Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia

Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia
Type Military college
Established 1832
Director Vladimir Yakovlev
Location Moscow, Russia
Coordinates: 55°38′59.28″N 37°28′26.37″E / 55.6498000°N 37.4739917°E / 55.6498000; 37.4739917

The General staff college of the Russian Federation´s armed forces, also General staff academy of the Russian Federation´s Armed Forces (Russian: Военная академия Генерального штаба Вооруженных Сил Российской Федерации) was founded in 1918 in Moscow by Leonid Govorov. It was the senior Soviet and now Russian general staff college.

The Academy of the General Staff is located in Moscow, on 14 Kholzunova Lane, not far from the Frunze Military Academy. The "best and the brightest" officers of all the Soviet Armed Forces were selected to attend this senior and most prestigious of all the Soviet academies. Students were, and probably still are, admitted to the Academy in the ranks of lieutenant colonel, colonel, and General-Major (one star). Most were colonels or newly promoted generals. Officers enter in their late 30s, as a general rule.

Officers selected for this academy would have first attended the appropriate service or branch academy (see Military academies in Russia). Graduates who were not already generals or admirals usually were promoted to this rank a short time after completing the course. Length of the academy was only two years, in contrast to the three years for the branch and service academies.

Faculty and students of the General Staff Academy were involved in debates over Soviet military restructuring in the last years of the USSR. They became associated with the military reform efforts of Major Vladimir Lopatin and made specific suggestions for deep force reductions.[1]

The Commandant, as of 2006, is Army General Ivan Yefremov, former commander of the Moscow Military District.[2] He replaced General Colonel Viktor Chechevatov in 2005.[3]

The Foundations of Geopolitics by Alexander Dugin has reportedly been a geopolitical textbook in the Academy.[4]

Naming

From its inception, the General Staff Academy has gone through a lot of transformations.

Graduate badge until 1992
Gold medal for the excellent graduates 1950

Notable faculty

Notable alumni

Chiefs since 1918

See also

References

  1. William E Odom, The Collapse of the Soviet Military, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1998
  2. Russian wikipedia entry on Moscow MD, obtained 20 October 2006, translated by Babelfish
  3. Scott and Scott, Russian Military Directory 2004, p.194
  4. John B. Dunlop. "Review: Aleksandr Dugin’s Foundations of Geopolitics" (PDF).
  5. Академия Генерального штаба (General Staff Academy). – М., Военное издательство, 1987. с. 242.
  6. Академия Генерального штаба. – М., Военное издательство, 1987. с. 243.
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