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Georgy Zhukov

Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov (Russian: Георгий Константинович Жуков; 1 December 1896 – 18 June 1974) was a Marshal of the Soviet Union. He also served as Chief of the General Staff, Minister of Defence, and was a member of the Presidium of the Communist Party (later Politburo). During World War II, Zhukov oversaw some of the Red Army's most decisive victories. He was also a military governor of Germany succeeded by Wilhelm Pieck.

Georgy Zhukov
Георгий Жуков
Zhukov in 1944
Minister of Defence of the Soviet Union
In office
9 February 1955 – 26 October 1957
First SecretaryNikita Khrushchev
Preceded byNikolai Bulganin
Succeeded byRodion Malinovsky
Additional positions
Member of the 20th Presidium of the CPSU
In office
27 February 1956 – 29 October 1957
Military Governor of Soviet Occupied Germany
In office
9 June 1945 – 21 March 1946
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byVasily Sokolovsky
Chief of the General Staff of the Red Army
In office
15 January 1941 – 29 July 1941
Preceded byKirill Meretskov
Succeeded byBoris Shaposhnikov
Personal details
Born
Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov

(1896-12-01)1 December 1896
Strelkovka, Kaluga Governorate, Russian Empire
Died18 June 1974(1974-06-18) (aged 77)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Resting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis, Moscow
Political partyCPSU (1917–1957)
Spouses
Alexandra Zuikova
(m. 1953; div. 1965)
Galina Semyonova
(m. 1965; died 1973)
ChildrenMargarita and 3 others
Awards
Signature
NicknameMarshal of Victory
Military service
Allegiance
Branch
Service years1914–1957
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union (1943–1957)
Commands
Wars

Born to a poor peasant family from central Russia, Zhukov was conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army and fought in World War I. He served in the Red Army during the Russian Civil War. Gradually rising through the ranks, by 1939 Zhukov had been given command of an army group and won a decisive battle over Japanese forces at Khalkhin Gol, for which he won the first of his four Hero of the Soviet Union awards. In February 1941, Zhukov was appointed as chief of the Red Army's General Staff.

Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Zhukov lost his position as chief of the general staff. Subsequently, he organized the defences of Leningrad, Moscow, and Stalingrad. He participated in planning several major offensives, including the Battle of Kursk, and Operation Bagration. In 1945, Zhukov commanded the 1st Belorussian Front; he took part in the Vistula–Oder Offensive, and the Battle of Berlin. In recognition of Zhukov's role in the war, he was chosen to accept the German Instrument of Surrender, and inspect the Moscow Victory Parade of 1945.

After the war, Zhukov's success and popularity caused Joseph Stalin to see him as a potential threat.[1] Stalin stripped him of his positions and relegated him to military commands of little strategic significance. After Stalin's death in 1953, Zhukov supported Nikita Khrushchev's bid for Soviet leadership. In 1955, he was appointed as Defence Minister and made a member of the Presidium. In 1957, Zhukov lost favour again and was forced to retire. He never returned to a position of influence and died in 1974. Zhukov is remembered as one of the greatest Russian and Soviet military leaders of all time, along with Alexander Suvorov, Mikhail Barclay de Tolly, and Mikhail Kutuzov.[2]

Early life and career edit

Zhukov was born into a poor peasant family of Russian[3] ethnicity in Strelkovka, Maloyaroslavsky, Kaluga Governorate in western Russia.[4] His father Konstantin, who had been orphaned at the age of two and then adopted by Anuska Zhukova, was a cobbler.[5] His mother Ustin'ya was a peasant laborer. Zhukov was said to resemble his mother, and he believed he inherited his physical strength from her; Ustin'ya was reportedly able to accomplish demanding tasks such as carrying 200-pound (91 kg) sacks of grain over long distances.[5] In an era when most members of Russia's poor and working classes completed only two years of schooling, Zhukov completed the three-year primary education course at his hometown school.[5] He was then apprenticed to his mother's brother Mikhail as a furrier in Moscow.[6]

While working for his uncle, Zhukov supplemented his education by reading with his cousin Alexander on a wide range of topics, including the Russian language, German language, science, geography, and mathematics.[6] In addition, he enrolled in a night school, where he completed courses as the work in his uncle's shop permitted.[6] He completed his apprenticeship in 1914 and established his own fur business, which included three young employees under his leadership.[6]

Zhukov was tall, especially for his time period, standing 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in).[7][8][9]

World War I edit

 
Non-commissioned officer Georgy Zhukov, Russian Imperial army, 1916

In 1914, Zhukov was conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army, where he served in the 10th Dragoon Novgorod Regiment, and was wounded in action against the Germans at Kharkov. During World War I, Zhukov was awarded the Cross of St. George twice for heroism, and promoted to the non-commissioned officer ranks in recognition of his bravery in battle.

He joined the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks) after the 1917 October Revolution; his background of poverty became a significant asset in party circles. After recovering from a serious case of typhus, he fought in the Russian Civil War, serving in the Second Cavalry Brigade, commanded by Semyon Timoshenko, which was later absorbed into the 1st Cavalry Army, led by Semyon Budyonny. He completed a cavalry training course for officers in 1920 and received his commission as an officer. He received the Order of the Red Banner for his part in subduing the Tambov Rebellion in 1921.[10]

Interwar period edit

 
Zhukov as a regimental commander, 1920s
 
Graduates of the Leningrad Higher Cavalry School 1924/25.
Sitting in the second row (right to left): 1. Bagramyan, 3. Yeremenko. Standing in the third row (right to left): 1. Zhukov, 5. Rokossovsky.

Zhukov quickly advanced through the ranks as the commander of a cavalry troop and squadron, and deputy commander of a cavalry regiment. At the end of May 1923, he was appointed commander of the 39th Cavalry Regiment.[11] In 1924, he entered the Higher School of Cavalry,[12] from which he graduated the next year, returning afterward to command the same regiment.[13] He attended the Frunze Military Academy beginning in 1929, and graduated in 1930.[14]

In May 1930, Zhukov became commander of the 2nd Cavalry Brigade of the 7th Cavalry Division.[15] In February 1931, he was appointed as the Assistant Inspector of Cavalry for the Red Army.[16]

In May 1933, Zhukov was appointed commander of the 4th Cavalry Division.[16] His career was accelerated by the Great Purge, when thousands of officers were arrested and shot, but those associated with the First Cavalry Army were protected. In 1937, Zhukov became commander of first the 3rd Cavalry Corps, and later the 6th Cavalry Corps.[17] In 1938, he became deputy cavalry commander of the Belorussian Military District.[18]

Khalkhin Gol edit

In 1938, Zhukov was directed to command the First Soviet Mongolian Army Group, and saw action against Japan's Kwantung Army on the border between the Mongolian People's Republic and the Japanese-controlled state of Manchukuo. The Soviet–Japanese border conflicts lasted from 1938 to 1939. What began as a border skirmish rapidly escalated into a full-scale war, with the Japanese pushing forward with an estimated 80,000 troops, 180 tanks and 450 aircraft.

These events led to the strategically decisive battle of Khalkhin Gol. Zhukov requested major reinforcements, and on 20 August 1939, his Soviet offensive commenced. After a massive artillery barrage, nearly 500 BT-5 and BT-7 tanks advanced,[19] supported by over 500 fighters and bombers.[20] This was the Soviet Air Force's first fighter-bomber operation.[21]

The offensive first appeared to be a typical conventional frontal attack. However, two tank brigades were initially held back and then ordered to advance around on both flanks, supported by motorized artillery, infantry, and other tanks. This daring and successful maneuver encircled the Japanese 6th Army and captured the enemy's vulnerable rear supply areas. By 31 August, the Japanese had been cleared from the disputed border, leaving the Soviets clearly victorious.[21]

This campaign had significance beyond the immediate tactical and local outcome. Zhukov demonstrated and tested the techniques later used against the Germans in the Eastern Front of the Second World War. His innovations included the deployment of underwater bridges, and improving the cohesion and battle-effectiveness of inexperienced units by adding a few experienced, battle-hardened troops to bolster morale and overall training.[22]

Evaluation of the problems inherent in the performance of the BT tanks led to the replacement of their fire-prone petrol (gasoline) engines with diesel engines. This battle provided valuable practical knowledge that was essential to the Soviet success in development of the T-34 medium tank used in World War II. After this campaign, veterans were transferred to untested units, to better spread the benefits of their battle experience.[23]

For his victory, Zhukov was declared a Hero of the Soviet Union. However, the campaign—and especially Zhukov's pioneering use of tanks—remained little known outside the Soviet Union. Zhukov considered Khalkhin Gol to be invaluable preparation for conducting operations during the Second World War.[24] In May 1940, Zhukov became an army general, making him one of the eight high-ranking Red Army officers.

World War II edit

Before the War edit

Pre-war military exercises edit

 
Zhukov and Semyon Timoshenko in 1940

In the autumn of 1940, Zhukov started preparing plans for the military exercise concerning the defence of the Western border of the Soviet Union. It had been pushed further to the west after the Soviet Union annexed eastern Poland and the Baltic republics.[25] In his memoirs, Zhukov reports that in this exercise, he commanded the Western or Blue forces—the supposed invasion troops—and his opponent was Colonel General Dmitry Pavlov, the commander of the Eastern or Red forces—the supposed Soviet troops. He noted that Blue had 60 divisions, while Red had 50 divisions. Zhukov describes the exercise as being similar to events that later took place during the German invasion.[26]

Russian historian Bobylev noted that the details of the exercises were reported differently by the various participants who published memoirs.[27] He said that there were two exercises; one from 2 to 6 January 1941, for the North-West direction; another from 8 to 11 January, for the South-West direction.[27] During the first, Western forces attacked Eastern forces on 15 July, but the Eastern forces counterattacked and, by 1 August, reached the original border.[27]

At the time, the Eastern forces had a numerical advantage: 51 infantry divisions against 41; 8,811 tanks against 3,512—with the exception of anti-tank guns.[27] Bobylev describes how by the end of the exercise, the Eastern forces did not manage to surround and destroy the Western forces. In their turn, the Western forces threatened to surround the Eastern forces.[27] The same historian reported that the second game was won by the Easterners, meaning that on the whole, both games were won by the side commanded by Zhukov.[27] However, he noted that the games had a serious disadvantage since they did not consider an initial attack by Western forces, but only an attack by Eastern forces from the initial border.[27]

According to Marshal Aleksandr Vasilevsky, the war-game defeat of Pavlov's Red Troops against Zhukov was not widely known. The victory of Zhukov's Red Troops was widely publicized, which created a popular illusion of easy success for a preemptive offensive.[28] On 1 February 1941, Zhukov became chief of the Red Army's General Staff.[29] He was also elected a candidate member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union In February 1941, and was appointed a Deputy People's Commissar for Defence in March.

Soviet offensive controversy edit

From 2 February 1941, as the chief of the general staff, and Deputy Minister of Defense, Zhukov was said to take part in drawing up the "Strategic plan for deployment of the forces of the Soviet Union in the event of war with Germany and its allies."[30] The plan was completed no later than 15 May 1941, according to a dated document found in the Soviet archives after they were declassified in the 1990s. Some researchers, such as Victor Suvorov, have theorized that on 14 May, Soviet People's Commissar of Defense Semyon Timoshenko and General Zhukov presented these plans to Stalin for a preemptive attack against Germany through Southern Poland.

