William E. Odom, former director of the U.S. National Security Agency and author of The Collapse of the Soviet Military, says that Rust’s flight irreparably damaged the reputation of the Soviet military. This enabled Gorbachev to remove many of the strongest opponents to his reforms. Minister of Defence Sergei Sokolov and the commander of the Soviet Air Defence Forces Alexander Koldunov were dismissed along with hundreds of other officers. This was the biggest turnover in the Soviet military since Stalin’s purges 50 years earlier.
I get that a bunch of officers getting removed at once is going to draw some comparisons but it still seems weird to mention it in the same breath as the Great Purge
Militaries can end up with very entrenched officer corps. It may not have been as brutal as the Great Purge, but it likely had similarly massive effects on the institutions of the Soviet military.
“On 24 November 1989, while doing his obligatory community service (Zivildienst) as an orderly in a West German hospital, Rust stabbed a female co-worker who had rejected him.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathias_Rust#The_flight
Wild stuff.
Never knew this. Pretty wild.
I get that a bunch of officers getting removed at once is going to draw some comparisons but it still seems weird to mention it in the same breath as the Great Purge
I think they compared it since they’re, well, comparable. Not in motivation or effect, but it was still the largest military purge since Stalin.
Militaries can end up with very entrenched officer corps. It may not have been as brutal as the Great Purge, but it likely had similarly massive effects on the institutions of the Soviet military.
“On 24 November 1989, while doing his obligatory community service (Zivildienst) as an orderly in a West German hospital, Rust stabbed a female co-worker who had rejected him.”
Nice
This sorta sounds like the soldier who ran to north korea recently in some ways.
That was a wild read. Thanks for the link!