Marshal Ustinov: the last defender of socialism. The marshal who never commanded...

Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov
5th Minister of Defense of the USSR
April 29, 1976 - December 20, 1984
Predecessor: Andrey Antonovich Grechko
Successor: Sergey Leonidovich Sokolov
Member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee
March 5, 1976 - December 20, 1984
Candidate member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee
April 8, 1966 - March 5, 1976
Candidate member of the Presidium of the CPSU Central Committee
March 26, 1965 - March 29, 1966
First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR

1st Chairman of the Supreme Council of the National Economy of the USSR of the Council of Ministers of the USSR
March 13, 1963 - March 26, 1965

Successor: Vladimir Nikolaevich Novikov
Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR
March 15, 1953 - December 14, 1957
Predecessor: position created
Successor: position abolished; Alexander Vasilievich Domrachev as Chairman State Committee USSR Council of Ministers on Defense Technology
People's Commissar - Minister of Armaments of the USSR
June 9, 1941 - March 15, 1953
Predecessor: Boris Lvovich Vannikov
Successor: position abolished; himself as Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR

Party: CPSU since 1927
Education: Military Mechanical Institute People's Commissariat heavy industry
Birth: October 17 (October 30), 1908
Samara, Russian Empire
Death: December 20, 1984 (age 76)
Moscow, RSFSR, USSR
Buried: Necropolis near the Kremlin wall

Military service
Years of service: 1922-1923,
1944-1984
Affiliation: Red Army flag.svg USSR
Branch of the armed forces: engineering and artillery service
Rank: Marshal Soviet Union
Commanded by: Ministry of Defense of the USSR

Awards:
Hero of the Soviet Union - 1978 Hero of Socialist Labor - 1942 Hero of Socialist Labor - 1961

Order of Lenin Order of Lenin Order of Lenin Order of Lenin
Order of Lenin Order of Lenin Order of Lenin Order of Suvorov, 1st class
Order of Kutuzov, 1st degree
Medal "For Excellence in Security state border THE USSR"

Jubilee medal “For valiant labor (For military valor). In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"
Medal "For the Defense of Moscow"
Medal "For victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945" 20 years of victory rib.png 30 years of victory rib.png Medal “For Victory over Japan”
Medal "For Valiant Labor in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945"

Medal "For Strengthening the Military Commonwealth"

Medal "For the development of virgin lands"

Jubilee medal "30 years of the Soviet Army and Navy"
Medal "40 years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"

Medal "50 years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"

Medal "60 years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"

Medal "50 years of Soviet police"
Medal "In memory of the 800th anniversary of Moscow"

Medal "In memory of the 250th anniversary of Leningrad"
Lenin Prize - 1982 USSR State Prize - 1983 Stalin Prize - 1953

Mongolia Awards
Hero of the Mongolian People's Republic
Order of Sukhbaatar

Order of Sukhbaatar

Order of Sukhbaatar
Order of the Red Banner (Mongolia)

Czechoslovakia
Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
Order of Klement Gottwald

Order of Klement Gottwald
Order of the White Lion, 1st class

Bulgaria
Order of Georgiy Dimitrov

Order of Georgiy Dimitrov

Hungary
Order of the Banner of Hungary with diamonds Order of the Banner of Hungary with diamonds

GDR
OrdenMarksa.png OrdenMarksa.png
Order of Scharnhorst

Poland and Finland
Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 1st class
Grand Cross of the Order of the White Rose

Afghanistan and Vietnam
Order of the Sun of Freedom (Afghanistan)

Order of Ho Chi Minh

Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov (October 17 (October 30), 1908, Samara - December 20, 1984, Moscow) - Soviet political and military leader. In 1976-1984, Minister of Defense of the USSR. Marshal of the Soviet Union (1976). Twice Hero of Socialist Labor (1942, 1961), Hero of the Soviet Union (1978).
Content

1 Biography
1.1 Education
1.2 Biography
2 “Ustinov Doctrine”
3 Opinions and ratings
4 Memory
5 Military ranks
6 Film incarnations
7 Awards
7.1 USSR awards
7.2 MPR Awards
7.3 Awards of Czechoslovakia
7.4 Vietnam Award
7.5 NRB Awards
7.6 PNR Award
7.7 Peru Award
7.8 VNR Awards
7.9 DRA Award
7.10 GDR awards
7.11 Finnish Award
7.12 Awards of the Republic of Cuba
8 Sources
9 Notes
10 Links

Biography
Education

Vocational school.
Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute.

Biography

1922 - Volunteered into the Red Army (ChON detachments) in Samarkand.

1923 - Volunteered in the 12th Turkestan Regiment. Participated in hostilities with the Basmachi.

After demobilization in 1923, he worked his way up from a mechanic to a plant director.

In November 1927 he joined the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks).

1927-1929 - mechanic at the Balakhninsky paper mill, then at a factory in Ivanovo-Voznesensk.

In the fall of 1929 he became a student at the mechanical faculty of the Ivanovo-Voznesensk Polytechnic Institute. He worked as secretary of the Komsomol organization and was a member of the party bureau of the institute.

In 1932, the group in which D. Ustinov studied was sent in full force to Leningrad to staff the newly created Military Mechanical Institute (now BSTU "Voenmekh" named after D. F. Ustinov)

1934 - successful graduation from the Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute.

Since 1934 - engineer, head of the bureau of operation and experimental work at the Leningrad Artillery Scientific Research Maritime Institute.

Since 1937 - design engineer, deputy chief designer, director of the Leningrad Bolshevik plant. According to N.V. Kochetov, the chief designer of the plant, D.F. Ustinov, having headed Bolshevik, constantly used obscene language. This “tradition” was preserved at Bolshevik after the transfer of D. F. Ustinov to Moscow [source not specified 287 days].

In 1955, by order of the USSR Minister of Defense, he was recognized as being on active duty. military service from the moment it was assigned military rank.

December 14, 1957 - March 13, 1963 - Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Chairman of the Commission of the Presidium of the Council of Ministers of the USSR on military-industrial issues

March 13, 1963 - March 26, 1965 - First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Chairman of the Supreme Council National economy USSR Council of Ministers of the USSR

Member of the CPSU(b)-CPSU since 1927. Member of the CPSU Central Committee in 1952-84, member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee in 1976-84 (candidate member of the Presidium-Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee in 1965-76). Delegate to the XVIII, XIX, XX, XXI, XXII, XXIII, XXIV, XXV and XXVI Congresses of the CPSU(b)-CPSU.

Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR in 1946-1950. and in 1954-1984. Deputy of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR in 1967-1984.

Marshal Dmitry Ustinov was a member of the unofficial, “small” Politburo, which included the oldest and most influential members of the USSR leadership: Brezhnev, the main ideologist and second person in the party and state Suslov, KGB chairman Andropov, Foreign Minister Gromyko. In the “small” Politburo, the most important decisions were made, which were then formally approved at a vote of the main Politburo composition, where they sometimes voted in absentia. When making the decision to send Soviet troops into Afghanistan, Ustinov supported Brezhnev, Andropov and Gromyko, and the entry of troops into Afghanistan was decided.

In addition, Dmitry Ustinov supported the candidacy of Yuri Andropov for the post of Secretary General, overcoming the resistance of internal party groups who wanted to see the old and sick Chernenko in this post. However, Andropov, having served as Secretary General for a year and 3 months, died. But ironically, the sick Chernenko managed to outlive the strong and energetic Ustinov beyond his years. D. F. Ustinov, having caught a cold during a demonstration of new military equipment, died on December 20, 1984 from transient severe pneumonia.

Among the members of the Politburo in the 1970-1980s. differed in that he slept for 4-4.5 hours. He was exceptionally energetic, enterprising, and very quickly solved the problems of managing and managing enterprises.

He was buried on Red Square (cremated, the urn with the ashes was walled up in the Kremlin wall).
"Ustinov Doctrine"

The appointment of D. F. Ustinov as Minister of Defense of the USSR in 1976 led to significant advances in the Soviet Army and in Soviet military doctrine. Previously, the main emphasis was on creating powerful armored forces in accordance with scenarios of “high-intensity conventional conflict” in Central Europe and Far East.

