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Hovhannes Khachaturi Bagramyan (Armenian: Հովհաննես Խաչատուրի (alternatively, Քրիստափորի, Christapori) Բաղրամյան; Russian: Оване́с Хачату́рович Баграмя́н; 2 December [O.S. 20 November] 1897 – 21 September 1982) was a Soviet Armenian military commander and Marshal of the Soviet Union. During World War II, Bagramyan was the first non-Slavic military officer to become a commander of a Front. He was among several Armenians in the Soviet Army who held the highest proportion of high ranking officers in the Soviet military during the war. Bagramyan's
experience in military planning as a chief of staff allowed him to
distinguish himself as a capable commander in the early stages of the
Soviet counter-offensives against Nazi Germany.
He was given his first command of a unit in 1942, and in November 1943
received his most prestigious command as the commanding officer (CO) of
the 1st Baltic Front. As the CO of the Baltic Front, he participated in the offensives which moved westward and pushed German forces out of the Baltic republics. He did not immediately join the Communist Party after the consolidation of the October Revolution,
becoming a member only in 1941, a move atypical for a Soviet military
officer. After the war, he served as a deputy member of the Supreme Soviets of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic and Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic and was a regular attendee of the Party Congresses. In 1952, he became a candidate for entry into the Central Committee and, in 1961, was inducted as a full member. Outside Armenia, he is primarily known by the Russified version of his name, Ivan (or Ovannes) Khristoforovich Bagramyan (Russian: Ива́н Христофо́рович Баграмян). For his contributions during the war, he was widely regarded as a national hero in the Soviet Union, and continues to hold such esteemed status among Armenians. Hovhannes Bagramyan was born to Armenian parents in the village of Chardakhlu in Azerbaijan near Yelizavetpol, then part of the Russian Empire. Hamazasp Babadjanyan,
a fellow Armenian who was to become the chief marshal of the Soviet
Armor corps, was born in the same village. While Bagramyan's father,
Khachatur, went to work all day at the railway station in Yelizavetpol,
his mother, Mariam, stayed at home to take care of her seven children.
Because his parents could not afford to send him to the local gymnasium, they decided to enroll him at a recently opened two-year school in Yelizavetpol. Graduating
in 1912, Bagramyan, whom everyone affectionately called Vanya, followed
his father and his brothers in a path in rail work, attending the
three-year railway technical institute in Tiflis. He graduated with honors and was slated to become a railway engineer within a few years when events in the First World War changed his life. Bagramyan was well aware of the military situation in the Caucasian Front during the first months of the world war. In the winter of 1914 - 1915, the Imperial Russian Army was able to withstand and repel the Ottoman Empire's
eastward advance, and to take the fight to its territory. Bagramyan
also began reading harrowing reports in the Russian press of what was
taking place against his fellow kinsmen across the border: the Ottomans
had embarked on their campaign to
systematically annihilate their Armenian subjects. He desperately
wished to join the military effort but because he was only seventeen
and a railway mechanic, he was not liable to be drafted. This did not
dissuade him from trying, as he later remarked, "My place was at the
front." His
opportunity came on September 16, 1915, when he was accepted by the
Russian Army as a volunteer. He was placed in the 116th Reserve
Battalion and sent to Akhaltsikhe for basic training. With his training complete in December, he joined the Second Caucasus Frontier Regiment of the Russian Expedition Corps, which was sent to dislodge the Ottoman Turks in Persia. Bagramyan participated in several battles in Asadabad, Hamedan and Kermanshah, the Russian victories here sending Ottoman forces reeling towards Anatolia. Learning
about the exploits of the men in the outfit, the chief of staff of the
regiment, General Pavel Melik-Shahnazaryan, advised Bagramyan to return
to Tiflis to enroll in the Praporshchik Military Academy. But in order to attend the school, Bagramyan needed to satisfy the academy's requirement of having completed school at a gymnasium. This did not deter him and, after preparing for the courses in Armavir,
he passed his exams and began attending the academy on February 13,
1917. He graduated in June 1917 and was assigned to the Third Armenian
Infantry regiment stationed near Lake Urmia. But with the overthrow of the Russian Provisional Government in the midst of the October Revolution of 1917, his unit was demobilized. However, with the creation of the newly established Democratic Republic of Armenia in 1918, Bagramyan enlisted in the Third Armenian Regiment of that country's armed forces. After the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 3, 1918) with the Russian SFSR, from April 1, 1918 he was in the First Armenian Cavalry Regiment, which helped stave off the Ottoman 3rd Army's offensives intent on conquering the remains of the republic in the regions of Karaourgani and Sarıkamış. He most notably participated in the May 1918 battle of Sardarapat, where the Armenian military secured a crucial victory against Turkish forces. He remained in the regiment until May 1920. Several years after the toppling of the Provisional Government by the Bolsheviks in October 1917, the Red Army invaded the southern Caucasus republics of Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia.
