65]

John Erickson wrote that: Vasilevskii is a much underestimated soldier, a figure who flits about Soviet historiography but a commander inured to the battlefield yet deft in his handling of the whole Soviet war machine.[71]

Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation

 
Vasilevsky in Port Arthur, China, 1945

During the 1944 summer offensive, Stalin announced that he would appoint Vasilevsky Commander-in-Chief of USSR Forces in the Far East once the war against Germany ended. Vasilevsky began drafting the war plan for Japan by late 1944 and began full-time preparation by April 27, 1945. In June 1945, Stalin approved his plan. Vasilevsky then received the appointment of Commander-in-Chief of USSR Forces in the Far East and travelled by armoured train to Chita to execute the plan.[citation needed]

During the preparation phase, Vasilevsky further rehearsed the offensive with his army commanders and directed the start of Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation, also known as the Battle of Manchuria. In twenty-four days, from August 9 to September 2, 1945, Japanese armies in Manchukuo were defeated, with just 37,000 casualties out of 1,600,000 troops on the USSR side.[72] For his success in this operation, Vasilevsky was awarded his second Hero of the Soviet Union decoration on September 8.[39]

After World War II

Between 1946 and 1949, Vasilevsky remained Chief of Staff, then became Defense Minister from 1949 to 1953. Following Stalin's death in 1953, Vasilevsky fell from grace and was replaced by Nikolai Bulganin, although he remained deputy Defense minister. In 1956, he was appointed Deputy Defense Minister for Military Science, a secondary position with no real military power. Vasilevsky would occupy this position for only one year before being pensioned off by Nikita Khrushchev, thus becoming a victim of the bloodless purge that also saw the end of Zhukov. In 1959, he was appointed a General Inspector of the Ministry of Defense, an honorary position. In 1973, he published his memoirs, The Cause of My Whole Life. Aleksandr Vasilevsky died on December 5, 1977.[6] His body was cremated and his ashes immured in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis.[16]

Family

 
Vasilevsky with his wife Ekaterina (1975)

In 1923, Vasilevsky married Serafima Nikolaevna Voronova (1904-1980), before divorcing in 1934. The couple had a son named Yuri (1925-2013), who went on to become a lieutenant general in the Soviet Air Force. Yuri was married to Era Zhukova, daughter of Georgy Zhukov.[73]

Vasilevsky later re-married to Ekaterina Vasilievna Saburova, with whom he had a son named Igor (born 1935). Igor went on to become a well-known architect, and was recipient of the title of Honored Architect of the Russian Federation and the State Prize of Czechoslovakia. Igor is married to the daughter of Soviet statesman Ivan Tevosian.[73]

Awards

In his memoirs, Vasilevsky recalls Stalin's astonishment when, at a ceremony taking place in the Kremlin on December 4, 1941, the Soviet leader saw just a single Order of the Red Star and the medal "XX years of the RKKA" on Vasilevsky's uniform.[74] However, Vasilevsky eventually became one of the most decorated commanders in Soviet history.[citation needed]

Vasilevsky was awarded the Gold Star of Hero of the Soviet Union twice for operations on the German and Japanese fronts. He was awarded two Orders of Victory (an achievement matched only by Zhukov and Stalin) for his successes in Crimea and Prussia. During his career, he was awarded eight Orders of Lenin (several of them after the war), the Order of the October Revolution when it was created in 1967, two Orders of the Red Banner, a first class Order of Suvorov for his operations in Ukraine and Crimea, and his first decoration, an Order of the Red Star, earned in 1940 for his brilliant staff work during the Winter War. Finally, he was awarded a third class Order for Service to the Homeland as recognition for his entire military career when this order was created in 1974, just three years before Vasilevsky's death.[citation needed]

Vasilevsky was also awarded fourteen medals. For his participation in various campaigns, he was awarded the Defense of Leningrad, Defense of Moscow, Defense of Stalingrad and Capture of Königsberg medals. As with all Soviet soldiers who took part in the war with Germany and Japan, he was awarded the Medal For the Victory Over Germany and the Medal "For the Victory over Japan". He also received several commemorative medals, such as Twenty, Thirty, Forty, and Fifty Years Since the Creation of the Soviet Armed Forces medals, Twenty and Thirty Years Since the Victory in the Great Patriotic War medals, the Eight Hundredth Anniversary of Moscow medal (awarded in 1947 for his participation in the battle of Moscow) and the Hundredth Birthday of Lenin medal. In addition to Soviet orders and medals, Vasilevsky was awarded several foreign decorations such as the Polish Virtuti Militari Order from the Polish communist government.[39]

Soviet Union
  
   
       
       
       
       
       
       
       

A reconstruction of Vasilevsky's ribbon bar, without foreign and Imperial era decorations

Imperial Russia
  Order of Saint Anna, 4th class
  Order of Saint Stanislaus, 3rd class
  Cross of St. George, 4th class
Foreign awards
  Order of Sukhbaatar, twice (Mongolia, 1966, 1971)
  Order of the Red Banner (Mongolia, 1945)
  Medal "30 Years of the Victory in Khalkhin-Gol" (Mongolia)
  Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" (Mongolia)
  Medal "30 Years of Victory over Militaristic Japan" (Mongolia)
  Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Army" (Mongolia)
  Order of the White Lion, 1st class (Czechoslovakia, 1955)
  Military Order of the White Lion "For Victory", 1st class (Czechoslovakia, 1945)
  War Cross 1939–1945 (Czechoslovakia, 1943)
  Medal "In Commemoration of the Battle of Dukla Pass" (Czechoslovakia, 1960)
  Order of Karl Marx (East Germany, 1975)
  Virtuti Militari, 1st class (Poland, 1946)
  Order of Polonia Restituta, 2nd class (Poland, 1968)
  Order of Polonia Restituta, 3rd class (Poland, 1973)
  Cross of Grunwald, 1st class (Poland, 1946)
  Order of The People's Republic of Bulgaria, 1st class (Bulgaria, 1974)
  Medal "90th Anniversary of the Birth of Georgi Dimitrov" (Bulgaria, 1972)
  Grand Officer of the Legion d'Honneur (France, 1944)
  Croix de guerre (France, 1944)
  Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (UK, 1943)
  Chief Commander, Legion of Merit (U.S., 1944)
  Order of National Liberation (Yugoslavia, 1946)
  Order of the Partisan Star, 1st class (Yugoslavia, 1946)
  Order of the National Flag, 1st class (North Korea, 1948)[citation needed]
  Medal for the Liberation of Korea (North Korea, 1948)
  Special Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Tripod (Republic of China, 1946)
  Medal of Sino-Soviet Friendship (China, 1956)

