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Andrey Yeryomenko

Andrey Ivanovich Yeryomenko[a] (Russian: Андре́й Ива́нович Ерёменко; Ukrainian: Андрій Іванович Єрьоменко; October 14 [O.S. October 2] 1892 – November 19, 1970) was a Soviet general during World War II and Marshal of the Soviet Union. During the war, Yeryomenko commanded the Southeastern Front (later renamed the Stalingrad Front) during the Battle of Stalingrad in summer 1942 and planned the successful defense of the city. He later commanded the armies responsible for the liberation of Western Hungary and Eastern Czechoslovakia in 1945.

Andrey Yeryomenko
Portrait, c. 1968 – c. 1970
Native name
Russian: Андрей Иванович Ерёменко
Born(1892-10-14)October 14, 1892
Markivka, Kharkov Governorate, Russian Empire (now Ukraine)
DiedNovember 19, 1970(1970-11-19) (aged 78)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Buried
Allegiance Russian Empire (1913–1917)
 Russian SFSR (1917–1922)
 Soviet Union (1922–1958)
Service/branchImperial Russian Army
Red Army
Years of service1913–1958
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union
Commands heldNorth Caucasus Military District
Western Front
Bryansk Front
4th Shock Army
Stalingrad Front
Kalinin Front
1st Baltic Front
Separate Coastal Army
2nd Baltic Front
4th Ukrainian Front
Carpathian Military District
Battles/warsWorld War I
Russian Civil War
Great Patriotic War
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union
Hero of Czechoslovakia
Order of Lenin (5)
Order of the Red Banner (4)
Order of the October Revolution
Order of Suvorov, 1st Class (3)
Order of Kutuzov, 1st Class[1]

Military career Edit

Draft and early service Edit

A Ukrainian, Yeryomenko was born in Markivka in Kharkov Governorate (today in Ukraine) to a peasant family, Yeryomenko was drafted into the Imperial Army in 1913, serving on the Southwest and Romanian Fronts during World War I. He joined the Red Army in 1918, where he served in the legendary Budyonny Cavalry (First Cavalry Army). He attended the Leningrad Cavalry School and then the Frunze Military Academy, graduating in 1935. In addition to his education, he was appointed to command of a regiment of cavalry in Dec. 1929, then a division in 1937, and then the 6th Cavalry Corps in 1938.[2]

Invasion of Eastern Poland Edit

 
Andrey Yeryomenko as colonel in 1938

On Sept. 17, 1939, Yeryomenko led his 6th Cavalry Corps into eastern Poland as part of the operations agreed to between Germany and the Soviet Union under the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. In general, this Soviet operation was not efficiently organized. Yeryomenko (whose Corps contained light tank and other motorized elements) was forced to request an emergency airlift of fuel so as to continue his advance. Despite these difficulties, the Corps kept moving, and Yeryomenko earned the nickname "the Russian Guderian".[3]

World War II Edit

Yeryomenko was given command of the prestigious 1st Red Banner Far Eastern Army, deep in eastern Siberia, where he was serving at the outbreak of Operation Barbarossa on June 22, 1941.[4]

Eight days after the invasion began, Yeryomenko was recalled to Moscow, where he was made the Acting Commander of the Soviet Western Front, two days after its original commander, General of the Army Dmitri Pavlov, was dismissed (and later convicted and executed) for incompetence. Yeryomenko was thrust into a very precarious position. The Nazi Blitzkrieg approach to warfare quickly dominated the Western Front, but Yeryomenko motivated the remaining troops, and halted the German offensive just outside Smolensk. During this vicious defensive Battle of Smolensk, Yeryomenko was wounded. Because of his injuries, he was transferred to command the newly created Bryansk Front.

In late August, Yeryomenko was ordered to launch counter-offensive operations along the Bryansk Front, primarily against Guderian's Second Panzer Group as it began to move south to trap Kirponos' Southwestern Front around Kiev. Stavka, particularly Stalin and Shaposhnikov, seemed convinced that Yeryomenko could block or distract Guderian's drive and save Kiev from encirclement. The counter-offensive failed to accomplish its objectives despite a valiant effort, leaving Bryansk Front severely weakened.[5]

In October, the Germans launched Operation Typhoon, which was an offensive aimed at capturing Moscow. Most of Yeryomenko's weakened forces (3rd, 13th and 50th Armies) were partially encircled by Oct. 8[6] although small units managed to escape for days or weeks following. On Oct. 13, Yeryomenko was once again wounded, this time severely. He was evacuated to a military hospital in Moscow, where he spent several weeks recovering. In January 1942, Yeryomenko was appointed commander of the 4th Shock Army, part of the Northwestern Front. During the Soviet Winter Counteroffensive, Yeryomenko's army was part of the highly successful Toropets–Kholm Offensive, which liberated Toropets and much of the surrounding region, helping to create the Rzhev Salient, which became a major battlefield over the next 15 months. On Jan. 20, 1942, Yeryomenko was again wounded, this time in one leg,[7] when German planes bombed his headquarters. Yeryomenko refused to evacuate to a hospital until the battle surrounding him finished.