In May 1920, Bagramyan, upset with the country's social and political conditions, participated in a failed rebellion against the Dashnak-led government of Armenia. He was jailed and sent to work in the fields for several months but was allowed to rejoin the military with the outbreak of the Turkish–Armenian War. Within several months, Armenia was sovietized and the national army was disbanded. Bagramyan, however, chose to join the 11th Soviet Army and was appointed a cavalry regiment commander. As
life in Armenia grew relatively more stable under Soviet rule,
Bagramyan decided to reconnect with a woman he had met several years
earlier, Tamara Hamayakovna. Tamara, who was at this time living in Nakhichevan with
her family, had been married to an Armenian officer who had been killed
during the Turkish-Armenian war, leaving her with their one-year-old
son, Movses. Bagramyan visited her and the two married in the end of
1922. In addition to their son Movses, who went on to become a painter,
they had a daughter, Margarit, who later became a doctor. Tamara
remained at Bagramyan's side until her death in 1973. In
1923, Bagramyan was appointed commander of the Alexandropol Cavalry
Regiment, a position he held until 1931. Two years later, Bagramyan
graduated from the Leningrad Cavalry School and, in 1934, from the Frunze Military Academy. In his memoirs, Pyotr Grigorenko, a Ukrainian commander who attended Frunze, wrote about how Bagramyan
was expelled from the academy by his superiors after they learned he
had been a secret member of the banned Dashnak Armenian nationalist
party for more than a decade. Pending his arrest, Grigorenko described
Bagramyan "deeply depressed, saying he only wished they'd arrest him
soon so that he could get it over with." Grigorenko advised that he appeal the arrest warrant which Bagramyan reluctantly did and, with the help of Armenian politburo member Anastas Mikoyan, the arrest warrant was revoked and he accepted to be "rehabilitated." From 1934 to 1936, he served as the chief of staff of
the 5th Cavalry Division, and from 1938, he worked as a senior
instructor and lecturer at the Military Academy of the Soviet General
Staff. Concurrently, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin had purged much of the Soviet officer corps of its veteran commanders. While fellow students from the military academy, Andrei Yeremenko and Georgy Zhukov, had seen their careers rise, Bagramyan's had remained stagnant. In 1940, when General Zhukov was promoted to commander of the Kiev Military District in
the Ukraine, Bagramyan wrote a letter asking to serve under his
command. Zhukov agreed, and in December asked for his help writing a
paper to be presented to the commanders of the Soviet Military
Districts. Bagramyan's paper, Conducting a Contemporary Offensive Operation, apparently impressed Zhukov, as he promoted Bagramyan to become the head of Operations for the Soviet 12th Army based in the Ukraine. Within three months however, Bagramyan, then a colonel, was appointed deputy chief of staff of the Southwestern Front, headquartered in Kiev. In June 1941, Nazi Germany violated the Molotov-Ribbentrop non-aggression pact and invaded the
Soviet Union. Unlike many of the border troops who were caught off
guard by the offensive, Bagramyan and his commander, General Mikhail Kirponos believed an invasion by Germany was inevitable. However, Kipronos chose to ignore Bagramyan's viewpoint that the German offensive would employ the lightning speed Blitzkrieg tactics like those used in the campaigns in Poland in 1939 and Western Europe in 1940. Since
the winter of 1939–40, Bagramyan had been busy devising a battle plan
that would counter threats from the western Ukraine that was approved
after numerous revisions on May 10, 1940. On the morning of June 22, he was tasked with the overseeing of a transfer of a military convoy to Ternopol. While his column was passing the Soviet airfields near the city of Brody,
German air strikes hit the aircraft on the ground. Several hours later,
they arrived in Ternopol, having been strafed twice by the planes. Three
days after the invasion, the plans for the counter offensive were
implemented, but disorder engulfed the troops, and the counter attack
collapsed. Bagramyan took part in the great tank battles in western Ukraine and the defensive operation around Kiev,
in which Kirponos was killed and the entire Front captured by the
Germans. He was one of a handful of senior officers who escaped from
the encircled Front. Bagramyan was then appointed chief of staff to Marshal Semyon Timoshenko and along with future Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev, then a political officer, coordinated the fighting around Rostov.