Soviet forces would occupy the Vistula Border and continue to Katowice or even Berlin—should the main German armies retreat—or the Baltic coast, should German forces not retreat and be forced to protect Poland and East Prussia. The attacking Soviets were supposed to reach Siedlce, Dęblin, and then capture Warsaw before penetrating toward the southwest and imposing final defeat at Lublin.[31]

Historians do not have the original documents that could verify the existence of such a plan, and there is no evidence that Stalin accepted it. In a transcript of an interview on 26 May 1965, Zhukov said that Stalin did not approve the plan. But Zhukov did not clarify whether execution was attempted. As of 1999, no other approved plan for a Soviet attack had been found.[32]

On 10 June 1941, Zhukov sent a message to the Military Council of the Kiev Special Military District, after someone, most likely the commander of the Kiev district, Mikhail Kirponos, had ordered troops on the border to occupy forward positions. Zhukov ordered: "Such action could provoke the Germans into armed confrontation fraught with all sorts of consequences. Revoke this order immediately and report who, specifically, gave such an unauthorised order." On 11 June, he sent a telegram saying that his immediate superior, Timoshenko, had ordered that they were to report back by 16 June confirming that the troops had been withdrawn from their forward positions." According to the historian David E. Murphy, "the action by Timoshenko and Zhukov must have been initiated at the request of Stalin."[33]

David Glantz and Jonathan House, American scholars of the Red Army, argue that "the Soviet Union was not ready for war in June 1941, nor did it intend, as some have contended, to launch a preventative war."[34] Gerhard Weinberg, a scholar of Nazi foreign policy, supports their view, arguing that Adolf Hitler's decision to launch Operation Barbarossa was not because of a sense of urgent foreboding, but rather from a "purposeful determination" and he had started his planning for the invasion well in advance of the summer of 1941[35]

The Eastern front edit

Germany invades the Soviet Union edit

 
Zhukov speaking in 1941

On 22 June 1941, Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, an invasion of the Soviet Union. On the same day, Zhukov responded by signing the "Directive of Peoples' Commissariat of Defence No. 3", which ordered an all-out counteroffensive by Red Army forces. He commanded the troops to "encircle and destroy [the] enemy grouping near Suwałki and to seize the Suwałki region by the evening of 24 June" and "to encircle and destroy the enemy grouping invading in [the] Vladimir-Volynia and Brody direction" and even "to seize the Lublin region by the evening of 24 June".[36] This manoeuvre failed and disorganized Red Army units were destroyed by the Wehrmacht.[37] Zhukov subsequently claimed that he was forced by Joseph Stalin to sign the directive, supposedly written by Aleksandr Vasilevsky,[38] despite the reservations that he raised.[39]

When Stalin arrived unannounced at command headquarters on 29 June, demanding to know why he was not being told what was happening at the front, Zhukov courageously told him: "Comrade Stalin, our duty is first of all to help the front commanders and only then to inform you." But when he had to admit that they lost contact with the front commanders in Belarus, Stalin lost his temper and called him "useless".[40]

On 29 July, Zhukov was removed from his post of chief of the general staff. In his memoirs he gives his suggested abandoning of Kiev to avoid an encirclement as a reason for it.[41] On the next day the decision was made official and he was appointed the commander of the Reserve Front.[41] There he oversaw the Yelnya offensive, delivering the Red Army's first victory over the Germans. On 10 September, Zhukov was made the commander of the Leningrad Front.[42] There he oversaw the defense of the city.

On 6 October, Zhukov was appointed the representative of Stavka for the Reserve and Western Fronts.[43] On 10 October, those fronts were merged into the Western Front under Zhukov's command.[44] This front then participated in the Battle of Moscow and several Battles of Rzhev.

In late August 1942, Zhukov was made deputy commander in chief and sent to the southwestern front to take charge of the defence of Stalingrad.[45] He and Vasilevsky later planned the Stalingrad counteroffensive.[46] In November, Zhukov was sent to coordinate the Western Front and the Kalinin Front during Operation Mars. In January 1943, he—together with Kliment Voroshilov—coordinated the actions of the Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts and the Baltic Fleet in Operation Iskra.[47] On January 18, 1943, Zhukov was promoted to Marshal of the Soviet Union.[48]

Battle of Kursk edit

 
Zhukov and Ivan Konev during the Battle of Kursk, 1943

Zhukov was a Stavka coordinator at the battle of Kursk in July 1943. He was considered the main architect of the Soviet victory together with Vasilevsky.[49] According to Zhukov's memoirs, he played a central role in the planning of the battle and the hugely successful offensive that followed. Commander of the Central Front Konstantin Rokossovsky, said, however, that the planning and decisions for the Battle of Kursk were made without Zhukov, that he only arrived just before the battle, made no decisions and left soon afterward, and that Zhukov exaggerated his role.[50] A sense of the nature of the beginning of Rokossovsky's famous World War II rivalry with Zhukov can be gathered from reading Rokossovsky's comments in an official report on Zhukov's character:[51]

Has a strong will. Decisive and firm. Often demonstrates initiative and skillfully applies it. Disciplined. Demanding and persistent in his demands. A somewhat ungracious and not sufficiently sympathetic person. Rather stubborn. Painfully proud. In professional terms well trained. Broadly experienced as a military leader... Absolutely cannot be used in staff or teaching jobs because constitutionally he hates them.

From 12 February 1944, Zhukov coordinated the actions of the 1st Ukrainian and 2nd Ukrainian Fronts.[52] On 1 March, Zhukov was appointed the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front until early May following the ambush of Nikolai Vatutin, its commander, by the anti-Soviet Ukrainian Insurgent Army near Ostroh.[53] During the Soviet offensive named Operation Bagration, Zhukov coordinated the 1st Belorussian and 2nd Belorussian Fronts, and later the 1st Ukrainian Front as well.[54] On 23 August, Zhukov was sent to the 3rd Ukrainian Front to prepare for the advance into Bulgaria.[55]

Surrender of Germany edit

March on Berlin edit

On 16 November, he became commander of the 1st Belorussian Front which took part in the Vistula–Oder offensive and the Battle of Berlin.[56] He called on his troops to "remember our brothers and sisters, our mothers and fathers, our wives and children tortured to death by Germans ... We shall exact a brutal revenge for everything". More than 20 million Soviet soldiers and civilians died as a result of the war. In a reprise of atrocities committed by German soldiers against Soviet civilians in the eastward advance into Soviet territory during Operation Barbarossa, the westward march by Soviet forces was marked by brutality towards German civilians, which included looting, burning and systematic rapes.[57]

Zhukov was chosen to personally accept the German Instrument of Surrender in Berlin.[58]

Post-war service edit

Soviet occupation zone edit

 
Zhukov, Montgomery, Sokolovsky, and Rokossovsky at the Brandenburg Gate

After the German capitulation, Zhukov became the first commander of the Soviet occupation zone. On 10 June 1945, he returned to Moscow to prepare for the Moscow Victory Parade of 1945. On 24 June, Stalin appointed him commander in chief of the parade. After the ceremony, on the night of 24 June, Zhukov went to Berlin to resume his command.[59]

In May 1945, Zhukov signed three resolutions to improve living standards in the Soviet occupation zone:

  • 11 May: resolution 063 – provision of food
  • 12 May: resolution 064 – restoration of the public services sector
  • 13 May: resolution 080 – provision of milk supplies for children

Zhukov requested the Soviet government to transport urgently to Berlin 96,000 tons of grain, 60,000 tons of potatoes, 50,000 cattle, and thousands of tons of other foodstuffs, such as sugar and animal fat. He issued strict orders that his subordinates were to "hate Nazism but respect the German people",[60] and to make all possible efforts to restore and maintain a stable living standard for the German population.[61]

Inter-allied diplomacy edit

 
Zhukov sharing a toast with Eisenhower, Montgomery and other Allied officials, June 1945

From 16 July to 2 August, Zhukov participated in the Potsdam Conference with the fellow representatives of the Allied governments. As one of the four commanders of the Allied occupational forces, Zhukov established good relationships with his new colleagues, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, and Marshal Jean de Lattre, and the four frequently exchanged views about such matters as the sentencing, trials, and judgments of war criminals, geopolitical relationships between the Allied states, and how to defeat Japan and rebuild Germany.

Eisenhower developed a good relationship with Zhukov, and it proved beneficial in resolving differences in post-war occupational issues.[62] Eisenhower's successor, General Lucius D. Clay, also praised the Zhukov–Eisenhower friendship, and commented: "The Soviet–America relationship should have developed well if Eisenhower and Zhukov had continued to work together".[63] Zhukov and Eisenhower went on to tour the Soviet Union together in the immediate aftermath of the victory over Germany.[64] During this tour Eisenhower introduced Zhukov to Coca-Cola. As Coca-Cola was regarded in the Soviet Union as a symbol of American imperialism,[65] Zhukov was apparently reluctant to be photographed or reported as consuming such a product. Zhukov asked if the beverage could be made colourless to resemble vodka. A European subsidiary of the Coca-Cola Export Corporation delivered an initial 50 cases of White Coke to Marshal Zhukov.

Decline of career edit

 
Zhukov at a post-war victory parade in Sverdlovsk, between 1948–1950

Zhukov was not only the supreme military commander of the Soviet occupation zone, but became its military governor on 10 June 1945. He was replaced with Vasily Sokolovsky on 10 April 1946. After an unpleasant session of the main military council—in which Zhukov was accused of egoism, disrespect to his peers and of political unreliability and hostility to the Party Central Committee—he was stripped of his position as commander in chief of the Soviet Army.[4][66][67]

He was assigned command of the Odessa Military District, far from Moscow and lacking in strategic significance and troops. He arrived there on 13 June 1946. Zhukov suffered a heart attack in January 1948, spending a month in the hospital. In February 1948, he was given another secondary posting, this time command of the Urals Military District. Peter G. Tsouras described the move from Odessa to the Urals as a relegation from a "second-rate" to a "fifth-rate" assignment.[68]

Throughout this time, security chief Lavrentiy Beria was supposedly trying to topple Zhukov. Two of Zhukov's subordinates, Marshal of Aviation Alexander Novikov and Lieutenant-General Konstantin Telegin, were arrested and tortured in Lefortovo Prison at the end of 1945. After Stalin's death it was claimed that Novikov was allegedly forced by Beria into a "confession" which implicated Zhukov in a conspiracy.[69] In reality, Novikov may have been encouraged to point the finger at Zhukov because he saw Zhukov's membership at the investigation commission of the Aviators Affair—a purge of the Soviet aircraft industry following accusations that, during the war, the fighter planes had been of poor quality—in which Novikov was implicated, as instrumental to his downfall.[4] Regardless, in a conference, all generals except GRU director Filipp Golikov defended Zhukov against accusation of misspending. During this time, Zhukov was accused of unauthorized looting of goods confiscated by the Germans, and of Bonapartism.[66][70]

In 1946, seven rail carriages with furniture that Zhukov was taking to the Soviet Union from Germany were impounded. In 1948, his apartments and house in Moscow were searched and many valuables looted from Germany were found.[71] In his investigation Beria concluded that Zhukov had in his possession 17 golden rings, three gemstones, the faces of 15 golden necklaces, more than four kilometers (2.5 mi) of cloth, 323 pieces of fur, 44 carpets taken from German palaces, 55 paintings and 20 guns."[72][incomplete short citation] Zhukov admitted in a memorandum to Zhdanov:

"I felt very guilty. I shouldn't have collected those useless junks and put them into some warehouse, assuming nobody needs them any more. I swear as a Bolshevik that I would avoid such errors and follies thereafter. Surely I still and will wholeheartedly serve the Motherland, the Party, and the Great Comrade Stalin."[73]

When learning of Zhukov's "misfortunes"—and despite not understanding all the problems—Eisenhower expressed his sympathy for his "comrade-in-arms".[74] In February 1953, Stalin relieved Zhukov of his post as Commander of the Urals Military District, recalling Zhukov to Moscow. It was thought Zhukov's expertise was needed in the Korean War; however, in practice, Zhukov received no orders from Stalin after arriving in Moscow. On 5 March 1953, at 09:50, Stalin died of a stroke. Following Stalin's passing, Zhukov's life entered a new phase.[63]

Relationship with Stalin edit

 
Zhukov with Stalin and Semyon Budyonny during the Soviet Victory Parade of 1945

During the war, Zhukov was one of only a few people who understood Stalin's personality. As the chief of staff and deputy supreme commander, Zhukov had hundreds of meetings with Stalin, both private and during Stavka conferences. Consequently, Zhukov understood Stalin's personality and methods well. According to Zhukov, Stalin was a bold and secretive person, but he was also hot-tempered and skeptical. Zhukov was able to gauge Stalin's mood: for example, when Stalin drew deeply on his tobacco pipe, it was a sign of a good mood. Conversely, if Stalin failed to light his pipe once it was out of tobacco, it was a sign of imminent rage.[75] His outstanding knowledge of Stalin's personality was an asset that allowed him to deal with Stalin's outbursts in a way other Soviet generals could not.[76]

Both Zhukov and Stalin were hot-tempered, and both made concessions necessary to sustain their relationship. While Zhukov viewed his relationship with Stalin as one of a subordinate–senior, Stalin was in awe and possibly jealous of Zhukov. Both were military commanders, but Stalin's experience was limited to a previous generation of non-mechanized warfare. By contrast, Zhukov was highly influential in the development of contemporary combined operations of highly mechanized armies. The differences in their outlooks were the cause of many tempestuous disagreements between the two of them at Stavka meetings. Nonetheless, Zhukov was less competent than Stalin as a politician, highlighted by Zhukov's many failures in politics. Stalin's unwillingness to value Zhukov beyond the marshal's military talents was one of the reasons why Zhukov was recalled from Berlin.[77]

Significant to their relationship as well was Zhukov's bluntness towards his superior. Stalin was dismissive of the fawning of many of his entourage and openly criticized it.[78] Many people around Stalin—including Beria, Yezhov, and Mekhlis—felt obliged to flatter Stalin to remain on his good side.[79] Zhukov remained obstinate and argumentative, and did not hesitate to publicly contradict Stalin to the point of risking his career and life. Their heated argument about whether to abandon Kiev due to the Germans' rapid advance in summer of 1941 was typical of Zhukov's approach.[80] Zhukov's ability to remain skeptical and unwavering at giving into pressure did garner him the respect of Stalin.

