Everything about Aleksandr Vasilevsky totally explained
Aleksandr Mikhaylovich Vasilevsky (
September 30 1895 –
December 5 1977) was a
Soviet military commander, promoted to
Marshal of the Soviet Union in 1943. He was the Soviet Chief of the General Staff and Deputy
Minister of Defense during
World War II, as well as Minister of Defense from 1949 to 1953. As the Chief of the General Staff, Vasilevsky was responsible for the planning and coordination of almost all decisive Soviet offensives, from the
Stalingrad counteroffensive to the
assault on
East Prussia and
Königsberg.
Vasilevsky started his military career during the
First World War, earning the rank of captain by 1917. At the beginning of the
October Revolution and the
Civil War he was conscripted into the
Red Army, taking part in the
Polish-Soviet War. After the war, he quickly rose through the ranks, becoming a regimental commander by 1930. In this position, he showed great skill in the organization and training of his troops. Vasilevsky's talent didn't go unnoticed, and in 1931 he was appointed a member of the Directorate of Military Training. In 1937, following
Stalin's
Great Purge, he was promoted to
General Staff officer.
At the start of the 1943 Soviet counteroffensive of the
Second World War, Vasilevsky coordinated and executed the Red Army's offensive on the upper
Don, in the
Donbass,
Crimea,
Belarus and
Baltic states, ending the war with the capture of
Königsberg in April 1945. In July 1945, he was appointed Commander-in-Chief of Soviet forces in the
Far East, executing
Operation August Storm and subsequently accepting
Japan's surrender. After the war, he became the
Soviet Defense Minister, a position he held until Stalin's death in 1953. With
Khrushchev's rise, Vasilevsky started to lose power and was eventually pensioned off. After his death, he was buried in the
Kremlin Wall Necropolis in recognition of his past service and contributions to his nation.
Biography
Childhood and early years
Vasilevsky was born on
September 30 [O.S. September 18], 1895 in Novaya Golchikha in the
Kineshma Uezd (now part of the city of
Vichuga in the
Kostroma Oblast). Vasilevsky was the fourth of eight children. His father, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Vasilevsky, was a priest to the nearby St. Nicholas Church. His mother, Nadezhda Ivanovna Sokolova, was the daughter of a priest in the nearby village of Ugletz. Vasilevsky reportedly broke off all contact with his parents after 1926 because of his
VKP(b) membership and his military duties in the
Red Army; three of his brothers did so as well. However, the family resumed relations in 1940, following
Stalin's suggestion that they do so.
According to Vasilevsky himself, his family was extremely poor. His father spent most of his time working to earn money, while the children assisted by working in the fields. In 1897, the family moved to Novopokrovskoe, where his father became a priest to the newly-built Ascension Church, and where Aleksandr began his education in the church school. In 1909, he entered Kostroma seminary, which required considerable financial sacrifice on the part of his parents. The same year, a ministerial directive preventing former seminarists from starting university studies initiated a nationwide seminarist movement, with classes stopping in most Russian seminaries. Vasilevsky, among others, was expelled from Kostroma, and only returned several months later, after the seminarists' demands had been satisfied.
World War I and Civil war
After completing his studies in the seminary and spending a few years working as a teacher, Vasilevsky intended to become an
agronomist or a
surveyor, but the outbreak of the First World War changed his plans. According to his own words, he was "overwhelmed with patriotic feelings" and decided to become a soldier instead. Vasilevsky took his exams in January 1915 and entered the
Alexander Military Law Academy in February. As he recalls, "
I didn't decide to become an officer to start a military career. I still wanted to be an agronomist and work in some remote corner of Russia after the war. I couldn't suppose that my country would change, and I would." After four months of courses that he later considered to be completely outdated, theoretical, and inappropriate for modern warfare, he was sent to the front with the rank of
praporshchik (the highest non-commissioned rank in the Russian infantry) in May 1915.