Personality and opinions

 
Vasilevsky in 1965

Vasilevsky was regarded by his peers as a kind and soft military commander. General Sergei Shtemenko, a member of the General Staff during the war, described Vasilevsky as a brilliant, yet modest officer with outstanding experience in staff work. Shtemenko pointed out Vasilevsky's prodigious talent for strategic and operational planning. Vasilevsky also showed his respect for subordinates and demonstrated an acute sense of diplomacy and politeness, which Stalin appreciated. As a result, Vasilevsky enjoyed almost unlimited trust from Stalin.[75] Several years before the war, Zhukov described Vasilevsky as "a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody."[31] During the war, Zhukov described Vasilevsky as an able commander, enjoying exceptional trust from Stalin, and able to persuade him even during heated discussions.[76] Vasilevsky never mentioned his awards (including the two orders of Victory) in his memoirs, attesting to his modesty.[citation needed] American military historians David M. Glantz and Jonathan M. House wrote that Vasilevsky "exercised a calm, rational influence" on Stalin and was "[f]ar less temperamental than Zhukov."[77]

Vasilevsky's actions and personality were sometimes the object of dispute, while less controversial than those of Zhukov. In particular, Nikita Khrushchev defined Vasilevsky in his memoirs as a passive commander completely under the control of Stalin, and blamed him for the Kharkov failure in Spring 1942.[78] Among Vasilevsky's strongest critics was Rokossovsky, who criticized Vasilevsky's decisions during the Stalingrad counteroffensive, especially his refusal to commit the 2nd Army to the annihilation of the encircled German divisions, and for general interference with his own work.[79] Rokossovsky even wrote in his memoirs: "I do not even understand what role could Zhukov and Vasilevsky play on Stalingrad front."[80] In fairness to Vasilevsky it needs noting that he diverted the 2nd army from the assault on the Stalingrad pocket only in order to commit it against a dangerous German counter-attack from Kotelnikovo, designed to deblockade the pocket, which was enjoying great numerical superiority. Vasilevsky, it seems, was dismayed by Rokossovsky's opposition to the transfer.[citation needed]

On the other hand, the writer Victor Suvorov held up Vasilevsky over Zhukov. According to him, Vasilevsky was the only officer responsible for the successful planning and execution of the Soviet counteroffensive at Stalingrad, and Zhukov played no role whatsoever in it. He claimed that Vasilevsky was the best Soviet military commander and that Soviet victory was mainly due to his actions as the Chief of Staff. According to Suvorov, Zhukov and the Soviet propaganda machine tried, after the war, to reduce the role of the General Staff (and thus Vasilevsky's importance) and to increase the role of the Party and Zhukov.[81]

A post-1991 view on Vasilevsky was elaborated by Mezhiritzky in his book, Reading Marshal Zhukov. Mezhiritzky points out Vasilevsky's timidity and his inability to defend his opinions before Stalin. Reportedly, Vasilevsky was appointed to such high military positions because he was easy to manage.[82] However, Mezhiritzky recognizes Vasilevsky's intelligence and assumes that Vasilevsky was indeed the main author of the Stalingrad counteroffensive. He also points out that Vasilevsky and Zhukov probably deliberately under-reported the estimated strength of the 6th Army to gain Stalin's approval for that risky operation.[83]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Василевский Александр Михайлович".
  2. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 8.
  3. ^ a b Vasilevsky 1978, p. 96.
  4. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h K.A. Zalessky, Stalin's empire (biographic dictionary), Moscow, Veche, 2000 (entry: Vasilevsky).
  6. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 10.
  7. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 12.
  8. ^ a b Vasilevsky 1978, p. 14.
  9. ^ This is a reference to the 1917 Russian Revolution and Vasilevsky's emerging communist beliefs
  10. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 15.
  11. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 16.
  12. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 19.
  13. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 23.
  14. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 27.
  15. ^ a b Shikman A.P., Actors of our History, biographical dictionary, Moscow, 1997, entry "Vasilevsky".
  16. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 30.
  17. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 31.
  18. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 33.
  19. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 35.
  20. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, pp. 41–49.
  21. ^ Tucker, Spencer (14 December 2003). Who's Who in Twentieth Century Warfare. Taylor & Francis. p. 339. ISBN 978-0-203-40253-5.
  22. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, pp. 42–44.
  23. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 45.
  24. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, pp. 49–50.
  25. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 61.
  26. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, pp. 59–60.
  27. ^ A Russian warfare theoretician, famous for his deep operations theory.
  28. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 63.
  29. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 70.
  30. ^ a b Zhukov 2002, p. 110.
  31. ^ Great Soviet Encyclopedia, Moscow, 1969 — 1978, entry "Vasilevsky".
  32. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 80.
  33. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 81.
  34. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 82.
  35. ^ Kees Boterbloem, The Life and Times of Andrei Zhdanov, 1896–1948, McGill-Queen's Press, 2004, ISBN 0-7735-2666-8, p. 203 (online link)
  36. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 106.
  37. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 110.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Soviet Military Encyclopedia, Moscow, 1976–1979, tome 2, entry "Vasilevsky"
  39. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 26.
  40. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 25.
  41. ^ a b Shtemenko 1989, p. 27.
  42. ^ Khrushchev 1999, p. 296.
  43. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 146.
  44. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 145.
  45. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 150.
  46. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 29.
  47. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 159.
  48. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 184.
  49. ^ Zhukov 2002, p. 64.
  50. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 40.
  51. ^ a b Sergei Khrushchev, Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev, Penn State Press, 2004, ISBN 0-271-02332-5, pp. 297–299 (online link)
  52. ^ Shtemenko 1989, pp. 52–53.
  53. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 60.
  54. ^ Shtemenko 1989, pp. 63–64.
  55. ^ Hew Strachan, European Armies and the Conduct of War, Routledge (UK), 1988, ISBN 0-415-07863-6, p.171 (online link)
  56. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 243.
  57. ^ Stanley Rogers, Duncan Anderson, The Eastern Front, Zenith Imprint, 2001, ISBN 0-7603-0923-X, p. 127
  58. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 248.
  59. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 90.
  60. ^ Shtemenko 1989, pp. 122–123.
  61. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 131.
  62. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 141.
  63. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 154.
  64. ^ a b http://mondvor.narod.ru/OPobeda.html, retrieved on July 8, 2006.
  65. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, p. 395.
  66. ^ Steven J Zaloga, Bagration 1944, Osprey Publishing, 1996, ISBN 1-85532-478-4, p. 21.(online link)
  67. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 208.
  68. ^ Shtemenko 1989, p. 219.
  69. ^ Otto von Lasch, So fell Königsberg, Moscow, 1991, chapter "Capitulation".
  70. ^ Erickson, John (1999) [1983]. The Road to Berlin: Stalin's War with Germany: Volume Two (2 ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 790. ISBN 0-300-07813-7.
  71. ^ Daniel Marston, The Pacific War Companion, Osprey Publishing, 2005, ISBN 1-84176-882-0, p. 242, (online link).
  72. ^ a b Ariadna Rokossovskaya (2005-02-11). "Мы были на фронте рядом с отцом". Rossiyskaya Gazeta. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  73. ^ Vasilevsky 1978, pp. 151–152.
  74. ^ Shtemenko 1989, pp. 105–108.
  75. ^ Zhukov 2002, p. 345.
  76. ^ David M. Glantz and Jonathan M. House, When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler, p.129, University Press of Kansas, 1995.
  77. ^ Khrushchev 1999, pp. 362–370.
  78. ^ Rokossovsky 1988.
  79. ^ Rokossovsky 1988, p. 235.
  80. ^ Viktor Suvorov, Shadow of Victory, Moscow, ACT, 2002, chapter 15
  81. ^ Mezhiritzky 2002, ch. 32.
  82. ^ Mezhiritzky 2002, ch. 60.

