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Kirill Meretskov

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K.A. Meretskov
File:KA-Meretskov.jpg
Kirill Meretskov.
Allegiance Soviet Union
Years of service1917 — 1968
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union
CommandsLeningrad Military District
7th Army
Volkhov Front
Karelian Front
Soviet Far East Front
Battles / warsRussian Civil War
Winter War
Great Patriotic War
AwardsHero of the Soviet Union
Order of Victory
Order of Lenin (7)
Order of the Red Banner (4)
Order of Suvorov, 1st Class
Order of Kutuzov, 1st Class
Order of the October Revolution
Other workChief of the General Staff
Deputy Commissar of Defense
Assistant Minister of Defense
Inspector-General of the Army

Kirill Afanasievich Meretskov (Template:Lang-ru) (June 7, 1897December 30, 1968) was a Soviet military commander.

He was born in the Ryazan province, southeast of Moscow. His parents were peasants and lived in a rural village. He volunteered for the Imperial Army in June 1916, where he worked as a mechanic.

Meretskov joined the Bolsheviks in August 1917, and became chief of staff of a Red Guard (later Red Army) division. During the Russian Civil War, he attended a military academy, which he was forced to leave several times so as to take command positions where he was desperately needed (see also 1st Cavalry Army). During these battles, he was wounded and subsequently decorated for bravery multiple times. He graduated in 1921. Between 1924 and 1931, he held a number of positions in the Moscow Military District.

In 1936, Meretskov left the Soviet Union to fight for the Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. He returned home in 1937. In 1939 he was appointed commander of the Leningrad Military District.

On November 30, 1939, the Soviet Union declared war on Finland, beginning the Soviet-Finnish War. Meretskov was in command of the operation, since he was commander of the Leningrad Military District. His initial attempt to defeat the Finns met with disaster. Despite an overwhelming numerical superiority, the Soviet forces were uncoordinated and poorly suited for the winter campaign. By mid-December, the offensive had been called off, due to extensive failures and heavy casualties. The blame for this loss does not lie with Meretskov, however. While the strategic planning of the war was sound, the tactical command, at the divisional level and lower was abysmal. Most Soviet generals had no experience, especially after the purges of the late 1930s had taken their toll. Furthermore, Meretskov's command of the operation was hindered by poor decissions of his superior, the People's Commissar for Defence, Kliment Voroshilov, who was in overall command of the operation.

Nonetheless, Stalin removed Meretskov from command and placed him in charge of the 7th Army, which had also taken part in the offensive. Marshal Semyon Timoshenko was placed in command of the Leningrad Military District. In February 1940, the Russians once again attacked Finland, but this time they were better prepared. The Russians were then able to defeat the Finns, who were compelled to sign an armstice on March 12th, and Meretskov was able to reap the rewards for being in command of the leading Russian element. He was given the rank of Hero of the Soviet Union, the highest honor in the Soviet Union. Afterwards, Meretskov was made Chief of the General Staff and then Deputy Commissar of Defense.

When the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Operation Barbarossa, began on June 22 1941, Meretskov was a member of the Soviet High Command, STAVKA, and attempted to come up with a plan to stem the German advance. In August he was sent to the Northwestern Front headquarters to act as STAVKA representative. But in September 1941 Lavrenti Beria, the head of the NKVD, accused Meretskov (falsely) of being a traitor. He was arrested and imprisoned until October, when Stalin was desperately short of competent generals. Meretskov was badly tortured in prison. After his release Stalin asked Meretskov "how are you feeling" (Montefiore Stalin 338)

A Victory at Tikhvin

Meretskov was appointed Commander of the Fourth Army which fought in the defense of Leningrad against the Army Group North of von Leeb. applying active defense and constant counterattacks bogged down Germans, went on the offensive and on December 10, 1941 recaptured Tikhvin. In the midst of the battle Stavka ordered Kirill Meretskov to organize a new Volkhov Front. By December 30, 1941 Meretzkov expelled Leeb's troops back to positions from which they began their Tikhvin offense. According to one of the leading historians of the Eastern Front David Glantz: "the concept of blitzkrieg failed for the first time in the Second World War... anticipating" the Soviet victory at Moscow. The battle at Tikhvin was also significant in its direct assistance to the Red Army in the battle of Moscow. Instead of sending troops from the Army Group North to Moscow, Germans were forced to reinforce their armies in the north with divisions from the Army Group Center as well as with other divisions which Germans initially planned to use at Moscow. David Glantz: "During this most critical period of the war, 32 percent of the Wehrmacht's forces, operating north of the Pripiat Marshes, including almost two full panzer groups, were tied down in combat along or adjacent to" Tikhvin. Wehrmacht lost in the battle 45,000 troops.

In December 1941 Meretskov was appointed commander of the Volkhov Front in the north, a position he held until February 1944.

As commander of Volkhov Front, Meretskov was able to finally halt the German offensive in the north, and prevent the Germans from completely surrounding Leningrad. During much of the war, Meretskov’s Volkhov Front, in co-operation with Leonid Govorov's Leningrad Front, conducted a number of offensives in an attempt to break the German blockade of Leningrad. Finally, in January 1943, during one of the many offensives, Volkhov and Leningrad front forces linked up near Siniavino. With a land bridge now open for supplies and troop movements, Govorov and Meretskov launched a series of offensives designed to push the Germans back and permanently break the blockade of Leningrad. This was accomplished with the Leningrad-Novgorod Strategic Offensive in January 1944.

In February 1944, Meretskov was transferred to the Karelian Front in the far north. Here, he aided Govorov’s Leningrad Front as they attempted to invade Finland and drive the Finns from the war. The operation was semi-successful, in that the Finns were forced to sue for peace, but the offensive was plagued by a series of difficulties and strong Finnish defence. In October, Meretskov was ordered to clear the city of Petsamo, in northern Finland, of Germans and to drive the German army back into Norway. Meretskov was able to use his knowledge of Arctic warfare to launch a co-ordinated offensive called the Petsamo-Kirkenes Operation that drove the Germans back from their positions. After this offensive Meretskov was promoted to the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union, on October 26, 1944.

Meretskov’s next major command was in Manchuria in 1945, in the Far East, where he was selected to lead the 1st Far Eastern Front for Operation August Storm because of his knowledge of terrain. Meretskov’s forces easily crushed their Japanese opponents during this final campaign of the war.

After the war Meretskov commanded a number of military districts until 1955 (including the Moscow Military District in 1947-49)[1], when he was made the Assistant Minister of Defense, a post he held until 1964. In that year, he was made the Inspector-General Ministry of Defense, a largely ceremonial post. Meretskov died on December 30, 1968. The urn containing his ashes is buried in the Kremlin.

Meretskov is regarded as one of the finest Soviet generals of World War II, and was one of the most decorated. He received the Victory Order, the highest medal available, and the rank of Hero of the Soviet Union. A college for tank commanders (ru:Благовещенское высшее танковое командное краснознамённое училище) in Blagoveshchensk in the Far East, and a number of streets in Moscow, Novgorod, and in other cities are named after him.

References

  1. ^ Feskov et al 2004, The Soviet Army during the Period of the Cold War