Under D. F. Ustinov, greater emphasis is placed on tactical and operational-tactical nuclear weapon(the theory of “strengthening the European strategic direction”). In accordance with it, in 1976, the planned replacement of monoblock medium-range missiles R-12 (SS-4) and R-14 (SS-5) with the latest RSD-10 Pioneer (SS-20) began. In 1983-1984 in addition to them, the USSR deployed the OTR-22 and OTR-23 “Oka” operational-tactical complexes on the territory of Czechoslovakia and the German Democratic Republic, which made it possible to shoot through the entire territory of Germany. [source not specified 1237 days] On this basis, US and NATO analysts concluded that that the USSR is preparing for a limited nuclear conflict in Europe.
Opinions and ratings

Dmitry Fedorovich, even at the highest position, did not hesitate to study and persistently forced his subordinates to study. Already being the Minister of Defense, he instructed me to give him and the ministry board a series of lectures on the principles of constructing complex information systems strategic purposes, methods of ensuring the highest reliability of strategic information, modern and promising technical means these systems, their algorithmic and program content. He was the most active listener to these lectures and, in my opinion, already in my absence he gave his closest subordinates something like an exam.

From the memoirs of V. G. Repin, chief designer of the early warning system and the SKKP in 1970-1987.

…Ustinov became fixated on the defense industry and did not want to help the country’s economy in any way. He made a great contribution to the victory over fascism, but at the same time, I think, he caused damage to our economy when, at his instigation, the Brezhnev leadership spared nothing for defense, even the welfare of the working people.

N. G. Egorychev

Memory
USSR postage stamp, 1988, (DFA (ITC) #6001; Scott #5714)

Ustinov became the last whose ashes were placed in an urn in the Kremlin wall (more than two months before the last funeral at the Kremlin wall - K. U. Chernenko).
In 1984, the city of Izhevsk was renamed Ustinov; The renaming of the capital of the autonomous republic was unusual (previously, only regional centers - Naberezhnye Chelny and Rybinsk - were renamed in honor of Brezhnev and Andropov). This renaming was received sharply negatively by the townspeople, and already on June 19, 1987, Izhevsk was returned to its previous name.
At the same time, the name of Marshal of the Soviet Union D.F. Ustinov was assigned to the Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute. Currently, the university, having undergone changes in its name, still bears the name of D. F. Ustinov, but without mentioning the military rank.
In 1985, Osenny Boulevard in Moscow was renamed in honor of Ustinov, which became Marshal Ustinov Street, but in 1990 it was returned to its previous name.
In Ustinov's homeland - Samara - a square in the historical part of the city is named in his honor; There is a bust of Ustinov in the park.
In St. Petersburg, a street in the Rybatskoye microdistrict is named in his honor.
The Northern Fleet includes the missile cruiser Marshal Ustinov.
In 2012, a decision was made in Kovrov to name a street in one of the city’s microdistricts.

Military ranks

January 24, 1944 - Lieutenant General of the Engineering and Artillery Service.
November 18, 1944 - Colonel General of the Engineering and Artillery Service.
April 29, 1976 - Army General.
July 30, 1976 - Marshal of the Soviet Union.

Film incarnations

Andrei Popov in the feature film “Taming the Fire”, USSR, 1972.
Boris Gusakov in the film epic “The Battle of Moscow” (Czech: Boj o Moskvu; German: Schlacht um Moskau; Vietnamese: Cuộc chiến ở Moskva), USSR, 1985.
Yuri Stoskov in the feature film " Gray wolves", Russia, 1993.
??? in the series Red Square, 2004.
Menshov, Vladimir Valentinovich in the TV series Brezhnev, Russia, 2005.

Awards
USSR awards

Hero of the Soviet Union (1978)
Twice Hero of Socialist Labor (1942, 1961)
11 Orders of Lenin (1939, 1942, 1944, 1951, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1968, 1971, 1978, 1983)
Order of Suvorov, 1st class (1945)
Order of Kutuzov, 1st class (1944)
17 USSR medals
Lenin Prize laureate (1982)
Laureate of the Stalin Prize, 1st degree (1953)
Laureate of the USSR State Prize (1983)

MPR Awards

Hero of the Mongolian People's Republic (08/06/1981)
3 Orders of Sukhbaatar (1975, 1978, 1981)
Order of the Red Banner of Battle (1983)
6 medals of the MPR

Czechoslovakia Awards

Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (10/6/1982)
2 orders of Klement Gottwald (1978, 1983)
Order of the White Lion, 1st class (1977)
2 medals of Czechoslovakia

Vietnam Award

Order of Ho Chi Minh (1983)

NRB Awards

2 orders of Georgiy Dimitrov (1976, 1983)
7 NRB medals

PPR Award

Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 1st class (1976)

Peru Award

Air Force Order of Merit

VNR Awards

2 Orders of the Banner of Hungary with rubies (1978, 1983)
Hungarian People's Republic Medal

DRA Award

Order of the Sun of Freedom (1982)

GDR awards

2 Orders of Karl Marx (1978, 1983)
Order of Scharnhorst (1977)
Medal of the GDR

Finnish Award

Order of the White Rose, 1st class (1978)

Awards of the Republic of Cuba

Order of Playa Giron (1983)
2 Cuban medals

Sources

Ustinov D.F. // Kutsenko A. Marshals and Admirals of the Fleet of the Soviet Union. - Kyiv: Polygraphbook, 2007. - P. 335-343.
Ustinov D.F. // Marshals of the Soviet Union. Personal affairs tell / Institute of Military Historical and Patriotic Problems and Research. - M.: Favorite book, 1996. - P. 73-74 - ISBN 5-7656-0012-3
Ustinov D.F. // Heroes of the Soviet Union: A Brief Biographical Dictionary / Prev. ed. collegium I. N. Shkadov. - M.: Voenizdat, 1988. - T. 2 /Lubov - Yashchuk/. - P. 631. - 863 p. - 100,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-00536-2

In Moscow on Red Square
Memorial plaque in Moscow (old)
Bronze bust in Samara
Memorial plaque in Moscow (on the house where he lived)
Memorial plaque in St. Petersburg
Sign on the Voenmekha building in St. Petersburg
Bust in Kovrov
Memorial plaque in Moscow (new)
Bust in Izhevsk
Memorial plaque in Ivanovo


Ustinov Dmitry Fedorovich - People's Commissar of Armaments of the USSR; Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR and Chairman of the Commission of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on military-industrial issues; Minister of Defense of the USSR, Marshal of the Soviet Union, Moscow.

In 1922-1923 he served in the Red Army, after which he graduated from a vocational school and the Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute. In 1927-1929 he worked as a mechanic at the Balakhninsky paper mill, then at a factory in Ivanovo. Member of the CPSU(b)/CPSU since 1927. Since 1934 - engineer at the Artillery Naval Research Institute, head of the bureau of operation and experimental work; since 1937 - design engineer, deputy chief designer and director of the Leningrad Bolshevik plant.

June 9, 1941 D.F. Ustinov was appointed people's commissar weapons of the USSR. In this post, he made a major contribution to achieving victory in the Great Patriotic War, ensuring the mass production of weapons and the successful development of the production of new types of weapons.

By Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of June 3, 1942, for outstanding services in organizing production, the development of new types of artillery and small arms and skillful management of factories Ustinov Dmitry Fedorovich awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labor with the Order of Lenin and the Hammer and Sickle gold medal.

Until March 15, 1953 D.F. Ustinov served as People's Commissar (since 1946 - Minister) of Armaments of the USSR. From March 15, 1953 to December 14, 1957, he was the Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR, and from December 14, 1957 to March 13, 1963, he was Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR.

By Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated June 17, 1961, for outstanding achievements in creating samples of rocket technology and ensuring the successful flight of a Soviet man in space awarded the second gold medal "Hammer and Sickle".