References

  • Khrushchev, Nikita (1999). Time. People. Power. (Memoirs). Vol. 1. Moscow: IIK Moscow News.
  • Otto von Lasch (1991), So fell Königsberg ('So fiel Königsberg'). Moscow.
  • Mezhiritzky, P.Ya. (2002). Reading Marshal Zhukov. Philadelphia: Libas Consulting.
  • Rokossovsky, K. (1988). Soldier's Duty. Moscow: Politizdat.
  • A.P. Shikman (1997), Actors of our History (biographical dictionary). Moscow.
  • Shtemenko, S.M. (1989). The General Staff during the War (2nd ed.). Moscow: Voenizdat.
  • Viktor Suvorov (2002), Shadow of Victory. Moscow: ACT.
  • Vasilevsky, A. M. (1978). The Matter of My Whole Life. Moscow: Politizdat.
  • K.A. Zalessky (2000), Stalin's empire (biographical dictionary). Moscow: Veche.
  • Zhukov, G. K. (2002). Memoirs. Moscow: Olma-Press.
  • (1969–1978) Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Moscow.
  • (1976–1979) Soviet Military Encyclopedia. Moscow.

External links

Military offices
Preceded by Chief of the Staff of the Soviet Army
26 June 1942 – February 1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief of the Staff of the Soviet Army
22 March 1946 – November 1948
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of War
24 March 1949 – 15 March 1953
Succeeded by