Battle of Stalingrad Edit

 
General Yeryomenko (right) as the commander of the Stalingrad Front, with Nikita Khrushchev (left), Chief Commissar of the Stalingrad Front, December 1942

Yeryomenko's performance in the winter offensives restored Stalin's confidence, and he was given command of the Southeastern Front, on Aug. 1, 1942,[8] where he proceeded to launch powerful counterattacks against the German offensive into the Caucasus, Fall Blau. Yeryomenko and Commissar Nikita Khrushchev planned the defense of Stalingrad, rallying and re-organizing men and equipment falling back to the city from the Don River and the steppes to the west. When one of his subordinates, Gen. Anton Lopatin, doubted if his 62nd Army would be able to defend Stalingrad, Yeryomenko replaced him with Lt. Gen. Vasily Chuikov as Army commander on Sept. 11, 1942.[9] Chuikov and the 62nd Army went on to prove themselves as the defenders of the city, confirming Yeryomenko's judgement. On Sept. 28, the Southeastern Front was renamed the Stalingrad Front.

During Operation Uranus, November 1942, Yeryomenko's forces helped to surround the German 6th Army from the south, linking up with the northern penetration at Kalach-na-Donu. German General Erich von Manstein soon attempted to counterattack the Soviet forces and break through the line to relieve the surrounded Germans. Yeryomenko successfully repelled the attack, largely with the forces of the 2nd Guards Army along their fall-back positions on the Myshkova River.

After Stalingrad Edit

 
Yeremenko and Ivan Konev in liberated Prague on 6 June 1945

On January 1, 1943, the Stalingrad Front was renamed Southern Front. After the end of the winter offensive, in March 1943, Yeryomenko was transferred north to the Kalinin Front, which remained relatively quiet until September, when Yeryomenko launched a small, but successful offensive. In December, Yeryomenko was once again sent south, this time to take command of the Separate Coastal Army, which was put together to retake Crimea, which was accomplished with assistance from Fyodor Tolbukhin's 4th Ukrainian Front. In April, Yeryomenko once again was sent north, to command the 2nd Baltic Front. During the summer campaign, 2nd Baltic was very successful in crushing German opposition, and was able to capture Riga, helping to bottle up some 30 German divisions in Latvia. On March 26, 1945, Yeryomenko was transferred to the command of the 4th Ukrainian Front, the unit he controlled until the end of the war. Fourth Ukrainian was positioned in Eastern Hungary. Yeryomenko's subsequent offensive helped capture the rest of Hungary, and paved the way for the Soviet liberation of Czechoslovakia. His army liberated many cities and towns in Czechoslovakia, most notably Ostrava. Today, many streets in the Czech Republic bear his name.

Post-war career Edit

After the war, Yeryomenko had three major commands: in 1945–1946, he was the Commander in Chief of the Carpathian Military District, in 1946–1952 he was the Commander in Chief of the Western Siberian Military District, and in 1953–1958 he was the Commander in Chief of the North Caucasus Military District. On March 11, 1955, Yeryomenko, along with five other noteworthy commanders, was given the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union. He was made Inspector General for the Ministry of Defense in 1958, a largely ceremonial role that allowed him to retire that same year.

Yeryomenko died on November 19, 1970 aged 78. The urn containing his ashes is buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis.