From March 13, 1963 to March 26, 1965 D.F. Ustinov is the First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. From March 26, 1965 to March 5, 1976 - Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee and candidate member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee. In this post D.F. Ustinov coordinated the work of all institutions of the military-industrial complex.

April 29, 1976 D.F. Ustinov was appointed to the post of Minister of Defense of the USSR. On July 30, 1976, he was awarded the military rank of “Marshal of the Soviet Union.”

By Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR dated October 27, 1978, for great services in strengthening the country’s defense during the Great Patriotic War Patriotic War both in the post-war period and in connection with the 70th anniversary of the birth of Marshal of the Soviet Union Ustinov Dmitry Fedorovich awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union with the Order of Lenin and the Gold Star medal.

Member of the CPSU Central Committee since June 9, 1941. Member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee since March 5, 1976. Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR 2nd, 4th-11th convocations (1946-1950, 1954-1984).

Military ranks:
Lieutenant General of the Engineering and Artillery Service (01/21/1944);
Colonel General of the Engineering and Artillery Service (11/18/1944);
Colonel General of the Engineering and Technical Service (06/20/1951);
Colonel General-Engineer (11/18/1971);
General of the Army (04/29/1976);
Marshal of the Soviet Union (06/30/1976).

Awarded 11 Orders of Lenin (02/8/1939, 06/3/1942, 08/5/1944, 12/8/1951, 04/20/1956, 12/21/1957, 10/29/1958, 10/29/1968, 12/2/1971, 10/27/19 78, 10/28/1983), orders of Suvorov 1st degree (09.16.1945), Kutuzov 1st degree (11.18.1944), medals.

Hero of the Mongolian People's Republic (06/08/1981). Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (09/30/1982). Awarded foreign awards: three Orders of Sukhbaatar (Mongolia, 1975, 1978, 1981), Order of the Red Banner of Battle (Mongolia, 1983), two Orders of Klement Gottwald (Czechoslovakia, 1978, 1982), Order of the White Lion 1st degree (Czechoslovakia , 1977), the Order of Ho Chi Minh (Vietnam, 1983), two orders of Georgiy Dimitrov (Bulgaria, 1976, 1983), the Order of the Cross of Grunwald, 1st degree (Poland, 1976), two Orders of the Banner with rubies (Hungary, 1978 , 1983), Order of the Sun of Freedom (Afghanistan, 1982), two Orders of Karl Marx (German Democratic Republic, 1978, 1983), Order of Scharnhorst (German Democratic Republic, 1977), Order of the White Rose 1st class (Finland, 1978 ), Order of Playa Giron (Cuba, 1983).

Laureate of the Lenin Prize (04/20/1982), Stalin Prize 1st degree (12/16/1953), USSR State Prize (02/5/1983).

Honorary citizen of Samara (07/25/2017, posthumously), Severodvinsk, Arkhangelsk region (05/25/1983) and Kovrov, Vladimir region (12/20/2017, posthumously).

A bronze bust of D.F. Ustinov was installed in Samara. His name was given to the Ulyanovsk Aviation Industrial Complex, production association"Izhmash" and the district in the city of Izhevsk (Udmurtia), the St. Petersburg Mechanical Institute, the square in Samara, streets in Moscow and St. Petersburg, the missile cruiser of the Red Banner Northern Fleet and school No. 23 in the city of Kovrov ( Vladimir region). In Moscow, memorial plaques are installed on the house in which he lived and on the building of the Ministry of Defense. In 1984-1990, the city of Izhevsk was named after him.

Essays:
Selected speeches and articles. M., 1979;
In the name of Victory. M., 1988.

Ustinov Dmitry Fedorovich
3.10.1908–20.12.1984

Marshal of the Soviet Union,
Minister of Defense of the USSR

Originally from Samara, grew up in a working-class family. In 1922–1923 he served in the Red Army.

After service, he graduated from vocational school and fur. Institute (1934). He worked as a mechanic, engineer, designer, and plant director. At the beginning of the Great Patriotic War (1941–1945), only 33 years old, at the direction of I.V. Stalin, he was appointed People's Commissar of Armaments, made a major contribution to achieving victory, for which in 1942 he was awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labor.

In 1953 he was awarded the “Stalin Prize” 1st class.

After the war - Minister of Armaments, Minister of Defense Industry, Deputy. Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Chairman of the Supreme Economic Council of the USSR. In 1961 he was awarded the second Gold Medal "Hammer and Sickle". In 1965–1976, he coordinated and directed the work of scientific institutions, design bureaus, and defense industrial enterprises. From 1976 to 1984 he was the Minister of Defense of the USSR. July 30, 1976 D.F. Ustinov was awarded the title of Marshal of the Soviet Union. In connection with the 70th anniversary of his birth, he was awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. Laureate of Lenin (1982) and State Prizes (1953, 1983).

He was buried on Red Square in Moscow near the Kremlin wall.

A bronze bust was installed in Samara.

Marshall D.F. Awards Ustinova:

  • Gold Star of the Hero of the Soviet Union (10/27/1978), 2 Gold medals “Hammer and Sickle” of the Hero of Socialist Labor (06/3/1942, 06/7/1961),
  • 11 Orders of Lenin,
  • Order of Suvorov 1st degree,
  • Order of Kutuzov 1st degree,
  • 16 medals,
  • as well as orders and medals of foreign countries; he was awarded the title of Hero of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (10/6/1982).

V.A. Egorshin, “Field Marshals and Marshals.” M., 2000

Ustinov Dmitry Fedorovich

Born October 17 (October 30), 1908 in Samara; Russian. In 1927 he graduated from a vocational school in Makaryev, in 1934 - from the Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute.

In 1922, he volunteered to join the Red Army and served as a private. After demobilization in 1923, he worked his way up from a mechanic to a plant director.

During the Great Patriotic War - People's Commissar of Armaments of the USSR (1941–1946).

After the war - Minister of Armaments of the USSR (1946–1953), Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR (1953–1957).

In 1955, the Ministry of Defense decided to “... consider the Minister of Defense of the USSR to be in active military service from the day he was awarded a military rank with secondment to the Ministry of Defense Industry of the USSR.”

From 1957 to 1963 - Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, from 1963 to 1965 - First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Chairman of the Supreme Economic Council of the USSR, from 1965 to 1976 - Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee, from 1976 Mr. - Minister of Defense of the USSR.

D. F. Ustinov - Hero of the Soviet Union (10/27/1978), twice Hero of Socialist Labor (1942, 1961). He was awarded 11 Orders of Lenin, the Order of Suvorov, 1st degree, and the Order of Kutuzov, 1st degree. 16 medals, as well as orders and medals of foreign countries. D. F. Ustinov is a laureate of the Lenin (1982) and State Prizes (1953, 1983).

Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov (facts and opinions)

Dmitry Fedorovich UstinovDmitry Fedorovich Ustinov (October 17 (October 30), 1908, Samara - December 20, 1984, Moscow) - Soviet political and military figure, Minister of Defense of the USSR in 1976-1984. Marshal of the Soviet Union (1976), twice Hero of Socialist Labor (1942, 1961), Hero of the Soviet Union (1978).

Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov, born in 1908 in Samara, into a working-class family. 1922-1923 - served as a volunteer in the Red Army (ChON detachments) in Samarkand. After demobilization in 1923, he worked his way up from a mechanic to a plant director.

1927-1929 - mechanic at the Balakhinsky paper mill, then at a factory in Ivanovo. 1934 - successful graduation from the Leningrad Military Mechanical Institute. Since 1934 - engineer, head of the bureau of operation and experimental work at the Artillery Naval Research Institute.

Since 1937 - design engineer, deputy chief designer, director of the Leningrad Bolshevik plant

June 9, 1941 - March 15, 1953 - People's Commissar, then Minister of Arms of the USSR. March 15, 1953 - December 14, 1957 - Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR.

In 1955, by order of the USSR Minister of Defense, he was recognized as being in active military service from the moment he was awarded a military rank.

