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Kliment Voroshilov

(Перенаправлен из килограмма Ворошилов )

Kliment Voroshilov
Климент Ворошилов
Voroshilov in 1961
Председатель Президиума Верховного Советского Советского Союза
В офисе
15 марта 1953 - 7 мая 1960 г.
Генеральный секретарь Nikita Khrushchev
Предшествует Николай Сипсник
Преуспевает Леонид Брежнев
Народный комиссар защиты Советского Союза
В офисе
6 ноября 1925 г. - 7 мая 1940 г.
Премьер Alexey Rykov
Vyacheslav Molotov
Предшествует Михаил Фрунзе
Преуспевает Семон Тимошенко
Полный член 14 , 15 , 16 , 17 , 18 , 19 и 20 лет.
В офисе
1 января 1926 - 16 июля 1960 г.
Личные данные
Рожденный
Kliment Yefremovich Voroshilov

( 1881-02-04 ) 4 февраля 1881 г.
Verkhneye, Bakhmut Uezd , Yekaterinoslav Governorate , Russian Empire
Умер 2 декабря 1969 г. (1969-12-02) (в возрасте 88 лет)
Москва, российский SFSR , Советский Союз
Место отдыха Кремль стена некрополис , Москва
Национальность Русский
Политическая партия RSDLP (большевики) (1903–1918)
Российская коммунистическая партия (большевики)/Коммунистическая партия Советского Союза (1918–1961, 1966–1969)
Супруг Ekaterina Davidovna
Награды Герой Советского Союза (дважды)
Герой социалистического труда
Порядок Ленина (восемь раз)
Порядок красного баннера (шесть раз)
Order of Suvorov
Военная служба
Верность  Русский SFSR
(1918–1922)
 Советский Союз
(1922–1961)
Филиал/сервис Красная армия
(1918–1946)
Советская армия
(1946–1961)
Years of service1918–1961
Rank Marshal of the Soviet Union
CommandsNorth Caucasus Military District
Moscow Military District
Leningrad Front
Battles/wars

Kliment Yefremovich Voroshilov ( Russian : Климент Ефремович Ворошилов pronounced ; Ukrainian : Климент Охрімович Ворошилов , romanized Klyment Okhrimovych Voroshylov ), popularly known as Klim Voroshilov (Russian: Клим Ворошилов ; [ Цитация необходима ] 4 февраля 1881 года [ 1 ] -2 декабря 1969 г.), был выдающимся советским военным офицером и политиком во время эпохи Сталина . Он был одним из первоначальных пяти маршалов Советского Союза , второго по величине военнослужащего Советского Союза (младшего в генералсимо Советского Союза , который был только пост Джозефом Сталином ), и служил председателем Президиума . Верховного советского , номинального советского главы государства , с 1953 по 1960 год.

в Российской семье работника в Украине, принял участие в российской революции Воросилов, родившийся в российской революции 1917 года 1917 года . Он с отличием служил в битве при Царицине , во время которой он стал близким другом Сталина. Воросилов был избран в центральный комитет Коммунистической партии в 1921 году, а в 1925 году Сталин назначил его народным комиссаром по военным вопросам и военно -морским вопросам (более поздний народный комиссар по обороне). В 1926 году он стал полным членом Политбюро . В 1935 году Ворошилов был назван маршалом Советского Союза.

В начале Второй мировой войны Ворошилов был привлечен к ответственности за сборы в Финляндии в Финляндии во время зимней войны и был заменен в качестве комиссара защиты Семоном Тимошенко . После немецкого вторжения в июне 1941 года он был отозван и назначен в комитет по обороне штата . Ворошилов не смог остановить немецкое окружение Ленинграда и снова был освобожден от своего командования в сентябре 1941 года.

После войны Ворошилов курировал создание социалистического режима в Венгрии . После смерти Сталина в 1953 году Ворошилов был назначен председателем Президиума Верховного Совета . Его состояние снизилось во время роста Никиты Хрущевой , и Верховный Совет повернулся против него. Он мирно ушел в отставку в 1960 году, хотя в 1966 году вышел на пенсию и вновь подписал партию. Ворошилов умер в 1969 году в возрасте 88 лет.