aleksandr, vasilevsky, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, mikhaylovich, family, name, vasilevsky, aleksandr, mikhaylovich, vasilevsky, russian, Алекса, ндр, Миха, йлович, Василе, в. For other people named Aleksandr Vasilevsky see Aleksandr Vasilevsky disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Mikhaylovich and the family name is Vasilevsky Aleksandr Mikhaylovich Vasilevsky Russian Aleksa ndr Miha jlovich Vasile vskij 30 September 1895 5 December 1977 was a Soviet career officer in the Red Army who attained the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union in 1943 He served as the Chief of the General Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces 1942 1945 and Deputy Minister of Defense during World War II and as Minister of Defense from 1949 to 1953 As the Chief of the General Staff from 1942 to 1945 Vasilevsky became involved in planning and coordinating almost all the decisive Soviet offensives in World War II from the Operation Uranus of November 1942 to the assaults on East Prussia January April 1945 Konigsberg January April 1945 and Manchuria August 1945 Aleksandr VasilevskyAleksa ndr Vasile vskijVasilevsky in 1944Minister Of WarUnion of Soviet Socialist RepublicsIn office 25 February 1950 15 March 1953PremierJoseph Stalin 1950 1953 Georgy Malenkov 1953 Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolished Post re established as Ministry of Defence with Nikolai Bulganin succeeding Minister of the Armed ForcesUnion of Soviet Socialist RepublicsIn office 24 March 1949 25 February 1950PremierJoseph StalinPreceded byNikolai BulganinSucceeded byPosition abolishedPersonal detailsBorn 1895 09 30 30 September 1895Novaya Golchikha Vichuga Russian EmpireDied5 December 1977 1977 12 05 aged 82 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionResting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis MoscowAwardsHero of the Soviet Union 2 Order of Victory 2 Order of Suvorov 1st ClassOrder of Lenin 8 Order of the Red Banner 2 Virtuti MilitariMilitary serviceAllegiance Russian Empire 1915 1917 Soviet Russia 1917 1922 Soviet Union 1922 1959 Years of service1915 1959RankMarshal of the Soviet UnionCommandsChief of the General Staff3rd Belorussian FrontFar East CommandBattles warsWorld War I Russian Civil War Polish Soviet War World War II Winter War Eastern Front Operation Barbarossa Battle of Moscow Second Battle of Kharkov Battle of Stalingrad Voronezh Kastornoye offensive Battle of the Dnieper Dnieper Carpathian offensive Operation Bagration East Prussian offensive Battle of Konigsberg Soviet Japanese War Invasion of ManchuriaVasilevsky began his military career during World War I earning the rank of captain by 1917 After the October Revolution of 1917 and the start of the Civil War of 1917 1922 he was conscripted into the Red Army taking part in the Polish Soviet War of 1919 1921 In peacetime he quickly rose through the ranks becoming a regimental commander by 1930 In this position he showed great skill in organizing and training his troops Vasilevsky s talent was noticed by whom and in 1931 he was appointed a member of the Directorate of Military Training In 1937 following Stalin s Great Purge he was promoted to become a General Staff officer At the start of the 1943 Soviet counteroffensive of World War II Vasilevsky coordinated and executed the Red Army s offensives on the upper Don in the Donbas Crimea Belarus and the Baltic states ending his war in Europe with the capture of Konigsberg in April 1945 In July 1945 he was appointed Commander in Chief of Soviet forces in the Far East He executed the Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation August 1945 After the war he became the Soviet Defense Minister from 1949 to 1953 a position he held until after Stalin s death in 1953 With Nikita Khrushchev s rise to pre eminence in the mid 1950s Vasilevsky began losing power and was eventually pensioned off After his death he was buried in the Kremlin Wall necropolis in recognition of his past service and contributions to his country Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood and early years 1 2 World War I and Civil war 1 3 The interwar period 1 4 World War II 1 4 1 Start and Battle of Moscow 1 4 2 Summer and fall 1942 1 4 3 Soviet victory 1 4 4 Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation 1 5 After World War II 2 Family 3 Awards 4 Personality and opinions 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External linksBiography EditChildhood and early years Edit Vasilevsky was born on September 30 1895 in Novaya Golchikha in the Kineshma Uyezd now part of the city of Vichuga in the Ivanovo Oblast in a family of Russian ethnicity 1 Vasilevsky was the fourth of eight children 2 His father Mikhail Aleksandrovich Vasilevsky was a priest to the nearby St Nicholas Church His mother Nadezhda Ivanovna Sokolova was the daughter of a priest in the nearby village of Ugletz Vasilevsky reportedly broke off all contact with his parents after 1926 because of his Communist Party membership and his military duties in the Red Army three of his brothers did so also However the family resumed relations in 1940 following Joseph Stalin s suggestion that they do so 3 4 According to Vasilevsky his family was extremely poor His father spent most of his time working to earn money while the children assisted by working in the fields In 1897 the family moved to Novopokrovskoe where his father became a priest to the newly built Ascension Church 5 and where Aleksandr began his education in the church school In 1909 he entered Kostroma seminary 6 which required considerable financial sacrifice on the part of his parents 7 The same year a ministerial directive preventing former seminarists from starting university studies initiated a nationwide seminarist movement with classes stopping in most Russian seminaries Vasilevsky among others was expelled from Kostroma and only returned several months later after the seminarists demands had been satisfied 8 World War I and Civil war Edit Vasilevsky as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army in 1914 After completing his studies in the seminary and spending a few years working as a teacher Vasilevsky intended to become an agronomist or a surveyor but the outbreak of the First World War changed his plans According to his own words he was overwhelmed with patriotic feelings 9 and decided to become a soldier instead Vasilevsky took his exams in January 1915 and entered the Alexander Military Law Academy in February As he recalls I did not decide to become an officer to start a military career I still wanted to be an agronomist and work in some remote corner of Russia after the war I could not suppose that my country would change and I would 10 9 After four months of courses that he later considered to be completely outdated theoretical and inappropriate for modern warfare 11 he was sent to the front with the rank of praporshchik the highest non commissioned rank in the Russian infantry in May 1915 12 From June to September Vasilevsky was assigned to a series of reserve regiments and finally arrived at the front in September as a half company commander polurotny in the 409th Novokhopersky regiment 109th division 9th Army 13 In the spring of 1916 Vasilevsky took command of a company which eventually became one of the most recognized in the regiment 14 In May 1916 he led his men during the Brusilov offensive becoming a battalion commander after heavy casualties among officers and gaining the rank of captain by age 22 15 16 World War I Russian infantry In November 1917 just after the Russian Revolution Vasilevsky decided to end his military career As he wrote in his memoirs There was a time when I led soldiers to battle thinking I was doing my duty as a Russian patriot