December 14, 1957 - March 13, 1963 - Deputy Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, Chairman of the Commission of the Presidium of the USSR Council of Ministers on military-industrial issues

March 13, 1963 - March 26, 1965 - First Deputy Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the National Economy of the USSR of the USSR Council of Ministers

March 26, 1965 - October 26, 1976 - Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee. April 29, 1976 - December 20, 1984 - Minister of Defense of the USSR. Member of the CPSU since 1927, member of the CPSU Central Committee since 1952, member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee since 1976, candidate member since 1965.

Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR II, IV-X convocations.

Ustinov was a member of the unofficial, small Politburo, which included the oldest and most influential members of the former leadership of the USSR: Brezhnev, the main ideologist and second person in the party and state Suslov, KGB chairman Andropov, Foreign Minister Gromyko. In the “small” Politburo, the most important decisions were made, which were then formally approved at a vote of the main Politburo composition, where they sometimes voted in absentia. When making the decision to send Soviet troops into Afghanistan, Ustinov supported Brezhnev, Andropov and Gromyko, and the entry of troops into Afghanistan was decided.

In addition, Ustinov supported Andropov’s candidacy for the post of Secretary General, overcoming the resistance of internal party groups who wanted to see the old and sick Chernenko in the post of Secretary General. However, Andropov, having served as Secretary General for a year and 4 months, died. But ironically, the sick Chernenko managed to outlive the strong and energetic Ustinov beyond his years. D. F. Ustinov, having caught a cold during a demonstration of new military equipment, died of transient severe pneumonia in December 1984.

Among the members of the Politburo of the 70s-80s. differed in that he slept for 4-4.5 hours. He was exceptionally energetic, enterprising, and very quickly solved the problems of managing and managing enterprises.

Ustinov was fixated on the defense industry and did not want to help the country's economy in any way. He made a great contribution to the victory over fascism, but at the same time, I think, he caused damage to our economy when, at his instigation, the Brezhnev leadership spared nothing for defense, even the welfare of the working people.
- N. G. Egorychev,

The appointment of D. F. Ustinov as Minister of Defense of the USSR in 1976 led to significant advances in the Soviet Army and in Soviet military doctrine. Previously, the main emphasis was on creating powerful armored forces in accordance with scenarios of “high-intensity conventional conflict” in Central Europe and the Far East. Under D.F. Ustinov, greater emphasis is placed on tactical and operational-tactical nuclear weapons (the theory of “strengthening the European strategic direction”). In accordance with it, in 1976, the planned replacement of monoblock medium-range missiles SS-4 and SS-5 with the latest SS-20 Pioneer began. In 1983-1984 in addition to them, the USSR deployed the OTR-22 and OTR-23 “Oka” operational-tactical complexes on the territory of Czechoslovakia and the German Democratic Republic, which made it possible to shoot through the entire territory of the Federal Republic of Germany. On this basis, US and NATO analysts concluded that the USSR was preparing for a limited nuclear conflict in Europe. The senseless accumulation of weapons is associated with the fear of Brezhnev, the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee, and Ustinov of a new attack on the USSR.

Ustinov became the last whose ashes were placed in an urn in the Kremlin wall (more than two months before the last funeral at the Kremlin wall - K. U. Chernenko).

THE MOST STALINIST MINISTER
For 40 years, Dmitry Ustinov remained one of the most influential people in USSR. Little-known details from the life of the creator of the Soviet military-industrial complex were told by Colonel General Igor Illarionov, who worked as Ustinov’s assistant for almost 30 years.

Igor Vyacheslavovich, judging by what I read and heard about Ustinov, he can be called the most Stalinist of all the people's commissars. Do you agree with this?
- Fully. He, like other leaders of that time, was raised by Stalin and retained the then existing style of work for the rest of his life. For example, the plant where I worked was a cartridge factory for many decades. And then they decided to repurpose it for the production of air defense systems. And the Minister of Defense Industry Ustinov began to visit us weekly. He called this “rocking the plant.” Moreover, he arrived at about ten o’clock in the evening. He had the habit of working at night since the entire leadership of the country adjusted to Stalin, who worked at night. But he rested during the day. But Ustinov - never. He slept two to three hours a day. For years!

Somehow they learned about his visits in advance, and all the bosses remained sitting in their places. He arrives and goes to all the workshops. Then he gathers all the bosses in the director’s office. And it’s already three o’clock in the morning. He will listen to everyone, speak up himself, and give some useful advice. Then he looks at his watch, and it’s already four, and says: “Yes... We stayed too late today. You still need to go home and get a good night's sleep. Go and be back around eight o’clock.”

Did he also treat people like Stalin, harshly?

Differently. It depended on the circumstances... And, you know, he changed a lot throughout his life. In the defense industry, Ustinov was open to everyone. And he treated people kindly. And in the Council of Ministers, Dmitry Fedorovich became much tougher. Especially after he was appointed chairman of the Supreme Council of National Economy (VSNKh) in 1963. I remember at a meeting of the Supreme Council of National Economy one leader told him that there was no need to set unrealistic deadlines, “after all, this is not a war.” So Ustinov simply kicked him out. We also got it...

What was the reason for this change in Ustinov?

On the one hand, he had enormous responsibility for the entire industry, on the other, his attitude was negatively affected by Khrushchev’s behavior. But at first Ustinov admired Nikita Sergeevich. He's so capable, he says... He picks up everything quickly, he can make a joke and he sings great. At that time I still thought: “After all, clever man, really doesn’t see what Khrushchev represents?” And then the party leader began to gather everyone to his place for dinners and discuss business.

Copied Stalin? He, too, gathered a small circle at the Near Dacha...

So the fact of the matter is that Khrushchev’s meeting was not a narrow circle. All members of the Politburo, all leading deputy chairmen of the Council of Ministers, other people. I was supposed to have a glass. And then, without serious consideration of any issue, a decision was formalized based on conversations around the table. Ustinov really disliked these dinners.

Later Nikita Sergeevich completely relaxed. I just behaved badly. He interrupted, barked... After this, Dmitry Fedorovich began to treat him skeptically, if not hostile. Khrushchev, by the way, also yelled at Brezhnev, despite the fact that he was the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR.

And Brezhnev and Ustinov agreed on the basis of a common dislike for Khrushchev?

They became close when Leonid Ilyich was still secretary of the regional committee in Dnepropetrovsk. A large defense plant was being built there. And after the Secretary of the Central Committee Brezhnev was assigned to oversee the military industry in the late 50s, they began to work together. And I must say, Brezhnev was able to master a new business in a short time. And how! He invited the head of the defense industry department of the Central Committee, specialists, and leading equipment designers. And with them he verified every phrase in the already approved resolutions of the Central Committee. I asked those present: “How can this be accomplished? And this? Everyone had to lay out their arguments, and Brezhnev slowly delved into the essence of the issue. This was not the Brezhnev who is remembered now. I then attended his performance in Leningrad, in Smolny. As he said! Without any paperwork, efficient and so incendiary!

And his relationship with Ustinov at that time was wonderful. When both were in Moscow, they met, in my opinion, almost every day.

You said they had a good relationship while. So, after Khrushchev’s dismissal, their friendship ended?

In 1965, Dmitry Fedorovich, at the suggestion of Brezhnev, was elected Secretary of the Central Committee for the Defense Industry and a candidate member of the Politburo. But in 1966, after the Soviet delegation’s trip to Vietnam, their relationship deteriorated for a long time. I was there with Ustinov. The group was led by Politburo member, Secretary of the Central Committee and head of the Party and State Control Committee Alexander Nikolaevich Shelepin. An extraordinary person - smart, strong-willed. And Dmitry Fedorovich began to sympathize with him. And Brezhnev had a very wary attitude towards Shelepin. Alexander Nikolaevich soon lost the post of chief controller, and then secretary of the Central Committee. But Brezhnev kept Ustinov at a distance from himself for several years. For more than ten years he has not been transferred from candidate to member of the Politburo.

But the disagreement with Brezhnev did not prevent him from keeping a tight rein on the entire military industry...

This is not entirely true. Of course, they were afraid of him and adjusted to him. For example, we rarely finished work at 9-10 pm. As a rule, Dmitry Fedorovich worked until midnight. And when he returned home, he called again and clarified something...