Ранний период жизни

[ редактировать ]

Voroshilov was born in the settlement of Verkhnyeye, Bakhmut uyezd , Yekaterinoslav Governorate , Russian Empire (now part of Lysychansk city in Luhansk Oblast , Ukraine ). [ 2 ] Его отец, бывший солдат, работал в разное время в качестве железнодорожного работника или шахтера и проходил периоды безработицы. По словам советского генерала-майора Петро Григоренко , сам Ворошилов упомянул о наследии его страны рождения (Украина) и предыдущей фамилии Воросило . [ 3 ]

Kliment Voroshilov with his teacher Semyon Ryzhkov

В своей опубликованной автобиографии Ворошилов описал детство крайних трудностей, работающих с шести или семи лет, и получая частые избиения от богатых крестьян, что оставило его с отвращением на всю жизнь на « кулаки ». Он вырос неграмотным, пока не смог поступить в недавно открытую школу в соседней деревне, в возрасте 12 лет, и учился в двухлетнем обучении. [ 4 ] В свои школьные годы Ворошилов стал близким другом и почти членом семьи Семон Ричкова . [ 5 ]

In 1896, he started work in a factory near his home village, where he led a strike in 1899. In 1903, he enrolled in a German owned factory in Luhansk (which was renamed Vorshilov during the Stalin era). There, he joined the Bolsheviks, and acted as a strike leader during the 1905 revolution. In April 1906, he travelled to Stockholm for the Fourth Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP), using the provocative pseudonym 'Volodya Antimekov' or Anti-Menshevik.[6] In Stockholm, he shared a room with the delegate from Georgia, Josif Dzhugashvili, later known as Stalin.[7]

In spring 1907, he travelled to London for the Fifth RSDLP Congress. On his return, he was arrested and deported to Arkhangelsk, but in December he escaped and moved to Baku, where Stalin was also active. Arrested again in 1908, he was released from exile in 1912, and for a time worked in an ordnance factory in Tsaritsyn (Stalingrad/Volgagrad).[4]

Russian Revolution and Civil War

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Voroshilov in 1920.
Voroshilov in 1920

Voroshilov was in Petrograd (St Petersburg) during the February Revolution, but returned to Luhansk, where he was chairman of the town soviet, and was elected to the Constituent Assembly. His military career began early in 1918, when he was given command of the Fifth Ukrainian Army, which was made up of a few scattered units, who were driven out of Ukraine by the German army. After a long, hazardous retreat, his group reached Tsaritsyn, where Stalin was posted in summer 1918 as representative of the central party leadership, and where Voroshilov was given command of the Tenth Army. Stalin and Voroshilov led the Red Army's 1918 defense of Tsaritsyn. They also sponsored the creation of the first Red Cavalry unit, commanded by Semyon Budyonny, which was composed chiefly of peasants from southern Russia.[8][9] During the Polish–Soviet War, Voroshilov was political commissar with Budienny's First Cavalry. In Tsaritsyn, Voroshilov clashed with Leon Trotsky, the People's Commissar for War, who considered him undisciplined and unfit to command an army, and in October 1918 threatened him with court martial.[10] Voroshilov was transferred to Ukraine, as commander of the Kharkiv military district, and later People's Commissar for War in the Ukraine soviet republic. He sided with the 'Military Opposition', who opposed the formation of a centralised army, preferring to rely on local mobile units, and objected to the recruitment into the Red Army of former officers from the Tsarist army.[11]

Interwar period

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The red banner from the Paris Commune, brought to Moscow by French communists. On the photo: Kliment Voroshilov first on the right, Grigory Zinoviev third from the right, Avel Enukidze fourth from the right and Nikolay Antipov fifth from the right. 1924

Voroshilov served as a member of the Central Committee from his election in 1921 until 1961. In April 1921, he was appointed commander of the North Caucasus military district. In March 1924, he was promoted to the post of commander of the Moscow military district. In 1925, after the death of Mikhail Frunze, Voroshilov was appointed People's Commissar for Military and Navy Affairs and Chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council of the USSR, a post he held until 1934. Despite the high offices he held, Voroshilov appears not to have been part in the inner leadership. In November 1930, the chairman of the Russian government, Sergey Syrtsov alleged that a "tiny group", which excluded Voroshilov but included nominally much less senior figures such as Pavel Postyshev, was making decisions "behind the back of the Politburo".[12]

His main accomplishment in this period was to move key Soviet war industries east of the Urals, so that the Soviet Union could strategically retreat, while keeping its manufacturing capability intact.[13] Frunze's political position adhered to that of the Troika (Grigory Zinoviev, Lev Kamenev, Stalin), but Stalin preferred to have a close, personal ally in charge (as opposed to Frunze, a "Zinovievite"). Frunze was urged by a group of Stalin's hand-picked doctors to have surgery to treat an old stomach ulcer, despite previous doctors' recommendations to avoid surgery and Frunze's own unwillingness.[14] He died on the operating table of a massive overdose of chloroform, an anaesthetic.[14] Voroshilov became a full member of the newly formed Politburo in 1926, remaining a member until 1960.

