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Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir

Russian: Иона Эммануилович Якир, Hebrew: יונה עמנואלוביץ יקיר
Also Known As: "Иона Эммануилович Якир"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chisinau, Chisinau, Moldova (Moldova, Republic of)
Death: June 12, 1937 (40)
Moscow, Moscow, Russian Federation (Execution)
Place of Burial: Moscow, Russian Federation
Immediate Family:

Son of Emmanuil (Mendel) Yakir and Haya Yakir
Husband of Sarra Lazarevna Yakir
Father of Petr Yakir
Brother of Private; Moris Yakir; Haia Raiz and Aleksandr (Samuil) Yakir

Occupation: Red Army commander, Army General
Managed by: Nurit Bertha Gillath
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Iona Yakir

Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir

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(Russian: Ио́на Эммануи́лович Яки́р; August 3, 1896 – June 12, 1937) was a Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World War II. He was an early and major military victim of the Great Purge, alongside Mikhail Tukhachevsky.

Contents
1 Early years 2 In the Civil War 3 Military reform 4 Political involvements 5 Arrest, trial and death 6 Legacy 7 Further reading 8 Videos 9 References Early years Yakir was born in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire, into the prosperous family of a Jewish pharmacist.[1][2] He graduated from the local secondary school in 1914. Because of governmental restrictions on Jewish access to higher education, Yakir studied abroad at the University of Basel in Switzerland, in the field of chemistry.[1][2] During World War I, he returned to the Russian Empire and worked as a turner in a military factory in Odessa, Ukraine (he was a reservist).[1][2] From 1915 to 1917, he attended the Kharkiv Technological Institute.[1][2] He was affected by the war and became a follower of Vladimir Lenin. In 1917, he returned to Kishinev, and in April became a member of the Bolshevik Party.[3] He also became a member of the Bessarabian Governorate's Council, the Governorate's Committee and the Revolutionary Committee.[1][2] From January 1918, he took active part in the Bolshevik seizure of power in Bessarabia. When Romania intervened to recapture Bessarabia, Yakir led Bolshevik resistance but his small force was overwhelmed by the regular Romanian army.[1][2]

In the Civil War Yakir retreated to Ukraine and fought against Austro-Hungarian occupation forces as a commander of a Chinese regiment of the Red Army.[1][2] He was severely wounded in March 1918 near Ekaterinoslav.[1][2] At the beginning of the Russian Civil War between Bolshevik forces, the White Army and various other anti-Bolshevik movements, Yakir was a member of the Bolshevik Party in Voronezh Province and started his service in the Red Army as a commissar. He showed military talent and was assigned as a field commander. In October 1918, he served as a member of the Revolutionary Council of the 8th Army in the Southern Front and simultaneously commanded the Southern Front's several key formations in operations against the Don Cossacks of Pyotr Krasnov.[1][2] He carried out Lenin's order of persecution against the Cossack civilians and the extermination of almost half of the male Cossack population.[1][4] The war against armed combatants plus the terror against the civilians were coming together in the Russian Civil War. Encouraged by the Bolshevik theory of class struggle, Yakir, like other members of the Communist party, took part in terror. For his services, he became the second individual (after Vasily Blyukher) to receive the highest Soviet military award of that time, the Order of the Red Banner (engraved as No. 2).

In the summer of 1919, Yakir was sent to Ukraine to command the 45th Rifle Division, and in August 1919, he became the commander of the Southern Group of the 12th Army, which included the 45th and 58th Rifle Divisions.[1][2] Both divisions were surrounded in Odessa by the White forces. Yakir undertook one of the most unusual Civil War military operations. He breached the encirclement and led his forces through the enemy rear for a distance of 400 kilometres (250 mi) to join the Red Army in Zhitomir.[1][2][5] Like other Bolshevik commanders who did not have military education he was assisted in this operation by former tsarist army officers on his staff but this fact does not negate his own role in planning and leading the campaign. For this campaign he received his second Order of the Red Banner, and both of his divisions received Red Banners of Honor.[1] Yakir took part in actions against the White forces of Nikolai Yudenich in defense of Petrograd, in suppression of Ukrainian anarchist guerrilla forces of Nestor Makhno, and in the Polish-Soviet War.[1] He was awarded the Order of the Red Banner three times (twice in 1919 and once in 1930), and he became one of the most-decorated Red Army commanders.