Political career edit

Arresting Beria edit

After Stalin's death, Zhukov returned to favor, becoming Deputy Defence Minister in 1953. He then had an opportunity to avenge himself on Beria. With Stalin's sudden death, the Soviet Union fell into a leadership crisis. Georgy Malenkov temporarily became First Secretary. Malenkov and his allies attempted to purge Stalin's influence and personality cult; however, Malenkov himself did not have the courage to do this alone. Moreover, Lavrentiy Beria remained dangerous. The politicians sought reinforcement from the powerful and prestigious military men. In this matter, Nikita Khrushchev chose Zhukov because the two had forged a good relationship, and, in addition, during World War II, Zhukov had twice saved Khrushchev from false accusations.[81][82]

On 26 June 1953, a special meeting of the Soviet Politburo was held by Malenkov. Beria came to the meeting with an uneasy feeling because it was called hastily—indeed, Zhukov had ordered General Kirill Moskalenko to secretly prepare a special force and permitted the force to use two of Zhukov's and Defence Minister Nikolai Bulganin's special cars (which had tinted windows) in order to safely infiltrate the Kremlin. Zhukov also ordered him to replace the MVD Guard with the guard of the Moscow Military District.

Finally, Khrushchev suggested expelling Beria from the Communist Party and bringing him before a military court. Moskalenko's special forces obeyed.[83][84]

Zhukov was a member of the military tribunal during the Beria trial, which was headed by Marshal Ivan Konev.[85] On 18 December 1953, the Military Court sentenced Beria to death. During the burial of Beria, Konev commented: "The day this man was born deserves to be damned!". Then Zhukov said: "I considered it as my duty to contribute my little part in this matter".[83][84]

Minister of Defense edit

 
Zhukov (right) with Polish Minister of Defense Konstantin Rokossovsky (center) and Ivan Konev in Warsaw, 1955

When Bulganin became premier in 1955, he appointed Zhukov as Defense Minister.[85] Zhukov participated in many political activities. He successfully opposed the re-establishment of the Commissar system, because the Party and political leaders were not professional military, and thus the highest power should fall to the army commanders. Until 1955, Zhukov had both sent and received letters from Eisenhower. Both leaders agreed that the two superpowers should coexist peacefully.[86] In July 1955, Zhukov—together with Khrushchev, Bulganin, Vyacheslav Molotov and Andrei Gromyko—participated in a Summit Conference at Geneva after the USSR signed the Austrian State Treaty and withdrew its army from the country.

Zhukov followed orders from the then Prime Minister Georgy Malenkov and Communist Party leader Khrushchev during the invasion of Hungary following the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[87] Along with the majority of members of the Presidium, he urged Khrushchev to send troops to support the Hungarian authorities and to secure the Austrian border. Zhukov and most of the Presidium were not, however, eager to see a full-scale intervention in Hungary. Zhukov even recommended the withdrawal of Soviet troops when it seemed that they might have to take extreme measures to suppress the revolution.

The mood in the Presidium changed again when Hungary's new Prime Minister, Imre Nagy, began to talk about Hungarian withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact. That led the Soviets to attack the revolutionaries and to replace Nagy with János Kádár. In the same years, when the UK, France, and Israel invaded Egypt during the Suez crisis, Zhukov expressed support for Egypt's right of self-defense. In October 1957, Zhukov visited Yugoslavia and Albania aboard the Chapayev-class cruiser Kuibyshev, attempting to repair the Tito–Stalin split of 1948.[88] During the voyage, Kuibyshev encountered units of the U.S. Sixth Fleet and "passing honours" in the form of full salvos were exchanged between the vessels.

Fall from power edit

 
Zhukov, c. 1960

On his 60th birthday, in 1956, Zhukov received his fourth Hero of the Soviet Union title—making him the first person to receive the honour four times. The only other four-time recipient was Leonid Brezhnev, who never rose above modest military rank and received all of his four Hero of the Soviet Union medals for his birthday as part of his overall cult of personality and love for medals, titles, and decorations. Despite his general lack of political ability, Zhukov became the highest-ranking military professional who was also a member of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party. He further became a symbol of national strength, the most widely-esteemed Soviet military hero of World War II. Zhukov's prestige was even higher than the police and security agencies of the USSR, and thus rekindled concerns among political leaders.

Going even further than Khrushchev, Zhukov demanded that the political agencies in the Red Army report to him before the Party. He demanded an official condemnation of Stalin's crimes during the Great Purge.[citation needed] He also supported the political vindication and rehabilitation for Mikhail Tukhachevsky, Grigoriy Shtern, Vasily Blyukher, Alexander Yegorov and many others. In response his opponents accused him of being a Reformist and Bonapartist. Such enviousness and hostility proved to be the key factor that led to his later downfall.[89]

The relationship between Zhukov and Khrushchev reached its peak during the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) in 1956. After becoming the First Secretary of the Party, Khrushchev moved against Stalin's legacy and criticised his personality cult in a speech, "On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences". To complete such startling acts, Khrushchev needed the approval—or at least the acquiescence—of the military, headed by Minister of Defense Zhukov.

At the plenary session of the Central Committee of the CPSU held in June 1957 Zhukov supported Khrushchev against the "Anti-Party Group", that had a majority in the Presidium and voted to replace Khrushchev as First Secretary with Bulganin. At that plenum, Zhukov stated: "The Army is against this resolution and not even a tank will leave its position without my order!".[90] In the same session the "Anti-Party Group" was condemned and Zhukov was made a member of the Presidium.

His second fall was more sudden and public even than his first. On 4 October 1957, he left on an official visit to Yugoslavia, and Albania.[91] He returned to Moscow on 26 October, straight to a meeting of the Presidium, during which he was removed from that body. On 2 November, the Central Committee convened to hear Zhukov being accused of 'non-party behaviour', conducting an 'adventurist foreign policy', and sponsoring his own personality cult. He was expelled from the Central Committee and sent into forced retirement at age 62. The same issue of the Krasnaya Zvezda that announced Zhukov's return also reported that he had been relieved of his duties.[92] According to many researchers, Soviet politicians—including Khrushchev himself—had a deep-seated fear of "powerful people".[93][94]

Later life edit

Retirement edit

 
Zhukov on holiday in Sochi

After being forced out of the government, Zhukov stayed away from politics. Many people—including former subordinates—frequently paid him visits, joined him on hunting excursions, and waxed nostalgic. In September 1959, while visiting the United States, Khrushchev told President Eisenhower that the retired Marshal Zhukov "liked fishing". Zhukov was actually a keen aquarist.[95] In response, Eisenhower sent Zhukov a set of fishing tackle. Zhukov respected this gift so much that he is said to have exclusively used Eisenhower's fishing tackle for the remainder of his life, referring to Soviet fishing tackle as "substandard".[96]

After Khrushchev was deposed in October 1964, Brezhnev restored Zhukov to favor—though not to power—in a move to use Zhukov's popularity to strengthen his political position. Zhukov's name was put in the public eye yet again when Brezhnev lionised Zhukov in a speech commemorating the Great Patriotic War. On 9 May 1965, Zhukov was invited to sit on the tribune of the Lenin Mausoleum and given the honour of reviewing the parade of military forces in Red Square.[97]

Zhukov had begun writing his memoirs, Memories and Recollections, in 1958. He now worked intensively on them, which together with steadily deteriorating health, served to worsen his heart disease. It would take another decade until publication after Zhukov clashed constantly with Mikhail Suslov, the Communist Party's Chief Ideologue and Second in Command in charge of Censorship, who demanded many revisions and removals, particularly his criticisms of Stalin, Voroshilov, Budyonny and Molotov. After Brezhnev came to power, Suslov made further demands to exaggerate Colonel Brezhnev's role in WWII by glorifying the little known and strategically unimportant Battles of Malaya Zemlya and Novorossiysk as a decisive turning point in the Eastern Front, both of which Zhukov refused to do.[98] In December 1967, Zhukov had a serious stroke. He was hospitalised until June 1968, and continued to receive medical and rehabilitative treatment at home under the care of his second wife, Galina Semyonova, a former officer in the Medical Corps. The stroke left him paralysed on his left side, his speech became slurred and he could only walk with assistance.

His memoirs were published in 1969 and became a best-seller. Within several months of the date of publication of his memoirs, Zhukov had received more than 10,000 letters from readers that offered comments, expressed gratitude, gave advice, or lavished praise. Supposedly, the Communist Party invited Zhukov to participate in the 24th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1971, but the invitation was rescinded.[99]

Death edit

 
Zhukov's grave in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis

Zhukov died in Moscow, Russian SFSR on 18 June, 1974 at age 77 after suffering a stroke.[100] His body was cremated and his ashes were buried at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis alongside fellow generals and marshals of the Soviet Union during his funeral.[101]

In 1995, an equestrian statue of Zhukov was erected in front of the State Historical Museum.[102]

Family edit

Father
Konstantin Artemyevich Zhukov (1851–1921); a shoemaker
Mother
Ustinina Artemievna Zhukova (1866–1944); farmer from a poor family
Siblings
1. Maria Kostantinovna Zhukova (1894–1954)
2. Alexei Konstantinovich Zhukov (born 1901); died prematurely
Spouses
 
Alexandra Dievna Zhukova, the Russian wife of Marshal Zhukov
1. Alexandra Dievna Zuikova (1900–1967); common-law wife since 1920; married in 1953; divorced in 1965; died after a stroke
2. Galina Alexandrovna Semyonova (1926–1973);[103] married in 1965; medical corps officer, at Burdenko hospital; specialized in therapeutics; died of breast cancer
Children
1. Era Zhukova (born 1928); by Alexandra Dievna Zukova
2. Margarita Zhukova (1929–2010); by Maria Nikolaevna Volokhova (1897–1983)
3. Ella Zhukova (1937–2010); by Alexandra Dievna Zukova
4. Maria Zhukova (born 1957); by Galina Alexandrovna Semyonova

Legacy edit

 
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev and Mongolian president Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj visit the monument to Georgy Zhukov in Ulaanbaatar, near the Zhukov Museum in Zhukov Street (Mongolian: Жуковын гудамж) in memory of the Battle of Khalkin Gol.

The first monument to Georgy Zhukov was erected in Mongolia, in memory of the Battle of Khalkin Gol. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, this monument was one of the few that did not suffer from anti-Soviet backlash in former Communist states. There is a statue of Zhukov on horseback as he appeared at the 1945 victory parade on Manezhnaya Square at the entrance of the Kremlin in Moscow. Another statue of Zhukov in Moscow is located on Prospekt Marshala Zhukova. A statue of Zhukov is located in the town of Irbit, in the Sverdlovsk Oblast. Other statues of Zhukov are found in Omsk, Irkutsk and Yekaterinburg.

A minor planet, 2132 Zhukov, discovered in 1975, by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Chernykh, is named in his honour.[104] In 1996, Russia adopted the Order of Zhukov and the Zhukov Medal to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his birthday.

Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky's poem On the Death of Zhukov ("Na smert' Zhukova", 1974) is regarded by critics as one of the best poems on the war written by an author of the post-war generation.[105] The poem is a stylization of The Bullfinch, Derzhavin's elegy on the death of Generalissimo Suvorov in 1800. Brodsky draws a parallel between the careers of these two famous commanders. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn re-interpreted Zhukov's memoirs in the short story Times of Crisis.

