Valeri Danilov

Valeri Danilov (also spelled: Valeriy; Russian:Валерий Дмитриевич Данилов) is a Russian military historian and a retired officer (Colonel). Danilov has Candidate of History Sciences degree (кандидат исторических наук) and is a professor at the Academy of Military Science.

In 1993, Yuri Gorkov and Valeri Danilov published[1] a previously classified document, called Considerations to the plan of the strategic development of the armed forces of the Soviet Union,[2] (dating back to May 15, 1941) which proposed a strike on Germany. Allegedly, it was composed by Georgy Zhukov and Semyon Timoshenko and presented to Joseph Stalin. The publishing of this plan initiated a longer discussion among the Russian historian over Stalin's actual strategy in 1941.

Contrary to many historians both within Russia and the West (David Glantz), Valeri Danilov has argued that - taking into account the concentration of power to Stalin's hand - it is highly implausible, that the Soviet defense commissar and the chief of staff could have prepared such a document without Stalin's authorization. Considering the 1937 purges of the higher officers, it is hardly possible that staff officers would have risked antagonised official Soviet policy. Danilov suggests - and he is supported by Mikhail Meltyukhov, Vladimir Nevezhin and others - that this draft by Zhukov was actually basis for Soviet military planning in 1941.

References

  1. Y.A.Gorkov Gotovil li Stalin uprezhaiushchi udar protiv Gitlera v 1941 g., Novaia i noveishaia istoriia, 3/1993, S. 29-45. English: Was Stalin Preparing a Preemptive Strike Against Hitler in 1941? in Russian Studies in Histor, XXXVI, Nr.3, 1997/98, S. 22-46.
  2. http://osteuropa.bsb-muenchen.de/dig/1000doktest/0024_zuk/@Generic__BookTextView/502;cs=default;ts=default;pt=502

Works

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 11, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.