Voroshilov was appointed People's Commissar (Minister) for Defence in 1934 and a Marshal of the Soviet Union in 1935.

The Great Purge

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Voroshilov (right) with Joseph Stalin (center) and Vyacheslav Molotov (left) in 1937 during the Great Purge

During the first of the Moscow trials, in August 1936, Voroshilov was one of four Politburo members who signed the order that appeals for clemency were to be denied and that the defendants were to be executed without delay.[15] He was also of the main speakers at the March 1937 plenum of the Central Committee, which ended with the arrests of Nikolai Bukharin and Alexei Rykov, whom Voroshilov denounced as "renegades".[16] In the early stages, he seemed to have believed that the purge would not affect the armed forces, and was seemingly unprepared for the arrest of Marshal Tukhachevsky and others in April and May. Voroshilov did not personally share the paranoia towards upper-class elements of the officer corps.[17] He openly declared that the saboteurs in the Red Army were few in number and tried to save the lives of officers like Lukin, who would serve with distinction during the Second World War, and Sokolov-Strakhov, and he was sometimes successful.[17] But on 30 May, he telephoned the commander of the Ukraine military district, Iona Yakir ordering him to take a train to Moscow for a meeting of the Military Revolutionary Council, knowing that he would be arrested on the way.[18] When the Council met on 1 June 1937, Voroshilov vacated the chair to deliver a report in which he said, apologetically: "I could not believe we would reveal so many and such scoundrels in the ranks fo the highest command of our glorious, our valiant Workers' and Peasants' Army."[19]

The first five Marshals of the Soviet Union, clockwise from top left: Budyonny, Blyukher, Yegorov, Voroshilov and Tukhachevsky (November 1935). Only Voroshilov and Budyonny would survive Stalin's Great Purge.

After that, he played a central role in Stalin's Great Purge of the 1930s, denouncing many of his own military colleagues and subordinates when asked to do so by Stalin. He wrote personal letters to exiled former Soviet officers and diplomats such as commissar Mikhail Ostrovsky, asking them to return voluntarily to the Soviet Union and falsely reassuring them that they would not face retribution from authorities.[20] Voroshilov personally signed 185 documented execution lists, fourth among the Soviet leadership after Molotov, Stalin and Kaganovich.[21] He had no problem denouncing officers he disliked such as Tukhachevsky.[17][22]

Despite taking part in the purging of many "mechanisers" (supporters of wide usage of tanks rather than cavalry) from the Red Army, Voroshilov became convinced that reliance on cavalry should be decreased while more modern arms should receive higher priority.[17] Marshal Budyonny tried to recruit him to his cause of protecting the status of cavalry in the Red Army but Voroshilov openly declared his intention to do the opposite.[17] He praised the army's combined arms warfare capabilities as well as the high quality and ability to take initiative of the officers during the 1936 summer manoeuvers.[17] However he also pointed out issues in the Red Army as a whole in his full report.[17] Among the issues he pointed out were insufficient communication, ineffective staffs, insufficient cooperation between arms, and the rudimentary nature of the command structure in tank units and other modern arms.[17]

Voroshilov in 1937

When the Great Purge ended, some reforms were undertaken by the high command to reconcile Red Army doctrine (for example deep operations doctrine) with the real state of the Red Army.[17] The politically appointed commanders of the post-purge Red Army saw that the army, especially after the purge, was not suitable to carry out deep operations style warfare.[17] Commanders such as Voroshilov and Kulik were among the instigators of these reforms which positively impacted the Red Army.[17] These commanders themselves turned out not to be able to carry out such operations in practice.[17] Voroshilov and Kulik turned out to be unable to put these reforms into practice.[17] One of these reforms was a reorganization of Red Army field units which accidentally moved Red Army organization to a far less advanced state than it had been in 1936. This reorganization was conceived by Kulik but put into practice by Voroshilov.[22]

When territorial units were abolished Voroshilov noted that among the reasons for disbanding them was inability to train conscripts in the use of modern technology.[17] He had openly proclaimed that the system was inadequate in an era in which imperialist powers (such as Germany) were expanding the capabilities of their armies.[17] The territorial units had been very unpopular, not only with Voroshilov, but with the Red Army leadership a whole.[17] They were hopelessly ineffective: territorial conscript Alexey Grigorovich Maslov noted that he never fired a shot during his training, while it was noted that these units only underwent real training in the one month a year when experienced veterans returned.[17]