From June to September, Vasilevsky was assigned to a series of reserve regiments, and finally arrived at the front in September as a half-company commander (
polurotny) in the 409th Novokhopersky regiment, 109th division, 9th Army. In the spring of 1916, Vasilevsky took command of a company, which eventually became one of the most recognized in the regiment. In May 1916, he led his men during the
Brusilov offensive, becoming a battalion commander after heavy casualties among officers, and gaining the rank of captain by age 22.
In November 1917, just after the
Russian Revolution, Vasilevsky decided to end his military career. As he wrote in his memoirs, "
There was a time when I led soldiers to battle, thinking I was doing my duty as a Russian patriot. However, I understood that we've been cheated, that people needed peace. . . . Therefore, my military career had to end. With no remorse, I could go back to my favorite occupation, working in the field." He travelled from Romania, where his unit was deployed in 1917, back to his own village.
In December 1917, while back at home, Vasilevsky learned that the men of the 409th regiment, which had been relocated to Ukraine, had elected him as their commander (at the beginning of the Russian Revolution, commanders were elected by their own men). However, the local military authorities recommended that he decline the proposal because of the heavy fighting taking place in Ukraine between pro-Soviet forces and the pro-independence Ukrainian government (the
Central Rada). He followed this advice and became a drill instructor in his own Kineshma uezd. He retired in September 1918 and became a school teacher in the
Tula Oblast.
In April 1919, Vasilevsky was again conscripted into the Red Army and sent to command a company fighting against peasant uprisings and assisting in the emergency Soviet policy of
prodrazvyorstka, which required peasants to surrender agricultural surplus for a fixed price. Later that year, Vasilevsky took command of a new reserve battalion, and, in October 1919, of a regiment. However, his regiment never took part in the battles of the
Russian Civil War, as
Denikin's troops never got close to Tula. In December 1919, Vasilevsky was sent to the Western front as a deputy regimental commander, participating in the
Polish-Soviet War.
As deputy regimental commander of the 427th regiment, 32nd brigade, 11th division, Vasilevsky participated at the battle of
Berezina, pulling back as the Polish forces had been slowly but steadily advancing eastward, and in the subsequent counterattack that started on
May 14,
1920, breaking through Polish lines before being stopped by cavalry counterattacks. Later, starting from
July 4,
1920, he took part at the Soviet offensive towards
Wilno, advancing to
Neman river despite heavy Polish resistance and German fortifications erected in the region during World War I. Vasilevsky's regiment arrived near Wilno by mid-July and stayed there on a garrison duty until the
Treaty of Riga.
The interwar period
After the
Treaty of Riga, Vasilevsky fought against remaining
white forces and peasant uprisings in Belarus and in the
Smolensk Oblast until August 1921. By 1930, he'd served as the regimental commander of the 142nd, 143rd, and 144th rifle regiments, During these years, Vasilevsky established friendships with higher commanders and Party members, including
Kliment Voroshilov,
Vladimir Triandafillov and
Boris Shaposhnikov. Shaposhnikov, in particular, would become Vasilevsky's protector until the former's death in 1945. Vasilevsky's connections and good performance earned him an appointment to the Directorate of Military Training in 1931.
While at the Directorate of Military Training, Vasilevsky supervised the Red Army's training and worked on military manuals and field books. He also met several senior military commanders, such as
Mikhail Tukhachevsky and
Georgy Zhukov, then the Deputy Cavalry Inspector of the Red Army. Zhukov would later characterize Vasilevsky as "
a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody." In 1934, Vasilevsky was appointed to be the Senior Military Training Supervisor of the Volga Military District (
Privolzhsky voyenny okrug). where he studied important aspects of military strategy and other topics under experienced generals, including Mikhail Tukhachevsky.
By mid-1937, Stalin's
Great Purge eliminated a significant number of senior military commanders, vacating a number of positions on the General Staff. To his amazement, Vasilevsky was appointed to the General Staff in October 1937 and held "
responsible for operational training of senior officers." In 1938, he was made a member of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (a sine qua non condition for a successful career in the Soviet Union); in 1939, he was appointed Deputy Commander of the Operations Directorate of the General Staff, while holding the rank of divisional commander.