But when the question arose about adopting a particular system for service, it turned out that each designer had his own patrons, through whom they pushed their brainchild. I remember there was a big scandal when everyone who was responsible for the country’s defense quarreled. The question arose about which new third-generation strategic missile to adopt. Two academic designers - Vladimir Chelomey and Mikhail Yangel - offered their samples. Both missiles had supporters and opponents in high leadership. Things got to the point where the issue was brought to the USSR Defense Council. It took place in Crimea. Above Yalta, in the mountains, there is the Alexander Palace, and above it is a hunting lodge. That's where everything took place. It was hot, they set up large tents and argued about the choice of rocket.

Brezhnev even began to reprimand Ustinov: “What position are you putting me in? Couldn’t you agree on this issue yourself?” Then the President of the USSR Academy of Sciences, Mstislav Keldysh, spoke and said that this whole dispute was due to the fact that we had not resolved the main issue - how we would use rocket technology. The Chelomey missile was designed to deliver a pre-emptive strike to the enemy. And the Yangel carrier is made in such a way that even after nuclear bombing he can start and respond. But to do this, you need to work on issues of combat control of missile weapons. First of all, it is necessary to determine who personally, after reporting the takeoff of enemy missiles, will make the decision to launch a counter strike?

And what, then the famous “nuclear suitcases” did not yet exist?

Not only were they missing, but there was also no procedure for making a decision on the use of nuclear missile weapons. We decided to write a doctrine, and then decide on the type of missile. The whole night after this, Keldysh, Ustinov, Deputy Minister of Defense for Armaments Marshal Nikolai Alekseev and the head of the Central Committee department Serbin prepared the document. Keldysh wrote mainly. This doctrine declared that we would only strike in retaliation.

And after that they chose Yangel’s rocket?

No. We decided to adopt both. In rocket technology, from the very beginning, the following order was established: tests are still ongoing, and production is beginning to be prepared. This is an expensive and lengthy business. And by the time of the disputes in the Defense Council, it turned out that both “firms” had already prepared everything for production. The same thing happened with tanks. The disputes usually ended the same way: both models were put into service.

In 1976, Ustinov became Minister of Defense and member of the Politburo. Did he manage to regain Brezhnev's trust?

Dmitry Fedorovich before last day During his life, the General Secretary was completely, I would even say, emphatically loyal to him. After all, from the second half of the 70s, it was clear that Brezhnev as a person was being destroyed before our eyes. When we were in Vienna, at negotiations with the American delegation and the signing of the arms reduction treaty, Brezhnev was already moving poorly. I barely read the speech from a piece of paper, hugged and kissed US President Jimmy Carter. That was the end of it. And there the GRU resident gave me a whole folder different materials from foreign sources about Brezhnev’s health. We returned to Moscow. I say to Ustinov: “Dmitry Fedorovich, they gave me such materials.” When he found out what was there, he said: “I already know everything. Burn it all immediately."

How soon did Ustinov get comfortable as head of the Ministry of Defense?

Dmitry Fedorovich did not know many of the subtleties of the army. He put pressure on the leadership of the ministry, forced them to participate in testing new systems, and travel to design bureaus. And they were always eager to go somewhere in the districts. Dmitry Fedorovich was angry: “Stop hanging around in parts!” He did not understand that under the existing conscription system, the army was a gigantic training center. And it was possible to maintain combat readiness only if each military commander constantly monitored his subordinates and the progress of training.

He argued harshly with the marshals on technical issues. They, like cadets, crammed the tactical and technical data of weapons.

Did the military leaders not like him?

I wouldn't say that's all. Those whose branches of the military were associated with equipment - pilots, missilemen, signalmen, air defense - accepted Dmitry Fedorovich's appointment with all their hearts. It was more difficult with combined arms commanders. They were wary of Ustinov. At first, Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev mainly helped. He always argued his opinion very intelligently, knew the situation and made good proposals. And since then, Akhromeev became one of Ustinov’s advisers.

It is often said that Ustinov died under rather strange circumstances. And this is attributed precisely to the dislike of the marshals. And this is supposedly confirmed by the fact that the Minister of Defense of one of the socialist countries died at the same time...

Czechoslovakia. But there was nothing strange about it. The 40th anniversary of the Slovak National Uprising of 1944 was celebrated. All ministers of defense of the socialist camp were invited. Ustinov performed there a lot, but the weather was not good. After the rally, everyone was taken to the mountains, where a banquet was held at the residence on the open terrace. A cold wind was blowing, and Dmitry Fedorovich caught a cold. He was very sick, but still pulled out.

And soon the annual final training sessions were held at the Ministry of Defense. And the minister usually spoke at them. We began to tell Dmitry Fedorovich that there was no need to do this, because the first deputy, Marshal Sergei Sokolov, could speak. But he doesn’t, that’s all. We involved the head of the Central Military Medical Directorate, Fyodor Komarov. He injected supporting drugs, and Ustinov began performing. He spoke normally for about thirty minutes, and then he began to make mistakes, I felt things were bad... After the meeting, Dmitry Fedorovich was urgently hospitalized at the Central Clinical Hospital. It turned out that my heart was bad. Both age and hard work have taken their toll...

As I was told, the Central Clinical Hospital determined that it was necessary to perform an operation. And before, when Ustinov was sick, he was prescribed a lot of aspirin and analgin. And the blood did not clot. What they didn’t do! About 30 people - his security, hospital workers, and other people with a suitable group - gave him blood. Transfused directly. This went on for a whole day. But the blood never began to clot...
http://cn.com.ua/

Marshal of the Soviet military-industrial complex

Dmitry Ustinov as statesman and just a person
2008-11-14 / Yuri Viktorov - journalist.

From the HBO dossier Leonid Grigoryevich Ivashov was born on August 31, 1943 in Kyrgyzstan. Graduated from the Tashkent Higher Combined Arms command school (1964), Military Academy named after M.V. Frunze (1974). Serving in the military - from company commander to deputy commander of a motorized rifle regiment. Since 1976 - senior adjutant, and then chief of staff of the USSR Minister of Defense, Marshal of the Soviet Union Dmitry Ustinov, since 1987 - head of the affairs department of the USSR Ministry of Defense, in 1992-1996 - secretary of the Council of Defense Ministers of the CIS member states, in 1996-2001 years - Head of the Main Directorate of International Military Cooperation of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation. Colonel General. He has state awards of the USSR, Russia, Yugoslavia, Syria and other countries. Doctor of Historical Sciences, Professor. Specialist in the field of geopolitics, conflictology, international relations. President of the Academy of Geopolitical Problems.

For some reason, the central Russian media did not remember one recent very significant date - the 100th anniversary of the birth of Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov. Although whoever it is, he is a more than prominent figure in the history of our country. Colonel General Leonid Ivashov was among the closest employees of Defense Minister Ustinov for many years, and therefore he has something to remember and talk about.

– Leonid Grigorievich, how did you get into Dmitry Fedorovich’s apparatus?

– After graduating from the Frunze Academy in 1974, I was appointed deputy regiment commander in the Taman Guards Division. In 1976, Ustinov, having become Minister of Defense, began selecting his closest assistants, including adjutants. He determined for them new role: not for reception duty and personal services, as before, when the minister’s office had neither military specialists nor people with higher education.

Dmitry Fedorovich set the task of selecting a professional, highly qualified apparatus corresponding to the level of a minister and member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee.

I was called to the Main Personnel Directorate of the Ministry of Defense straight from field training. Dmitry Fedorovich was introduced on December 20. He asked what tasks the regiment was solving, asked in detail about weapons and equipment, especially highlighting the BMP-1, its qualities, and the stability of the gun. On the same day, an order was signed for my appointment as senior adjutant to the USSR Minister of Defense.

Ustinov’s working hours were as follows: he arrived at work at 8.00 and left closer to midnight. If the evening was devoted to meetings with the First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, Chairman of the Military-Industrial Commission Leonid Vasilyevich Smirnov or the head of the defense industry department of the CPSU Central Committee Ivan Dmitrievich Serbin, then it ended no earlier than one or two in the morning. Decided the most important problems country defense. Meetings with general designers of weapons systems were the same.