World War II

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Voroshilov with Joseph Stalin, Vyacheslav Molotov, Harry Hopkins and George Marshall at the Tehran Conference in Iran, December 1943

Voroshilov commanded Soviet troops during the Winter War from November 1939 to January 1940 but, due to poor Soviet planning and Voroshilov's incompetence as a general,[23] the Red Army suffered about 320,000 casualties compared to 70,000 Finnish casualties.[24] When the leadership gathered at Stalin's dacha at Kuntsevo, Stalin shouted at Voroshilov for the losses; Voroshilov replied in kind, blaming the failure on Stalin for eliminating the Red Army's best generals in his purges.[citation needed] Voroshilov followed this retort by smashing a platter of food on the table. Nikita Khrushchev said it was the only time he ever witnessed such an outburst.[25] Voroshilov was nonetheless made the scapegoat for the initial failures in Finland. He was later replaced as Defense Commissar by Semyon Timoshenko. Voroshilov was then made Deputy Premier responsible for cultural matters.[26] Voroshilov initially argued that thousands of Polish army officers captured in September 1939 should be released, but he later signed the order for their execution in the Katyn massacre of 1940.[27]

Voroshilov shows the Sword of Stalingrad to US President Franklin D. Roosevelt while the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Stalin look on.

Between 1941 and 1944, Voroshilov was a member of the State Defense Committee.

After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, Voroshilov became commander of the short-lived Northwestern Direction (July to August 1941), controlling several fronts. In September 1941 he commanded the Leningrad Front. Working alongside military commander Andrei Zhdanov as German advances threatened to cut off Leningrad, he displayed considerable personal bravery in defiance of heavy shelling at Ivanovskoye; at one point he rallied retreating troops and personally led a counter-attack against German tanks armed only with a pistol.[28] However, the style of counterattack he launched had long since been abandoned by strategists and drew mostly contempt from his military colleagues;[23] he failed to prevent the Germans from surrounding Leningrad and he was dismissed from his post and replaced by Georgy Zhukov on 8 September 1941.[29] Stalin had a political need for popular wartime leaders, however, and Voroshilov remained as an important figurehead.[23]

Post war

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Hungary

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Between 1945 and 1947, Voroshilov supervised the establishment of the socialist republic in postwar Hungary.[23] He attributed the poor showing of the Hungarian Communist Party in the October 1945 Budapest municipal elections to the number of minorities in leadership positions, arguing that it was "detrimental to the party that its leaders are not of Hungarian origin".[30]

1952–1953 Soviet leadership

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Voroshilov (right) with J.K. Paasikivi in Moscow

In 1952, Voroshilov was appointed a member of the Presidium of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Stalin's death on 5 March 1953 prompted major changes in the Soviet leadership. On 15 March 1953, Voroshilov was approved as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (i.e., the head of state) with Nikita Khrushchev as First Secretary of the Communist Party and Georgy Malenkov as Premier of the Soviet Union. Voroshilov, Malenkov, and Khrushchev brought about the 26 June 1953 arrest of Lavrenty Beria after Stalin's death.

One of Voroshilov's responsibilities as chairman of the Presidium was to oversee the appeal review of Soviet death row inmates. Analysis by Jeffrey S. Hardy and Yana Skorobogatov describe his role thus:

"Chairman Voroshilov presided over the meetings and clearly had the most influential voice, but split votes were not uncommon and Voroshilov was sometimes outvoted... Throughout his tenure as Presidium chair, he behaved like someone who believed that one should follow established procedure and not act too quickly in matters of life and death."[31]

Hardy and Skorobogatov indicate that Voroshilov frequently exerted his influence on the committee toward leniency, especially in the case of those who expressed repentance in their appeal documents and those convicted of crimes of passion or under the influence of alcohol; he judged those convicted of political crimes or acts with financial motives more harshly. During his tenure, many individuals sentenced to death had their punishments commuted to prison terms of varying lengths. The authors of the study observe that his successor, Brezhnev, took a noticeably harder line in appeals cases.[31]

Voroshilov with Mao Zedong and Mei Lanfang in Beijing, China, 1957

However, the contrast between Voroshilov's relatively magnanimous attitude toward pardon cases in the 1950s with his well-documented participation in the deadly purges of the 1930s (as described above) was noted even at the time by Khrushchev, who asked him, "So when were you acting according to your conscience, then or now?"[31]