Honours and awards Edit

Soviet Union
Foreign Awards

Commands Edit

Source:[11]

Military offices
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding Officer of the 14th Cavalry Division
1937–1938
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the 6th Cavalry Corps
1938–1940
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Unit created
Commanding General of the 3rd Mechanized Corps
1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military District
1940–1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commanding General of the 1st Red Banner Army
January–June 1941
Succeeded by
Vasily Vasilyev
Preceded by Commanding General of the Western Front
28 June – 2 July 1941
Succeeded by
Marshal Timoshenko, Yeryomenko as vice commander of Western Front
Preceded by
Newly formed
Commanding General of the Bryansk Front
16 August – 13 October 1941
Succeeded by
Preceded by
27th Army renamed as 4th Shock Army
Commanding General of the 4th Shock Army
26 December 1941 – 13 February 1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Unidentified
Commanding General of the Southwestern Front
1942 – 12 July 1942
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Newly formed
Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front
12 July – 7 August 1942
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Newly formed by splitting the Stalingrad Front
Commanding General of the Southeastern Front
7 August – 28 September 1942
Succeeded by
Disbanded
Preceded by
Reformed from Southeastern Front
Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front
28 September 1942 – 1 January 1943
Succeeded by
Unidentified
Preceded by
Reformed from Stalingrad Front
Commanding General of the Southern Front
1 January – February 1943
Succeeded by
General Lieutenant Rodion Malinovsky
Preceded by
Army General Maksim Purkayev
Commanding General of the Kalinin Front
7 April – 12 October 1943
Succeeded by
Renamed 1st Baltic Front
Preceded by
Renamed from Kalinin Front
Commanding General of the 1st Baltic Front
12 October – 19 November 1943
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commanding General of the Separate Coastal Army
3 February – 18 April 1944
Succeeded by
Lieutenant General Kondrat Semenovich Melnik
Preceded by
Army General Markian Popov
Commanding General of the 2nd Baltic Front
23 April 1944 – February 1945
Succeeded by
2nd Baltic Front was merged into Leningrad Front
Preceded by Commanding General of the 4th Ukrainian Front
26 March – 25 August 1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Newly formed from 4th Ukrainian Front
Commanding General of the Carpathian Military District
25 August 1945 – October 1946
Succeeded by
Colonel General K. N. Galytskyy
Preceded by
General Lieutenant V. I. Kurdyumov
Commanding General of the Western Siberian Military District
October 1946 – November 1953
Succeeded by
Disbanded to form Siberian Military District
Preceded by
Colonel General S. G. Trofimenko
Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military District
November 1953 – April 1958
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Unidentified
Inspector General of the Ministry of Defense
April 1958
Succeeded by
Unidentified

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Also transliterated as Yeremenko and Eremenko

References Edit

  1. ^ (in Russian) Biography on War Heroes site.
  2. ^ Glantz, David M.; Colossus Reborn; University Press of Kansas; Lawrence, Kansas, 2005; p 708
  3. ^ Glantz, David M.; Colossus Reborn; University Press of Kansas; Lawrence, Kansas, 2005; p 485
  4. ^ Glantz, David M.; Colossus Reborn; University Press of Kansas; Lawrence, Kansas, 2005; p 485
  5. ^ Glantz, David M.; Barbarossa Derailed, vol. 2; Helion and Co., Ltd.; Solihull, UK, 2012; pp. 364–497
  6. ^ Stahel, David: Operation Typhoon; Cambridge University Press; New York, 2013; pp. 76–77
  7. ^ Shaw, John; Red Army Resurgent; Time-Life Books; 1979; p 142
  8. ^ Craig, William (1973). Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad. Old Saybrook, CT: Konecky and Konecky. p. 25. ISBN 1-56852-368-8.
  9. ^ Craig, William (1973). Enemy at the Gates: The Battle for Stalingrad. Old Saybrook, CT: Konecky and Konecky. p. 83. ISBN 1-56852-368-8.
  10. ^ Еременко, А. И. (11 March 2020). Годы возмездия. Боевыми дорогами от Керчи до Праги (in Russian). ISBN 978-5457162914. Retrieved 2015-03-09.
  11. ^ "Biography of Marshal of Soviet Union Andrei Ivanovich Eremenko - (Андрей Иванович Еременко) (1892 – 1970), Soviet Union".

