The Soviet military
leader Mikhail Vasilievich Frunze (1885-1925) reformed the Red Army and guided
the militarization of the former U. S. S. R. Mikhail Frunze was born on Feb. 2,
1885, in Pishpek (renamed Frunze), Kirghizia, the son of a medical orderly. He
attended the St. Petersburg Institute of Technology and joined the Bolshevik
party in 1904. He was an active party member, and his revolutionary ardor
earned him a sentence of 8 years at hard labor.
During the civil
war years Frunze distinguished himself, first against Adm. A. V. Kolchak on the
eastern front in 1919 and later against Gen. P. N. Wrangel on the southern
front in 1920. In what was perhaps the most brilliant military victory of the
civil war, Frunze ordered his men to wade through the shallow sea of the narrow
Perekop Isthmus past Wrangel's sleeping White Army. Cannon, men, and cavalry
all floated silently by the enemy, and in the morning Wrangel's men were
dumb-founded to find themselves surrounded by the Red Army.
Frunze conceived
the ``unitary military doctrine,'' combining ideology, determination, and
aggressiveness in the promotion of world revolution. In January 1921, 2 months
after the close of the civil war, Frunze astounded war-weary Russia by calling
for total Soviet militarization for the war of the future. In June 1925 the U.
S. S. R. Congress of Soviets passed the momentous law ordering the total
economic mobilization of the Soviet state. The continual growth of his program
of peacetime preparedness played no small role in enabling the U. S. S. R. to
become one of the world's greatest military powers.
Frunze was
appointed deputy commissar for military affairs in March 1924 and succeeded
Leon Trotsky as commissar for military affairs in January 1925. His influence
on the development of the Red Army was of decisive importance, as he proceeded
to regularize the military organization. He was responsible for the circulation
in November 1924 of a declaration that defined the duties of both the military
commanders and the political commissars, thus resolving the difficult problem
of the unity of command. Field-service regulations were redrafted, and he
systematized the duties of the conscript in a recruitment law that served as
the basis of all such subsequent legislation until 1936. Frunze believed in the
importance of a sound officers' corps and stimulated the development of a
countrywide network of advanced military schools.
This rise in the
military was paralleled by Frunze's ascent in the party. In 1921 he was elected
to the Central Committee, and in 1924 he was made a deputy member of the Politburo.
The circumstances
surrounding Mikhail Frunze's premature death on Oct. 31, 1925, are rather
mysterious. Stalin summoned Frunze to Moscow, where he was ordered to undergo
surgery for cancer, from which he never recovered. His successor as commissar
was Stalin's old friend K. E. Voroshilov.
Further Reading A recent biography of Frunze is Walter
Darnell Jacobs, Frunze: The Soviet Clausewitz, 1885-1925 (1970). Another
excellent source is John Erickson, The Soviet High Command: A Military-
Political History, 1918-1941 (1962). See also Michel Gardner, A History of the
Soviet Army (1959; trans. 1966).
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