In his memoirs, Khrushchev described Bagramyan as a "very precise
person who reported on everything just as it was. How many troops we
had, their positions, and the general situation." Khrushchev went on to detail an account in where Marshal Semyon Budyonny, sent by the chief of the operations department from the Soviet capital of Moscow to Kiev and representing the STAVKA, courtmartialed Bagramyan, who
protested and stated that if he was an incapable staff officer, then he
should instead be given a field unit to command. To Bagramyan's
astonishment, Budyonny went on to attempt to convince him to agree to
his execution. Khrushchev remarked that the argument was essentially
sparked arbitrarily and had taken place after an "abundant feast with
cognac" and that "in those days we didn't take that kind of
conversation seriously." According
to him, at the time however, the Soviet military was especially
suspicious of the men in its ranks, itself judging that there were "enemies of the people ... everywhere, especially the Red Army." Bagramyan
was instrumental in the planning of two Soviet counter offensives
against the Germans, including the major push made by Soviet forces in
December during the battle of Moscow, and for this was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General. In the same month, he was made the chief of staff of a military operations group that would oversee three Army Groups: the Southern, the Southwestern and Bryansk Fronts. In
March 1942, he went along with Khrushchev and Timoshenko to Moscow to
present the plans of a new counter offensive in the Ukrainian city of Kharkov to
Stalin. Stalin, impressed with his plan, approved the operation and on
April 8, promoted Bagramyan as Chief of Staff of the Southwestern
Front. On May 12, 1942, armies of the Southwestern Front attacked
Kharkov but the launch of the offensive came at an inopportune moment
since they were attacking from the Barvenkovo Salient, a region that German forces were near closing. While Soviet forces were initially successful in recapturing Kharkov,
they found themselves trapped by the German army after the closing of
Barvenkovo. On May 18, Bagramyan asked Timoshenko to alter the plans
but Timoshenko along with Stalin refused to approve his request. Soviet losses were heavy as the 6th, 9th and 57th armies (approximately 18 – 20 divisions)
comprising a large portion of the Southwestern Front, were all
destroyed and Bagramyan was removed from his post on June 28 by STAVKA.
According to Khrushchev, Bagramyan was so devastated from the immense
loss of men that after the operation was called off, "he burst into
tears. His nerves cracked ... He was weeping for our army." Held
responsible for the failure of the operation and "poor staff work", he
was demoted to chief of staff of the Soviet 28th Army. Several days later, he wrote a letter to Stalin asking to "serve at the front at any capacity, however modest." British military historian John Erickson however
contends that Bagramyan was unfairly scapegoated by Stalin in his
attempts to "hunt for [the] culprits" of the mismanagement of
operations. Though
he had never led a fighting unit prior to the war, he was given his
first command of an army in the Western Front as his superiors, and
particularly field marshal Zhukov were impressed with his skills and
capabilities as a staff officer. Zhukov, with the approval of STAVKA, appointed him commander of the 16th Army (2nd formation), (July 1942 - April 1943) replacing its former commander, Konstantin Rokossovsky who had been sent to command the Bryansk Front. The 16th Army transferred its troops to the 5th Army, and its command and staff were moved to the second echelon of the Western Front where the Army took up command of part of the 10th Army's
troops, and its defensive positions. On August 11, however, German
forces mounted a surprise offensive on the southern flank of Western
Front, splitting the 61st Army from the 16th Army which was not taking
part in the Rzhev-Sychevka Offensive operation. The
German forces threatened Bagramyan's left flank as he quickly moved his
forces to counter their movements and halted them from advancing
further on September 9. With the rest of the Eastern Front battles almost entirely focused on Stalingrad and the Germans' attempts to advance to the Caucasus, the 16th Army was not called up to action until February 1943. By then, the German 6th Army besieged
in Stalingrad had been encircled and surrendered as Soviet forces
remained on the constant offense. The 16th Army at the time was
composed of four divisions and one infantry brigade and in light of the new offensive, Bagramyan's force was given two extra divisions, an infantry brigade, four tank brigades and several artillery regiments.
As
the battle of Stalingrad marked the turning point of the war, German
forces reorganized for a new offensive in the summer of 1943 to attack
the Soviet held Kursk salient in Russia. The German High Command was to utilize veteran units in its ambitions to destroy the salient, including the Ninth Army and the II SS Panzer Corps. STAVKA, already informed of the impending attacks, called for an advance towards the German defenses positioned near the town of Kozelsk which would push south where it would be aided by the armies of Central Front.
