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  2. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1940–1943) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    The ranks and rank insignia of the Red Army and Red Navy between 1940 and 1943 were characterised by continuing reforms to the Soviet armed forces in the period immediately before Operation Barbarossa and the war of national survival following it. The Soviet suspicion of rank and rank badges as a bourgeois institution remained, but the ...

  3. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1935–1940) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    By decision of the extraordinary session of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR (end of August until early September 1939) the law on universal compulsory service took effect, and the new OF4-ranks of Podpolkovnik and Battalion commissar were introduced as a result of the amendments to the rank regulations of 1935. An equivalent OF4-rank for the ...

  4. Military ranks of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    The final rank structure from these reforms stayed well until the Union's dissolution and is the basis for the current ranks of the Russian Ground Forces. These ranks also became the basic ranks for the Soviet Air Forces in 1918 and the Soviet Air Defense Forces (from 1932 to 1949 part of the Soviet Air Force and the Red Army, 1949 independent ...

  5. Militsiya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Militsiya

    Soviet militsiya officer's cap cockade (service/parade version).. The name militsiya as applied to police forces originates from a Russian Provisional Government decree dated April 17, 1917, and from early Soviet history: both the Provisional Government and the Bolsheviks intended to associate their new law-enforcement authority with the self-organisation of the people and to distinguish it ...

  6. Army General (Soviet rank) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_General_(Soviet_rank)

    Army general (Russian: генерал армии, romanized: general armii) was a rank of the Soviet Union which was first established in June 1940 as a high rank for Red Army generals, inferior only to the marshal of the Soviet Union.

  7. Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1943–1955) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ranks_of_the...

    The highest rank of Generalissimo of the Soviet Union (Russian: Генерали́ссимус Сове́тского Сою́за) was created in October 1943, as an individual award to Stalin, the Head of Government and party chief, and functioned as supreme commander on all Soviet armed forces. Promotion to this rank was limited explicitly ...

  8. Soviet Armed Forces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Armed_Forces

    The Soviet Armed Forces, [a] also known as the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union, [b] the Red Army (1918–1946) and the Soviet Army (1946–1991), were the armed forces of the Russian SFSR (1917–1922) and the Soviet Union (1922–1991) from their beginnings in the Russian Civil War of 1917–1923 to the collapse of the USSR in 1991.

  9. Category:Military ranks of the Soviet Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Military_ranks_of...

    Military ranks and insignia of the Soviet Union (1918–1935) Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1935–1940) Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1940–1943) Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1943–1955) Military ranks of the Soviet Union (1955–1991) Red Army man; Ryadovoy