Dmitry Fedorovich knew everyone in the defense industry, many people called him. Their names didn’t mean anything to me, who came from the troops. At first, there were a lot of incidents.

I hear: “Get me through to Nadiradze quickly.”

Who is this? I take a telephone directory for Georgia: there is none. How could I know then that this was the general designer who made an amazing, unique thing - the first strategic missile system on wheels.

– To what extent was Ustinov enough to take care of the army in addition to weapons? Or was it handled by deputies? By the way, who was the Chief of the General Staff then?

– When Ustinov was appointed to the post of minister, Viktor Georgievich Kulikov. But already in December Nikolai Vasilyevich Ogarkov became the Chief of the General Staff.

Dmitry Fedorovich once said: “The art of war is good when it is based on good technique, material base." The main task that he solved at his ministerial post was the transfer of the army to new system weapons. Exactly the system.

What does it mean? By the end of the Great Patriotic War, our army had a weapons system that met the conditions of waging that war. Then nuclear missile weapons appeared. Military science and military art moved forward. But they were based on the previous system, only anti-aircraft guns, for example, were replaced by anti-aircraft missiles, Shpagin submachine guns - by Kalashnikov assault rifles. But conceptually nothing changed.

Dmitry Fedorovich set the army the task of fighting not with numbers, but with the quality of equipment and, through mastering it, to master new methods of warfare. The emphasis was not on huge masses of people, not on a gigantic number of tanks and artillery, but on the qualitative and even fundamental superiority of military equipment. Su-27, MiG-29 aircraft, S-300 complexes, variants one and two, naval weapons, strategic and operational-technical missiles - all this was laid down by Ustinov. Today the Ustinov system is in effect, it is only being improved. Time passes, it no longer meets the requirements of the day in everything, but nothing else is offered.

There is a need to change the weapons system. Our previous systems were based on offensive doctrine. Even if they were called defensive, an offensive was still planned after repelling the attack. Today such a task is not worth it. And the weapon system must meet the task of inflicting unacceptable damage on the attacking side at a very great depth in response.

It must be said frankly that Ustinov’s ideas were not accepted by the commanders of the military branches, and the former Minister of Defense Andrei Andreevich Grechko stood on traditional positions.

The defense industry turned out to be immune to the new, which was clearly demonstrated by the example of the Pioneer (SS-20) complex. This is a missile system with an ICBM that had a flight range of up to 5.5 thousand kilometers and three multiple warheads, at that time invulnerable because it was mobile. It was developed by young designers led by Alexander Davidovich Nadiradze, but neither the enterprise nor the Ministry of Defense Industry supported them, preferring to launch missiles that were well-established in production with a range of up to 200 kilometers. Dmitry Fedorovich, who was then the secretary of the CPSU Central Committee, asked the leadership everything:

– What’s new, breakthrough?

It turned out nothing. The youth themselves offered to show their developments. No matter how much the director and minister tried to dissuade Dmitry Fedorovich from this, he familiarized himself with the youth project in detail and put enormous effort into supporting it. There were opponents... The main command of the Rocket Forces was Marshal Tolubko and his deputy Grigoriev, chairman of the State Commission for New Technology. They were strongly against it. Grechko is also against it. Just like before the Great Patriotic War, when the military leadership opposed machine guns and Katyushas. But the deployment of the Pioneer complex put the whole of Europe under our control, replacing dozens of divisions. It took a lot of perseverance to put the MiG-29 into production.

Let's be objective: Dmitry Fedorovich could not deeply understand many of the processes taking place in the army and in the art of war. But he tried to comprehend it all. And in a big way. A characteristic detail: under him, classes were organized on Saturdays for the entire senior military leadership. Our outstanding military theorists from the Academy of the General Staff and defense specialists gave lectures on the art of war, on weapons systems, and on new views on the development of military affairs, new trends. Ustinov was always present at them.

They bring him a map of future teachings that he must approve. He studies it, asks us in detail about everything that is not clear. The concept of time at work did not exist for him. Work was the main thing in his life.

- Why was he appointed Minister of War?

“I think it’s the same reason why in 1941, a few days before the start of the war, he was appointed People’s Commissar of Armaments - the most important People’s Commissariat of the defense industry, which produced more than half of all military products. At 32 and a half years old! Now it’s hard to even imagine. Yes, he had already managed to prove himself, managed a large military plant, received the Order of Lenin, which was very rare. And yet... Apparently, Nikolai Alekseevich Voznesensky, at that time the first deputy chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, and perhaps Stalin himself, who looked very closely at the personnel, saw his talent.

Why was Ustinov appointed Minister of Defense after Grechko's death? Apparently, because the marshals who participated in the Great Patriotic War believed more in the art of war than in technology, and were committed to the weapons with which they fought. But it was necessary to qualitatively rearm the army; apparently, no one could do this better than Dmitry Fedorovich.

As minister, he steadily and reliably managed the Armed Forces, while still leading the military-industrial complex. Although Yakov Petrovich Ryabov was appointed Secretary of the Central Committee for Defense Issues, I am a witness that the ministers and all the general designers focused on him. Apart from Efim Pavlovich Slavsky, Minister of Nuclear Industry, everyone else even agreed to go on vacation with Dmitry Fedorovich.

– What do you think is the most important thing Ustinov has done during his eight years as Minister of Defense?

– First: he carried out a qualitative rearmament of the army and the transition to a new military doctrine in accordance with the current realities in the world.

Second: he introduced some new moral principles into the service of the central apparatus of the military department. Hunts, all kinds of celebrations, feasts, parties are a thing of the past. With the arrival of Dmitry Fedorovich in the ministry, everything was devoted to work. Nothing else existed for him except serving the Fatherland. He did not leave the office until all the tasks planned for that day were done.

Only three people could influence a slight reduction in the working day: grandchildren Mitya and Seryozha and daughter Vera Dmitrievna (Honored Artist of the RSFSR, she sang in the Sveshnikov choir).

I will also note his personal modesty, which extended to his family. If, say, Vera Dmitrievna asked us, the adjutants, to send a car after a late-ending concert, then with one condition; “so that only dad doesn’t know.” While working, Dmitry Fedorovich forgot about food; even getting him to drink a glass of tea instead of lunch was a problem. On business trips, he set such a work pace that there was not a single free minute left. He never approached the tables set by the local command, saying to those accompanying him: “You go eat, while I’ll talk to the commanders and soldiers.” I myself saw how in the Taman division he climbed into a new tank and asked the crew what shortcomings it had, why the vehicle was inconvenient.

– Whom did Ustinov promote and whom did he push aside?

– I don’t know of a single case where Dmitry Fedorovich treated someone on the basis of personal likes or dislikes. The movements occurred only for business reasons. Kulikov was appointed from the post of Chief of the General Staff to an equal post - Commander-in-Chief of the United Armed Forces Warsaw Pact, and Nikolai Vasilyevich Ogarkov came to his place from the post of chairman of the state technical commission. Why?

Kulikov is a military commander for whom the main thing is unity of command, unquestioning submission without any discussion. He said - and that’s it, nothing else. And in the General Staff, designed to help the minister change the qualitative state of the Armed Forces and military thought, a more intelligent person was needed, with a broader outlook, capable of listening and taking into account different opinions, without suppressing them. Nikolai Vasilyevich Ogarkov was perfect for this role. He constantly worked on himself and was very receptive to the opinions of others. Marshal, he could have discussed with the colonel.

Dmitry Fedorovich attracted such people to him. He invited Vitaly Mikhailovich Shabanov, Deputy Minister of Radio Industry, Doctor of Technical Sciences, who clearly understood the need for technical re-equipment of the army, to become deputy for armaments. In general, he nominated people who combined the qualities of a thinking commander and a thinking engineer. The changes in the ministry were noticed by the district commanders: in their reports, issues related to military equipment occupied more and more space.