As a senior officer, Vasilevsky met frequently with
Joseph Stalin. During one of these meetings, Stalin asked Vasilevsky about his family. Since Vasilevsky's father was a priest and thus a potential "
enemy of the people," Vasilevsky said that he'd ended his relationship with them in 1926. Stalin, surprised, suggested that he reestablish his family ties at once, and help his parents with whatever needs they might have.
World War II
Start and Battle of Moscow
By June 1941, Vasilevsky was working around the clock in his General Staff office. On
June 22,
1941, he learned of the German bombing of several important military and civilian objectives, starting the
Great Patriotic War. In August 1941, Vasilevsky was appointed Commander of Operations, Directorate of the General Staff and Deputy Chief of the General Staff, making him one of the key figures in the Soviet military leadership. At the end of September 1941, Vasilevsky gave a speech before the General Staff, describing the situation as extremely difficult, but pointing out that the northern part of the front was holding, that Leningrad still offered resistance, and that such a situation would potentially allow some reserves to be gathered in the northern part of the front.
In October 1941, the situation at the front was becoming critical, with German forces advancing towards Moscow during
Operation Typhoon. As a representative of the Soviet General Staff (
STAVKA), Vasilevsky was sent to the
Western Front to coordinate the defense and guarantee a flow of supplies and men towards the region of
Mozhaisk, where Soviet forces were attempting to contain the German advance. During heavy fighting near the outskirts of Moscow, Vasilevsky spent all of his available time both in the STAVKA and on the front line trying to coordinate the three fronts committed to Moscow's defense. When most of the General Staff (including its chief Marshal
Shaposhnikov) was evacuated from Moscow, Vasilevsky remained in the city as liaison between the Moscow Staff and the evacuated members of the General Staff. On
October 28,
1941, Vasilevsky was promoted to
Lieutenant General.
The
Battle of Moscow was a very difficult period in Vasilevsky's life, with the Wehrmacht approaching close enough to the city for German officers to make out some of Moscow's buildings through their field glasses. As he recalls, his workday often ended at four a.m. Moreover, with Marshal Shaposhnikov having fallen ill, Vasilevsky had to make important decisions by himself. On
October 29,
1941, a bomb exploded in the courtyard of the General Staff. Vasilevsky was slightly wounded but continued working. The kitchen was damaged by the explosion, and the General Staff was relocated underground without hot food. Nevertheless, the Staff continued to function. In December 1941, Vasilevsky coordinated the Moscow counteroffensive, and by early 1942, the general counteroffensive in the Moscow and Rostov directions, further motivated in his work by the return of his evacuated family to Moscow. In April 1942, he coordinated the unsuccessful elimination of the
Demyansk pocket, the encirclement of the German 2nd Army Corps near Leningrad. On
April 24, with Shaposhnikov seriously ill again, Vasilevsky was appointed as acting Chief of Staff and promoted to
Colonel General on
April 26.
Summer and fall 1942
In May 1942 one of the most controversial episodes in Vasilevsky's career occurred: the
Second Battle of Kharkov, a failed counteroffensive that led to a stinging Red Army defeat, and ultimately to a successful German offensive (
Operation Blue) in the south. After repelling the enemy from Moscow, Soviet morale was high and Stalin was determined to launch another general counteroffensive during the summer. However, Vasilevsky recognized that
"the reality was more harsh than that." Following Stalin's orders, the Kharkov offensive was launched on
May 12,
1942. When the threat of encirclement became obvious, Vasilevsky and Zhukov asked for permission to withdraw the advancing Soviet forces. Stalin refused, leading to the encirclement of the Red Army forces and a total defeat. In his memoirs, Khrushchev accused Vasilevsky of being too passive and indecisive, as well as being unable to defend his point of view in front of Stalin during that particular operation. As he wrote, "
It was my view that the catastrophe. . . . could have been avoided if Vasilevsky had taken the position he should have. He could have taken a different position. . . . but he didn't do that, and as a result, in my view, he'd a hand in the destruction of thousands of Red Army fighters in the Kharkov campaign."
