Iona Yakir
Iona Yakir | |
---|---|
Iona Yakir | |
Birth name | Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir |
Born |
Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire | February 16, 1893
Died |
June 11, 1937 44) Moscow | (aged
Allegiance | Soviet Union |
Years of service | 1918 — 1937 |
Rank | Kommandarm |
Unit | 45th Rifle Division, 58th Rifle Division, Kiev Military District |
Commands held | Kiev Military District |
Battles/wars | Russian Civil War |
Awards | Order of the Red Banner (Three times) |
Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir (Russian: Иона Эммануилович Якир; August 3, 1896 – June 11, 1937) was the Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World War II.
Early years
Yakir was born in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire, into the prosperous family of a Jewish pharmacist. Because of governmental restrictions on Jewish access to higher education, Yakir studied abroad at the University of Basel in Switzerland. During World War I, he returned to the Russian Empire and worked in a military factory in Odessa, Ukraine. From 1915 to 1917, he was a student of Kharkiv Technological Institute. He was affected by the war and became a follower of Vladimir Lenin. In 1917, he returned to Kishinev, became a member of the Bolshevik Party and took active part in the Bolshevik seizure of power in Bessarabia. When Romania intervened to recapture Bessarabia in 1918, Yakir led Bolshevik resistance but his small force was overwhelmed by the regular Romanian army.
In the Civil War
Yakir retreated to Ukraine and fought against Austro-Hungarian occupation forces as a commander of a Chinese regiment of the Red Army. He was wounded in March 1918. At the beginning of the Russian Civil War between Bolshevik forces, the White Army and various other anti-Bolshevik movements, Yakir was a member of the Bolshevik Party in Voronezh Province and started his service in the Red Army as a commissar. He showed military talent and was assigned as a field commander. In October 1918, he served as a member of the Revolutionary Council of the 8th army in the Southern Front and simultaneously commanded the Southern Front's several key formations in operations against the Don Cossacks of Pyotr Krasnov. He carried out Lenin's order of persecution against the Cossack civilian population. The war against armed combatants, plus the terror against the civilian population, were coming together in the Russian civil war. Encouraged by the Bolshevik theory of class struggle, Yakir, like other members of the Communist party, took part in terror. For his services, he became the second individual to receive the highest Soviet military award of that time, the Order of the Red Banner (engraved as No. 2).
In the summer of 1919, Yakir was sent to Ukraine to command the 45th Rifle Division, and in August 1919, he became the commander of the Southern Group of the 12th army, which included the 45th and 58th Rifle Divisions. Both divisions were surrounded in Odessa by the White forces. Yakir undertook one of the most unusual Civil War military operations. He breached the encirclement and led his forces through the enemy rear for a distance of 400 kilometres (250 mi), to join the Red Army in Zhitomir. Like other Bolshevik commanders who did not have military education, he was assisted in this operation by former tsarist army officers on his staff, but this fact does not negate his own role in planning and leading the campaign. For this campaign, he received his second Order of the Red Banner, and both of his divisions received Red Banners of Honor. Yakir took part in actions against the White forces of Nikolai Yudenich in defense of Petrograd, in suppression of Ukrainian anarchist guerrilla forces of Nestor Makhno, and in the Polish-Soviet War. He was awarded the Order of the Red Banner three times, and he became one of the most-decorated Red Army commanders.
Military reformer
After the war, Yakir commanded army formations in Ukraine. Yakir was a close associate of Mikhail Frunze and belonged to his inner circle of innovative Red Army officers who assisted Frunze in starting far-reaching military reforms. Among these reformers was Mikhail Tukhachevsky who became Yakir's friend. In April 1924 Yakir was appointed a head of Main Directorate of Military Academies of the Red Army and simultaneously editor of a major military periodical devoted to development of military theory, "Voennyi Vestnik".
In November 1925, after Frunze's death, Yakir was appointed commander of the most powerful territorial formations of the Red Army, the newly reorganized Ukrainian military district (see: Kiev Military District). Yakir, in close coordination with Tukhachevsky and other reformers, made his district into a laboratory of wide-ranging experiments in strategy, tactical and operational techniques, army formations and equipment. In training his troops, Yakir encouraged his officers' initiative and ability to make their own judgments. In 1928 and 1929, Yakir studied at the Higher Military Academy in Berlin. This was possible because of the intensive military cooperation between the Soviet Union and Germany. Yakir's innovative approaches to the military art impressed his German colleagues. German Field Marshal of World War I fame, Paul von Hindenburg, praised him as one of the most-talented military commanders of the post-World War I era.[citation needed]
After returning to his district, Yakir continued military reform. He was one of the creators of the first large tank and air force formations in the world.[citation needed] Not a military theorist in his own right, Yakir strongly supported Tukhachevsky's endeavor in developing the theory of deep operations. Military historians across the world now consider this theory an outstanding theoretical innovation. In 1934 Yakir requested that Tukhachevsky would be appointed to conduct advanced courses on operational theory for high-ranking officers of the Red Army General Staff and commanders of military districts. He did it even though he knew about Joseph Stalin's dislike of Tukhachevsky. In retribution, Stalin instructed his crony Kliment Voroshilov, who was a Peoples Commissar of Defense, to bar Yakir from membership in the prestigious Advisory Council of the Defense Commissariat. In 1935, in order to diminish Yakir's power, the Ukrainian military district was divided into two new districts, Kiev, under Yakir's command, and Kharkov.