However I understood that we have been cheated that people needed peace Therefore my military career had to end With no remorse I could go back to my favorite occupation working in the field 17 He travelled from Romania where his unit was deployed in 1917 back to his own village citation needed In December 1917 while back at home Vasilevsky learned that the men of the 409th regiment which had been relocated to Ukraine had elected him as their commander at the start of the Russian Revolution commanders were elected by their own men However the local military authorities recommended that he decline the proposal because of the heavy fighting taking place in Ukraine between pro Soviet forces and the pro independence Ukrainian government the Central Rada He followed this advice and became a drill instructor in his own Kineshma uezd 18 He retired in September 1918 and became a school teacher in the Tula Oblast 19 In April 1919 Vasilevsky was again conscripted into the Red Army and sent to command a company fighting against peasant uprisings and assisting in the emergency Soviet policy of prodrazvyorstka which required peasants to surrender agricultural surplus for a fixed price Later that year Vasilevsky took command of a new reserve battalion and in October 1919 of a regiment However his regiment never took part in the battles of the Russian Civil War as Anton Denikin s troops never got close to Tula 20 In December 1919 Vasilevsky was sent to the Western front as a deputy regimental commander participating in the Polish Soviet War 6 21 22 As deputy regimental commander of the 427th regiment 32nd brigade 11th division Vasilevsky participated at the battle of Berezina pulling back as the Polish forces had been slowly but steadily advancing eastward and in the subsequent counterattack that began on May 14 1920 breaking through Polish lines before being stopped by cavalry counterattacks 23 Later starting from July 4 1920 he took part at the Soviet offensive towards Wilno advancing to the Neman River despite heavy Polish resistance and German fortifications erected in the region during World War I Vasilevsky s regiment arrived near Wilno by mid July and stayed there on a garrison duty until the Treaty of Riga 24 The interwar period Edit Regimental Commander Aleksandr Vasilevsky in 1928 After the Treaty of Riga Vasilevsky fought against remaining White forces and peasant uprisings in Belarus and in the Smolensk Oblast until August 1921 25 By 1930 he had served as the regimental commander of the 142nd 143rd and 144th rifle regiments 6 where he showed great skill in organizing and training his troops In 1928 he graduated from the Vystrel regimental commander s course 6 26 During these years Vasilevsky established friendships with higher commanders and Party members including Kliment Voroshilov 27 Vladimir Triandafillov 28 and Boris Shaposhnikov 29 Shaposhnikov in particular would become Vasilevsky s protector until the former s death in 1945 Vasilevsky s connections and good performance earned him an appointment to the Directorate of Military Training in 1931 30 While at the Directorate of Military Training Vasilevsky supervised the Red Army s training and worked on military manuals and field books He also met several senior military commanders such as Mikhail Tukhachevsky and Georgy Zhukov then the Deputy Cavalry Inspector of the Red Army Zhukov would later characterize Vasilevsky as a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody 31 In 1934 Vasilevsky was appointed to be the Senior Military Training Supervisor of the Volga Military District Privolzhsky voyenny okrug 6 In 1937 he entered the Academy of the General Staff 32 33 where he studied important aspects of military strategy and other topics under experienced generals including Mikhail Tukhachevsky 34 By mid 1937 Stalin s Great Purge eliminated a significant number of senior military commanders vacating a number of positions on the General Staff To his amazement Vasilevsky was appointed to the General Staff in October 1937 and held responsible for operational training of senior officers 6 35 In 1938 he was made a member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union a sine qua non condition for a successful career in the Soviet Union in 1939 he was appointed Deputy Commander of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff while holding the rank of divisional commander 6 While in this position he and Shaposhnikov were responsible for the planning of the Winter War and after the Moscow peace treaty for setting the demarcation line with Finland 36 As a senior officer Vasilevsky met frequently with Joseph Stalin During one of these meetings Stalin asked Vasilevsky about his family Since Vasilevsky s father was a priest and thus a potential enemy of the people Vasilevsky said that he had ended his relationship with them in 1926 Stalin surprised suggested that he reestablish his family ties at once and help his parents with whatever needs they might have 3 4 World War II Edit Start and Battle of Moscow Edit Vasilevky left and Nikita Khrushchev inspect German equipment destroyed near Stalingrad 1943 By June 1941 Vasilevsky was working around the clock in his General Staff office 37 On June 22 1941 he learned of the German bombing of several important military and civilian objectives 38 starting Operation Barbarossa In August 1941 Vasilevsky was appointed Chief of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff and Deputy Chief of the General Staff 39 making him one of the key figures in the Soviet military leadership At the end of September 1941 Vasilevsky gave a speech before the General Staff describing the situation as extremely difficult but pointing out that the northern part of the front was holding that Leningrad still offered resistance and that such a situation would potentially allow some reserves to be gathered in the northern part of the front 40 In October 1941 the situation at the front was becoming critical with German forces advancing towards Moscow during Operation Typhoon As a representative of the Soviet General Staff Stavka Vasilevsky was sent to the Western Front to coordinate the defense and guarantee a flow of supplies and men towards the region of Mozhaisk 41 where Soviet forces were attempting to contain the German advance During heavy fighting near the outskirts of Moscow Vasilevsky spent all of his available time both in the Stavka and on the front line trying to coordinate the three fronts committed to Moscow s defense 42 When most of the General Staff including its chief Marshal Shaposhnikov was evacuated from Moscow Vasilevsky remained in the city as liaison between the Moscow Staff and the evacuated members of the General Staff 42 In his memoirs Nikita Khrushchev described Vasilevsky as an able specialist even so early in the war 43 On October 28 1941 Vasilevsky was promoted to Lieutenant General 44 The Battle of Moscow was a very difficult period in Vasilevsky s life with the Wehrmacht approaching close enough to the city for German officers to make out some of Moscow s buildings through their field glasses As he recalls his workday often ended at 4 a m 45 Moreover with Marshal Shaposhnikov having fallen ill Vasilevsky had to make important decisions by himself 46 On October 29 1941 a bomb exploded in the courtyard of the General Staff Vasilevsky was slightly wounded but continued working The kitchen was damaged by the explosion and the General Staff was relocated underground without hot food Nevertheless the Staff continued to function 47 In December 1941 Vasilevsky coordinated the Moscow counteroffensive and by early 1942 the general counteroffensive in the Moscow and Rostov directions further motivated in his work by the return of his evacuated family to Moscow 48 In April 