Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Sergei Akhromeev


Related Topics

  
  Akhromeev on Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Europe
Akhromeev's latest move in this campaign took the form of an interview printed in Pravda on April 19.[1] The Marshal argued that the Warsaw Pact's admitted 12 to 1 advantage in short-range nuclear missiles was offset by what he claimed was a NATO advantage in aircraft that could carry nuclear bombs and missiles.
Akhromeev maintained that tactical nuclear weapons in Europe had to be considered as an indivisible triad consisting of short-range missiles, strike aircraft, and nuclear artillery.
Akhromeev went to some length to refute the NATO charge that the Warsaw Pact was hypocritical in opposing the modernization of Western short-range nuclear missiles just after it had completed its own modernization program.
files.osa.ceu.hu /holdings/300/8/3/text/143-4-75.shtml   (1274 words)

  
  Sergei Akhromeyev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sergei Feodorovich Akhromeev (Ахромеев, Сергей Фёдорович in Russian) (1923 1991), Russian military figure, Hero of the Soviet Union (1982), Marshal of the Soviet Union (1983).
Akhromeev was a junior officer in World War II, serving with distinction on the Leningrad front.
In 1984-1988, Akhromeev was Chief of Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sergei_Akhromeev   (340 words)

  
 RFE/RL Newsline, 04-06-21
Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov told President Vladimir Putin during a meeting at the Kremlin on 19 June that Russian troops are prepared for the next phase of military exercises slated to begin in the Russian Far East on 21 June, ORT reported (see "RFE/RL Newsline," 8 June 2004).
Speaking at the same function, Audit Chamber Chairman and former Interior Minister Sergei Stepashin (who also served as a ministry political officer) urged that the unit be rechristened with "the decent name" of Dzerzhinskii, which was dropped under President Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s.
The official version of events suggested that Akhromeev, a special adviser to Gorbachev and a devoted communist, could not bear to witness the collapse of the Soviet Union and reportedly asked for Gorbachev's forgiveness in a suicide note over his links to the putschists.
www.hri.org /news/balkans/rferl/2004/04-06-21.rferl.html   (8417 words)

  
 Calendar (events)
Sergey Sergeevich Kamenev, "comandarm" of first rank, the second chief of Red Army, was born.
Sergei Pavlovich Korolev, academician, HSLx2, cheif of GIRD since 1932, arrested in 1938, released from custody in 1946(?), chief designer of ballistic missiles since 1946.
Sergey Georgievich Gorshkov, Admiral of Fleet of USSR, 2xHSU, Chief of Soviet Navy 1956..
www.aviation.ru /calendar/?Type=p   (2903 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
The day Pugo and his wife were buried, Saturday, August 24, Marshal Sergei Akhromeev, 68, Hero of the Soviet Union and military advisor to the Soviet president, committed suicide in his office in the Moscow Kremlins Unit 1.
Akhromeev had no weapons at hand, but he could not and did not want to wait.
Marshal Akhromeev was a good military leader, greatly respected in the military and in the Party.
english.mn.ru /english/printver.php?2002-32-10   (2460 words)

  
 Marshal of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The last Marshal of the Soviet Union was Dmitry Yazov, appointed in 1990, who was imprisoned after the failed coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991.
Marshal Sergei Akhromeev committed suicide in 1991 on the fall of the Soviet Union.
All of these were officers in World War II, but their higher commands were held in the Warsaw Pact or as Soviet Defence Ministers.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Marshal_of_the_Soviet_Union   (802 words)

  
 1991 Coup - Johnson's Russia List 8-28-02   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Akhromeev was the chief expert at arms reduction negotiations while Gorbachev admitted that without Akhromeev the negotiations would have been less successful.
In 1991, Akhromeev co-authored - with his friend Georgy Korniyenko, a diplomat - a small book, Through the Eyes of a Marshal and a Diplomat, which was published in 1992 with the marshals name on the title page placed in a fl box.
Nikolai Kruchina represented the Party; Sergei Akhromeev, the military, and Boris Pugo, the KGB and the Interior Ministry.
www.cdi.org /russia/johnson/6410-14.cfm   (2508 words)