In his book of recollections,[106] Zhukov was critical of the role the Soviet leadership played during the war. The first edition of Vospominaniya i razmyshleniya was published during Leonid Brezhnev's premiership only on the conditions that criticism of Stalin was removed, and that Zhukov add a (fictional) episode of a visit to Brezhnev, politruk on the Southern Front, to consult on military strategy.[107]

In 1989, parts of previously unpublished and censored chapters from Zhukov's memoir were published by Pravda, which his daughter said had been hidden in a safe until they could be published. The excerpts included criticism of the 1937–1939 purges for annihilating "[M]any thousands of outstanding party workers" and stated that Stalin had played no role in directing the war effort, although he often issued orders devised by the general staff as if they were his own.[108]

Appraisals of Zhukov's career vary. For example, historian Konstantin Zaleski claimed that Zhukov exaggerated his own role in World War II.[109] Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky said that the planning and decisions for the Battle of Kursk were made without Zhukov, that he only arrived just before the battle, made no decisions and left soon after.[50]

Zhukov also received many positive comments, mostly from his Army companions, from the modern Russian Army, and from his Allied contemporaries. General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower stated that, because of Zhukov's achievements fighting the Nazis, the United Nations owed him much more than any other military leader in the world. "The war in Europe ended with victory and nobody could have done that better than Marshal Zhukov—we owed him that credit. He is a modest person, and so we can't undervalue his position in our mind. When we can come back to our Motherland, there must be another type of Order in Russia, an Order named after Zhukov, which is awarded to everybody who can learn the bravery, the far vision, and the decisiveness of this soldier."[110]

 
Zhukov depicted on a 1990 Soviet ruble commemorative coin

Marshal of the Soviet Union Aleksandr Vasilevsky commented that Zhukov is one of the most outstanding and brilliant military commanders of the Soviet military forces.[111] Major General Sir Francis de Guingand, chief of staff of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, described Zhukov as a friendly person.[112] John Gunther, who met Zhukov many times after the war, said that Zhukov was more friendly and honest than any of the other Soviet leaders.[113]

John Eisenhower—son of Dwight Eisenhower—claimed that Zhukov was really ebullient and was a friend of his.[86] Albert Axell in his work "Marshal Zhukov, the one who beat Hitler" claimed that Zhukov was a military genius like Alexander the Great and Napoleon. Axell also commented that Zhukov was a loyal communist and a patriot.[114] At the end of his work about Zhukov, Otto Chaney concluded: "But Zhukov belongs to all of us. In the darkest period of World War II his fortitude and determination eventually triumphed. For Russians and people everywhere he remains an enduring symbol of victory on the battlefield."[115]

In Russia, Zhukov is often credited for his "prophetic" words spoken to Konstantin Rokossovsky in Berlin in 1945: "We have liberated them, and they will never forgive us for that."[116]

In popular culture edit

Zhukov has been portrayed by the following actors:

Star Trek: The Next Generation producers named an Ambassador-class starship after Zhukov, which was mentioned or made an appearance on several episodes of the series.

Decorations edit

 
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev laying a wreath at a monument to Zhukov in Ulaanbaatar, while on a state visit to Mongolia in August 2009
 
Marshal Zhukov depicted on façade of Victory Memorial, Prokhorovka, Russia

Zhukov was the recipient of many decorations. Most notably he was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union four times. The medals of the only other four-time recipient, Leonid Brezhnev, were the result of self-awarding as birthday gifts.

Zhukov was one of only three recipients to receive the Order of Victory twice. He was also awarded high honours from many other countries. A partial listing is presented below.

Imperial Russia edit

Soviet Union edit

Hero of the Soviet Union (29 August 1940, 29 July 1944, 1 June 1945, 1 December 1956)
Order of Victory (Serial No. 1, 10 April 1944 and Serial No. 5, 30 March 1945)
Order of Lenin (16 August 1936, 29 August 1939, 21 February 1945, 1 December 1956, 1 December 1966, 1 December 1971)
Order of the October Revolution (22 February 1968)
Order of the Red Banner (31 August 1922, 3 November 1944, 20 June 1949)
Order of Suvorov, 1st class (Serial No. 1, 28 January 1943 and Serial No. 39, 28 July 1943)
Medal "For the Defence of Stalingrad"
Medal "For the Defence of Leningrad"
Medal "For the Defence of the Caucasus"
Medal "For the Defence of Moscow"
Medal "For the Liberation of Warsaw"
Medal "For the Capture of Berlin"
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 "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"
Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"
Medal "In Commemoration of the 250th Anniversary of Leningrad"
Medal "In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow"
Honorary weapon – sword inscribed with golden national emblem of the Soviet Union

Foreign edit

Hero of the Mongolian People's Republic (Mongolian People's Republic, 1969)
Order of Sukhbaatar (Mongolian People's Republic, 1968, 1969, 1971)
Order of the Red Banner (Mongolian People's Republic, 1939, 1942)
Medal "30 Years of the Victory in Khalkhin-Gol" (Mongolian People's Republic)
Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Revolution" (Mongolian People's Republic)
Medal "For Victory over Japan" (Mongolian People's Republic)
Medal "50 Years of the Mongolian People's Army" (Mongolian People's Republic)
Order of the White Lion, 1st class (Czechoslovakia)
Military Order of the White Lion, 1st class (Czechoslovakia)
War Cross 1939–1945 (Czechoslovakia)
Virtuti Militari, 1st class (Poland)
Order of Polonia Restituta, 1st class (Poland)
Order of Polonia Restituta, 3rd class (Poland)
Cross of Grunwald, 1st class (Poland)
Medal "For Warsaw 1939–1945" (Poland)
Medal "For Oder, Neisse and the Baltic" (Poland)
Medal "25 Years of the Bulgarian People's Army" (Bulgaria)
Medal "90th Anniversary of the Birth of Georgi Dimitrov" (Bulgaria)
Garibaldi Partisan Star (Italy, 1956)
Grand Cross of the Order of Merit (Egypt, 1956)
Grand Officer of the Legion d'Honneur (France, 1945)
Croix de guerre (France, 1945)
Honorary Knight Grand Cross, Order of the Bath, (military division) (UK, 1945)
Chief Commander, Legion of Merit (United States, 1946)
Order of Freedom (Yugoslavia, 1956)
Medal of Sino-Soviet Friendship (China, 1953 and 1956)

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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Goldman, S. D. (2013). Nomonhan, 1939: the Red Army's victory that shaped World War II. Annapolis: NIP. ISBN 978-1591143390.
  • Hill, A. (2017). The Red Army and the Second World War. Cambridge: CUP. ISBN 978-1107020795.

External links edit

  • Reminiscences and Reflections, two-volume English-language translation of Zhukov's memoirs by Progress Publishers, 1985: Volume 1, Volume 2
  • Georgy Zhukov Newsreels at Net-Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive
  • Works by Georgy Zhukov at Open Library
  • Works by or about Georgy Zhukov at Internet Archive
  • Georgy Zhukov – WWII Marshal of the Soviet Union 1 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine
  • Newspaper clippings about Georgy Zhukov in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