Fall from grace

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After Khrushchev removed most of the Stalinists like Molotov and Malenkov from the party, Voroshilov's career began to fade. On 7 May 1960, the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union granted Voroshilov's request for retirement and elected Leonid Brezhnev chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Council (the head of state). The Central Committee also relieved him of duties as a member of the Party Presidium (as the Politburo had been called since 1952) on 16 July 1960.[citation needed] In October 1961, his political defeat was complete at the 22nd party congress when he was excluded from election to the Central Committee.[citation needed]

Following Khrushchev's fall from power, Soviet leader Brezhnev brought Voroshilov out of retirement into a figurehead political post. Voroshilov was again re-elected to the Central Committee in 1966. Voroshilov was awarded a second medal of Hero of the Soviet Union 1968.

Death

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During a winter night in 1969, Voroshilov started to feel unwell. His family proposed to call an ambulance immediately, but he adamantly refused. In the morning he put on his military uniform, and after calling a car, he went to the hospital himself, fully decorated. Voroshilov died on 2 December, at the age of 88, and was buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis,[32] in one of the twelve individual tombs located between the Lenin Mausoleum and the Kremlin wall.

Personal life

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Voroshilov was married to Ekaterina Voroshilova, born Golda Gorbman, a Ukrainian Jew from Mardarovka. She changed her name when she converted to Orthodox Christianity in order to be allowed to marry Voroshilov. They met while both were exiled in Arkhangelsk, where Ekaterina was sent in 1906. While both serving on the Tsaritsyn Front in 1918, where Ekaterina was helping orphans, they adopted a four-year-old orphan boy who they named Petya.[33] They also adopted the children of Mikhail Frunze following his death in 1925. During Stalin's rule, they lived in the Kremlin at the Horse Guards.[34]

His personality as it was described by Molotov in 1974: "Voroshilov was nice, but only in certain times. He always stood for the political line of the party, because he was from a working class, a common man, very good orator. He was clean, yes. And he was personally devoted to Stalin. But his devotion was not very strong. However in this period he advocated Stalin very actively, supported him in everything, though not entirely sure in everything. It also affected their relationship. This is a very complex issue. This must be taken into account to understand why Stalin treated him critically and not invited him at all our conversations. At least at private ones. But he came by himself. Stalin frowned. Under Khrushchev, Voroshilov behaved badly."[35]

Honours and awards

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Soviet Union

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The Kliment Voroshilov (KV) series of tanks, used in World War II, was named after him. Two towns were also named after him: Voroshilovsk in Donbas (now Alchevsk) Voroshilovgrad in Ukraine (now changed back to the historical Luhansk) and Voroshilov in the Soviet Far East (now renamed Ussuriysk after the Ussuri river), as well as the General Staff Academy in Moscow. Stavropol was called Voroshilovsk from 1935 to 1943.

Foreign awards

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Mongolia

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Finland

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Turkey

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  • Honorary citizen of İzmir, November 1933;[36] in İzmir a street was also named after him.[37] In 1951, it was renamed "Plevne Bulvarı".