  
 Reconquista-Popular message, [R-P] (en inglés) three suicides in 1991   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Akhromeev was the chief > expert at arms reduction negotiations while Gorbachev admitted that without > Akhromeev the negotiations would have been less successful.
His apartment in Plotnikov Pereulok was subjected to an especially > careful search, which was conducted by a team of criminologists under the > supervision of three chief investigators from the USSR Prosecutors Office and > in the presence of the prosecutor of Moscows Leninsky district.
Nikolai Kruchina represented the Party; Sergei Akhromeev, the > military, and Boris Pugo, the KGB and the Interior Ministry.
archives.econ.utah.edu /archives/reconquista-popular/2002w35/msg00048.htm   (3091 words)

  
 Foreign Military Studies Office Publications - Forecasting Future War: Andrei Kokoshin and the Military-Political ...
Under Marshal Sergei Akhromeev, who replaced Ogarkov as Chief of the General Staff in 1984, Soviet military thought began to examine the possibility of a general war fought with advanced conventional weapons.
Given the ongoing war in Afghanistan and the increasing evidence of economic decline and technological stagnation in the face of a renewed arms race with the United States, hard choices had to be made.
Kokoshin cites his work and that of Sergei Blagovolin for their contribution to raising the issue of burden of defense on the national economy in their advocacy of "reasonable sufficient defense.
www.fas.org /nuke/guide/russia/agency/990100-kokoshin.htm   (19128 words)

  
 Commentary Magazine - Letters   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Lipman, Samuel and Laqueur, Walter and Muravchik, Joshua and Hart, Jeffrey and Bukovsky, Vladimir and Besancon, Alain and Ratushinskaya, Irina and Hough, Jerry and Getty, J. Arch and Roberts, Peter and Leithauser, Brad and Heuvel, Katrina vanden and Coogan, Kevin and Yarim-Agaev, Yuri and Grigoryants, Sergei and Gerashchenko, Igor and Kuznetsov, Edward
...Do they think that even the military chief of staff, Marshal Akhromeev, leads as good a life as the average American colonel-and that he will fight to sabotage any effort to improve his life...
...The article was not written with disregard for the welfare of Soviet dissidents, particularly Sergei Gri- goryants...
www.commentarymagazine.com /Summaries/V86I5P4-1.htm   (13777 words)

  
 Marshal of the Soviet Union information - Search.com
The last Marshal of the Soviet Union was Dmitry Yazov, appointed in 1990, who was imprisoned after the failed coup against Mikhail Gorbachev in 1991.
Marshal Sergei Akhromeev committed suicide in 1991 on the fall of the Soviet Union.
All of these were officers in World War II, but their higher commands were held in the Warsaw Pact or as Soviet Defence Ministers.
webshots.search.com /reference/Marshal_of_the_Soviet_Union   (719 words)

  
 The School of Russian and Asian Studies: Resources: Interviews and Personalities: John Freedman - Man of the Newspaper, ...
1990, translating for ABC News as Sam Donaldson interviews Soviet Marshal Sergei Akhromeev in his Kremlin office about a year before he committed suicide after the failed coup of 1991.
I was, and have always remained, deeply impressed with the sincerity, thoughtfulness and winning simplicity this man displayed that day.
Before we began the interview, Sergei outfitted me in a traditional cossack coat that had belonged to his father Nikita.
www.sras.org /news2.phtml?m=253   (1745 words)

  
 ISN Security Watch - Chernobyl, Glasnost, and disarmament
Chief of the General Staff Sergei Akhromeev heard the news at 2:20am and immediately dispatched military aid and equipment to Chernobyl.
In the meantime, Akhromeev had learned of the radioactive emissions through military channels and warned Gorbachev at 10am on 26 April that the situation was much worse than originally understood.
Twelve hours after the explosion, a helicopter flight over the power plant supplied evidence of the massive destruction of the reactor and showed high degrees of radioactivity.
www.isn.ethz.ch /news/sw/details.cfm?id=15654   (2384 words)

  
 PARAMETERS, US Army War College Quarterly - Winter 1996-97
Gorbachev's military adviser, Marshal Akhromeev, formerly Soviet Chief of Staff, was charged with the task of preparing the withdrawal of the 300,000 Soviets troops stationed in East Germany.[38]
Gorbachev's recollection of this key planning meeting differs only in minor details from that of Chernyayev.
Akhromeev and G. Kornienko, Glazami Marshala i Diplomata (Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye Otnoshenie, 1992).
carlisle-www.army.mil /usawc/parameters/96winter/boll.htm   (4232 words)