1942 he coordinated the unsuccessful elimination of the Demyansk pocket the encirclement of the German 2nd Army Corps near Leningrad On April 24 with Shaposhnikov seriously ill again Vasilevsky was appointed as acting Chief of Staff and promoted to Colonel General on April 26 citation needed Summer and fall 1942 Edit Vasilevsky center with Colonel General Filipp Golikov right coordinating operations during the Voronezh Kharkov offensive 1943 In May 1942 one of the most controversial episodes in Vasilevsky s career occurred the Second Battle of Kharkov a failed counteroffensive that led to a stinging Red Army defeat and ultimately to a successful German offensive Operation Blue in the south After repelling the enemy from Moscow Soviet morale was high and Stalin was determined to launch another general counteroffensive during the summer However Vasilevsky recognized that the reality was more harsh than that 49 Following Stalin s orders the Kharkov offensive was launched on May 12 1942 When the threat of encirclement became obvious Vasilevsky and Zhukov asked for permission to withdraw the advancing Soviet forces Stalin refused 50 51 leading to the encirclement of the Red Army forces and a total defeat In his memoirs Khrushchev accused Vasilevsky of being too passive and indecisive as well as being unable to defend his point of view in front of Stalin during that particular operation 52 As he wrote It was my view that the catastrophe could have been avoided if Vasilevsky had taken the position he should have He could have taken a different position but he didn t do that and as a result in my view he had a hand in the destruction of thousands of Red Army fighters in the Kharkov campaign 52 In June 1942 Vasilevsky was briefly sent to Leningrad to coordinate an attempt to break the encirclement of the 2nd Shock Army led by General Andrei Vlasov On June 26 1942 Vasilevsky was appointed Chief of the General Staff and in October 1942 Deputy Minister of Defense 39 He was now one of the few people responsible for the global planning of Soviet offensives Starting from July 23 1942 Vasilevsky was a Stavka representative on the Stalingrad front which he correctly anticipated as the main axis of attack 53 The battle of Stalingrad was another difficult period in Vasilevsky s life Sent with Zhukov to the Stalingrad Front he tried to coordinate the defenses of Stalingrad with radio links working intermittently at best 54 On September 12 1942 during a meeting with Stalin Vasilevsky and Zhukov presented their plan for the Stalingrad counteroffensive after an all night planning session 55 56 Two months later on November 19 with Stalingrad still unconquered Operation Uranus was launched Since Zhukov had been sent to near Rzhev to execute Operation Mars the Rzhev counteroffensive Vasilevsky remained near Stalingrad to coordinate the double pincer attack that ultimately led to the German defeat 39 and annihilation of the armies entrapped in the cauldron all a result of the plan he had presented to Stalin on December 9 57 58 This plan sparked some debate between Vasilevsky and Rokossovsky who wanted an additional army for clearing Stalingrad which Rokossovsky continued to mention to Vasilevsky even years after the war 59 The army in question was Rodion Malinovsky s 2nd Guards which Vasilevsky committed against a dangerous German counter attack launched from Kotelnikovo by the 57th Panzer corps that was designed to deblockade the Stalingrad pocket citation needed Soviet victory Edit Vasilevsky and Budyonny in the Donbas 1943 In January 1943 Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives on the upper Don River near Voronezh and Ostrogozhsk leading to decisive encirclements of several Axis divisions 39 60 In mid January Vasilevsky was promoted to General of the Army and only 29 days later on February 16 1943 to Marshal of the Soviet Union citation needed In March 1943 after the creation of the Kursk salient and the failure of the Third Battle of Kharkov Stalin and the Stavka had to decide if the offensive should be resumed despite this setback or if it was better to adopt a defensive stance Vasilevsky and Zhukov managed to persuade Stalin that it was necessary to halt the offensive for now and wait for the initiative from the Wehrmacht 61 When it became clear that the supposed German offensive was postponed and would no longer take place in May 1943 as expected Vasilevsky successfully defended continuing to wait for the Wehrmacht to attack rather than making a preemptive strike as Khrushchev wanted 62 When the Battle of Kursk finally began on July 4 1943 Vasilevsky was responsible for coordinating the Voronezh and Steppe Fronts 39 After the German failure at Kursk and the start of the general counteroffensive on the left bank of the Dnieper Vasilevsky planned and executed offensive operations in the Donbas region 39 63 Later that year he developed and executed the clearing of Nazi forces from Crimea 64 Marshal Vasilevsky left and General Ivan Chernyakhovsky interrogate captured Lieutenant General Alfons Hitter in Germany 1944 At the start of 1944 Vasilevsky coordinated the Soviet offensive on the right bank of the Dnieper leading to a decisive victory in eastern Ukraine On April 10 1944 the day Odessa was retaken Vasilevsky was presented with the Order of Victory only the second ever awarded the first having been awarded to Zhukov 65 Vasilevsky s car rolled over a mine during an inspection of Sevastopol after the fighting ended on May 10 1944 He received a head wound cut by flying glass and was evacuated to Moscow for recovery 66 During Operation Bagration the general counteroffensive in Belarus Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives of the 1st Baltic and 3rd Belorussian Fronts 67 When Soviet forces entered the Baltic states Vasilevsky assumed complete responsibility for all the Baltic fronts discarding the 3rd Belorussian 68 On July 29 1944 he was made Hero of the Soviet Union for his military successes 39 In February 1945 Vasilevsky was again appointed commander of 3rd Belorussian Front to lead the East Prussian Operation leaving the post of General Chief of Staff to Aleksei Antonov 69 As a front commander Vasilevsky led the East Prussian operation and organized the assaults on Konigsberg and Pillau 39 He also negotiated the surrender of the Konigsberg garrison with its commander Otto Lasch After the war Lasch claimed that Vasilevsky did not respect the guarantees made during the city s capitulation Indeed Vasilevsky promised that German soldiers would not be executed that prisoners civilians and wounded would be treated decently and that all prisoners would return to Germany after the end of the war Instead Lasch remained in prison for 10 years and returned to Germany only in 1955 as did many of the Wehrmacht soldiers and officers while all German population was expelled from Eastern Prussia 70 For the brilliant successes at Konigsberg and in Eastern Prussia Vasilevsky was awarded his second Order of Victory 65 John Erickson wrote that Vasilevskii is a much underestimated soldier a figure who flits about Soviet historiography but a commander inured to the battlefield yet deft in his handling of the whole Soviet war machine 71 Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation Edit Vasilevsky in Port Arthur China 1945 During the 1944 summer offensive Stalin announced that he would appoint Vasilevsky Commander in Chief of USSR Forces in the Far East once the war against Germany ended Vasilevsky began drafting the war plan for Japan by late 1944 and began full time preparation by April 27 1945 In June 1945 Stalin approved his plan Vasilevsky then received the appointment of Commander in Chief of USSR Forces in the Far East and travelled by armoured train to Chita to execute the