andrey, yeryomenko, andrey, ivanovich, yeryomenko, russian, Андре, Ива, нович, Ерёменко, ukrainian, Андрій, Іванович, Єрьоменко, october, october, 1892, november, 1970, soviet, general, during, world, marshal, soviet, union, during, yeryomenko, commanded, sout. Andrey Ivanovich Yeryomenko a Russian Andre j Iva novich Eryomenko Ukrainian Andrij Ivanovich Yeromenko October 14 O S October 2 1892 November 19 1970 was a Soviet general during World War II and Marshal of the Soviet Union During the war Yeryomenko commanded the Southeastern Front later renamed the Stalingrad Front during the Battle of Stalingrad in summer 1942 and planned the successful defense of the city He later commanded the armies responsible for the liberation of Western Hungary and Eastern Czechoslovakia in 1945 Andrey YeryomenkoPortrait c 1968 c 1970Native nameRussian Andrej Ivanovich EryomenkoBorn 1892 10 14 October 14 1892Markivka Kharkov Governorate Russian Empire now Ukraine DiedNovember 19 1970 1970 11 19 aged 78 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionBuriedKremlin Wall NecropolisAllegiance Russian Empire 1913 1917 Russian SFSR 1917 1922 Soviet Union 1922 1958 Service wbr branchImperial Russian ArmyRed ArmyYears of service1913 1958RankMarshal of the Soviet UnionCommands heldNorth Caucasus Military DistrictWestern FrontBryansk Front4th Shock ArmyStalingrad FrontKalinin Front1st Baltic FrontSeparate Coastal Army2nd Baltic Front4th Ukrainian FrontCarpathian Military DistrictBattles warsWorld War IRussian Civil WarGreat Patriotic WarAwardsHero of the Soviet UnionHero of CzechoslovakiaOrder of Lenin 5 Order of the Red Banner 4 Order of the October RevolutionOrder of Suvorov 1st Class 3 Order of Kutuzov 1st Class 1 Contents 1 Military career 1 1 Draft and early service 1 2 Invasion of Eastern Poland 1 3 World War II 1 3 1 Battle of Stalingrad 1 3 2 After Stalingrad 2 Post war career 3 Honours and awards 4 Commands 5 Notes 6 ReferencesMilitary career EditDraft and early service Edit A Ukrainian Yeryomenko was born in Markivka in Kharkov Governorate today in Ukraine to a peasant family Yeryomenko was drafted into the Imperial Army in 1913 serving on the Southwest and Romanian Fronts during World War I He joined the Red Army in 1918 where he served in the legendary Budyonny Cavalry First Cavalry Army He attended the Leningrad Cavalry School and then the Frunze Military Academy graduating in 1935 In addition to his education he was appointed to command of a regiment of cavalry in Dec 1929 then a division in 1937 and then the 6th Cavalry Corps in 1938 2 Invasion of Eastern Poland Edit nbsp Andrey Yeryomenko as colonel in 1938On Sept 17 1939 Yeryomenko led his 6th Cavalry Corps into eastern Poland as part of the operations agreed to between Germany and the Soviet Union under the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact In general this Soviet operation was not efficiently organized Yeryomenko whose Corps contained light tank and other motorized elements was forced to request an emergency airlift of fuel so as to continue his advance Despite these difficulties the Corps kept moving and Yeryomenko earned the nickname the Russian Guderian 3 World War II Edit Yeryomenko was given command of the prestigious 1st Red Banner Far Eastern Army deep in eastern Siberia where he was serving at the outbreak of Operation Barbarossa on June 22 1941 4 Eight days after the invasion began Yeryomenko was recalled to Moscow where he was made the Acting Commander of the Soviet Western Front two days after its original commander General of the Army Dmitri Pavlov was dismissed and later convicted and executed for incompetence Yeryomenko was thrust into a very precarious position The Nazi Blitzkrieg approach to warfare quickly dominated the Western Front but Yeryomenko motivated the remaining troops and halted the German offensive just outside Smolensk During this vicious defensive Battle of Smolensk Yeryomenko was wounded Because of his injuries he was transferred to command the newly created Bryansk Front In late August Yeryomenko was ordered to launch counter offensive operations along the Bryansk Front primarily against Guderian s Second Panzer Group as it began to move south to trap Kirponos Southwestern Front around Kiev Stavka particularly Stalin and Shaposhnikov seemed convinced that Yeryomenko could block or distract Guderian s drive and save Kiev from encirclement The counter offensive failed to accomplish its objectives despite a valiant effort leaving Bryansk Front severely weakened 5 In October the Germans launched Operation Typhoon which was an offensive aimed at capturing Moscow Most of Yeryomenko s weakened forces 3rd 13th and 50th Armies were partially encircled by Oct 8 6 although small units managed to escape for days or weeks following