  
 Parallel History Project on NATO and the Warsaw Pact   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
At the meeting in December 1984, Marshal Sergei F. Akhromeev, at that time Soviet deputy defense minister, discussed the impact of the Euromissiles and the Rogers Plan on the East-West equilibrium.
After the Gorbachev-Reagan meeting in Reykjavik, Soviet defense minister Marshal Sergei Sokolov warned his colleagues that the United States were still pursuing a policy of strength.
He argued that the SDI was designed by Washington to exert political pressure on Moscow by threatening a nuclear first-strike.
www.isn.ethz.ch /php/documents/collection_3/CMD_texts/introduction.htm   (9230 words)

  
 The Week in Chess 398
Loek Van Wely has started with a perfect 4/4 score but is still only half a point clear of Sergei Tiviakov.
Volkov, Sergey g RUS 2609 + 57 - 12 - 43 + 90 + 64 = 40 + 42 + 27 + 33 - 2 + 10 7.5 2626 9.
The event is organised by the Esbjerg Chess Union and is a 10-player category 14 round-robin with: Alisa Galliamova, Lazaro Bruzon, Leinier Dominguez, Sergey Tiviakov, Hannes Stefansson, Igor Glek, Andrey Volokitin, Peter Heine Nielsen, Curt Hansen and Sune Berg Hansen.
www.chesscenter.com /twic/twic398.html   (9533 words)

  
 List of suicides - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Neil Aggett, (1982), South African worker's union leader; hanged in prison, murder is suspected by some
General Sergei Akhromeev, (1991), Soviet military commander who led an unsuccessful coup against Mikhail Gorbachev
Sergei Yesenin, (1925), poet, husband of Isadora Duncan
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_suicides   (4346 words)

  
 Afghanistan: Lessons from the Last War
The Politburo discussions show that the Soviet leaders were very reluctant to send troops, and responded to the Afghan requests with shipments of military equipment, but not troops, throughout the spring and summer of 1979.
Both Chief of USSR General Staff Marshal Ogarkov and his Deputy General of the Army Akhromeev voiced strong objections to introducing troops on the grounds that the proposed limited contingent of forces would not be able to fulfill its objectives.
The first serious Politburo discussion of the need to withdraw Soviet troops from Afghanistan, which included the testimony of Marshal Sergei Akhromeev is reflected in the Minutes of November 13, 1986.
www.gwu.edu /~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB57/soviet.html   (2702 words)

  
 Classement FIDE par pays
i 4116291 Appolonov, Sergey m 2459 18 12.12.73 4190963 Apsatarov, Ivan 1970 3 22.02.39 4119770 Arakelian, Eduard m 2404 0 17.09.65 4126718 Arakelov, Ilya 2417 0 04.09.81 4167260 Arapov, Nikolaj 1918 0 14.04.62 i 4116798 Araslanov, Farid 2290 0 03.02.48 4107985 Arbatskaia, N 2230 0.
wi 4149785 Besedin, I. 2313 0 15.07.87 i 4122291 Besedin, Nikita 2245 0 16.10.68 i 4105451 Beshukov, Sergei g 2470 0 01.04.71 4153804 Bespalov, Alexey 2312 0 24.10.84 4142438 Bespalov, Konstantin 2199 0 30.09.81 4170610 Bespalov, Vladimir 2049 0 17.07.79 i 4186796 Bessarab, V. 4133668 Bessonov, Alexey 2304 0.
4197852 Dubinskiy, Sergey 1961 0 10.05.71 4124553 Dubinsky, Roman f 2309 0 16.10.78 i 4189604 Dubograev, Daniil 2147 0 13.09.88 4195159 Dubov, Danil 2128 7 27.06.86 4196953 Duchko, Andrey 2134 0.
interactu.free.fr /chess/fide_nations/fide_rus.htm   (2601 words)

