Tsarist officers in the Red Army

During the Russian Civil War, several former Tsarist officers joined the Red Army, either voluntarily or through coercion. This list includes senior officers of the Imperial Army who joined the Bolsheviks as commanders or military specialists, mustangs commissioned as officers before 1917, and former Tsarist NCOs promoted under the new Communist regime, such as Budyonny and Zhukov.

Overview

Standing, left to right: P. P. Lebedev, N. N. Petin, S. M. Budyonny, B. M. Shaposhnikov. Seated: S. S. Kamenev, S. I. Gusev, A. I. Yegorov and K. E. Voroshilov in 1921.

Following the Russian Revolution in 1917, the ruling communist Bolsheviks, in the fashion of most traditional Marxists, hoped to disband the standing Imperial Russian Army of the deposed Tsardom and replace it with a militia system. The outbreak of civil war led them to opt for a regular military in 1918 and they created the Red Army to oppose the anti-revolutionary White movement.[1] The pre-existing army had a 250,000-strong officer corps. Of these, 75,000 were inducted into the Red Army, most of them being drafted and many not supportive of the Bolsheviks' political agenda. However, a large number joined out of a desire to maintain Russian territorial integrity (they believed that only the Bolsheviks could govern effectively) and to curb foreign influence in the country (the White leadership had promised foreign governments special privileges under their rule in exchange for support).[2] As such, the overwhelming majority of the officers in the Red Army had formerly served in the Imperial military, much to the chagrin of Bolshevik leaders who were anxious to assert their authority over the armed forces. They were forced to rely on the ex-Tsarist officers, dubbed "military specialists", due to a deficit of trained commanders among the revolutionaries. Throughout the war the Red Army's command staff, the Stavka, was dominated by Tsarist officers.[1] In spite of his colleagues' wariness, Vladimir Lenin praised them for their contributions to the Bolshevik war effort:[2]

"You have heard about the series of the brilliant victories won by the Red Army. There are tens of thousands of old colonels and other officers in its ranks. If we had not taken them into service and them work for us, we could not have created the Army...only with their help was the Red Army able to win the victories that it did."

Immediately following the conflict the former Tsarists made up the majority of the General Staff Academy's faculty and constituted over 90 percent of all instructional and administrative staff at military schools. The Stavka was organised in a manner very similar to its Tsarist antecedent and much of the military curriculum was copied from the Imperial General Staff Academy.[1]

The Bolsheviks reformed the Red Army in the mid-1920s. In an attempt to reduce the reliance on the mistrusted ex-Tsarists they reduced the officer corps and educated new cadets.[1] Leon Trotsky's removal from the Commissariat of Defence was in part driven by his perceived over reliance on Tsarist officers. His replacement, Mikhail Frunze, further decreased their number in army. By 1930, ex-Tsarists made up only about 10 percent of the officer corps.[3]