plan citation needed During the preparation phase Vasilevsky further rehearsed the offensive with his army commanders and directed the start of Manchurian Strategic Offensive Operation also known as the Battle of Manchuria In twenty four days from August 9 to September 2 1945 Japanese armies in Manchukuo were defeated with just 37 000 casualties out of 1 600 000 troops on the USSR side 72 For his success in this operation Vasilevsky was awarded his second Hero of the Soviet Union decoration on September 8 39 After World War II Edit Between 1946 and 1949 Vasilevsky remained Chief of Staff then became Defense Minister from 1949 to 1953 Following Stalin s death in 1953 Vasilevsky fell from grace and was replaced by Nikolai Bulganin although he remained deputy Defense minister In 1956 he was appointed Deputy Defense Minister for Military Science a secondary position with no real military power Vasilevsky would occupy this position for only one year before being pensioned off by Nikita Khrushchev thus becoming a victim of the bloodless purge that also saw the end of Zhukov In 1959 he was appointed a General Inspector of the Ministry of Defense an honorary position In 1973 he published his memoirs The Cause of My Whole Life Aleksandr Vasilevsky died on December 5 1977 6 His body was cremated and his ashes immured in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis 16 Family Edit Vasilevsky with his wife Ekaterina 1975 In 1923 Vasilevsky married Serafima Nikolaevna Voronova 1904 1980 before divorcing in 1934 The couple had a son named Yuri 1925 2013 who went on to become a lieutenant general in the Soviet Air Force Yuri was married to Era Zhukova daughter of Georgy Zhukov 73 Vasilevsky later re married to Ekaterina Vasilievna Saburova with whom he had a son named Igor born 1935 Igor went on to become a well known architect and was recipient of the title of Honored Architect of the Russian Federation and the State Prize of Czechoslovakia Igor is married to the daughter of Soviet statesman Ivan Tevosian 73 Awards EditIn his memoirs Vasilevsky recalls Stalin s astonishment when at a ceremony taking place in the Kremlin on December 4 1941 the Soviet leader saw just a single Order of the Red Star and the medal XX years of the RKKA on Vasilevsky s uniform 74 However Vasilevsky eventually became one of the most decorated commanders in Soviet history citation needed Vasilevsky was awarded the Gold Star of Hero of the Soviet Union twice for operations on the German and Japanese fronts He was awarded two Orders of Victory an achievement matched only by Zhukov and Stalin for his successes in Crimea and Prussia During his career he was awarded eight Orders of Lenin several of them after the war the Order of the October Revolution when it was created in 1967 two Orders of the Red Banner a first class Order of Suvorov for his operations in Ukraine and Crimea and his first decoration an Order of the Red Star earned in 1940 for his brilliant staff work during the Winter War Finally he was awarded a third class Order for Service to the Homeland as recognition for his entire military career when this order was created in 1974 just three years before Vasilevsky s death citation needed Vasilevsky was also awarded fourteen medals For his participation in various campaigns he was awarded the Defense of Leningrad Defense of Moscow Defense of Stalingrad and Capture of Konigsberg medals As with all Soviet soldiers who took part in the war with Germany and Japan he was awarded the Medal For the Victory Over Germany and the Medal For the Victory over Japan He also received several commemorative medals such as Twenty Thirty Forty and Fifty Years Since the Creation of the Soviet Armed Forces medals Twenty and Thirty Years Since the Victory in the Great Patriotic War medals the Eight Hundredth Anniversary of Moscow medal awarded in 1947 for his participation in the battle of Moscow and the Hundredth Birthday of Lenin medal In addition to Soviet orders and medals Vasilevsky was awarded several foreign decorations such as the Polish Virtuti Militari Order from the Polish communist government 39 Soviet Union A reconstruction of Vasilevsky s ribbon bar without foreign and Imperial era decorations Gold Star Hero of the Soviet Union twice 29 July 1944 8 September 1945 Order of Victory twice No 2 and No 7 10 April 1944 19 April 1945 Eight Orders of Lenin 21 May 1942 29 July 1944 21 February 1945 29 September 1945 29 September 1955 29 September 1965 29 September 1970 29 September 1975 Order of the October Revolution 22 February 1968 Order of Red Banner twice 3 November 1944 20 June 1949 Order of Suvorov 1st class 28 January 1943 Order of the Red Star 1939 Order for Service to the Homeland in the Armed Forces of the USSR 3rd class 30 April 1975 For military valour To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Medal For the Defence of Moscow Medal For the Defence of Stalingrad Medal For the Capture of Konigsberg Medal For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Medal For the Victory over Japan Jubilee Medal Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Jubilee Medal Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow Medal Veteran of the Armed Forces of the USSR Jubilee Medal XX Years of the Workers and Peasants Red Army Jubilee Medal 30 Years of the Soviet Army and Navy Jubilee Medal 40 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR Jubilee Medal 50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR Honorary weapon with gold National Emblem of the USSR 1968 Imperial Russia Order of Saint Anna 4th class Order of Saint Stanislaus 3rd class Cross of St George 4th classForeign awards Order of Sukhbaatar twice Mongolia 1966 1971 Order of the Red Banner Mongolia 1945 Medal 30 Years of the Victory in Khalkhin Gol Mongolia Medal 50 Years of the Mongolian People s Revolution Mongolia Medal 30 Years of Victory over Militaristic Japan Mongolia Medal 50 Years of the Mongolian People s Army Mongolia Order of the White Lion 1st class Czechoslovakia 1955 Military Order of the White Lion For Victory 1st class Czechoslovakia 1945 War Cross 1939 1945 Czechoslovakia 1943 Medal In Commemoration of the Battle of Dukla Pass Czechoslovakia 1960 Order of Karl Marx East Germany 1975 Virtuti Militari 1st class Poland 1946 Order of Polonia Restituta 2nd class Poland 1968 Order of Polonia Restituta 3rd class Poland 1973 Cross of Grunwald 1st class Poland 1946 Order of The People s Republic of Bulgaria 1st class Bulgaria 1974 Medal 90th Anniversary of the Birth of Georgi Dimitrov Bulgaria 1972 Grand Officer of the Legion d Honneur France 1944 Croix de guerre France 1944 Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire UK 1943 Chief Commander Legion of Merit U S 1944 Order of National Liberation Yugoslavia 1946 Order of the Partisan Star 1st class Yugoslavia 1946 Order of the National Flag 1st class North Korea 1948 citation needed Medal for the Liberation of Korea North Korea 1948 Special Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Tripod Republic of China 1946 Medal of Sino Soviet Friendship China 1956 Personality and opinions Edit Vasilevsky in 1965 Vasilevsky was regarded by his peers as a kind and soft military commander General Sergei Shtemenko a member of the General Staff during the war described Vasilevsky as a brilliant yet modest officer with outstanding experience in staff work Shtemenko pointed out Vasilevsky s prodigious talent for strategic and operational planning Vasilevsky also showed his respect for subordinates and demonstrated an acute sense of diplomacy and politeness which Stalin appreciated As a result Vasilevsky enjoyed almost unlimited trust from Stalin 75 Several years before the war Zhukov described Vasilevsky as a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody 31 During the war Zhukov described Vasilevsky as an able commander enjoying exceptional trust from Stalin and able to persuade him even during heated discussions 76 Vasilevsky never mentioned his awards including the two orders of Victory in his memoirs attesting to his modesty citation needed American military historians David M Glantz and Jonathan M House wrote that Vasilevsky exercised a calm rational influence on Stalin and was f ar less temperamental than Zhukov 77 Vasilevsky s actions and personality were sometimes the object of dispute while less controversial than those of Zhukov In particular Nikita Khrushchev defined Vasilevsky in his memoirs as a passive commander completely under the control of Stalin and blamed him for the Kharkov failure in Spring 1942 78 Among Vasilevsky s strongest critics was Rokossovsky who criticized Vasilevsky s decisions during the Stalingrad counteroffensive especially his refusal to commit the 2nd Army to the annihilation of the encircled German divisions and for general interference with his own work 79 Rokossovsky even wrote in his memoirs I do not even understand what role could Zhukov and Vasilevsky play on Stalingrad front 80 In fairness to Vasilevsky it needs noting that he diverted the 2nd army from the assault on the Stalingrad pocket only in order to commit it against a dangerous German counter attack from Kotelnikovo designed to deblockade the pocket which was enjoying great numerical superiority Vasilevsky it seems was dismayed by Rokossovsky s opposition to the transfer citation needed On the other hand the writer Victor Suvorov held up Vasilevsky over Zhukov According to him Vasilevsky was the only officer responsible for the successful planning and execution of the Soviet counteroffensive at Stalingrad and Zhukov played no role whatsoever in it He claimed that Vasilevsky was the best Soviet military commander and that Soviet victory was mainly due to his actions as the Chief of Staff According to Suvorov Zhukov and the Soviet propaganda machine tried after the war to reduce the role of the General Staff and thus Vasilevsky s importance and to increase the role of the Party and Zhukov 81 A post 1991 view on Vasilevsky was elaborated by Mezhiritzky in his book Reading Marshal Zhukov Mezhiritzky points out Vasilevsky s timidity and his inability to defend his opinions before Stalin Reportedly Vasilevsky was appointed to such high military positions because he was easy to manage 82 However Mezhiritzky recognizes Vasilevsky s intelligence and assumes that Vasilevsky was indeed the main author of the Stalingrad counteroffensive He also points out that Vasilevsky and Zhukov probably deliberately under reported the estimated strength of the 6th Army to gain Stalin s approval for that risky operation 83 Footnotes Edit Vasilevskij Aleksandr Mihajlovich Vasilevsky 1978 p 8 a b Vasilevsky 1978 p 96 a b Pleshakov Konstantin 2005 Stalin s Folly The Tragic First Ten Days of World War II on the Eastern Front Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 55 56 ISBN 0 618 36701 2 Vasilevsky 1978 p 9 a b c d e f g h K A Zalessky Stalin s empire biographic dictionary Moscow Veche 2000 entry Vasilevsky Vasilevsky 1978 p 10 Vasilevsky 1978 p 12 a b Vasilevsky 1978 p 14 This is a reference to the 1917 Russian Revolution and Vasilevsky s emerging communist beliefs Vasilevsky 1978 p 15 Vasilevsky 1978 p 16 Vasilevsky 1978 p 19 Vasilevsky 1978 p 23 Vasilevsky 1978 p 27 a b Shikman A P Actors of our History biographical dictionary Moscow 1997 entry Vasilevsky Vasilevsky 1978 p 30 Vasilevsky 1978 p 31 Vasilevsky 1978 p 33 Vasilevsky 1978 p 35 Vasilevsky 1978 pp 41 49 Tucker Spencer 14 December 2003 Who s Who in Twentieth Century Warfare Taylor amp Francis p 339 ISBN 978 0 203 40253 5 Vasilevsky 1978 pp 42 44 Vasilevsky 1978 p 45 Vasilevsky 1978 pp 49 50 Vasilevsky 1978 p 61 Vasilevsky 1978 pp 59 60 A Russian warfare theoretician famous for his deep operations theory Vasilevsky 1978 p 63 Vasilevsky 1978 p 70 a b Zhukov 2002 p 110 Great Soviet Encyclopedia Moscow 1969 1978 entry Vasilevsky Vasilevsky 1978 p 80 Vasilevsky 1978 p 81 Vasilevsky 1978 p 82 Kees Boterbloem The Life and Times of Andrei Zhdanov 1896 1948 McGill Queen s Press 2004 ISBN 0 7735 2666 8 p 203 online link Vasilevsky 1978 p 106 Vasilevsky 1978 p 110 a b c d e f g h i j Soviet Military Encyclopedia Moscow 1976 1979 tome 2 entry Vasilevsky Shtemenko 1989 p 26 Shtemenko 1989 p 25 a b Shtemenko 1989 p 27 Khrushchev 1999 p 296 Vasilevsky 1978 p 146 Vasilevsky 1978 p 145 Vasilevsky 1978 p 150 Shtemenko 1989 p 29 Vasilevsky 1978 p 159 Vasilevsky 1978 p 184 Zhukov 2002 p 64 Shtemenko 1989 p 40 a b Sergei Khrushchev Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Penn State Press 2004 ISBN 0 271 02332 5 pp 297 299 online link Shtemenko 1989 pp 52 53 Shtemenko 1989 p 60 Shtemenko 1989 pp 63 64 Hew Strachan European Armies and the Conduct of War Routledge UK 1988 ISBN 0 415 07863 6 p 171 online link Vasilevsky 1978 p 243 Stanley Rogers Duncan Anderson The Eastern Front Zenith Imprint 2001 ISBN 0 7603 0923 X p 127 Vasilevsky 1978 p 248 Shtemenko 1989 p 90 Shtemenko 1989 pp 122 123 Shtemenko 1989 p 131 Shtemenko 1989 p 141 Shtemenko 1989 p 154 a b http mondvor narod ru OPobeda html retrieved on July 8 2006 Vasilevsky 1978 p 395 Steven J Zaloga Bagration 1944 Osprey Publishing 1996 ISBN 1 85532 478 4 p 21 online link Shtemenko 1989 p 208 Shtemenko 1989 p 219 Otto von Lasch So fell Konigsberg Moscow 1991 chapter Capitulation Erickson John 1999 1983 The Road to Berlin Stalin s War with Germany Volume Two 2 ed New Haven Yale University Press p 790 ISBN 0 300 07813 7 Daniel Marston The Pacific War Companion Osprey Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 84176 882 0 p 242 online link a b Ariadna Rokossovskaya 2005 02 11 My byli na fronte ryadom s otcom Rossiyskaya Gazeta Retrieved October 2 2020 Vasilevsky 1978 pp 151 152 Shtemenko 1989 pp 105 108 Zhukov 2002 p 345 David M Glantz and Jonathan M House When Titans Clashed How the Red Army Stopped Hitler p 129 University Press of Kansas 1995 Khrushchev 1999 pp 362 370 Rokossovsky 1988 Rokossovsky 1988 p 235 Viktor Suvorov Shadow of Victory Moscow ACT 2002 chapter 15 Mezhiritzky 2002 ch 32 Mezhiritzky 2002 ch 60 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aleksandr Vasilevsky Wikiquote has quotations related to Aleksandr Vasilevsky Khrushchev Nikita 1999 Time People Power Memoirs Vol 1 Moscow IIK Moscow News Otto von Lasch 1991 So fell Konigsberg So fiel Konigsberg Moscow Mezhiritzky P Ya 2002 Reading Marshal Zhukov Philadelphia Libas Consulting Rokossovsky K 1988 Soldier s Duty Moscow Politizdat A P Shikman 1997 Actors of our History biographical dictionary Moscow Shtemenko S M 1989 The General Staff during the War 2nd ed Moscow Voenizdat Viktor Suvorov 2002 Shadow of Victory Moscow ACT Vasilevsky A M 1978 The Matter of My Whole Life Moscow Politizdat K A Zalessky 2000 Stalin s empire biographical dictionary Moscow Veche Zhukov G K 2002 Memoirs Moscow Olma Press 1969 1978 Great Soviet Encyclopedia Moscow 1976 1979 Soviet Military Encyclopedia Moscow External links EditNewspaper clippings about Aleksandr Vasilevsky in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWMilitary officesPreceded byBoris Shaposhnikov Chief of the Staff of the Soviet Army26 June 1942 February 1945 Succeeded byAleksei AntonovPreceded byAleksei Antonov Chief of the Staff of the Soviet Army22 March 1946 November 1948 Succeeded bySergei ShtemenkoPolitical officesPreceded byNikolai Bulganin Minister of War24 March 1949 15 March 1953 Succeeded byNikolai Bulganin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aleksandr Vasilevsky amp oldid 1148846581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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