In June 1942, Vasilevsky was briefly sent to Leningrad to coordinate an attempt to break the encirclement of the 2nd Shock Army led by General
Vlasov. On
June 26,
1942 Vasilevsky was appointed
Chief of the General Staff, and, in October 1942, Deputy Minister of Defense.
The battle of Stalingrad was another difficult period in Vasilevsky's life. Sent with Zhukov to the Stalingrad Front, he tried to coordinate the defenses of Stalingrad with radio links working intermittently, at best. On
September 12,
1942, during a meeting with Stalin, Vasilevsky and Zhukov presented their plan for the Stalingrad counteroffensive after an all-night brainstorming session. Two months later, on November 19, with Stalingrad still unconquered,
Operation Uranus was launched. Since Zhukov had been sent to near Rzhev to execute
Operation Mars (the Rzhev counteroffensive), Vasilevsky remained near Stalingrad to coordinate the double-pincer attack that ultimately led to the German defeat This plan sparked some debate between Vasilevsky and
Rokossovsky, who wanted an additional army for clearing Stalingrad, which Rokossovsky continued to mention to Vasilevsky even years after the war. The army in question was
Rodion Malinovsky's 2nd Guards' which Vasilevsky committed against a dangerous German counter-attack launched from Kotelnikovo by the 57th Panzer corps and designed to deblockade the Stalingrad pocket. This attack, hitherto, had enjoyed overwhelming numerical superiority.
Soviet victory
In January 1943, Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives on the upper
Don near
Voronezh and Ostrogozhsk, leading to decisive encirclements of several
Axis divisions. In mid-January, Vasilevsky was promoted to
General of the Army and only 29 days later, on
February 16,
1943, to
Marshal of the Soviet Union.
In March 1943, after the creation of the Kursk salient and the failure of the
third battle of Kharkov, Stalin and the STAVKA had to decide whether the offensive should be resumed despite this setback, or whether it was better to adopt a defensive stance. Vasilevsky and Zhukov managed to persuade Stalin that it was necessary to halt the offensive for now, and wait for the initiative from the Wehrmacht. When it became clear that the supposed German offensive was postponed and would no longer take place in May 1943 as expected, Vasilevsky successfully defended continuing to wait for the Wehrmacht to attack, rather than making a preemptive strike as Khrushchev wanted. When the
Battle of Kursk finally started on
July 4,
1943, Vasilevsky was responsible for the coordination of the
Voronezh and
Steppe Fronts. Later that year, he developed and executed the clearing of Nazi forces from Crimea.
At the beginning of 1944, Vasilevsky coordinated the Soviet offensive on the right bank of the Dnieper, leading to a decisive victory in eastern Ukraine. On
April 10,
1944, the day
Odessa was retaken, Vasilevsky was presented with the
Order of Victory, only the second ever awarded (the first having been awarded to Zhukov). Vasilevsky's car rolled over a mine during an inspection of
Sevastopol after the fighting ended on
May 10,
1944. He received a head wound, cut by flying glass, and was evacuated to Moscow for recovery.
During
Operation Bagration, the general counteroffensive in
Belarus, Vasilevsky coordinated the offensives of the 1st Baltic and
3rd Belorussian Fronts. When Soviet forces entered the
Baltic states, Vasilevsky assumed complete responsibility for all the Baltic fronts, discarding the 3rd Belorussian. On
July 29,
1944, he was made
Hero of the Soviet Union for his military successes. As a front commander, Vasilevsky led the East Prussian operation and organized the assaults on
Königsberg and
Pillau. For the brilliant successes at Königsberg and in Eastern Prussia, Vasilevsky was awarded his second Order of Victory. For his success in this operation, Vasilevsky was awarded his second Hero of the Soviet Union decoration on
September 8. However, Vasilevsky eventually became one of the most decorated commanders in Soviet history.