The forces would then proceed to cut off a 75-mile (121 km) gap
that would effectively surround the Germans and cut if off from
reinforcements. This was similar to the 1942 launched Operation Uranus, where the Soviet army encircled and trapped the Sixth Army in Stalingrad. Bagramyan's
Eleventh Army was tasked to take part in the offensive and was given an
additional three infantry divisions and two tank corps, a force composed of fifteen divisions. Bagramyan
however argued to STAVKA that its planning was too audacious in the
hopes of repeating a successful encirclement like that in Uranus. He claimed that his forces would be overstretched and would have difficulty in attacking the entrenched German positions in Bolkhov.
To avoid a repetition of the failure in Kharkov the previous year, he
instead asked that the 61st Army from the Bryansk Front aid the
Eleventh in destroying the German forces in Bolkhov, thus eliminating
the Ninth Army's protection from the north. He appealed to his front commander Vasily Sokolovsky as
well the Bryansk's M.A. Reyter, both of whom rejected his proposal. In
April, STAVKA recalled the main commanders of the Fronts and Armies to
Moscow on a briefing of the preparations for the battle. Against the
protestations of Sokolovsky and Reyter, Bagramyan proposed his
alternative plan to Stalin, who agreed and approved that it would be
the more correct course to follow. Bagramyan
was given twenty days to prepare the Eleventh Army and on May 24
reported that his forces were ready. The Eleventh Army now was composed
of 135,000 men, 280 armored fighting vehicles, 2,700 artillery pieces and several hundred planes to lend air support for the ground forces. Stalin however, feeling it was necessary to further deteriorate the fighting abilities of German forces, delayed the offensive. On July 5, 1943, after several months of postponing the offensive, German forces launched Operation Citadel in
the area around Kursk. German losses were initially heavy due to Soviet
defensive preparations. Taking advantage of this, on July 12,
Bagramyan's forces commenced their offensive, codenamed Operation Kutuzov, and quickly breached through German defenses, advancing a distance of 45 miles (72 km) by July 18. By July 28, the operation successfully concluded and he was promoted to the rank of Colonel General.
In the ensuing month, his forces took part in the large-scale tank
offensives which effectively routed the German assaults and forced
Germany to remain on the defensive for the remainder of the war. With
the end of operations in Kursk, the Soviets began a series of
offensives on various fronts to push the Germans out of the occupied
Soviet republics. In October 1943, Bagramyan's Eleventh Army was
transferred to the Second Baltic Front which was concentrated on the
retaking of Belarus and namely, the Baltic republics. In November, Stalin offered Bagramyan the position of head commander of the First Baltic Front which had the similar objectives of the Second but was making little headway in its attempts to advance northwards. Stalin would allow him to retain the Eleventh Army and suggested that Colonel-General N. E. Chibisov,
an officer he had served under, assume his position. Bagramyan however
commented that he had had a frictional relationship with Chibisov and
instead nominated Lieutenant General K.N. Galitsky. Stalin, belatedly realizing that Bagramyan was implying
that the two would be unable to coherently coordinate together due to a
conflict of holding the same rank, agreed to Bagramyan's suggestion and
promoted him to the rank Army General. He
also agreed to have the Second Baltic Front return a tank corps and an
infantry division that was taken from the Eleventh Army, thus
bolstering the forces under Bagramyan to a total of four armies: the
Eleventh, Thirty-ninth, Forty-third Guards and the Fourth Shock. In the winter of 1943, his forces advanced forward towards the Belarusian city of Vitebsk. One of the keys of Bagramyan's progress was that many of the soldiers were part of veteran units that had been trained in the Arctic regions of Siberia, enabling
them to easily push through entrenched defenses the Germans had spent
months preparing. Among the key locations imperative to reach Vitebsk
was the small town of Gorodok,
serving as a communications hub that the Germans had heavily fortified.