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For the footballer see Georgy Zhukov footballer Zhukov redirects here For other uses see Zhukov disambiguation In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Konstantinovich and the family name is Zhukov Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov Russian Georgij Konstantinovich Zhukov 1 December 1896 18 June 1974 was a Marshal of the Soviet Union He also served as Chief of the General Staff Minister of Defence and was a member of the Presidium of the Communist Party later Politburo During World War II Zhukov oversaw some of the Red Army s most decisive victories He was also a military governor of Germany succeeded by Wilhelm Pieck Marshal of the Soviet UnionGeorgy ZhukovGeorgij ZhukovZhukov in 1944Minister of Defence of the Soviet UnionIn office 9 February 1955 26 October 1957First SecretaryNikita KhrushchevPreceded byNikolai BulganinSucceeded byRodion MalinovskyAdditional positionsMember of the 20th Presidium of the CPSUIn office 27 February 1956 29 October 1957Military Governor of Soviet Occupied GermanyIn office 9 June 1945 21 March 1946Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byVasily SokolovskyChief of the General Staff of the Red ArmyIn office 15 January 1941 29 July 1941Preceded byKirill MeretskovSucceeded byBoris ShaposhnikovPersonal detailsBornGeorgy Konstantinovich Zhukov 1896 12 01 1 December 1896Strelkovka Kaluga Governorate Russian EmpireDied18 June 1974 1974 06 18 aged 77 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionResting placeKremlin Wall Necropolis MoscowPolitical partyCPSU 1917 1957 SpousesAlexandra Zuikova m 1953 div 1965 wbr Galina Semyonova m 1965 died 1973 wbr ChildrenMargarita and 3 othersAwardsCross of Saint George 2 Hero of the Soviet Union 4 Order of Lenin 6 Order of Victory 2 Order of the October Revolution Order of the Red Banner 3 Order of Suvorov 2 SignatureNicknameMarshal of VictoryMilitary serviceAllegianceRussian EmpireRussian SFSRSoviet UnionBranchImperial Russian ArmySoviet Red ArmySoviet Ground ForcesService years1914 1957RankMarshal of the Soviet Union 1943 1957 CommandsKiev Military District Odessa Military District First Belorussian Front Leningrad Front Soviet Reserve Front Soviet Western FrontWarsWorld War I Brusilov Offensive Russian Civil War Spring Offensive Tambov Rebellion World War II Soviet Japanese border conflict Battle of Khalkhin Gol Great Patriotic War Operation Barbarossa Battle of Brody Yelnya Offensive Battle of Moscow Battle of Stalingrad Operation Uranus Operation Mars Siege of Leningrad Operation Iskra Operation Polar Star Battle of Kursk Operation Bagration Baltic Offensive Vistula Oder Offensive Battle of Berlin Occupation of Germany Hungarian RevolutionBorn to a poor peasant family from central Russia Zhukov was conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army and fought in World War I He served in the Red Army during the Russian Civil War Gradually rising through the ranks by 1939 Zhukov had been given command of an army group and won a decisive battle over Japanese forces at Khalkhin Gol for which he won the first of his four Hero of the Soviet Union awards In February 1941 Zhukov was appointed as chief of the Red Army s General Staff Following the German invasion of the Soviet Union Zhukov lost his position as chief of the general staff Subsequently he organized the defences of Leningrad Moscow and Stalingrad He participated in planning several major offensives including the Battle of Kursk and Operation Bagration In 1945 Zhukov commanded the 1st Belorussian Front he took part in the Vistula Oder Offensive and the Battle of Berlin In recognition of Zhukov s role in the war he was chosen to accept the German Instrument of Surrender and inspect the Moscow Victory Parade of 1945 After the war Zhukov s success and popularity caused Joseph Stalin to see him as a potential threat 1 Stalin stripped him of his positions and relegated him to military commands of little strategic significance After Stalin s death in 1953 Zhukov supported Nikita Khrushchev s bid for Soviet leadership In 1955 he was appointed as Defence Minister and made a member of the Presidium In 1957 Zhukov lost favour again and was forced to retire He never returned to a position of influence and died in 1974 Zhukov is remembered as one of the greatest Russian and Soviet military leaders of all time along with Alexander Suvorov Mikhail Barclay de Tolly and Mikhail Kutuzov 2 Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 World War I 1 2 Interwar period 1 3 Khalkhin Gol 2 World War II 2 1 Before the War 2 1 1 Pre war military exercises 2 1 2 Soviet offensive controversy 2 2 The Eastern front 2 2 1 Germany invades the Soviet Union 2 2 2 Battle of Kursk 2 3 Surrender of Germany 2 3 1 March on Berlin 3 Post war service 3 1 Soviet occupation zone 3 2 Inter allied diplomacy 3 3 Decline of career 3 4 Relationship with Stalin 4 Political career 4 1 Arresting Beria 4 2 Minister of Defense 4 3 Fall from power 5 Later life 5 1 Retirement 5 2 Death 6 Family 7 Legacy 8 In popular culture 9 Decorations 9 1 Imperial Russia 9 2 Soviet Union 9 3 Foreign 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and career editZhukov was born into a poor peasant family of Russian 3 ethnicity in Strelkovka Maloyaroslavsky Kaluga Governorate in western Russia 4 His father Konstantin who had been orphaned at the age of two and then adopted by Anuska Zhukova was a cobbler 5 His mother Ustin ya was a peasant laborer Zhukov was said to resemble his mother and he believed he inherited his physical strength from her Ustin ya was reportedly able to accomplish demanding tasks such as carrying 200 pound 91 kg sacks of grain over long distances 5 In an era when most members of Russia s poor and working classes completed only two years of schooling Zhukov completed the three year primary education course at his hometown school 5 He was then apprenticed to his mother s brother Mikhail as a furrier in Moscow 6 While working for his uncle Zhukov supplemented his education by reading with his cousin Alexander on a wide range of topics including the Russian language German language science geography and mathematics 6 In addition he enrolled in a night school where he completed courses as the work in his uncle s shop permitted 6 He completed his apprenticeship in 1914 and established his own fur business which included three young employees under his leadership 6 Zhukov was tall especially for his time period standing 1 88 m 6 ft 2 in 7 8 9 World War I edit nbsp Non commissioned officer Georgy Zhukov Russian Imperial army 1916In 1914 Zhukov was conscripted into the Imperial Russian Army where he served in the 10th Dragoon Novgorod Regiment and was wounded in action against the Germans at Kharkov During World War I Zhukov was awarded the Cross of St George twice for heroism and promoted to the non commissioned officer ranks in recognition of his bravery in battle He joined the Russian Communist Party Bolsheviks after the 1917 October Revolution his background of poverty became a significant asset in party circles After recovering from a serious case of typhus he fought in the Russian Civil War serving in the Second Cavalry Brigade commanded by Semyon Timoshenko which was later absorbed into the 1st Cavalry Army led by Semyon Budyonny He completed a cavalry training course for officers in 1920 and received his commission as an officer He received the Order of the Red Banner for his part in subduing the Tambov Rebellion in 1921 10 Interwar period edit nbsp Zhukov as a regimental commander 1920s nbsp Graduates of the Leningrad Higher Cavalry School 1924 25 Sitting in the second row right to left 1 Bagramyan 3 Yeremenko Standing in the third row right to left 1 Zhukov 5 Rokossovsky Zhukov quickly advanced through the ranks as the commander of a cavalry troop and squadron and deputy commander of a cavalry regiment At the end of May 1923 he was appointed commander of the 39th Cavalry Regiment 11 In 1924 he entered the Higher School of Cavalry 12 from which he graduated the next year returning afterward to command the same regiment 13 He attended the Frunze Military Academy beginning in 1929 and graduated in 1930 14 In May 1930 Zhukov became commander of the 2nd Cavalry Brigade of the 7th Cavalry Division 15 In February 1931 he was appointed as the Assistant Inspector of Cavalry for the Red Army 16 In May 1933 Zhukov was appointed commander of the 4th Cavalry Division 16 His career was accelerated by the Great Purge when thousands of officers were arrested and shot but those associated with the First Cavalry Army were protected In 1937 Zhukov became commander of first the 3rd Cavalry Corps and later the 6th Cavalry Corps 17 In 1938 he became deputy cavalry commander of the Belorussian Military District 18 Khalkhin Gol edit In 1938 Zhukov was directed to command the First Soviet Mongolian Army Group and saw action against Japan s Kwantung Army on the border between the Mongolian People s Republic and the Japanese controlled state of Manchukuo The Soviet Japanese border conflicts lasted from 1938 to 1939 What began as a border skirmish rapidly escalated into a full scale war with the Japanese pushing forward with an estimated 80 000 troops 180 tanks and 450 aircraft These events led to the strategically decisive battle of Khalkhin Gol Zhukov requested major reinforcements and on 20 August 1939 his Soviet offensive commenced After a massive artillery barrage nearly 500 BT 5 and BT 7 tanks advanced 19 supported by over 500 fighters and bombers 20 This was the Soviet Air Force s first fighter bomber operation 21 The offensive first appeared to be a typical conventional frontal attack However two tank brigades were initially held back and then ordered to advance around on both flanks supported by motorized artillery infantry and other tanks This daring and successful maneuver encircled the Japanese 6th Army and captured the enemy s vulnerable rear supply areas By 31 August the Japanese had been cleared from the disputed border leaving the Soviets clearly victorious 21 This campaign had significance beyond the immediate tactical and local outcome Zhukov demonstrated and tested the techniques later used against the Germans in the Eastern Front of the Second World War His innovations included the deployment of underwater bridges and improving the cohesion and battle effectiveness of inexperienced units by adding a few experienced battle hardened troops to bolster morale and overall training 22 Evaluation of the problems inherent in the performance of the BT tanks led to the replacement of their fire prone petrol gasoline engines with diesel engines This battle provided valuable practical knowledge that was essential to the Soviet success in development of the T 34 medium tank used in World War II After this campaign veterans were transferred to untested units to better spread the benefits of their battle experience 23 For his victory Zhukov was declared a Hero of the Soviet Union However the campaign and especially Zhukov s pioneering use of tanks remained little known outside the Soviet Union Zhukov considered Khalkhin Gol to be invaluable preparation for conducting operations during the Second World War 24 In May 1940 Zhukov became an army general making him one of the eight high ranking Red Army officers World War II editBefore the War edit Pre war military exercises edit nbsp Zhukov and Semyon Timoshenko in 1940In the autumn of 1940 Zhukov started preparing plans for the military exercise concerning the defence of the Western border of the Soviet Union It had been pushed further to the west after the Soviet Union annexed eastern Poland and the Baltic republics 25 In his memoirs Zhukov reports that in this exercise he commanded the Western or Blue forces the supposed invasion troops and his opponent was Colonel General Dmitry Pavlov the commander of the Eastern or Red forces the supposed Soviet troops He noted that Blue had 60 divisions while Red had 50 divisions Zhukov describes the exercise as being similar to events that later took place during the German invasion 26 Russian historian Bobylev noted that the details of the exercises were reported differently by the various participants who published memoirs 27 He said that there were two exercises one from 2 to 6 January 1941 for the North West direction another from 8 to 11 January for the South West direction 27 During the first Western forces attacked Eastern forces on 15 July but the Eastern forces counterattacked and by 1 August reached the original border 27 At the time the Eastern forces had a numerical advantage 51 infantry divisions against 41 8 811 tanks against 3 512 with the exception of anti tank guns 27 Bobylev describes how by the end of the exercise the Eastern forces did not manage to surround and destroy the Western forces In their turn the Western forces threatened to surround the Eastern forces 27 The same historian reported that the second game was won by the Easterners meaning that on the whole both games were won by the side commanded by Zhukov 27 However he noted that the games had a serious disadvantage since they did not consider an initial attack by Western forces but only an attack by Eastern forces from the initial border 27 According to Marshal Aleksandr Vasilevsky the war game defeat of Pavlov s Red Troops against Zhukov was not widely known The victory of Zhukov s Red Troops was widely publicized which created a popular illusion of easy success for a preemptive offensive 28 On 1 February 1941 Zhukov became chief of the Red Army s General Staff 29 He was also elected a candidate member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union In February 1941 and was appointed a Deputy People s Commissar for Defence in March Soviet offensive controversy edit See also Soviet offensive plans controversy From 2 February 1941 as the chief of the general staff and Deputy Minister of Defense Zhukov was said to take part in drawing up the Strategic plan for deployment of the forces of the Soviet Union in the event of war with Germany and its allies 30 The plan was completed no later than 15 May 1941 according to a dated document found in the Soviet archives after they were declassified in the 1990s Some researchers such as Victor Suvorov have theorized that on 14 May Soviet People s Commissar of Defense Semyon Timoshenko and General Zhukov presented these plans to Stalin for a preemptive attack against Germany through Southern Poland Soviet forces would occupy the Vistula Border and continue to Katowice or even Berlin should the main German armies retreat or the Baltic coast should German forces not retreat and be forced to protect Poland and East Prussia The attacking Soviets were supposed to reach Siedlce Deblin and then capture Warsaw before penetrating toward the southwest and imposing final defeat at Lublin 31 Historians do not have the original documents that could verify the existence of such a plan and there is no evidence that Stalin accepted it