Generals

Senior officers

Junior officers

Non commissioned officers

  • Pavel Ivanovich Batov - Russian Imperial Guard during World War I, Red Army commander during the Russian Civil War, Spanish Civil War, Winter War and Great Patriotic War.
  • Ivan Bogdanov - NCO in Tsarist army and Red Army commander during Russian Civil War and Great Patriotic War. Killed in action in 1942.
  • Semyon Budyonny - NCO in the Tsarist army, decorated multiple times during World War I, commander of the 1st Cavalry Army of the RFSFR in the Civil War, Marshal of the Soviet Union from 1935 to his death in 1973.
  • Vasily Chapaev - NCO in the Tsarist army and three times decorated with the Order of St. George in World War I, joined the Bolsheviks in 1917 to become one of the first "Red Commanders". Noted for his bravery, he was killed-in-action in the Ural River in 1919 and has been since immortalized as a hero in both the Soviet Union and Russian Federation.
  • Pavel Dybenko - Promoted to naval NCO in the Baltic Fleet in 1912. He took part in the October Revolution in Petrograd, fought in the Civil War and reached the rank of Army General and military district commander in the Red Army. Executed in Stalin's purges in 1938.
  • Vasily Gordov - Junior sergeant in 1915-17. He commanded the Stalingrad Front in 1942 during the early stages of the Battle of Stalingrad. Took part in the Battle of Berlin and the Prague Offensive in 1945.
  • Mikhail Lashevich - Senior NCO in the Imperial Army, was wounded twice in World War I. In the Civil War he held commanding positions in various Red armies, then went to Harbin to serve as deputy chairman of the Chinese Eastern Railway (1926-1928).
  • Lev Mekhlis - Bombardier in the 2nd Grenadier Artillery Regiment (1911), Feuerwerker (Senior Artillery NCO) in 1917, joined the Red Army in 1918, Colonel-General from 1939, member of the Stavka in the Great Patriotic War, responsible for five to seven fronts.
  • Romuald Muklevich - Petty officer in the Baltic Fleet from 1912, took part in the Storming of the Winter Palace in October 1917, rose to become an Admiral and the Commander-In-Chief of the Soviet Navy 1926-31, commissar for shipbuilding industry 1934-36, deputy minister for the defence industries 1936-37. Killed in Stalin's purges in 1938.
  • Konstantin Rokossovsky - Tsarist cavalry NCO until 1917, then served in the Red Army until arrested and imprisoned during Stalin's purge. Reinstated in the Red Army in 1940 and retired in 1962.
  • Andrey Yeryomenko - In 1914 he took part in the capture of Przemysl and was promoted to NCO. Joined the Bolsheviks in the Civil War, he was a proponent of mechanized warfare and earned the nickname "Russian Guderian". In 1941-45 he commanded many fronts, including the Stalingrad Front during the main phase of the Battle of Stalingrad.
  • Georgy Zhukov - NCO in the Tsarist army in World War, Order of St. George, Marshal of the Soviet Union from 1941 and Defence Minister during and after the Great Patriotic War.
  • Andrei Zhdanov - NCO in the 139th Infantry Regiment (1916-1917), member of the Central Committee of the CPSU and Stalin's inner circle in the 1930s, Colonel-General of the Red Army and head of the defence of Leningrad in the Great Patriotic War.
  • Dmitry Zhloba - Studied as a military engineer and became a Tsarist NCO in 1917. Joined the Bolsheviks in Moscow and took part in the storming of the Kremlin. In 1918 he led the famous "Steel Division" of 15,000 men to a legendary 800-kilometer march in sixteen days from Nevinnomysskaya to Tsaritsyn, falling on the rear of Pyotr Krasnov's besieging White Army to relieve the Bolshevik garrison during the Battle of Tsaritsyn.[19]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Taylor 2003, p. 140.
  2. 1 2 Kokoshin 1998, p. 13.
  3. Taylor 2003, p. 141.
  4. Moroz, Vitaly (22 February 2011). "Под орлом и звездой" [Under the Eagle and the Star]. Krasnaya Zvezda (in Russian). Retrieved 8 December 2017.
  5. "Biography of Colonel-General of Artillery Nikolai Fedorovich Drozdov - (Николай Федорович Дроздов) (1862 – 1953), Soviet Union". www.generals.dk. Retrieved 2017-12-09.
  6. Kitkin
  7. Russians in WWI
  8. Samoylo
  9. Zayonchovski
  10. Bashko
  11. Lev Galler
  12. 1 2 Kokoshin 1998, p. 14.
  13. Russian WWII database
  14. Cyber heroes of the past
  15. Heroes of the USSR
  16. Heroes of the USSR
  17. Tales of Lt Ilyin
  18. Red Bonaparte
  19. https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0199390711

Bibliography

  • Kokoshin, Andreĭ Afanasʹevich (1998). Soviet Strategic Thought, 1917-91. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press. ISBN 9780262611381.
  • Taylor, Brian D. (2003). Politics and the Russian Army: Civil-Military Relations, 1689-2000 (illustrated ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521016940.
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