– Which of the commanders of the Great Patriotic War did Dmitry Fedorovich single out?

“He had the greatest respect for Stalin. While working on the book “In the Name of Victory,” the editors tried to persuade him to cite some episodes where he achieved success against the will of Stalin. “This never happened,” said Dmitry Fedorovich. “Stalin was like a god for us.” The book was published after his death, and the publishing house “cleaned up” the text, leaving only a few phrases.

Dmitry Fedorovich said that on his own initiative he never called Stalin. In the first half of the war, when the situation was difficult, Stalin could call at any time of the day. One of the assistants connected: “Comrade Stalin will speak to you.” Usually the conversation went like this: “Hello, Comrade Ustinov. This is Stalin. Why didn’t Yelets fulfill the plan and didn’t deliver two guns?”

This is the greatest art of leadership! Such conversations forced the people's commissars to know the situation at the factories down to the smallest detail and take action. People who worked with Ustinov at that time say that before the launch of the most important workshops, he moved into them, slept on a cot and did not leave until the workshop began to operate. One must imagine what a gigantic work was accomplished at the beginning of the war, when hundreds of enterprises were relocated to the east, and to as soon as possible started working. No other economy other than the socialist one, no other state other than the Soviet one, could solve such a problem. There has been nothing like this in world history. This was a great feat, which required both enormous talents and powerful organizational skills. There were many people with such qualities who worked in the defense industry, but Dmitry Fedorovich stood out against their background.

And who did you single out among the commanders? Chernyakhovsky, Rokossovsky, Zhukov. These are all bright personalities who solved the problems of military art in an unconventional way and were a model for others. He spoke very respectfully about Marshal of Artillery Nikolai Yakovlev, they were family friends, about Admiral Nikolai Kuznetsov, Admiral Sergei Gorshkov. Among the chiefs of the General Staff, he singled out Marshal Vasilevsky. That is, he valued military leaders who defeated the enemy primarily with their intelligence and talent.

– Ustinov, Andropov and Gromyko were called the ruling triumvirate in the last period of Brezhnev’s life.

– I’ll be honest: it was this powerful trio that coordinated and resolved the main issues of defense, national security, and foreign policy. They combined friendly relations and a common concern for the fate of the Fatherland.

– I heard that many members of the Politburo were afraid of Ustinov as an exceptionally decisive and firm person.

“It’s hard for me to say whether they were afraid of him or not.” There was a very respectful relationship between the members of the Politburo, at least outwardly. There was also strict discipline. I know for sure that, say, Gromyko, Andropov and Ustinov could not have gathered somewhere in the country without permission Secretary General Central Committee of the CPSU. Two of us met on walks, but no more.

“There was a general consensus that if these three people decided something, so it would be.”

– This is true, at least for our questions. A few days before Brezhnev’s death, this is how the issue of the 13th salary for military personnel was resolved.

– Was Dmitry Fedorovich’s attitude towards Brezhnev somehow manifested itself?

– In general, the attitude was respectful. Back then it was common practice to public speaking start with a quote from Brezhnev. I once asked if this is necessary every time. “But Leonid Ilyich does not deny us anything. Then they probably report to him about the content of our speeches,” he replied. And to put it bluntly, using the Secretary General’s love for flattery helped resolve issues in the Armed Forces. Dmitry Fedorovich was the initiator of conferring the rank of marshal on Brezhnev. Who lost what from this? And the Armed Forces won – support in defense matters increased.

– Let’s return to the “mighty three.” It was she who decided the issue of sending Soviet troops into Afghanistan.

– There were many good reasons for this, directly related to the security of the USSR. The decision was not easy. I won’t say who was the initiator. Andropov and Ustinov constantly met on this issue, heard from intelligence representatives (KGB, GRU), diplomats, and members of the General Staff. It was necessary to find the right answer to the emerging situation, which was dangerous for us. Ogarkov gave instructions to work out two options: for the introduction of troops and against. We decided to send in troops. And this was not the worst answer to the problems at hand.

The question is different. Yes, military force is necessary in some situations, but one must understand that an invasion has both positive factors (establishing stability, eliminating the threat) and negative ones, which conflict with religious and national traditions. It was necessary to find a balance between the participation of military force and decisions of a political, economic, and diplomatic nature. Unfortunately, the emphasis was placed on military force. And this was a mistake.

Perhaps we should have interacted more actively with leaders such as Ahmad Shah Massoud. I had to meet him. It was amazing person, rooting for Afghanistan, and he proved it. He could not be considered an enemy; he had to be worked with. In general, it is better to take into account all the diversity of forces. And the military classified everyone who was against the government and carried weapons as enemies and shot at them. Naturally, causing a backlash.

It was not the deployment of troops itself that was a mistake, it was the actions after the deployment that were wrong.

– Who determined the political line in Afghanistan?

- Hard to say. If the military had a war strategy, no one personified the political strategy. I don't know if she was there at all. If the main efforts had been promptly transferred to the economic and political areas, the troops could have been withdrawn earlier. I think we should not have strictly focused on Babrak Karmal and his entourage and introduced a socialist ideology for which the Afghan people were not prepared. Maybe it would be more fruitful to create some kind of new type state based on the consent of all forces existing in Afghanistan. But the war led us to a dead end, and we did not achieve the goals we set for ourselves.

“I’m afraid that by that time there were no heads in our leadership capable of finding the right solution.”

- Yes. It was necessary to take advantage of the moment when we achieved military superiority and switch to other methods. This was not done. Later, after the end of the Afghan campaign, I found in Engels the following description of the Afghan nation: it is distinguished by the desire of each tribe for freedom and fierce hatred of any central government.

– Ustinov died immediately after Andropov. The "Mighty Three", which actually ruled the country, ceased to exist within one year. After both Ustinov and Czechoslovak Defense Minister Dzur died, there were suggestions that biological weapons would be used against them.

– This is the “medical version”, so to speak. But there is also a political one. When Andropov took the helm of the USSR, some in the West became very concerned that under his leadership the Soviet Union could emerge from stagnation and adjust its development strategy, ensuring sustainable progress in all areas. Remember Andropov’s phrase: “Let’s figure out what kind of society we live in.” The first year of his reign was marked by a significant increase in labor productivity and the entire economy. The notes that I, as the head of the secretariat of a member of the Politburo, had to read, said, for example, that the planned system is good, but socialist competition is no longer a decisive incentive in the development of the national economy, it is necessary to switch to market relations. It was Andropov who began to propose a partial departure from 100 percent planning: it was necessary to leave reserves for enterprises.

And when a turn towards economic modernization and its freer development is revealed, Andropov suddenly falls ill. Yes, he had bad kidneys. But experts know that depending on the choice of drugs, the disease can be either suppressed or stimulated. Andropov is developing it... He died on February 9, 1984.

At the end of the same year, Ustinov also died. Usually Dmitry Fedorovich went on vacation in July-August. This time - at the end of September. The weather is cool, but I am a witness to this: he did not change his usual routine in any way - he also swam and walked. As a result, I caught a cold. A medical team, Chazov, arrived and diagnosed pneumonia. They started treatment - first locally, in Bocharov Ruchey, then in Moscow, at the Central Clinical Hospital. Dmitry Fedorovich lay there for a while and, without completing his treatment, went to work. It was necessary to hold a large meeting of the leadership of the Armed Forces, at which they discussed a serious turn in their strategic development. Dmitry Fedorovich was the main speaker. About 40 minutes after the start, we saw that he was feeling bad. They announced a break and called Vera Dmitrievna. Only she managed to persuade him to go to the Central Clinical Hospital. The first days of treatment showed improvement, but then it was discovered that, against the background of untreated pneumonia, Dmitry Fedorovich began to develop a fissure in the cardiac aorta: a consequence of a heart attack suffered on a business trip to the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany. It was decided to have heart surgery.

I saw how Dmitry Fedorovich behaved in front of her. He talked with Grigory Vasilyevich Romanov, secretary of the CPSU Central Committee for military issues, and set tasks for him in case he did not come out alive after the operation. He identified his successor - Marshal Sergei Leonidovich Sokolov. I talked to him in detail on the phone.

