Chief of the Soviet
General Staff and first deputy minister of defense (1984-1988) and national
security advisor to President Mikhail Gorbachev (1988-1991).
Marshal Sergei
Akhromeyev played a key role in ending the Cold War and the negotiation of key
arms control agreements: the INF (Inter-Mediate Range Nuclear Forces) Treaty
(1987) and the CFE (Conventional Forces in Europe) Treaty (1990) between NATO
and Warsaw Treaty Organization member states. He also oversaw the Soviet
military withdrawal from Afghanistan. According to Admiral William Crowe, his
American counterpart, "He was a communist, a patriot and a soldier."
Dedicated to the rejuvenation of the Soviet system, Akhromeyev found that
perestroika had unleashed deep conflicts within the USSR and undermined the
system's legitimacy. After playing a part in the unsuccessful coup of August
1991, he committed suicide in his Kremlin office.
Born in 1923,
Akhromeyev belonged to that cohort upon whom the burden of World War II fell
most heavily. The war shaped both his career as a professional soldier and his
understanding of the external threat to the Soviet regime. He enrolled in a
naval school in Leningrad in 1940 and was in that city when the German invasion
began. He served as an officer of naval infantry in 1942 at Stalingrad and
fought with the Red Army from the Volga to Berlin. Akhromeyev advanced during
the war to battalion command and joined the Communist Party in 1943.
In the postwar
years Akhromeyev rose to prominence in the Soviet Armed Forces and General
Staff. In 1952 he graduated from the Military Academy of the Armor Forces. In
1967 he graduated from the Military Academy of the General Staff. Thereafter,
he held senior staff positions and served as head of a main directorate of the
General Staff from 1974 to 1977 and then as first deputy chief of the General
Staff from 1979 to 1984. As Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov's deputy, Akhromeyev sought
to recast the Soviet Armed Forces to meet the challenge of the revolution in
military affairs, which involved the application of automated troop control,
electronic warfare, and precision strikes to modern combined arms combat.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Herspring, Dale. (1990). The Soviet High Command, 1964-1989: Politics and
Personalities. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Kipp, Jacob W., Bruce
W. Menning, David M. Glantz, and Graham H. Turbiville, Jr. "Marshal
Akhromeev's Post-INF World" Journal of Soviet Military Studies
1(2):167-187. Odom, William E. (1998). The Collapse of the Soviet Military. New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press Zisk, Kimberly Marten. (1993). Engaging the
Enemy: Organization Theory and Soviet Military Innovation, 1955-1991.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
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