In 1935, Yakir conducted military maneuvers in Kiev, with the Kiev and Kharkov military districts' forces.[citation needed] The major aim of these maneuvers was to test the theory of deep operations and the latest technology. A total of 65,000 troops, including 1,888 paratroopers, 1,200 tanks and 600 aircraft participated in these maneuvers. These were first maneuvers in the world that used combined operations of large tank, airforce and airborne formations. The troops acted along a front of 250 metres (0 mi) and a depth of 200 metres (0 mi). The representatives of major world armies attended the maneuvers. The British General Archibald Wavell reported to his government, "If I had not witnessed this myself I would never have believed such an operation possible."[citation needed] The German Wehrmacht copied Soviet innovations in preparation for World War II.[citation needed] The reform started by Frunze, and continued by Yakir, Tukhachevsky and many other commanders, made the Red Army into the most advanced army in the world.[citation needed] During these years, Yakir regularly gave lectures to the Red Army General Staff Academy, informing the students about the newest developments in military affairs. In 1935 he was promoted to Comandarm, first rank, the second-highest military rank in the Soviet Union at the time.
Political involvements
Stalin, who was consolidating his power over the country, approved Yakir's appointment to the Ukrainian Military District in 1925. However, he did not trust him fully and instructed his political ally Lazar Kaganovich to become friends with Yakir and to report about his activities. Yakir, who was a firm believer in the Communist cause, was actively involved in internal politics. He was member of the party Central Committee in Moscow and member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Ukraine. While ingenious and independent in his thinking as a military commander, in Soviet politics he was a docile party member and followed the party Stalinist line. During the famine in Ukraine caused by Stalin's "forced collectivization" of agriculture during 1932-1933, Yakir was alarmed by the tragedy and approached Stalin with a request to soften official policies. Stalin was outraged and instructed Kaganovich to advise Yakir to limit his activities to his party assignment which was military service. Yakir obeyed. As a party member, he lacked the power of conviction and independent thinking to defy Stalin.
His blind obedience did not spare Yakir. Stalin would not allow to his military commanders any independent thinking, even in area of their professional expertise. While apparently Stalin's attitude toward Yakir was friendly, the dictator could not tolerate people like Yakir in the Stalinist totalitarian state. Starting with the Great Purge in 1936, the NKVD arrested many close associates and subordinates of Yakir. Yakir was one of few top Soviet commanders who appealed to Stalin, claiming the innocence of these officers. However, Yakir's appeals alienated Stalin even more, and Yakir was marked for persecution. To remove Yakir from his power base in June 1937, Stalin sent him to command the Kiev military district. During the Great Purge, it was a clear sign of forthcoming persecution.
Trial and death
On 28 May 1937, the NKVD arrested Yakir, who was accused of being a member of the alleged Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization and of being a Nazi agent. Yakir maintained his innocence, both in correspondence to Joseph Stalin and at his trial, but Stalin wrote on his letter: "Rascal and prostitute". Kliment Voroshilov and Vyacheslav Molotov added: "A perfectly accurate definition". Lazar Kaganovich wrote: "The only punishment for the scoundrel, riffraff and whore is death penalty".[1] Yakir was executed, in Moscow, together with Tukhachevsky, and several other Soviet officers, immediately after the trial on June 11, 1937. His wife was subsequently arrested and executed, as were several of his relatives. His son, Pyotr Yakir Ionovich (1923 - 1982),[2] then fourteen years old, was arrested shortly after his father's execution and spent a number of years in prison camps. Yakir's military writings were banned.[3]
Yakir's legacy
After Yakir's execution, the Purge wiped out large number of the officers who had served under him. Many tasks of Yakir's work, including his reforms and preparations for guerrilla activities in the event of an invasion of Ukraine, were dismantled. When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, the Red Army was incapable of modern warfare and unprepared to face an enemy who used military art, which Yakir and other Soviet innovators were greatly familiar with. The Soviets suffered terrible defeats and huge human and territorial losses before remastering modern operational approaches and tactics. Yakir's disciples who survived the Purge used the experiences which they had gained under Yakir to make a vital contribution to Soviet victory over Germany. Among them were: Chief of the General Staff of the Red Army Aleksei Antonov, Front commanders Andrei Yeremenko and Ivan Chernyakhovsky, and Army commander Alexander Gorbatov.
During Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinisation, Yakir's image was rehabilitated on January 31, 1957.
Further reading
- A. V. Gorbatov, Years of My Life. The Memoirs of a General of the Soviet Army (New York, 1964)
- Harold Shukman, Stalin's Generals (New York, 1993)
References
- ↑ Якир Иона Эммануилович
- ↑ http://www.eleven.co.il/article/15202
- ↑ Roy Medvedev, Let History Judge, 1971.