In a transcript of an interview on 26 May 1965 Zhukov said that Stalin did not approve the plan But Zhukov did not clarify whether execution was attempted As of 1999 update no other approved plan for a Soviet attack had been found 32 On 10 June 1941 Zhukov sent a message to the Military Council of the Kiev Special Military District after someone most likely the commander of the Kiev district Mikhail Kirponos had ordered troops on the border to occupy forward positions Zhukov ordered Such action could provoke the Germans into armed confrontation fraught with all sorts of consequences Revoke this order immediately and report who specifically gave such an unauthorised order On 11 June he sent a telegram saying that his immediate superior Timoshenko had ordered that they were to report back by 16 June confirming that the troops had been withdrawn from their forward positions According to the historian David E Murphy the action by Timoshenko and Zhukov must have been initiated at the request of Stalin 33 David Glantz and Jonathan House American scholars of the Red Army argue that the Soviet Union was not ready for war in June 1941 nor did it intend as some have contended to launch a preventative war 34 Gerhard Weinberg a scholar of Nazi foreign policy supports their view arguing that Adolf Hitler s decision to launch Operation Barbarossa was not because of a sense of urgent foreboding but rather from a purposeful determination and he had started his planning for the invasion well in advance of the summer of 1941 35 The Eastern front edit Germany invades the Soviet Union edit nbsp Zhukov speaking in 1941On 22 June 1941 Germany launched Operation Barbarossa an invasion of the Soviet Union On the same day Zhukov responded by signing the Directive of Peoples Commissariat of Defence No 3 which ordered an all out counteroffensive by Red Army forces He commanded the troops to encircle and destroy the enemy grouping near Suwalki and to seize the Suwalki region by the evening of 24 June and to encircle and destroy the enemy grouping invading in the Vladimir Volynia and Brody direction and even to seize the Lublin region by the evening of 24 June 36 This manoeuvre failed and disorganized Red Army units were destroyed by the Wehrmacht 37 Zhukov subsequently claimed that he was forced by Joseph Stalin to sign the directive supposedly written by Aleksandr Vasilevsky 38 despite the reservations that he raised 39 When Stalin arrived unannounced at command headquarters on 29 June demanding to know why he was not being told what was happening at the front Zhukov courageously told him Comrade Stalin our duty is first of all to help the front commanders and only then to inform you But when he had to admit that they lost contact with the front commanders in Belarus Stalin lost his temper and called him useless 40 On 29 July Zhukov was removed from his post of chief of the general staff In his memoirs he gives his suggested abandoning of Kiev to avoid an encirclement as a reason for it 41 On the next day the decision was made official and he was appointed the commander of the Reserve Front 41 There he oversaw the Yelnya offensive delivering the Red Army s first victory over the Germans On 10 September Zhukov was made the commander of the Leningrad Front 42 There he oversaw the defense of the city On 6 October Zhukov was appointed the representative of Stavka for the Reserve and Western Fronts 43 On 10 October those fronts were merged into the Western Front under Zhukov s command 44 This front then participated in the Battle of Moscow and several Battles of Rzhev In late August 1942 Zhukov was made deputy commander in chief and sent to the southwestern front to take charge of the defence of Stalingrad 45 He and Vasilevsky later planned the Stalingrad counteroffensive 46 In November Zhukov was sent to coordinate the Western Front and the Kalinin Front during Operation Mars In January 1943 he together with Kliment Voroshilov coordinated the actions of the Leningrad and Volkhov Fronts and the Baltic Fleet in Operation Iskra 47 On January 18 1943 Zhukov was promoted to Marshal of the Soviet Union 48 Battle of Kursk edit nbsp Zhukov and Ivan Konev during the Battle of Kursk 1943Zhukov was a Stavka coordinator at the battle of Kursk in July 1943 He was considered the main architect of the Soviet victory together with Vasilevsky 49 According to Zhukov s memoirs he played a central role in the planning of the battle and the hugely successful offensive that followed Commander of the Central Front Konstantin Rokossovsky said however that the planning and decisions for the Battle of Kursk were made without Zhukov that he only arrived just before the battle made no decisions and left soon afterward and that Zhukov exaggerated his role 50 A sense of the nature of the beginning of Rokossovsky s famous World War II rivalry with Zhukov can be gathered from reading Rokossovsky s comments in an official report on Zhukov s character 51 Has a strong will Decisive and firm Often demonstrates initiative and skillfully applies it Disciplined Demanding and persistent in his demands A somewhat ungracious and not sufficiently sympathetic person Rather stubborn Painfully proud In professional terms well trained Broadly experienced as a military leader Absolutely cannot be used in staff or teaching jobs because constitutionally he hates them From 12 February 1944 Zhukov coordinated the actions of the 1st Ukrainian and 2nd Ukrainian Fronts 52 On 1 March Zhukov was appointed the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front until early May following the ambush of Nikolai Vatutin its commander by the anti Soviet Ukrainian Insurgent Army near Ostroh 53 During the Soviet offensive named Operation Bagration Zhukov coordinated the 1st Belorussian and 2nd Belorussian Fronts and later the 1st Ukrainian Front as well 54 On 23 August Zhukov was sent to the 3rd Ukrainian Front to prepare for the advance into Bulgaria 55 Surrender of Germany edit March on Berlin edit On 16 November he became commander of the 1st Belorussian Front which took part in the Vistula Oder offensive and the Battle of Berlin 56 He called on his troops to remember our brothers and sisters our mothers and fathers our wives and children tortured to death by Germans We shall exact a brutal revenge for everything More than 20 million Soviet soldiers and civilians died as a result of the war In a reprise of atrocities committed by German soldiers against Soviet civilians in the eastward advance into Soviet territory during Operation Barbarossa the westward march by Soviet forces was marked by brutality towards German civilians which included looting burning and systematic rapes 57 Zhukov was chosen to personally accept the German Instrument of Surrender in Berlin 58 Post war service editSoviet occupation zone edit nbsp Zhukov Montgomery Sokolovsky and Rokossovsky at the Brandenburg GateAfter the German capitulation Zhukov became the first commander of the Soviet occupation zone On 10 June 1945 he returned to Moscow to prepare for the Moscow Victory Parade of 1945 On 24 June Stalin appointed him commander in chief of the parade After the ceremony on the night of 24 June Zhukov went to Berlin to resume his command 59 In May 1945 Zhukov signed three resolutions to improve living standards in the Soviet occupation zone 11 May resolution 063 provision of food 12 May resolution 064 restoration of the public services sector 13 May resolution 080 provision of milk supplies for childrenZhukov requested the Soviet government to transport urgently to Berlin 96 000 tons of grain 60 000 tons of potatoes 50 000 cattle and thousands of tons of other foodstuffs such as sugar and animal fat He issued strict orders that his subordinates were to hate Nazism but respect the German people 60 and to make all possible efforts to restore and maintain a stable living standard for the German population 61 Inter allied diplomacy edit nbsp Zhukov sharing a toast with Eisenhower Montgomery and other Allied officials June 1945From 16 July to 2 August Zhukov participated in the Potsdam Conference with the fellow representatives of the Allied governments As one of the four commanders of the Allied occupational forces Zhukov established good relationships with his new colleagues General Dwight D Eisenhower Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery and Marshal Jean de Lattre and the four frequently exchanged views about such matters as the sentencing trials and judgments of war criminals geopolitical relationships between the Allied states and how to defeat Japan and rebuild Germany Eisenhower developed a good relationship with Zhukov and it proved beneficial in resolving differences in post war occupational issues 62 Eisenhower s successor General Lucius D Clay also praised the Zhukov Eisenhower friendship and commented The Soviet America relationship should have developed well if Eisenhower and Zhukov had continued to work together 63 Zhukov and Eisenhower went on to tour the Soviet Union together in the immediate aftermath of the victory over Germany 64 During this tour Eisenhower introduced Zhukov to Coca Cola As Coca Cola was regarded in the Soviet Union as a symbol of American imperialism 65 Zhukov was apparently reluctant to be photographed or reported as consuming such a product Zhukov asked if the beverage could be made colourless to resemble vodka A European subsidiary of the Coca Cola Export Corporation delivered an initial 50 cases of White Coke to Marshal Zhukov Decline of career edit nbsp Zhukov at a post war victory parade in Sverdlovsk between 1948 1950Zhukov was not only the supreme military commander of the Soviet occupation zone but became its military governor on 10 June 1945 He was replaced with Vasily Sokolovsky on 10 April 1946 After an unpleasant session of the main military council in which Zhukov was accused of egoism disrespect to his peers and of political unreliability and hostility to the Party Central Committee he was stripped of his position as commander in chief of the Soviet Army 4 66 67 He was assigned command of the Odessa Military District far from Moscow and lacking in strategic significance and troops He arrived there on 13 June 1946 Zhukov suffered a heart attack in January 1948 spending a month in the hospital In February 1948 he was given another secondary posting this time command of the Urals Military District Peter G Tsouras described the move from Odessa to the Urals as a relegation from a second rate to a fifth rate assignment 68 Throughout this time security chief Lavrentiy Beria was supposedly trying to topple Zhukov Two of Zhukov s subordinates Marshal of Aviation Alexander Novikov and Lieutenant General Konstantin Telegin were arrested and tortured in Lefortovo Prison at the end of 1945 After Stalin s death it was claimed that Novikov was allegedly forced by Beria into a confession which implicated Zhukov in a conspiracy 69 In reality Novikov may have been encouraged to point the finger at Zhukov because he saw Zhukov s membership at the investigation commission of the Aviators Affair a purge of the Soviet aircraft industry following accusations that during the war the fighter planes had been of poor quality in which Novikov was implicated as instrumental to his downfall 4 Regardless in a conference all generals except GRU director Filipp Golikov defended Zhukov against accusation of misspending During this time Zhukov was accused of unauthorized looting of goods confiscated by the Germans and of Bonapartism 66 70 In 1946 seven rail carriages with furniture that Zhukov was taking to the Soviet Union from Germany were impounded In 1948 his apartments and house in Moscow were searched and many valuables looted from Germany were found 71 In his investigation Beria concluded that Zhukov had in his possession 17 golden rings three gemstones the faces of 15 golden necklaces more than four kilometers 2 5 mi of cloth 323 pieces of fur 44 carpets taken from German palaces 55 paintings and 20 guns 72 incomplete short citation Zhukov admitted in a memorandum to Zhdanov I felt very guilty I shouldn t have collected those useless junks and put them into some warehouse assuming nobody needs them any more I swear as a Bolshevik that I would avoid such errors and follies thereafter Surely I still and will wholeheartedly serve the Motherland the Party and the Great Comrade Stalin 73 When learning of Zhukov s misfortunes and despite not understanding all the problems Eisenhower expressed his sympathy for his comrade in arms 74 In February 1953 Stalin relieved Zhukov of his post as Commander of the Urals Military District recalling Zhukov to Moscow It was thought Zhukov s expertise was needed in the Korean War however in practice Zhukov received no orders from Stalin after arriving in Moscow On 5 March 1953 at 09 50 Stalin died of a stroke Following Stalin s passing Zhukov s life entered a new phase 63 Relationship with Stalin edit nbsp Zhukov with Stalin and Semyon Budyonny during the Soviet Victory Parade of 1945During the war Zhukov was one of only a few people who understood Stalin s personality As the chief of staff and deputy supreme commander Zhukov had hundreds of meetings with Stalin both private and during Stavka conferences Consequently Zhukov understood Stalin s personality and methods well According to Zhukov Stalin was a bold and secretive person but he was also hot tempered and skeptical Zhukov was able to gauge Stalin s mood for example when Stalin drew deeply on his tobacco pipe it was a sign of a good mood Conversely if Stalin failed to light his pipe once it was out of tobacco it was a sign of imminent rage 75 His outstanding knowledge of Stalin s personality was an asset that allowed him to deal with Stalin s outbursts in a way other Soviet generals could not 76 Both Zhukov and Stalin were hot tempered and both made concessions necessary to sustain their relationship While Zhukov viewed his relationship with Stalin as one of a subordinate senior Stalin was in awe and possibly jealous of Zhukov Both were military commanders but Stalin s experience was limited to a previous generation of non mechanized warfare By contrast Zhukov was highly influential in the development of contemporary combined operations of highly mechanized armies The differences in their outlooks were the cause of many tempestuous disagreements between the two of them at Stavka meetings Nonetheless Zhukov was less competent than Stalin as a politician highlighted by Zhukov s many failures in politics Stalin s unwillingness to value Zhukov beyond the marshal s military talents was one of the reasons why Zhukov was recalled from Berlin 77 Significant to their relationship as well was Zhukov s bluntness towards his superior Stalin was dismissive of the fawning of many of his entourage and openly criticized it 78 Many people around Stalin including Beria Yezhov and Mekhlis felt obliged to flatter Stalin to remain on his good side 79 Zhukov remained obstinate and argumentative and did not hesitate to