- Igor Rodionov
Igor Nikolayevich Rodionov ( _ru. Игорь Николаевич Родионов) (born
1936 ) is aRussia n general andDuma deputy. He is best known as a hardline politician, and for his service heading theDefence Ministry of the Russian Federation .Rodionov served as a
Soviet military officer inGermany ,Czechoslovakia , the RussianFar East and several other areas around the world. Then-Major Rodionov commanded a motorized rifle regiment in the famed 24th Motorized Rifle Division (the "Iron Division") in theCarpathian Military District from 1970-1973, and later commandered the 17th Motor Rifle Division in the same District. He commanded the 5th Army in theFar East Military District from 1983-85 and then the key 40th Army inAfghanistan in1985 -1986 . He held the post of First Deputy Chief Commander of theMoscow Military District from1986 until1988 , when Colonel General Rodionov was appointed Commander of theTranscaucasus Military District .In April
1989 he was made responsible for the violent massacre during the April 9 riots inTbilisi and removed from his post. From1989 to1996 , he served as a People’s Deputy and as the head of the General Staff Academy.In the leadup to the 1996 presidential election, Russian President
Boris Yeltsin dismissed Defence MinisterPavel Grachev and replaced him with Rodionov. Rodionov had had many military doctrinal articles published, and coming from command of the General Staff Academy had a background in analysis which Grachev lacked. During Rodionov's term the major factors obstructing Armed Forces reform were mainly political.Rodionov did have ideas for reforming the armed forces, but thought that the general outlook of the Cold War ought to remain;
Russia had been and would continue to be an adversary of the West, and the threat perception and budget levels should be designed on that basis. [Arbatov, Alexei G. Arbatov, Military Reform in Russia: Dilemmas, Obstacles, and Prospects, International Security, Vol. 22, No.4, Spring 1998, p.113] Over the course of his tenure asDefence Minister , he changed his mind over whether the Armed Forces should be restructured to Russia's new circumstances, or whether Russia should continue, in the Soviet style, to place the military above social and economic needs. At the start of his term, he appeared to be convinced of fitting the Army to the state; eventually he was dismissed because he would not foreswear fitting the state to the Army. His attitude was revealed in comments such as 'it is.. impermissible to solve society's.. problems at the cost of lowering the state's main attribute, the army'. [Trud, 11 February 1997, in Dov Lynch, Manoeuvring with the Military, The World Today, November 1997, p.276.] Rodionov was eventually dismissed for two reasons. First, he had refused to subordinate the Ministry to civilian control in the form of the short-lived Defence Council. [Dov Lynch, Russian Peacekeeping Strategies towards the CIS, 1999, p.10] Secondly, he had had a major dispute with Yuriy Baturin, of the Defence Council, over whether reform was possible within the budgetary resources the state had available. Rodionov insisted it was not, and much more money would have to be spent; Baturin argued that the military would have to make do with the then current spending levels, as increases were fiscally impossible. Neither man would give up his position, and reform was not being achieved, so Yeltsin solved the problem by firing Rodionov. [Stuart Goldman, Russian Conventional Armed Forces,Congressional Research Service Report 97-820F, 1997, p.40-1] ADuma member ("Rodina" faction) since1999 , Igor Rodionov is now a member of the Committee on National Security and Chairman of the Professional Union of Military Personnel.External links and References
* U.S. Army
Foreign Military Studies Office , [http://fmso.leavenworth.army.mil/documents/rodionov.htm Rodionov: A Military Biography]
* [http://www.nupi.no/cgi-win/Russland/personer.exe?858 Person Page at NUPI Centere for Russian Studies] (note: NUPI says Rodionov commanded theTransbaikal Military District in 85-86, but this is disapproved by Feskov et al's list of District commanders.)
* [http://www.usrbc.org/Members-Only/Russian%20Government%20and%20Regions/duma/deputy.htm Duma Deputy Biographies at US-Russian Business Council]
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