On Oct 13 Yeryomenko was once again wounded this time severely He was evacuated to a military hospital in Moscow where he spent several weeks recovering In January 1942 Yeryomenko was appointed commander of the 4th Shock Army part of the Northwestern Front During the Soviet Winter Counteroffensive Yeryomenko s army was part of the highly successful Toropets Kholm Offensive which liberated Toropets and much of the surrounding region helping to create the Rzhev Salient which became a major battlefield over the next 15 months On Jan 20 1942 Yeryomenko was again wounded this time in one leg 7 when German planes bombed his headquarters Yeryomenko refused to evacuate to a hospital until the battle surrounding him finished Battle of Stalingrad Edit nbsp General Yeryomenko right as the commander of the Stalingrad Front with Nikita Khrushchev left Chief Commissar of the Stalingrad Front December 1942Yeryomenko s performance in the winter offensives restored Stalin s confidence and he was given command of the Southeastern Front on Aug 1 1942 8 where he proceeded to launch powerful counterattacks against the German offensive into the Caucasus Fall Blau Yeryomenko and Commissar Nikita Khrushchev planned the defense of Stalingrad rallying and re organizing men and equipment falling back to the city from the Don River and the steppes to the west When one of his subordinates Gen Anton Lopatin doubted if his 62nd Army would be able to defend Stalingrad Yeryomenko replaced him with Lt Gen Vasily Chuikov as Army commander on Sept 11 1942 9 Chuikov and the 62nd Army went on to prove themselves as the defenders of the city confirming Yeryomenko s judgement On Sept 28 the Southeastern Front was renamed the Stalingrad Front During Operation Uranus November 1942 Yeryomenko s forces helped to surround the German 6th Army from the south linking up with the northern penetration at Kalach na Donu German General Erich von Manstein soon attempted to counterattack the Soviet forces and break through the line to relieve the surrounded Germans Yeryomenko successfully repelled the attack largely with the forces of the 2nd Guards Army along their fall back positions on the Myshkova River After Stalingrad Edit nbsp Yeremenko and Ivan Konev in liberated Prague on 6 June 1945On January 1 1943 the Stalingrad Front was renamed Southern Front After the end of the winter offensive in March 1943 Yeryomenko was transferred north to the Kalinin Front which remained relatively quiet until September when Yeryomenko launched a small but successful offensive In December Yeryomenko was once again sent south this time to take command of the Separate Coastal Army which was put together to retake Crimea which was accomplished with assistance from Fyodor Tolbukhin s 4th Ukrainian Front In April Yeryomenko once again was sent north to command the 2nd Baltic Front During the summer campaign 2nd Baltic was very successful in crushing German opposition and was able to capture Riga helping to bottle up some 30 German divisions in Latvia On March 26 1945 Yeryomenko was transferred to the command of the 4th Ukrainian Front the unit he controlled until the end of the war Fourth Ukrainian was positioned in Eastern Hungary Yeryomenko s subsequent offensive helped capture the rest of Hungary and paved the way for the Soviet liberation of Czechoslovakia His army liberated many cities and towns in Czechoslovakia most notably Ostrava Today many streets in the Czech Republic bear his name Post war career EditAfter the war Yeryomenko had three major commands in 1945 1946 he was the Commander in Chief of the Carpathian Military District in 1946 1952 he was the Commander in Chief of the Western Siberian Military District and in 1953 1958 he was the Commander in Chief of the North Caucasus Military District On March 11 1955 Yeryomenko along with five other noteworthy commanders was given the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union He was made Inspector General for the Ministry of Defense in 1958 a largely ceremonial role that allowed him to retire that same year Yeryomenko died on November 19 1970 aged 78 The urn containing his ashes is buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis Honours and awards EditSoviet Union Gold Star Medal Hero of the Soviet Union 29 July 1944 Five Orders of Lenin 22 February 1938 29 July 1944 21 February 1945 13 October 1962 13 October 1967 Order of the October Revolution 22 February 1968 Order of the Red Banner four times 15 June 1926 22 February 1941 3 November 1944 20 June 1949 Order of Suvorov 1st class four times 23 January 1943 16 May 1944 23 May 1945 Order of Kutuzov 1st class 22 September 1943 Honorary weapon with a National Emblem of the Soviet Union in gold 22 February 1968 Jubilee Medal XX Years of the Workers and