publicly contradict Stalin to the point of risking his career and life Their heated argument about whether to abandon Kiev due to the Germans rapid advance in summer of 1941 was typical of Zhukov s approach 80 Zhukov s ability to remain skeptical and unwavering at giving into pressure did garner him the respect of Stalin Political career editArresting Beria edit After Stalin s death Zhukov returned to favor becoming Deputy Defence Minister in 1953 He then had an opportunity to avenge himself on Beria With Stalin s sudden death the Soviet Union fell into a leadership crisis Georgy Malenkov temporarily became First Secretary Malenkov and his allies attempted to purge Stalin s influence and personality cult however Malenkov himself did not have the courage to do this alone Moreover Lavrentiy Beria remained dangerous The politicians sought reinforcement from the powerful and prestigious military men In this matter Nikita Khrushchev chose Zhukov because the two had forged a good relationship and in addition during World War II Zhukov had twice saved Khrushchev from false accusations 81 82 On 26 June 1953 a special meeting of the Soviet Politburo was held by Malenkov Beria came to the meeting with an uneasy feeling because it was called hastily indeed Zhukov had ordered General Kirill Moskalenko to secretly prepare a special force and permitted the force to use two of Zhukov s and Defence Minister Nikolai Bulganin s special cars which had tinted windows in order to safely infiltrate the Kremlin Zhukov also ordered him to replace the MVD Guard with the guard of the Moscow Military District Finally Khrushchev suggested expelling Beria from the Communist Party and bringing him before a military court Moskalenko s special forces obeyed 83 84 Zhukov was a member of the military tribunal during the Beria trial which was headed by Marshal Ivan Konev 85 On 18 December 1953 the Military Court sentenced Beria to death During the burial of Beria Konev commented The day this man was born deserves to be damned Then Zhukov said I considered it as my duty to contribute my little part in this matter 83 84 Minister of Defense edit nbsp Zhukov right with Polish Minister of Defense Konstantin Rokossovsky center and Ivan Konev in Warsaw 1955When Bulganin became premier in 1955 he appointed Zhukov as Defense Minister 85 Zhukov participated in many political activities He successfully opposed the re establishment of the Commissar system because the Party and political leaders were not professional military and thus the highest power should fall to the army commanders Until 1955 Zhukov had both sent and received letters from Eisenhower Both leaders agreed that the two superpowers should coexist peacefully 86 In July 1955 Zhukov together with Khrushchev Bulganin Vyacheslav Molotov and Andrei Gromyko participated in a Summit Conference at Geneva after the USSR signed the Austrian State Treaty and withdrew its army from the country Zhukov followed orders from the then Prime Minister Georgy Malenkov and Communist Party leader Khrushchev during the invasion of Hungary following the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 87 Along with the majority of members of the Presidium he urged Khrushchev to send troops to support the Hungarian authorities and to secure the Austrian border Zhukov and most of the Presidium were not however eager to see a full scale intervention in Hungary Zhukov even recommended the withdrawal of Soviet troops when it seemed that they might have to take extreme measures to suppress the revolution The mood in the Presidium changed again when Hungary s new Prime Minister Imre Nagy began to talk about Hungarian withdrawal from the Warsaw Pact That led the Soviets to attack the revolutionaries and to replace Nagy with Janos Kadar In the same years when the UK France and Israel invaded Egypt during the Suez crisis Zhukov expressed support for Egypt s right of self defense In October 1957 Zhukov visited Yugoslavia and Albania aboard the Chapayev class cruiser Kuibyshev attempting to repair the Tito Stalin split of 1948 88 During the voyage Kuibyshev encountered units of the U S Sixth Fleet and passing honours in the form of full salvos were exchanged between the vessels Fall from power edit nbsp Zhukov c 1960On his 60th birthday in 1956 Zhukov received his fourth Hero of the Soviet Union title making him the first person to receive the honour four times The only other four time recipient was Leonid Brezhnev who never rose above modest military rank and received all of his four Hero of the Soviet Union medals for his birthday as part of his overall cult of personality and love for medals titles and decorations Despite his general lack of political ability Zhukov became the highest ranking military professional who was also a member of the Presidium of the Central Committee of the Communist Party He further became a symbol of national strength the most widely esteemed Soviet military hero of World War II Zhukov s prestige was even higher than the police and security agencies of the USSR and thus rekindled concerns among political leaders Going even further than Khrushchev Zhukov demanded that the political agencies in the Red Army report to him before the Party He demanded an official condemnation of Stalin s crimes during the Great Purge citation needed He also supported the political vindication and rehabilitation for Mikhail Tukhachevsky Grigoriy Shtern Vasily Blyukher Alexander Yegorov and many others In response his opponents accused him of being a Reformist and Bonapartist Such enviousness and hostility proved to be the key factor that led to his later downfall 89 The relationship between Zhukov and Khrushchev reached its peak during the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union CPSU in 1956 After becoming the First Secretary of the Party Khrushchev moved against Stalin s legacy and criticised his personality cult in a speech On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences To complete such startling acts Khrushchev needed the approval or at least the acquiescence of the military headed by Minister of Defense Zhukov At the plenary session of the Central Committee of the CPSU held in June 1957 Zhukov supported Khrushchev against the Anti Party Group that had a majority in the Presidium and voted to replace Khrushchev as First Secretary with Bulganin At that plenum Zhukov stated The Army is against this resolution and not even a tank will leave its position without my order 90 In the same session the Anti Party Group was condemned and Zhukov was made a member of the Presidium His second fall was more sudden and public even than his first On 4 October 1957 he left on an official visit to Yugoslavia and Albania 91 He returned to Moscow on 26 October straight to a meeting of the Presidium during which he was removed from that body On 2 November the Central Committee convened to hear Zhukov being accused of non party behaviour conducting an adventurist foreign policy and sponsoring his own personality cult He was expelled from the Central Committee and sent into forced retirement at age 62 The same issue of the Krasnaya Zvezda that announced Zhukov s return also reported that he had been relieved of his duties 92 According to many researchers Soviet politicians including Khrushchev himself had a deep seated fear of powerful people 93 94 Later life editRetirement edit nbsp Zhukov on holiday in SochiAfter being forced out of the government Zhukov stayed away from politics Many people including former subordinates frequently paid him visits joined him on hunting excursions and waxed nostalgic In September 1959 while visiting the United States Khrushchev told President Eisenhower that the retired Marshal Zhukov liked fishing Zhukov was actually a keen aquarist 95 In response Eisenhower sent Zhukov a set of fishing tackle Zhukov respected this gift so much that he is said to have exclusively used Eisenhower s fishing tackle for the remainder of his life referring to Soviet fishing tackle as substandard 96 After Khrushchev was deposed in October 1964 Brezhnev restored Zhukov to favor though not to power in a move to use Zhukov s popularity to strengthen his political position Zhukov s name was put in the public eye yet again when Brezhnev lionised Zhukov in a speech commemorating the Great Patriotic War On 9 May 1965 Zhukov was invited to sit on the tribune of the Lenin Mausoleum and given the honour of reviewing the parade of military forces in Red Square 97 Zhukov had begun writing his memoirs Memories and Recollections in 1958 He now worked intensively on them which together with steadily deteriorating health served to worsen his heart disease It would take another decade until publication after Zhukov clashed constantly with Mikhail Suslov the Communist Party s Chief Ideologue and Second in Command in charge of Censorship who demanded many revisions and removals particularly his criticisms of Stalin Voroshilov Budyonny and Molotov After Brezhnev came to power Suslov made further demands to exaggerate Colonel Brezhnev s role in WWII by glorifying the little known and strategically unimportant Battles of Malaya Zemlya and Novorossiysk as a decisive turning point in the Eastern Front both of which Zhukov refused to do 98 In December 1967 Zhukov had a serious stroke He was hospitalised until June 1968 and continued to receive medical and rehabilitative treatment at home under the care of his second wife Galina Semyonova a former officer in the Medical Corps The stroke left him paralysed on his left side his speech became slurred and he could only walk with assistance His memoirs were published in 1969 and became a best seller Within several months of the date of publication of his memoirs Zhukov had received more than 10 000 letters from readers that offered comments expressed gratitude gave advice or lavished praise Supposedly the Communist Party invited Zhukov to participate in the 24th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1971 but the invitation was rescinded 99 Death edit nbsp Zhukov s grave in the Kremlin Wall NecropolisZhukov died in Moscow Russian SFSR on 18 June 1974 at age 77 after suffering a stroke 100 His body was cremated and his ashes were buried at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis alongside fellow generals and marshals of the Soviet Union during his funeral 101 In 1995 an equestrian statue of Zhukov was erected in front of the State Historical Museum 102 Family editFather Konstantin Artemyevich Zhukov 1851 1921 a shoemaker Mother Ustinina Artemievna Zhukova 1866 1944 farmer from a poor family Siblings 1 Maria Kostantinovna Zhukova 1894 1954 2 Alexei Konstantinovich Zhukov born 1901 died prematurely Spouses nbsp Alexandra Dievna Zhukova the Russian wife of Marshal Zhukov1 Alexandra Dievna Zuikova 1900 1967 common law wife since 1920 married in 1953 divorced in 1965 died after a stroke 2 Galina Alexandrovna Semyonova 1926 1973 103 married in 1965 medical corps officer at Burdenko hospital specialized in therapeutics died of breast cancer Children 1 Era Zhukova born 1928 by Alexandra Dievna Zukova 2 Margarita Zhukova 1929 2010 by Maria Nikolaevna Volokhova 1897 1983 3 Ella Zhukova 1937 2010 by Alexandra Dievna Zukova 4 Maria Zhukova born 1957 by Galina Alexandrovna SemyonovaLegacy edit nbsp Russian president Dmitry Medvedev and Mongolian president Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj visit the monument to Georgy Zhukov in Ulaanbaatar near the Zhukov Museum in Zhukov Street Mongolian Zhukovyn gudamzh in memory of the Battle of Khalkin Gol The first monument to Georgy Zhukov was erected in Mongolia in memory of the Battle of Khalkin Gol After the dissolution of the Soviet Union this monument was one of the few that did not suffer from anti Soviet backlash in former Communist states There is a statue of Zhukov on horseback as he appeared at the 1945 victory parade on Manezhnaya Square at the entrance of the Kremlin in Moscow Another statue of Zhukov in Moscow is located on Prospekt Marshala Zhukova A statue of Zhukov is located in the town of Irbit in the Sverdlovsk Oblast Other statues of Zhukov are found in Omsk Irkutsk and Yekaterinburg A minor planet 2132 Zhukov discovered in 1975 by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Chernykh is named in his honour 104 In 1996 Russia adopted the Order of Zhukov and the Zhukov Medal to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his birthday Nobel laureate Joseph Brodsky s poem On the Death of Zhukov Na smert Zhukova 1974 is regarded by critics as one of the best poems on the war written by an author of the post war generation 105 The poem is a stylization of The Bullfinch Derzhavin s elegy on the death of Generalissimo Suvorov in 1800 Brodsky draws a parallel between the careers of these two famous commanders Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn re interpreted Zhukov s memoirs in the short story Times of Crisis In his book of recollections 106 Zhukov was critical of the role the Soviet leadership played during the war The first edition of Vospominaniya i razmyshleniya was published during Leonid Brezhnev s premiership only on the conditions that criticism of Stalin was removed and that Zhukov add a fictional episode of a visit to Brezhnev politruk on the Southern Front to consult on military strategy 107 In 1989 parts of previously unpublished and censored chapters from Zhukov s memoir were published by Pravda which his daughter said had been hidden in a safe until they could be published The excerpts included criticism of the 1937 1939 purges for annihilating M any thousands of outstanding party workers and stated that Stalin had played no role in directing the war effort although he often issued orders devised by the general staff as if they were his own 108 Appraisals of Zhukov s career vary For example historian Konstantin Zaleski claimed that Zhukov exaggerated his own role in World War II 109 Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky said that the planning and decisions for the Battle of Kursk were made without Zhukov that he only arrived just before the battle made no decisions and left soon after 50 Zhukov also received many positive comments mostly from his Army companions from the modern Russian Army and from his Allied contemporaries General of the Army Dwight D Eisenhower stated that because of Zhukov s achievements fighting the Nazis the United Nations owed him much more than any other military leader in the world The war in Europe ended with victory and nobody could have done that better than Marshal Zhukov we owed him that credit He is a modest person and so we can t undervalue his position in our mind When we can come back to our Motherland there must be another type of Order in Russia an Order named after Zhukov which is awarded to everybody who can learn the bravery the far vision and the decisiveness of this soldier 110 nbsp Zhukov depicted on a 1990 Soviet ruble commemorative coinMarshal of the Soviet Union Aleksandr Vasilevsky