FACTOID # 17: Senior gentlemen might consider a trip to Russia, where there are two women over 65 for every man.
 
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Encyclopedia > Sergei Akhromeev

Sergei Feodorovich Akhromeev (Ахромеев, Сергей Фёдорович in Russian) (19231991), Russian military figure, Hero of the Soviet Union (1982), Marshal of the Soviet Union (1983).


In 1984-1988, Akhromeev was Chief of Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces. In March of 1990, he became Adviser to the President of the USSR. During the August Coup of 1991, Akhromeev committed suicide.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Akhromeev on Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Europe (1274 words)
Akhromeev's latest move in this campaign took the form of an interview printed in Pravda on April 19.[1] The Marshal argued that the Warsaw Pact's admitted 12 to 1 advantage in short-range nuclear missiles was offset by what he claimed was a NATO advantage in aircraft that could carry nuclear bombs and missiles.
Akhromeev maintained that tactical nuclear weapons in Europe had to be considered as an indivisible triad consisting of short-range missiles, strike aircraft, and nuclear artillery.
Akhromeev went to some length to refute the NATO charge that the Warsaw Pact was hypocritical in opposing the modernization of Western short-range nuclear missiles just after it had completed its own modernization program.
Sergei Akhromeyev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (340 words)
Sergei Feodorovich Akhromeev (Ахромеев, Сергей Фёдорович in Russian) (1923 1991), Russian military figure, Hero of the Soviet Union (1982), Marshal of the Soviet Union (1983).
Akhromeev was a junior officer in World War II, serving with distinction on the Leningrad front.
In 1984-1988, Akhromeev was Chief of Staff of the Soviet Armed Forces.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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