Valentin Varennikov - Military Career

Military Career

He became a junior officer of the Red Army and fought in the Battle of Stalingrad as well as in the successful campaigns to retake Ukraine and Belarus from the German army. Varennikov finished the German-Soviet War in the Battle of Berlin as one of the commanders of the Soviet soldiers who captured the Reichstag.

Varennikov stayed in East Germany as an officer of the Soviet troops, stationed there until 1950.

In 1954 he graduated from the Frunze Military Academy in Moscow. Later he graduated from the In 1960 he became deputy commander of a motor rifle division. From 1962 to 1966 Varennikov commanded 54th Motor Rifle Division of the Leningrad Military District. In 1964 armed forces inspectors tested the division, and it was awarded as one of the six top divisions of the Land Forces of the Armed Forces of the USSR by order of the Minister of Defence. In August 1965 he was enrolled in the General Staff Academy. From 1967 to 1969 he commanded the 26th Army Corps of the Leningrad Military District.

In 1969 Varennikov took charge of the 3rd Shock Army, and in 1979 became deputy head of the Soviet General Staff.

During the last few years of the Soviet war in Afghanistan, Varennikov was the personal representative in Kabul of the Soviet Defence Minister, and held negotiations with the United Nations Mission members who oversaw the pullout from the country of Soviet troops between 1988 and 1989.

In 1989 General Varennikov was named commander-in-chief of land forces and deputy minister of defence.

In 1991 during the August coup attempt he joined forces opposing former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. After the coup failure General Varennikov was arrested, tried and prosecuted together with other coup plotters and was acquitted by the Russian Supreme Court in 1994. He was the only member of the group of accused plotters who refused to accept an amnesty.

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