commented that Zhukov is one of the most outstanding and brilliant military commanders of the Soviet military forces 111 Major General Sir Francis de Guingand chief of staff of Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery described Zhukov as a friendly person 112 John Gunther who met Zhukov many times after the war said that Zhukov was more friendly and honest than any of the other Soviet leaders 113 John Eisenhower son of Dwight Eisenhower claimed that Zhukov was really ebullient and was a friend of his 86 Albert Axell in his work Marshal Zhukov the one who beat Hitler claimed that Zhukov was a military genius like Alexander the Great and Napoleon Axell also commented that Zhukov was a loyal communist and a patriot 114 At the end of his work about Zhukov Otto Chaney concluded But Zhukov belongs to all of us In the darkest period of World War II his fortitude and determination eventually triumphed For Russians and people everywhere he remains an enduring symbol of victory on the battlefield 115 In Russia Zhukov is often credited for his prophetic words spoken to Konstantin Rokossovsky in Berlin in 1945 We have liberated them and they will never forgive us for that 116 In popular culture editZhukov has been portrayed by the following actors Fedor Blazhevich in The Vow and The Fall of Berlin Mikhail Ulyanov in Stalingrad Liberation Battle of Moscow and Take Aim Vladimir Menshov in The General and Liquidation Valeriy Grishko in White Tiger Jason Isaacs in The Death of StalinStar Trek The Next Generation producers named an Ambassador class starship after Zhukov which was mentioned or made an appearance on several episodes of the series Decorations edit nbsp Russian President Dmitry Medvedev laying a wreath at a monument to Zhukov in Ulaanbaatar while on a state visit to Mongolia in August 2009 nbsp Marshal Zhukov depicted on facade of Victory Memorial Prokhorovka RussiaZhukov was the recipient of many decorations Most notably he was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union four times The medals of the only other four time recipient Leonid Brezhnev were the result of self awarding as birthday gifts Zhukov was one of only three recipients to receive the Order of Victory twice He was also awarded high honours from many other countries A partial listing is presented below Imperial Russia edit Cross of St George 3rd classCross of St George 4th classSoviet Union edit Hero of the Soviet Union 29 August 1940 29 July 1944 1 June 1945 1 December 1956 Order of Victory Serial No 1 10 April 1944 and Serial No 5 30 March 1945 Order of Lenin 16 August 1936 29 August 1939 21 February 1945 1 December 1956 1 December 1966 1 December 1971 Order of the October Revolution 22 February 1968 Order of the Red Banner 31 August 1922 3 November 1944 20 June 1949 Order of Suvorov 1st class Serial No 1 28 January 1943 and Serial No 39 28 July 1943 Medal For the Defence of Stalingrad Medal For the Defence of Leningrad Medal For the Defence of the Caucasus Medal For the Defence of Moscow Medal For the Liberation of Warsaw Medal For the Capture of Berlin 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 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 Jubilee Medal In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Medal In Commemoration of the 250th Anniversary of Leningrad Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow Honorary weapon sword inscribed with golden national emblem of the Soviet UnionForeign edit Hero of the Mongolian People s Republic Mongolian People s Republic 1969 Order of Sukhbaatar Mongolian People s Republic 1968 1969 1971 Order of the Red Banner Mongolian People s Republic 1939 1942 Medal 30 Years of the Victory in Khalkhin Gol Mongolian People s Republic Medal 50 Years of the Mongolian People s Revolution Mongolian People s Republic Medal For Victory over Japan Mongolian People s Republic Medal 50 Years of the Mongolian People s Army Mongolian People s Republic Order of the White Lion 1st class Czechoslovakia Military Order of the White Lion 1st class Czechoslovakia War Cross 1939 1945 Czechoslovakia Virtuti Militari 1st class Poland Order of Polonia Restituta 1st class Poland Order of Polonia Restituta 3rd class Poland Cross of Grunwald 1st class Poland Medal For Warsaw 1939 1945 Poland Medal For Oder Neisse and the Baltic Poland Medal 25 Years of the Bulgarian People s Army Bulgaria Medal 90th Anniversary of the Birth of Georgi Dimitrov Bulgaria Garibaldi Partisan Star Italy 1956 Grand Cross of the Order of Merit Egypt 1956 Grand Officer of the Legion d Honneur France 1945 Croix de guerre France 1945 Honorary Knight Grand Cross Order of the Bath military division UK 1945 Chief Commander Legion of Merit United States 1946 Order of Freedom Yugoslavia 1956 Medal of Sino Soviet Friendship China 1953 and 1956 References editCitations edit Roberts Geoffrey 2012 The Rise and Fall of a Great Captain Barnsley South Yorkshire United Kingdom Pen and Sword Books p 192 ISBN 978 0891414698 Sto velikih polkovodcev Istoriya RF A hundred great military commanders 100 histrf ru Russian Military Historical Society Archived from the original on 25 March 2023 Zhukov Georgij Konstantinovich warheroes ru a b c Roberts Geoffrey 2012 Stalin s General The Life of Georgy Zhukov London Icon Books pp 11 244 245 ISBN 978 1 8483 1443 6 via Google Books a b c Stalin s General p 12 a b c d Stalin s General p 13 Georgij Zhukov Uznajvsyo Georgij Zhukov biografiya rost rostves info 14 December 2021 Georgij Zhukov 24SMI in Russian B V Sokolov 2000 V ogne revolyucii i grazhdanskoj vojny in Neizvestnyj Zhukov portret bez retushi v zerkale epohi Minsk Rodiola plus Zhukov 2002 pp 79 90 Zhukov 2002 p 87 Zhukov 2002 p 89 Stalin s General p 49 Zhukov 2002 p 99 a b M A Gareev 1996 Marshal Zhukov Velichie i unikalnost polkovodcheskogo iskusstva Ufa Zhukov 2002 p 151 Zhukov 2002 p 158 Coox 1985 p 579 Coox 1985 p 590 a b Coox 1985 p 633 Coox 1985 pp 991 998 Coox 1985 p 998 Coox 1985 p 996 Folio 37977 inventory 5 file 564 sheets 32 34 Central State Archive of the Red Army TsGAKA Zhukov 2002 pp 224 225 a b c d e f g P N BOBYLEV Repeticiya katastrofy Voenno istoricheskij zhurnal 7 8 1993 g 1 Vasilevsky 1973 p 24 Zhukov 2002 p 205 A M Vasilevsky May 1941 Soobrazheniya po planu strategicheskogo razvyortyvaniya sil Sovetskogo Soyuza na sluchaj vojny s Germaniej i eyo soyuznikami Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 Retrieved 4 June 2012 tuad nsk ru Viktor Suvorov 2006 Strategicheskie zamysly Stalina nakanune 22 iyunya 1941 goda in Pravda Viktora Suvorova perepisyvaya istoriyu Vtoroj mirovoj Moscow Yauza Mikhail I Meltyukhov 1999 Upushennyj shans Stalina Sovetskij Soyuz i borba za Evropu 1939 1941 Moscow Murphy David E 2005 What Stalin Knew The Enigma of Barbarossa New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 135 136 ISBN 0 300 10780 3 Uldricks 1999 p 629 Uldricks 1999 pp 629 630 Chant Christopher 2020 Operation Barbarossa Retrieved 24 May 2020 Kashuba Steven 2013 Destination Gulag Bloomington Trafford Publishing p 260 ISBN 978 1 4669 8312 0 P Ya Mezhiritzky 2002 Reading Marshal Zhukov Philadelphia Libas Consulting chapter 32 Zhukov 2003 p 269 Pleshakov Constantine 2005 Stalin s Folly The Secret History of the German Invasion of Russia June 1941 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 214 ISBN 978 0 297 84626 0 a b Zhukov 2003 p 353 Zhukov 2003 p 382 Zhukov 2003 p 8 Zhukov 2003 p 16 Chaney 1996 pp 212 213 Chaney 1996 p 224 Mahmut A Gareev Marshal Zhukov Velichie i unikalnost polkovodcheskogo iskusstva M Ufa 1996 Ziemke Earl Frederick Bauer Magna E 1987 Moscow to Stalingrad Decision in the East Washington DC Center of Military History United States Army p 507 ISBN 978 0 1608 0081 8 via Google Books Roberts Geoffrey 2006 Stalin s Wars From World War to Cold War 1939 1953 New Haven CT Yale University Press p 159 ISBN 0 300 11204 1 a b Voenno istoricheskij zhurnal 1992 N3 p 31 Kokoshin Andreĭ Afanas evich 1998 Soviet Strategic Thought 1917 1991 MIT Press p 43 Zhukov 2003 p 205 Zhukov 2003 pp 209 217 Zhukov 2003 p 222 Zhukov 2003 p 246 Zhukov 2003 p 259 William I Hitchcock The Bitter Road to Freedom A New History of the Liberation of Europe 2008 pp 160 161 Zhukov 2003 p 332 Shtemenko 1989 pp 566 569 Tibbetts Jann 2016 50 Great Military Leaders of All Time Vij Books India ISBN 978 93 85505 66 9 Grigori Deborin 1958 Vtoraya mirovaya vojna Voenno politicheskij ocherk Moscow Voenizdat pp 340 343 Clark Douglas E 2013 Eisenhower in Command at Columbia Lanham MD Lexington Books p 33 ISBN 978 0 7391 7836 2 a b Axell 2003 p 356 Chaney 1996 pp 346 347 Mark Pendergrast 15 August 1993 Viewpoints A Brief History of Coca Colonization The New York Times Retrieved 12 September 2012 a b Boterbloem Kees 1 March 2004 Life and Times of Andrei Zhdanov 1896 1948 McGill Queen s Press MQUP p 477 ISBN 978 0 7735 7173 0 Spahr 1993 pp 200 205 Tsouras P G 1994 Changing Orders The evolution of the World s Armies 1945 to the Present Facts on File pp 43 44 ISBN 0 8160 3122 3 Kornukov A M 2 Chief Marshal of Aviation AA Novikov His 100th Birthday Warheroes ru Retrieved on 8 July 2019 I S Konev 1991 Zapiski komanduyushego frontom Diary of the Front Commander Voenizdat Moscow pp 594 599 Warheroes ru Retrieved on 12 July 2013 Boris Vadimovich Sokolov 2000 Neizvestnyj Zhukov portret bez retushi v zerkale epohi Unknown Zhukov Minsk Rodiola plyus ISBN 985 448 036 4 Zhukov Georgij Konstantinovich BIOGRAFIChESKIJ UKAZATEL Hrono ru Retrieved on 12 July 2013 Voennye arhivy Rossii M 1993 p 244 The New York Times 29 July 1955 G K Zhukov Reminiscences and Reflections vol 2 pp 139 150 Axell 2003 p 280 Chaney 1996 Shtemenko 1989 p 587 Vasilevsky 1973 p 62 A I Sethi Marshal Zhukov The Great Strategician New Delhi 1988 p 187 Vasilevsky 1973 p 137 Sergei Khrushchev 1990 Khrushchev on Khrushchev An Inside Account of the Man and His Era Little Brown amp Company Boston pp 243 272 317 ISBN 0316491942 a b K S Moskalenko 1990 The arrest of Beria Newspaper Moskovskie novosti No 23 a b Afanasyev 1989 p 141 a b Associated Press 9 February 1955 reported in The Albuquerque Journal p 1 a b John Eisenhower 1974 Strictly Personal New York 1974 p 237 ISBN 0385070713 Johanna Granville 2004 The First Domino International Decision Making During the Hungarian Crisis of 1956 Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 1 58544 298 4 Spahr 1993 pp 235 238 Spahr 1993 p 391 Afanasyev 1989 pp 151 152 Chaney 1996 pp 444 445 Spahr 1993 p 238 Afanasyev 1989 p 152 Chaney 1996 pp 453 455 Nowak Eugeniusz 1998 Erinnerungen an Ornithologen die ich kannte J Ornithol in German 139 3 325 348 doi 10 1007 BF01653343 S2CID 28973619 Korda M 2008 Ike An American Hero Axell 2003 p 277 Thelman Joseph December 2012 The Man in Galoshes Jew Observer Retrieved 28 February 2021 Spahr 1993 p 411 MARSHAL RIUKOV IS REPORTED DEAD The New York Times 19 June 1974 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 September 2023 State funeral of Soviet Hero Marshal Zhukov in Moscow Pohorony Zhukov retrieved 20 August 2023 Williams C J 2 May 1995 At Last a Soviet Hero Gets Respect Marshal Georgi Zhukov was demoted twice after leading victorious World War II forces Now he is being honored with a medal a monument and a museum LA Times Retrieved 23 July 2019 Tony Le Tissier 1996 Zhukov at the Oder The Decisive Battle for Berlin London p 258 ISBN 0811736091 Schmadel Lutz D 2003 Dictionary of Minor Planet Names 5th ed New York Springer Verlag p 173 ISBN 3 540 00238 3 Shlapentokh Dmitry The Russian boys and their last poet The National Interest 22 June 1996 Retrieved on 17 July 2002 Zhukov G K 2002 Vospominaniya i razmyshleniya Archived 26 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine Olma Press Koivisto Mauno 2001 Venajan idea Helsinki Tammi Soviets Print Excerpts of Attack by Zhukov on Stalin s War Role The New York Times 21 January 1989 Retrieved 20 March 2018 Zalesskij K A Imperiya Stalina Biograficheskij enciklopedicheskij slovar Moskva Veche 2000 Zhukov Georgij Konstantinovich Hronos biografii in Russian Eisenhower Dwight D 1948 Crusade in Europe New York Vasilevsky 1973 p 568 de Guingand Francis 1972 Generals at War London Gunther John 1958 Inside Russia Today New York The general who defeated Hitler 8 May 2005 BBC Vietnamese in Vietnamese Chaney 1996 p 483 My ih osvobodili i oni nam etogo nikogda ne prostyat prorocheskaya fraza marshala Pobedy Georgiya Zhukova We have liberated them and they will never forgive us for that the prophetic phrase of Victory Marshal Georgy Zhukov gazeta delovoy mir ru in Russian 10 June 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Bibliography edit Afanasyev Y N ed 1989 There Is No Other Way in Russian Moscow Progress Publishers OCLC 495955198 Axell A 2003 Marshal Zhukov The Man Who Beat Hitler London Pearson Longman ISBN 978 0582772335 Chaney O P 1996 Zhukov revised ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806128078 Coox A D 1985 Nomonhan Japan Against Russia 1939 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804711609 Isaev A V 2006 Zhukov The Last Argument of the King in Russian Moscow Yauza Publishing ISBN 978 5699165643 Roberts Geoffrey 2012 Stalin s General The Life of Georgy Zhukov New York Random House ISBN 978 0679645177 Shtemenko S M 1989 General Staff during the War in Russian Moscow Voenizdat ISBN 978 5203004918 Spahr W J 1993 Zhukov The Rise and Fall of a Great Captain Novato Presidio Press ISBN 978 0891414698 Uldricks T J 1999 The Icebreaker Controversy Slavic Review 58 3 626 643 doi 10 2307 2697571 JSTOR 2697571 S2CID 153701270 Vasilevsky A M 1973 A Lifelong Cause in Russian Moscow Progress Publishers OCLC 988160134 Zhukov G K 1973 The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0224619240 Zhukov G K 2002 Memories and Reflections in Russian Vol 1 Moscow Olma Press ISBN 978 5224031955 Zhukov G K 2003 Memories and Reflections in Russian Vol 2 Moscow Olma Press ISBN 978 5224031979 Zhukov Georgi 1969 Marshal Zhukov s Greatest Battles New York Harper amp Row in English edited amp commentary by Harrison E Salisbury Further reading editGoldman S D 2013 Nomonhan 1939 the Red Army s victory that shaped World War II Annapolis NIP ISBN 978 1591143390 Hill A 2017 The Red Army and the Second World War Cambridge CUP ISBN 978 1107020795 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Georgy Zhukov nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Georgy Zhukov Reminiscences and Reflections two volume English language translation of Zhukov s memoirs by Progress Publishers 1985 Volume 1 Volume 2 Georgy Zhukov Newsreels at Net Film Newsreels and Documentary Films Archive Works by Georgy Zhukov at Open Library Works by or about Georgy Zhukov at Internet Archive Georgy Zhukov WWII Marshal of the Soviet Union Archived 1 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine Newspaper clippings about Georgy Zhukov in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgy Zhukov amp oldid 1206222881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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