  
 PARAMETERS, US Army War College Quarterly - Winter 1996-97
Gorbachev's military adviser, Marshal Akhromeev, formerly Soviet Chief of Staff, was charged with the task of preparing the withdrawal of the 300,000 Soviets troops stationed in East Germany.[38]
Gorbachev's recollection of this key planning meeting differs only in minor details from that of Chernyayev.
Akhromeev and G. Kornienko, Glazami Marshala i Diplomata (Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye Otnoshenie, 1992).
www.carlisle.army.mil /usawc/Parameters/96winter/boll.htm   (4232 words)

  
 Mark Kramer: The 1968 Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia (I)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
As recently as 1986-87, it was virtually impossible to find a Soviet official who would talk candidly about the Prague Spring or Moscow’s role in the crisis.
The invasion was still invariably depicted as a necessary step to thwart the machinations of “internal counterrevolutionaries and external reactionary forces.” Some senior officials, such as Gromyko and Marshal Sergei Akhromeev (of the Soviet General Staff), continued to speak in those terms until the day they died.
Some, but not all, of the interviews were highly informative, and only a few of the ex-officials deliberately tried to mislead their Western interlocutor.
www.mujweb.cz /kultura/riverman/kramer1.html   (3997 words)

  
 Biographical Files of Elizabeth Teague: Container List
Andreev, A. - Andreyanova, N. Andreev, Sergei, 1988 - 1992
Massalovich, Sergei - Masik, Konstantin I. Masko, Anatolii - Maslov, V.P. Masliukov, IUrii D. Masol, Vitalii A. - Hatemi, Mehemet
Sekretariuk, Viacheslav V. - Selivanov, V.V. Seliunin, Vasilii I. Semakov, Sergei - Semenov, Nikolai A. Semenov, Nikolai I. - Semenov, Vladimir
www.osa.ceu.hu /db/fa/300-5-151-1.htm   (4897 words)

  
 H-Net Review: David Stone on Russian Civil-Military Relations   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
While the Soviet military was naturally puzzled by what such a concept might precisely mean, the Soviet officer corps correctly perceived that whatever it meant, their budgets would be cut.
Their attempts to avoid conceding "reasonable sufficiency" bespeak considerable creativity--Marshal Sergei Akhromeev preferred to speak of "approximate military parity," echoed by theorist General Makhmut Gareev's "military parity," while Defense Minister Dmitrii Yazov used "defensive sufficiency," briefly switching to "reliable sufficiency." General Vladimir Lobov adopted "adequate defense" as his term of choice.
Ironically, while generals and civilians debated theory, the structure they discussed was crumbling around them.
www.h-net.org /reviews/showrev.cgi?path=14824887133638   (1650 words)

  
 The Fall of Soviet Communism in Central and Eastern Europe
Another major change in Eastern military doctrine was the recognition of the need to overcome NATO’s “defense in depth” strategy.
A joint statement released in 1987 by Soviet Chief of General Staff, Marshal Sergei F. Akhromeev, and the Soviet Minister of Defense, Marshal Dmitri T. Iazov, acknowledged Soviet military doctrine was being revised to meet the challenges of the "new thinking" in Western military policy (Zickel).
Early planning for the United States’ Strategic Defense Initiative system of space-based anti-missile defenses and the development of the US Patriot battlefield missile defense system threatened the most dangerous component of communist arsenals: tactical and strategic nuclear weapons.
www.cephasministry.com /nwo_tear_down_this_wall.html   (4581 words)

  
 Best Book Buys - Search
Marshal Akhromeev: Rokovoi Avgust Stati, Ocherki, Interviu, Vospominaniia (Russian)
by T. Akhromeeva, Sergei Fedorovich Akhromeev, IU F. IUshkin, A. Luzgin
All trademarks are owned by the respective company or Best Web Buys.
www.bestwebbuys.com /A_S_Luzgin-author.html?isrc=Inktomi-b-compare-author   (66 words)

  
 HTML Translation of SGML/EAD Document by Tim Green
STANKEVICH SERGEI FL 1989 1990 DEPUTY OF MOSCOW CITY COUNCIL
BOGOMOLOV SERGEY ALEXSANDROVICH B1926 FORMER USSR MINISTER FOR FOREIGN
AKHROMEYEV SERGEY FYODOROVICH B1923 SOVIET POLITICIAN AND SOLDIER
library-2.lse.ac.uk /archives/handlists/2RR/m.html   (2074 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.