Despite the heavy defense preparations, Bagramyan was able to utilize
his heavy artillery and air support from the Red Air Force in late December to bombard the town and then launch a three-pronged attack from the ground. The
German garrison was overwhelmed, and by December 24, two infantry
divisions and one tank division surrendered. In Moscow, the news of the
victory at Gorodok prompted a 124 cannon salute in honor of Bagramyan
and the First Baltic Front. On
April 2, 1944 Stalin granted Bagramyan's request to relieve the troops
of the Front of offensive duties. However, German forces took this to
their advantage as they mounted a new offensive against Soviet partisan fighters
in Belarus. Bagramyan's senior staff diverted air support and other
crucial supplies to aid the partisans, allowing most of them to escape
the German encirclement. With the advance of Soviet forces in the Baltic and the Ukraine, German Army Group Center had largely been isolated as STAVKA prepared to eliminate the pocket (consisting of Third Panzer, Second, Fourth, and Ninth Armies). STAVKA's plan, codenamed Operation Bagration was
kept secret from all of the involved Front commanders. Bagramyan
himself was only informed in May 1944 of his role in the offensive. Bagration called
for the First, Second and Third Belarusian Fronts and the First Baltic
to engulf Army Group Center. Bagramyan was tasked with attacking the
forces in the pocket, cross the Daugava River and, along with Third Belarusian, clear the surrounding areas of Vitebsk of German forces. Although he felt the plans for the Bagration were sound, he worried about the possibility of a German incursion by Army Group North against his forces from the north. He appealed to his superiors once more, Zhukov and Alexander Vasilevsky, to have the First Baltic Front move westwards to help eliminate the Third Panzer Army, thus splitting Army Group North in two. Zhukov
and Vasilevsky accepted his argument, introducing it to Stalin in a
meeting on May 23 who formally approved it in a directive on May 31. Although
Bagramyan found it acceptable to sustain heavy casualties (as did all
the commanders of the Red Army), he was disturbed with the immense loss
of life the war was taking against his men. He,
however, attempted to reduce those levels primarily by maintaining the
element of surprise in operations. In his preparations for Bagration,
he planned for the Forty-third army to move through the more
geographically difficult swamps and marshlands to Army Group North's
right flank. This maneuver would thus take North by surprise since it
expected the Soviet offensive to move through more suitable terrain. He
proved correct, as in early June 1944, the Forty-third Army achieved
success in its attack. Commander of the Forty-third Army, General A.P.
Beloborodov wrote that during the offensive, they apprehended a German
general who stated that German forces had been blindsided by the
attacking forces. As Bagramyan pushed towards Vitebsk, his forces were aided by the same Belarusian guerrilla fighters
that had escaped the German encirclement in April. They provided vital
intelligence, including information on the location of bridges and
troop movements, and launched attacks against German logistics lines.
On June 22, 1944, Bagration began
as Bagramyan proceeded in moving westwards as previously planned.
However, a widening gap on the Front's northern flank grew as it
advanced while the Second Baltic Front, tasked to help defend that
area, took no action. Stalin agreed to send a tank corps to reinforce Bagramyan's forces but ordered him to capture Polatsk,
which would sever Army Group North's communication lines and open up a
route towards the central Baltic. By July 3, his troops had
accomplished the tasks set forth in the directive, destroyed the Third
Panzer Army and captured Polatsk. For his achievements, on July 7 he was decorated with the title of Hero of the Soviet Union. With the overall success of Soviet forces in Bagration,
his Front was expanded by three armies (although he ceded the Fourth
Shock Army to Second Baltic), the Thirty-ninth army (previously under
the command of Third Belarusian), the Fifty-first and the Second Guard Armies. The
First Baltic Front was ordered by STAVKA to move westward in order to
stop Army Group North's remaining forces from escaping to Germany.
Despite this, Bagramyan understood that many of the general orders
being given to the German Army were directed by Adolf Hitler, rather than the General Staff and knew that while there was a possibility that they would confront them in the Lithuanian city of Kaunas, he felt the more likely location would be in Latvia's capital, Riga. He spoke with Vasilevsky who agreed to change the plans if his theory and intuition proved correct. As
the First Baltic began moving towards Lithuania and into eastern
Latvia, it became clear that Army Group North would attempt to outflank
Bagramyan's forces near Daugavpils,
as he had previously predicted. Vasilevsky, keeping his promise,
appealed to Stalin to allow Bagramyan to move to Daugavpils but he
refused to do so. Vasilevsky
in turn, took it upon his own initiative and gave Bagramyan the go
ahead. However, with the loss of the Fourth Shock, Bagramyan was left
shortchanged since his promised Thirty Ninth Army had not only not
arrived but was composed of only seven divisions (in comparison to the
Fourth's ten). Feeling that time was being lost, he pressed on with the
units he had. By
July 9, his ground forces had made significant gains in cutting off a
vital road that connected Kaunas to Daugavpils. Taking advantage of
this, Bagramyan worked with other Front commanders to attack the rear
guard of Army Group Center but poor coordination between the units led
a stall in the advance. At
this time, Bagramyan realized that German forces were most probably not
going to easily retreat from the Baltics and so further advances
towards Kaunas would be pointless. He proposed to STAVKA to launch a
full-scale offensive towards Riga but the former rejected his plans,
stating that the armies of Second and Third Baltic Fronts would have
already pushed Army Group Center to Prussia by the time of the
offensive. He
attempted to convince them otherwise, citing the numerically deficient
forces in the two Fronts, but was rebuffed and ordered to drive towards
a road connecting the Lithuania city of Shaulyai to Riga, resulting in its capture in late July. With
its capture, he persuaded Vasilevsky to allow his forces to move
towards Riga, receiving a formal go-ahead by STAVKA in a directive on
July 29. On July 30, his forces finally reached the seaside city of Tukums, near the Bay of Riga, thereby cutting off a total of 38 German infantry and armored divisions in Latvia. For his achievements in this battle, he was given the title of Hero of the Soviet Union.
