Viktor Chechevatov
Viktor Stepanovich Chechevatov (Russian: Виктор Степанович Чечеватов; born 15 April 1945, Mordovskiy Belyi Klyuch, Ulyanovsk Oblast, Russian SFSR) is a Russian military and public official, Colonel General who served as commander for several military districts in the Soviet Union and Russia, director of the Russian Customs Academy (RTA) and the Military Academy of General Staff.
Viktor Chechevatov | |
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Lieutenant general Chechevatov | |
Birth name | Viktor Stepanovich Chechevatov |
Born | Mordovskiy Belyi Klyuch, Ulyanovsk Oblast, RSFSR, Soviet Union | April 15, 1945
Allegiance | |
Service/ | |
Years of service | 1962–2005[1] |
Rank | |
Commands held | Military Academy of General Staff Far Eastern Military District Kiev Military District Carpathian Military District (first deputy) Central Asian Military District (chief of staff) |
Battles/wars | Soviet coup d'état attempt |
Spouse(s) | Lidiya Andreevna |
Early life
Chechevatov was born in Russian peasant family in village Mordovskiy Belyi Klyuch, Ulyanovsk Oblast in Midstream Volga region.[1][2] A graduate of Ulyanovsk Tank School in 1966, in 1973 he finished Military Academy of Armored Forces and in 1984 Chechevatov graduated with a gold medal Academy of General Staff.[1][2]
Military service for the USSR
Chechevatov started his military career in Belarusian Military District where he served until 1982.[1][2] Since 1984 he was a commander of the 3rd Combined Arms Army (Group of Soviet Forces in Germany) based in the German Democratic Republic.[1][2][3] In 1987–1989 Chechevatov was appointed as a chief of staff in Central Asia Military District.[1][2]
In 1989–1992 he served in the Ukrainian SSR at first as a first deputy commander of Carpathian Military District and in 1991–1992 as a commander of Kiev Military District.[1][2] In 1991, while in Kiev, he actively supported the State Committee on the State of Emergency, because of which was suspended from command.[4][1] In January of 1992 for refusal to accept oath of allegiance to Ukrainian people, Chechevatov was removed from command and has requested to be transferred to Russia.[1] At the same time the Union of Military Officers of Ukraine not groundlessly raised an issue of corruption in Kiev Military District against Chechevatov and the General Presecutor's Office of Ukraine instigated a criminal proceeding against former Soviet general.[1][5][2]
Post USSR military service
In April of 1992 he was appointed in command of Russian Far Eastern Military District.[1][3][2][6] In December of 1995 an initiative group of voters nominated General Viktor Chechevatov as a presidential candidate for the 1996 Russian presidential election, but Chechevatov soon withdrew his nomination in favor of Boris Yeltsin.[1][2] Earlier in 1995 there was information that he was offered a post of First Deputy Commander of Russian Ground Forces in place of the sacked Eduard Vorobyov.[1][2] Also, there was an incident with his son Andrei Chechevatov (also military officer) who was involved in street shooting as part of road rage which led to casualties, but no prosecutions against Andrei.[1][5] Yeltsin met with Chechevatov in May of 1996 when he was on official trip to China.[2] Following the presidential elections in July of 1996 President of Russia Boris Yeltsin personally has invited Chechevatov to Kremlin when an issue has been raised about appointing a candidate to the post of Minister of Defense of the Russian Federation after dismissal of Pavel Grachev due to the First Chechen War.[1][2] At that time mass media have informed about offer to Chechevatov to take the post of minister and his refusal from it.[1] After the meeting with Yeltsin, the post of minister was given to Igor Radionov.[2]
On 27 February 1997 Yeltsin again met with Chechevatov in Kremlin when his candidacy was presented to post of the commander-in-chief of Ground Forces, but was not approved.[2] Later in 1997 Chechevatov participated in scandalous meeting of the Russia Defense Council at which were sacked from their posts Minister of Defense Igor Radionov and Chief of General Staff Viktor Samsonov and during which right in the course of the meeting Yeltsin offered Chechevatov to take the post of Chief of General Staff.[1][2] In respond the General asked President about a five-minute confidential conversation, after which the issue about his new post was never raised again.[1][2] What they talked about is not known, but the General Staff office was headed not by Chechvatov, but Anatoly Kvashnin.[2] In the beginning of 1998 Chechevatov turned out to be involved in a conflict situation between Naval and Ground forces caused by the actions of the Ministry of Defense to "optimize the structure of the armed forces".[2]
Due to the start of the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, in March of 1999 Chechevatov declared that he is ready to head any military formation of volunteer or regular armed forces to help Yugoslavia and called other volunteers to go to Yugoslavia.[1][2] In his letter to Yeltsin, Colonel General Chechevatov stated that bombing of Yugoslavia may turned out in the near future to be just a rehearsal of similar strikes on Russia.[2] In context of the Kosovo issue, the name of Chechevatov also was raised in negotiations between Boris Yeltsin and Bill Clinton when after complaining to Clinton that communists pursue Yeltsin to send forces to Yugoslavia, President of Russia told that he even fired Chechevatov who wanted to deploy a battalion to help Milošević.[7] In August of 1999 Chechevatov was appointed a director of Military Academy of General Staff.[1]
Retirement
Chechevatov officially retired in 2005.[1] In 2005–06 he actively was involved in public life and held number of office in various public organizations such as "Nakaznoy Ataman" of the "Far Eastern Military Cossack District" as well as Chairman of the Board of Trustees, under the auspices of Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna, a head of House of Romanov and Foundation of the Cavaliers Duma of the Imperial Military Order of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker.[1] In July of 2006 Chechevatov was appointed a rector of Russia Customs Academy.[1]
Awards
- Order of Military Merit[1]
- Order of the Red Star[1]
- Order "For Service to the Homeland in the Armed Forces of the USSR" (2nd and 3rd classes)[1]
References
- (ЧЕЧЕВАТОВ Виктор Степанович). Center Asia.
- Viktor Stepanovich Chechevatov (Виктор Степанович Чечеватов). Polit.ru. 11 August 1999
- Viktor Stapanovich Chechevatov (ЧЕЧЕВАТОВ ВИКТОР СТЕПАНОВИЧ). Veshkaymsky District website.
- Viktor Chechevatov. Lyudi (peoples.ru).
- Podatev, Vladimir. Chapter 46: General Chechevatov and corruption in the Army (ГЛАВА 46 ГЕНЕРАЛ ЧЕЧЕВАТОВ И КОРРУПЦИЯ В АРМИИ) // Book of Life or Road to Light. Interunity.org
- Patsaev, Vladimir. The commander of Far Eastern District is sacked (Отставлен командующий ДВО). Kommersant.ru. 4 May 1992
- Russia is not going to take Sevastopol, Putin is a real democrat. The United States declassified decryption of closed negotiations of Yeltsin and Clinton (Россия не собирается брать Севастополь, Путин — настоящий демократ США рассекретили расшифровки закрытых переговоров Ельцина и Клинтона). Meduza. 31 August 2018
External links
- Viktor Chechevatov at the Russian Ministry of Defense
Military offices | ||
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Preceded by Boris Gromov |
Commander of the Kiev Military District (Soviet Union) 1991–1992 |
Succeeded by Valentin Boriskin as in Ukraine |
Preceded by Viktor Novozhilov |
Commander of the Far Eastern Military District 1992–1999 |
Succeeded by Yuriy Yakubov |
Preceded by Valery Tretyakov |
Chief of the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia 1999–2005 |
Succeeded by Ivan Yefremov |