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Old Style date 23 January 1881
  2. ^ "Ворошилов Климент Ефремович" (in Russian). Герои Страны (Heroes of the Country). Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  3. ^ Pyotr Grigorenko. "В ПОДПОЛЬЕ МОЖНО ВСТРЕТИТЬ ТОЛЬКО КРЫС..." (In the underground one may find only rats...). Institute "Open society" - Cooperation and Association Fund "Liberty Road". 1981 (Cover of the book Archived 10 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine)
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Georges Haupt, and Jean-Jacques Marie (1974). Makers of the Russian Revolution, Biographies of Bolshevik Leaders. (This volume contains a translation of a biographical essay by Voroshilov, written for a Soviet encyclopaedia around 1926) London: George Allen & Unwin. p. 281. ISBN 0-04-947021-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  5. ^ "Ворошилов, Климент Ефремович – это... Что такое Ворошилов, Климент Ефремович?". Словари и энциклопедии на Академике (in Russian). Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  6. ^ Wolfe, Bertram D. (1966). Three Who Made a Revolution, A Biographical History. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 390.
  7. ^ Tucker, Robert C. (1974). Stalin As Revolutionary, 1879–1929. London: Chatto & Windus. p. 86. ISBN 0-7011-2054-1.
  8. ^ Brown, Stephen. "Communists and the Red Cavalry: The Political Education of the Konarmiia in the Russian Civil War, 1918–20" The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 73, No. 1 (Jan. 1995), p. 88.
  9. ^ Barmine, Alexander, One Who Survived, New York: G.P. Putnam (1945), footnote, p. 21.
  10. ^ Trotsky, Leon (1969). Stalin, Volume Two: The Revolutionary in Power. London: Panther. p. 74.
  11. ^ Schapiro, Leonard (1965). The Origin of the Communist Autocracy, Political Opposition in the Soviet State: First Phase, 1917–1922. New York: Frederick A. Praeger. p. 244.
  12. ^ Khlevniuk, Oleg, ed. (1995). Сталинское Политбюро в 30-е годы. Moscow. pp. 99–106.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Darman, Peter (16 December 2012). The Home Fronts: Allied and Axis Life During World War II. Rosen Classroom. p. 26. ISBN 978-1448892365.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Erickson, John (2013). The Soviet High Command: a Military-political History, 1918–1941. Routledge. p. 199. ISBN 978-1136339523.
  15. ^ R.W.Davies, Oleg V. Khlevniuk and E..A. Rees (2003). The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence, 1931–36. New Haven: Yale U.P. p. 339. ISBN 0-300-09367-5.
  16. ^ J.Arch Getty, and Oleg V.Naumov (1999). The Road to Terror, Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks, 1932–1939. New Haven: Yale U.P. pp. 375–77. ISBN 0-300-07772-6.
  17. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Hill, Alexander, 1974- (2017). The Red Army and the Second World War. Cambridge, United Kingdom. ISBN 9781107020795. OCLC 944957747.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ Conquest, Robert (1971). The Great Terror. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. pp. 303–04.
  19. ^ M. Svitlana, and Ahmet Erdogan. Transcripts from the Soviet Archives, Volume III. Academia.edu. p. 164.
  20. ^ Barmine, Alexander, One Who Survived, New York: G.P. Putnam (1945), footnote, p. 21.
  21. ^ "Сталинские списки". stalin.memo.ru. Archived from the original on 12 February 2021. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  22. ^ Jump up to: a b Glantz, David M. (1995). When Titans Clashed: How the Red Army Stopped Hitler. House, Jonathan M. (Jonathan Mallory), 1950–. Lawrence, Kan.: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 070060717X. OCLC 32859811.
  23. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Rappaport, Helen (1999). Joseph Stalin: A Biographical Companion. ABC-CLIO. p. 307. ISBN 1576070840.
  24. ^ Buttar, Prit (2015). Between Giants: The Battle for The Baltics in World War II. United Kingdom: Osprey Publishing.
  25. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita Khrushchev Remembers, London, 1971, p.137.
  26. ^ Sebag Montefiore, Simon 2004 Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar, Phoenix London ISBN 0-7538-1766-7 pp. 340–41.
  27. ^ Монтефиоре, с. 337–39.
  28. ^ Безумие Сталина: трагические первые десять дней Второй мировой войны на Восточном фронте , Константин Плешаков, 2006, с.268
  29. ^ Montefiore, с. 391–95.
  30. ^ Эпплбаум, Энн. Железный занавес: сокрушение Восточной Европы 1944–56. Лондон: Пингвин, 2013, с.222.
  31. ^ Jump up to: а беременный в Харди, Джеффри С.; Скоробогатов, Яна (2018). « Мы не можем стрелять всех » . Cahiers du Monde Russe . 59 (4): 473–498. doi : 10.4000/monderusse.10532 . S2CID   166397822 .
  32. ^ Заархивировано в Ghostarchive и на машине Wayback : «Забытые лидеры. Эпизод 2. Климент Ворошилов. Документальный фильм. Английские субтитры. Starmediaen» . YouTube . 8 мая 2018 года.
  33. ^ Лариса Васса Васса, Кремлин Живы стр. 83–5 Получено 23 октября
  34. ^ Монтефиоре, с. 9–10.
  35. ^ Chuev, Felix (1993), Молотов помнят: Inside Kremlin Politics , van R Dee Inc ISBN   978-1-56663-027-6
  36. ^ "Dspace Home" (PDF) .
  37. ^ "Ас-Адд." .
[ редактировать ]
Политические офисы
Предшествует Председатель Президиума Верховного Советского Советского Союза
1953–1960
Преуспевает
Предшествует Народный комиссар обороны
1925–1940
Преуспевает
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Kliment Voroshilov - Wikipedia
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