Soviet military commander and marshal of the Soviet Union
(1940). Semen Timoshenko was born in Odessa Province of peasant origins.
Conscripted at the outbreak of World War I, he served through the conflict as a
machine gunner, emerging as a junior officer.
When the czarist army collapsed, Timoshenko returned to
Odessa, joining the Red Guards in early 1918 and fighting against the Germans
and anti-Soviet forces in the Kuban and Crimea before becoming Cavalry Brigade
Commander in the Tenth Army in November, defending Tsaritsyn. Becoming part of
Stalin’s “Tsaritsyny” faction, from June 1919, he served as divisional
commander in Semen Budennyi’s 1st Cavalry Army, fighting Anton Denikin, Peter
Wrangel’, and Poland until 1920.
Timoshenko completed Officers’ Higher Academy Courses (1922,
1927) and graduated from the Lenin Military- Political Academy (1930). During
the purges, Stalin dispatched him to occupy numerous short-term command posts,
replacing purged commanders.
After commanding on the Ukrainian front in occupied Poland
(1939), Timoshenko led the Soviet assault on the Mannerheim Line during the
Russo-Finnish War (1939– 1940), achieving victory with appalling losses. Witnessing
here the adverse effect of the military purges, from May 1940, as defense
commissar, he attempted to strengthen Soviet border defenses against Germany,
working with Georgy Zhukov, but Stalin’s vacillations and preparations for the
wrong war led to the disastrous Soviet performances during the initial German
invasion.
The humiliation in the Winter War prompted reassessment at
the highest level. In the middle of April 1940 a special session of the Central
Committee and the Main Military Council met to consider steps to improve Soviet
fighting power. Voroshilov, who had been a dominant voice as Defence Commissar
for fifteen years, was subjected to a hostile cross-examination.
Stalin dismissed what he called ‘the cult of
admiration for civil war experience’, and
finally sacked his civil war comrade, the man Khrushchev regarded as ‘the biggest bag of shit in the army’. In his place Stalin appointed Timoshenko, who
had brought the Finnish fiasco to a satisfactory close. Timoshenko’s career had followed the conventional Soviet path. A former
peasant labourer, he rose to become an NCO during the First World War, joined
the Red Army in 1918, the Communist Party in 1919. He proved an able organizer
and was regarded as politically reliable. In 1940 he was commander of the Kiev
military district, the key area for the defence of the Soviet frontier. He was
summoned to the Defence Commissariat as a reformer.
He set about his task with the urgency it deserved. Where
Voroshilov had persisted in viewing the army as a branch of politics, as a
revolutionary force, Timoshenko was determined to take up the torch lit by
Tukhachevsky before his fall and to turn the Red Army into a professional
force. He enjoyed wide support from other commanders, who wanted to abandon the
political supervision of the army by Party commissars which Voroshilov had
reintroduced in 1937. The ambition was to rely more on military expertise.
General Kirill Meretskov, who had commanded an army against Finland, complained
openly at a meeting in May 1940 about the sterility produced by political
control:
Our people are afraid
to say anything directly, they are afraid to spoil relations and get in
uncomfortable situations and are fearful to speak the truth.
It was evidence of the changing mood in the Party that
Meretskov not only survived this outspoken challenge to Party interference, but
was promoted to chief of staff in August. On the twelfth of that month
Timoshenko, with Stalin’s approval, reinstituted unitary
command, returning the initiative to the military.
This was the most important of the reforms introduced in the
summer of 1940, but not the only one. Timoshenko restructured the Defence
Commissariat along functional lines; he resurrected the old officer corps. Over
1,000 were promoted to admiral or general, and traditional uniforms were
reinstated. The right of junior officers to criticize their superiors was
abolished. A tough new code of discipline was introduced, as was a new training
regime that cut down on political propaganda, under the slogan ‘Teach the
troops what they require in war, and only that.’ Training was altered to
reflect more closely the arduous conditions of combat learned in Finland. At
the expense of training for open, mobile warfare, every effort was now made to
prepare the troops to attack fixed defences. Progress, however, was slow. At
the end of the year Meretskov told the annual conference of the Defence
Commissariat that training was still inadequate and blamed the failures on a
lack of ‘military professionalism’.
The reforms were intended to turn the Red Army and Navy into
effective fighting forces, which in 1940 they were not. Timoshenko did not
question the wider military strategy adopted in 1939 but concentrated his
effort on producing commanders and troops who could carry it out. Like most
senior officers, he accepted that modern war would be fought in two stages, a
preliminary period following a declaration of war in which the two sides used a
screen of forces in forward positions to disrupt the mobilization and
deployment of the enemy’s main forces, and a second in which the main forces,
concentrated behind the first echelon, would mount a crushing offensive. This
strategic outlook emphasized the offensive posture of Soviet forces, which the
Finnish war had exposed as flawed. It also flew in the face of the evidence of
the German campaign in Poland. Soviet commanders did not draw the obvious
lesson that modern mechanized armies could deploy at once with remarkable
striking power, without any preliminary skirmishing.
Timoshenko became chairman of the Soviet military command
(Stavka) (June–July 1941), commanded the Western Sector (July–September 1941),
and directed the battle for Smolensk, crucially delaying the German Center
Group. As Southwestern Sector commander (September 1941–May 1942), Timoshenko
brilliantly counterattacked at Rostov (November 1941) but was responsible for
the Kharkov encirclement (May 1942), where 240,000 Russians were taken
prisoner. Never recovering from this debacle, he received only minor postings
for the rest of the war, only escaping execution because of his good relations
with Stalin.
After the war, Timoshenko again held minor postings,
commanding Baranovich, South Ural, and Belorussia Military Districts. He was
inspector general of the Defense Ministry from 1960 and chairman of the Soviet
War Veterans Committee from 1961. He died in Moscow, neither the best nor the
worst, but rather typical of Stalin’s generals.
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