During the month of August, Soviet forces stalled in the Riga
offensive, concentrating on halting German attacks. Finally on
September 14, 1944, the First, Second and Third Baltic Fronts launched
full scale offensives with the objective of Riga, encountering fierce
resistance by its defenders. On September 24, with his forces only 12
miles (19 km) from Riga, STAVKA ordered Bagramyan's forces to
abandon it to the Second and Third Baltic Fronts, regroup, and instead
advance against Memel. His forces attacked Memel on October 5 and on October 10, reached the city, effectively preventing Army Group North from retreating to Prussia. In early 1945, Bagramyan's army, under the overall command of Vasilievsky, took part in the advance into East Prussia. In Operation Samland, Bagramyan's First Baltic Front, now known as the Samland Group, captured Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) in April. On May 9, 1945, he accepted the surrender of the German forces penned up in Latvia, capturing a total of 158 aircraft, 18,000 vehicles, 500 tanks and assault guns among other weaponry. After the war, Bagramyan remained in command of the Baltic Military District, commanding operations against partisans in Lithuania and Latvia. In 1954, he was appointed Chief Inspector of the Ministry of Defense. In 1955, he was appointed Deputy Minister of Defense with the rank of Marshal of the Soviet Union. He was also head of the Military Academy of General Staff and commander of the reserve forces of the Soviet Armed Forces. He spent much of his time writing articles in military journals on Soviet strategic operations and most notably, co-authored the six-volume work on Soviet involvement during World War II, The Soviet Union's Great Patriotic War (1941 – 1945). In August 1967, Bagramyan accompanied General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev and premier Alexey Kosygin to North Vietnam,
where they met with Vietnamese leaders as he, serving in the role of a
military expert, helped negotiate the transfer of logistics and arms to
the country during the Vietnam War. He retired in 1968. In 1971, Bagramyan completed his first volume of his memoirs in This is How the War Began in 1971 and in 1977, the second volume Thus We Went to Victory was
published. Among the numerous points he noted in the second book was an
analysis of the Red Army's costly offensives in the early stages of the
war: There
is no point in hiding that before the war we mostly learned to attack,
and did not pay enough attention to such an important manoeuvre as
retreat. Now we have paid for this. It turned out that the commanders
and the staff were not sufficiently prepared to prepare and execute the
retreat manoeuvre. Now, in the second week of war, we had in fact to
learn from the beginning the most difficult art - the art of the
execution of retreat. Marshal
Bagramyan was awarded with numerous Soviet and foreign Orders and
medals for his service including with two Orders of the Hero of the Soviet Union, seven Orders of Lenin, the Order of the October Revolution, three Orders of the Red Banner, two Orders of Suvorov and the Order of Kutuzov. Among the other commendations he received were the Polish Virtuti Militari, the Medal For the Victory Over Germany and the Medal For the Victory Over Japan. After the death of Marshal Vasily Chuikov on
March 18, 1982, he was the last Soviet Marshal who held a high command
in World War II who remained alive. However, only several months later,
Bagramyan died, on September 21, 1982, from illness at the age of 84,
and was buried with full military honors at the Kremlin Wall Necropolis in Moscow. A
town, a military firing
range and an army training brigade, and a subway station and street in
the capital of Armenia, Yerevan, are named in his honor. On May 11, 1997, the government of Armenia established the commemorative 100th Anniversary of Marshal Bagramyan medal (Armenian: զինված ուժերի «Մարշալ Բաղրամյան» մեդալ). It is awarded to service and civilian personnel who participated in the Second World War. |