Vasilevsky was awarded the
Gold Star of
Hero of the Soviet Union twice for operations on the German and Japanese fronts. He was awarded two
Orders of Victory for his successes in Crimea and Prussia (an achievement matched only by Zhukov and Stalin). During his career, he was awarded eight
Orders of Lenin (several of them after the war), the
Order of the October Revolution when it was created in 1967, two
Orders of the Red Banner, a first class
Order of Suvorov for his operations in Ukraine and Crimea, and his first decoration, an
Order of the Red Star, earned in 1940 for his brilliant staff work during the
Winter War. Finally, he was awarded a third class
Order for Service to the Homeland as recognition for his entire military career when this order was created in 1974, just three years before Vasilevsky's death.
Vasilevsky was also awarded fourteen medals. For his participation in various campaigns, he was awarded the Defense of Leningrad, Defense of Moscow, Defense of Stalingrad and Capture of Königsberg medals. As with all Soviet soldiers who took part in the war with Germany and Japan, he was awarded the
Medal For the Victory Over Germany and the
Medal For the Victory Over Japan. He also received several commemorative medals, such as Twenty, Thirty, Forty, and Fifty Years Since the Creation of the Soviet Armed Forces medals, Twenty and Thirty Years Since the Victory in the Great Patriotic War medals, the Eight Hundredth Anniversary of Moscow medal (awarded in 1947 for his participation in the battle of Moscow) and the Hundredth Birthday of Lenin medal. In addition to Soviet orders and medals, Vasilevsky was awarded several foreign decorations such as the Polish
Virtuti Militari Order from the
Polish communist government. Several years before the war, Zhukov described Vasilevsky as "
a man who knew his job as he spent a long time commanding a regiment and who earned great respect from everybody." Vasilevsky never mentioned his awards (including the two orders of Victory) in his memoirs, attesting to his modesty.
This being said, Vasilevsky's actions and personality were sometimes the object of dispute, while less controversial than those of Zhukov. In particular, Nikita Khrushchev defined Vasilevsky in his memoirs as a passive commander completely under the control of Stalin, and blamed him for the Kharkov failure in Spring 1942. Among Vasilevsky's strongest critics was Rokossovsky, who criticized Vasilevsky's decisions during the Stalingrad counteroffensive, especially his refusal to commit the 2nd Army to the annihilation of the encircled German divisions, and for general interference with his own work. Rokossovsky even wrote in his memoirs:
"I don't even understand what role could Zhukov and Vasilevsky play on Stalingrad front.". In fairness to Vasilevsky it needs noting that he only diverted the 2nd army from the assault on the Stalingrad pocket in order to commit it against a dangerous German counter-attack from Kotelnikovo, designed to deblockade the pocket, which was enjoying great numerical superiority. Vasilevsky, it seems, was dismayed by Rokossovsky's opposition to the transfer.
On the other hand, the controversial historian
Victor Suvorov held up Vasilevsky over Zhukov. According to him, Vasilevsky was the only officer responsible for the successful planning and execution of the Soviet counteroffensive at Stalingrad, and Zhukov played no role whatsoever in it. He claimed that Vasilevsky was the best Soviet military commander and that Soviet victory was mainly due to his actions as the Chief of Staff. According to Suvorov, Zhukov and the Soviet propaganda machine tried, after the war, to reduce the role of the General Staff (and thus Vasilevsky's importance) and to increase the role of the Party and Zhukov.
A more balanced post-1991 view on Vasilevsky was elaborated by Mezhiritzky in his book,
Reading Marshal Zhukov. Mezhiritzky points out Vasilevsky's timidity and his inability to defend his opinions before Stalin. Reportedly, Vasilevsky was appointed to such high military positions because he was easy to manage. However, Mezhiritzky recognizes Vasilevsky's intelligence and assumes that Vasilevsky was indeed the main author of the Stalingrad counteroffensive. He also points out that Vasilevsky and Zhukov probably deliberately under-reported the estimated strength of the 6th Army in order to have Stalin's approval for that risky operation.
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