Peasants Red Army Foreign AwardsHero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic 28 April 1970 Legion of Merit Chief Commander USA 10 Order of Klement Gottwald Honorary Citizen of Volgograd 4 May 1970 Smolensk Daugavpils 27 July 1964 and Ostrava Czech Republic Commands EditSource 11 Military officesPreceded byUnidentified Commanding Officer of the 14th Cavalry Division1937 1938 Succeeded byUnidentifiedPreceded byUnidentified Commanding General of the 6th Cavalry Corps1938 1940 Succeeded byUnidentifiedPreceded byUnit created Commanding General of the 3rd Mechanized Corps1940 Succeeded byAlexey KurkinPreceded byFyodor Kuznetsov Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military District1940 1941 Succeeded byIvan KonevPreceded byMarkian Popov Commanding General of the 1st Red Banner ArmyJanuary June 1941 Succeeded byVasily VasilyevPreceded byArmy General Dmitry Pavlov Commanding General of the Western Front28 June 2 July 1941 Succeeded byMarshal Timoshenko Yeryomenko as vice commander of Western FrontPreceded byNewly formed Commanding General of the Bryansk Front16 August 13 October 1941 Succeeded byMajor General Georgiy Fedorovich ZakharovPreceded by27th Army renamed as 4th Shock Army Commanding General of the 4th Shock Army26 December 1941 13 February 1942 Succeeded byLieutenant General Filipp GolikovPreceded byUnidentified Commanding General of the Southwestern Front1942 12 July 1942 Succeeded byUnidentifiedPreceded byNewly formed Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front12 July 7 August 1942 Succeeded byUnidentifiedPreceded byNewly formed by splitting the Stalingrad Front Commanding General of the Southeastern Front7 August 28 September 1942 Succeeded byDisbandedPreceded byReformed from Southeastern Front Commanding General of the Stalingrad Front28 September 1942 1 January 1943 Succeeded byUnidentifiedPreceded byReformed from Stalingrad Front Commanding General of the Southern Front1 January February 1943 Succeeded byGeneral Lieutenant Rodion MalinovskyPreceded byArmy General Maksim Purkayev Commanding General of the Kalinin Front7 April 12 October 1943 Succeeded byRenamed 1st Baltic FrontPreceded byRenamed from Kalinin Front Commanding General of the 1st Baltic Front12 October 19 November 1943 Succeeded byArmy General Hovhannes BagramyanPreceded byArmy General Ivan Yefimovich Petrov Commanding General of the Separate Coastal Army3 February 18 April 1944 Succeeded byLieutenant General Kondrat Semenovich MelnikPreceded byArmy General Markian Popov Commanding General of the 2nd Baltic Front23 April 1944 February 1945 Succeeded by2nd Baltic Front was merged into Leningrad FrontPreceded byArmy General Ivan Yefimovich Petrov Commanding General of the 4th Ukrainian Front26 March 25 August 1945 Succeeded byRe designated as Carpathian Military DistrictPreceded byNewly formed from 4th Ukrainian Front Commanding General of the Carpathian Military District25 August 1945 October 1946 Succeeded byColonel General K N GalytskyyPreceded byGeneral Lieutenant V I Kurdyumov Commanding General of the Western Siberian Military DistrictOctober 1946 November 1953 Succeeded byDisbanded to form Siberian Military DistrictPreceded byColonel General S G Trofimenko Commanding General of the North Caucasus Military DistrictNovember 1953 April 1958 Succeeded byArmy General Issa Alexandrovich PliyevPreceded byUnidentified Inspector General of the Ministry of DefenseApril 1958 Succeeded byUnidentifiedNotes Edit Also transliterated as Yeremenko and EremenkoReferences Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andrey Yeremenko in Russian Biography on War Heroes site Glantz David M Colossus Reborn University Press of Kansas Lawrence Kansas 2005 p 708 Glantz David M Colossus Reborn University Press of Kansas Lawrence Kansas 2005 p 485 Glantz David M Colossus Reborn University Press of Kansas Lawrence Kansas 2005 p 485 Glantz David M Barbarossa Derailed vol 2 Helion and Co Ltd Solihull UK 2012 pp 364 497 Stahel David Operation Typhoon Cambridge University Press New York 2013 pp 76 77 Shaw John Red Army Resurgent Time Life Books 1979 p 142 Craig William 1973 Enemy at the Gates The Battle for Stalingrad Old Saybrook CT Konecky and Konecky p 25 ISBN 1 56852 368 8 Craig William 1973 Enemy at the Gates The Battle for Stalingrad Old Saybrook CT Konecky and Konecky p 83 ISBN 1 56852 368 8 Eremenko A I 11 March 2020 Gody vozmezdiya Boevymi dorogami ot Kerchi do Pragi in Russian ISBN 978 5457162914 Retrieved 2015 03 09 Biography of Marshal of Soviet Union Andrei Ivanovich Eremenko Andrej Ivanovich Eremenko 1892 1970 Soviet Union Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrey Yeryomenko amp oldid 1158457618, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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