Riga Higher Military Political School

The Riga Higher Military Political School named after Marshal of the Soviet Union Sergey Biryuzov[1] (Russian: Рижское высшее военно-политическое училище имени Маршала Советского Союза С. С. Бирюзова; Latvian: S. Birjuzova Rīgas Augstākā politiskā karaskola) was a military academy in the Soviet Union located in the captial of the Latvian SSR, the city of Riga. In the years it existed, it trained military personnel in a number of specializations from its headquarters on Ezermalas Street.

History

The school was the successor to the School of Coastal Defense of the Soviet Navy (named after the Komsomol of Ukraine). It was created on 18 April 1932 by order of the Revolutionary Military Council. The school was originally multi-disciplinary and only began training for communications commanders in 1941. It was awarded the Order of the Red Banner by order of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on 22 January 1944. By 1960, the school consisted of personnel of the Strategic Missile Forces.[2] On 6 March 1965, the school was named after Marshal of the Soviet Union Sergey Biryuzov. In 1977, the school became a military-political school. Standard educational buildings, barracks, staff buildings, a canteen, a sports hall and warehouses were located there. In 1986, integrated week long field trips began to be organized as part of the school.[3][4] In 1991, courses of the political faculties, and the entire engineering faculty, were transferred to missile schools in the RSFSR. Those who did not want to continue training were given the option to quit the Soviet Army. The last graduation of officers took place on 29 April 1992. The building of the school now houses the National Defence Academy of Latvia.[5]

Heads

The following served as heads of the school:[6]

  • S. Raytsen (1931-1938)
  • P. Karandasov (1938-1941)
  • V. Kostyshin (1941-1942
  • I. Bolshakov (1944-1955)
  • P. Cherkasov (1955-1959)
  • А. Vasilyev (1959-1963)
  • V. Novikov (1963-1967)
  • N. Beryeznyak (1967-1973)
  • A. Glushchenko (1973-1977)
  • V. Mikhailov (1977-1986)
  • А. Sidirenko (1986-1992)

Alumni

Notable alumni include Vice Admiral and Hero of the Soviet Union Ilya Khvorostyanov (the former head of the Nakhimov Naval Academy in Sevastopol) and Grigory Ditsky[7] (a former official at the Central Navy Observatory who made a great contribution to the development of marine space exploration).[8] Other alumni include officers like Mikhail Gatsko, who was a long time legal specialist for the Russian military leadership.[9] On the 85th anniversary of the founding of the school in 2016, the St. Petersburg Council of the School Veterans hosted celebrations in St. Petersburg. A similar event was held in Riga.[10]

gollark: Process management stuff got enhanced isolation after a spate of bugs relating to that, so it's *probably* okay now, but there are still problems, inevitably.
gollark: Also, some stuff was deliberately not isolated to the extent it should have been for security - mostly the process management, but possibly some filesystem IO.
gollark: Specifically, it relies on quirkiness in some aspects of Lua to work, but the quirks have more nested quirks attached which have problems.
gollark: Unfortunately, the sandboxing design has always been kind of flaky and inconsistent.
gollark: It incorporates a state-of-the-art-as-of-2018-or-so sandbox designed to stop unprivileged user code from being able to overwrite core OS files, ever.

See also

References

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