To all our words about the prematureness of this, Dmitry Fedorovich replied: “We are communists and must take everything seriously.”

The operation went without complications, but when I came to Dmitry Fedorovich with documents after it, I saw that the bandages on his chest were always soaked in blood. When treating pneumonia, doctors used medications that thinned the blood, which led to its incoagulability. Liver rejection began. The outcome was a foregone conclusion.

It is difficult to say whether this was an unfortunate coincidence of circumstances or a camouflaged removal from the political arena of the leader of the Stalinist school. The strongest personality in the leadership of the USSR at that time, unshakably standing on communist positions. Ustinov had enough strength, experience, will, authority, and, most importantly, intelligence to give a new direction in the development of the country, strengthening its power. (In Czechoslovakia, at the same time, Defense Minister Dzur, whom we knew as a loyal communist, died with approximately the same diagnosis.) The passing of Andropov and Ustinov, in whose hands all the power of the state was concentrated, turned out to be fatal for the subsequent development of events in the country.

I think it is no coincidence that the third member of the mighty triumvirate, Andrei Andreevich Gromyko, who took the honorable but powerless post of Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, was very soon removed from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

It is not for nothing that Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov is called “the most Stalinist minister”: the marshal gained respect already in the post-war years. However, the death of the USSR Minister of Defense gave rise to a lot of rumors, the most popular of which were versions about the liquidation of Ustinov.

Mysterious death Marshal of the Soviet Union Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov, which overtook him on December 20, 1984, exactly after major maneuvers of the armies of the Warsaw Pact member countries, still remains a mystery to all historians and conspiracy theorists around the world. Why did Ustinov, who was called “the most Stalinist minister,” die under mysterious circumstances immediately after conducting military exercises? Why did the Minister of Defense of the GDR Hoffmann (December 2, 1984), the Minister of Defense of Hungary Olah (December 15, 1984) and the Minister of Defense of Czechoslovakia Dzur (December 16, 1984) die with the same symptoms? Did this chain of deaths become the first “bell” of the overthrow of the socialist system in the Warsaw Pact countries and the USSR?

Dmitry Ustinov was appointed to the post of People's Commissar of Armaments of the USSR on June 9, 1941. Already in 1953, he became the Minister of Defense Industry of the USSR, from 1953 he held high positions in the Council of Ministers of the USSR, and in 1965 he became Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee. The peak of Ustinov’s career came in 1976: he was appointed Minister of Defense of the Union, and it was in this position that he served until his death.

Ustinov, among others, was involved in the development of unique Moscow air defense systems. It was he who took the most Active participation in the development and modernization of defense systems. Ustinov also worked daily to improve the defense capability of the USSR and increase combat readiness Armed Forces and the development of military science in general. It was Ustinov who was an ardent opponent of the world’s slide towards thermonuclear war.

People who knew Ustinov noted that four hours was enough for him to sleep, and at the same time he was always cheerful and energetic. Colonel General Igor Illarionov, who worked as Ustinov’s assistant for almost 30 years, recalls: “Ustinov came to the plant for the creation of air defense systems at ten o’clock in the evening. He had the habit of working at night since the entire leadership of the country adjusted to Stalin, who worked at night. . But he rested during the day. But Ustinov never did. He slept two or three hours a day. For years! Somehow they learned about his visits in advance, and all the bosses remained sitting in their places. He arrives and goes to all the workshops. Then he collects all the bosses in the director’s office. And it’s already three o’clock in the morning. He listens to everyone, speaks himself, gives some useful advice. Then he looks at his watch, and it’s already four, and says: “Yes... We’ve been sitting too long today. You still need to go home and get a good night's sleep. Go and be back around eight o'clock."

IN last years Throughout his life, Ustinov was often and seriously ill - age affected him. Thus, the USSR Minister of Defense underwent urological surgery, as well as two surgical interventions to remove malignant tumors. He also once suffered a myocardial infarction. Imprint on general condition Ustinov was delayed by illness and the subsequent death of his wife. However, immediately after undergoing operations and illnesses, Ustinov, out of old habit, got up from his hospital bed and, as if nothing had happened, continued his work at the usual military pace and with a soldier’s precision.

Many experts, historians and conspiracy theorists have linked the deaths of Ustinov, Hoffman, Olah and Dzur into a single chain of events. This is not surprising: all four ministers of the countries of the socialist camp died in a fairly short period of time. According to one version, all of them were eliminated with the help of a “terrorist operation”, since there was an agreement between them on the need to quickly send troops to Poland, where, despite the internment of the opposition and the introduction of martial law, the political situation continued to heat up. This was pointed out by Colonel of the General Staff of the Polish Army Ryszard Kuchlinski, who is also a recruited CIA agent. At the same time, opponents of this version believe that the decision of the four military ministers would not have been made without the permission of the Politburo and Gorbachev personally. It is also noted that there was no need to kill Olah and Hoffmann, since Gorbachev had already become the Secretary General of the USSR, and, thus, the destruction of the socialist bloc had already begun.

Another conspiracy theory about the death of “Stalin’s minister himself” states that Ustinov planned... to destroy socialism through the “Chilean scenario” - that is, by creating in the Warsaw Pact countries the power of a military junta similar to the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in Chile, established in 1973 as a result of the overthrow Socialist rule led by Salvador Allende. One of the main ideologists of Perestroika, Alexander Yakovlev, spoke about this version as follows: “There is a lot of evidence that the highest military generals were thinking about a military coup in the socialist camp (in one form or another). I was fascinated by the experience of other countries when on the way from totalitarianism "The temporary autocracy of the military was introduced to democracy. The conspiracy then failed." At the same time, experts urge not to consider Yakovlev’s words as truth, since they very often did not correspond to reality.

One way or another, it was Dmitry Ustinov who in the war and post-war years became the personification of the defense capability of the USSR and the military power of the state. In December 1984, Ustinov, after returning from major military exercises, suddenly felt unwell and was hospitalized. Subsequently, doctors diagnosed changes in the lungs and the onset of fever.

Colonel General Igor Illarionov does not connect the death of the USSR Minister of Defense with any conspiracy theories: “There was nothing strange about it. The 40th anniversary of the Slovak National Uprising of 1944 was celebrated. All the defense ministers of the socialist camp were invited. Ustinov spoke there a lot, and the weather was unimportant. After the meeting, everyone was taken to the mountains, where a banquet was held at the residence on the open terrace. A cold wind was blowing, and Dmitry Fedorovich caught a cold. He was very sick, but still pulled through. And soon the annual final training sessions were held at the Ministry of Defense. And he usually spoke the minister is on them. We began to tell Dmitry Fedorovich that there is no need to do this, After all, the first deputy, Marshal Sergei Sokolov, can speak. But he doesn’t, that’s all. We involved the head of the Central Military Medical Directorate, Fyodor Komarov. He injected supporting drugs, and Ustinov began performing. He spoke normally for about thirty minutes, and then he began to make mistakes, I felt things were bad... After the meeting, Dmitry Fedorovich was urgently hospitalized at the Central Clinical Hospital. It turned out that my heart was bad. Both age and hard work took their toll... As I was told, the Central Clinical Hospital determined that it was necessary to have an operation. And before, when Ustinov was sick, he was prescribed a lot of aspirin and analgin. And the blood did not clot. What they didn’t do! About 30 people - his security, hospital workers, other people with a suitable group - gave him blood. Transfused directly. This went on for a whole day. But the blood never began to clot..."

Dmitry Fedorovich Ustinov died on December 20, 1984. All Soviet radio and television stations broadcast live for more than an hour from Red Square, where the funeral procession took place, and newspapers devoted the front pages to this ceremony. After Ustinov’s death, many predicted a quick decline in Gorbachev’s political career, but history decreed somewhat differently.

After the death of the marshal, the capital of Udmurtia was renamed the city of Ustinov. Even under Gorbachev, the city was returned to its previous name - Izhevsk, a name the city has retained to this day.