Military reform

1966 USSR stamp of Yakir After the war, Yakir commanded army formations in Ukraine. Yakir was a close associate of Mikhail Frunze and belonged to his inner circle of innovative Red Army officers who assisted Frunze in starting far-reaching military reforms. Among these reformers was Mikhail Tukhachevsky who became Yakir's friend. In April 1924 Yakir was appointed a head of Main Directorate of Military Academies of the Red Army[1][2][6] and simultaneously editor[1] of a major military periodical devoted to development of military theory, Voennyi Vestnik.[7]

In November 1925, after Frunze's death, Yakir was appointed commander of the most powerful territorial formations of the Red Army, the newly reorganized Ukrainian Military District (see: Kiev Military District).[1][2][8] Yakir, in close coordination with Tukhachevsky and other reformers, made his district into a laboratory of wide-ranging experiments in strategy, tactical and operational techniques, army formations and equipment. In training his troops, Yakir encouraged his officers' initiative and ability to make their own judgments. In 1928 and 1929, Yakir studied at the Higher Military Academy in Berlin.[1][2] This was possible because of the intensive military cooperation between the Soviet Union and Germany. Yakir's innovative approaches to the military art impressed his German colleagues. German Field Marshal of World War I fame, Paul von Hindenburg,[9] praised him as one of the most-talented military commanders of the post-World War I era.[1][10] Upon repeated requests from German officers, Yakir gave special lectures on the Russian Civil War.

After returning to his district, Yakir continued military reform. He was one of the creators of the first large tank and air force formations in the world. Not a military theorist in his own right, Yakir strongly supported Tukhachevsky's endeavor in developing the theory of deep operations. Military historians across the world still consider this theory an outstanding theoretical innovation. In 1934 Yakir requested that Tukhachevsky would be appointed to conduct advanced courses on operational theory for high-ranking officers of the Red Army General Staff and commanders of military districts. He did it even though he knew about Joseph Stalin's dislike of Tukhachevsky. In retribution, Stalin instructed Kliment Voroshilov, the Peoples Commissar of Defense, to bar Yakir from membership in the prestigious Advisory Council of the Defense Commissariat. In 1935, in order to diminish Yakir's power, the Ukrainian Military District was divided into two new districts: Kiev,[11] under Yakir's command, and Kharkov.

In September 1935, Yakir conducted major military maneuvers in Kiev, with the Kiev and Kharkov Military Districts' forces. The event resulted in several cover page articles in the Defense Comissariat's official journal, Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star).[12] The major aim of these maneuvers was to test the theory of deep operations and the latest technology. A total of 65,000 troops, including 1,888 paratroopers, 1,200 tanks and 600 aircraft participated in these maneuvers. These were first maneuvers in the world that used combined operations of large tank, air force and airborne formations. The troops acted along a front of 250 kilometres (160 mi) and a depth of 200 kilometres (120 mi). The representatives of major world armies attended the maneuvers. French general Lucien Loizeau made very favorable comments about the technical and moral readiness of the Red Army.[11][13] The German Wehrmacht copied Soviet innovations in preparation for World War II. The reform started by Frunze, and continued by Yakir, Tukhachevsky and many other commanders, made the Red Army into one of the most advanced armies in the world. During these years, Yakir regularly gave lectures to the Red Army General Staff Academy, informing the students about the newest developments in military affairs; his students considered him both an excellent speaker and tutor.[14] In 1935 he was promoted to Komandarm 1st rank, the second-highest military rank in the Soviet Union at the time.

Political involvements Stalin, who was consolidating his power over the country, approved Yakir's appointment to the Ukrainian Military District in 1925. However, he did not trust him fully and instructed his political ally Lazar Kaganovich to become friends with Yakir and to report about his activities.[15][16][17][18] Yakir, who was a firm believer in the Communist cause, was actively involved in internal politics. He was member of the party Central Committee in Moscow[19] and member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Ukraine.[1][2] While ingenious and independent in his thinking as a military commander, in Soviet politics he was a docile party member and followed the Stalinist line.[20] As a party member, he lacked the power of conviction and independent thinking to defy Stalin.

His blind obedience did not spare him. Stalin would not allow to his military commanders any independent thinking – he was paranoid of a coup plot. While Stalin's attitude toward Yakir was apparently friendly, the leader could not tolerate him.[21] Starting with the Great Purge in 1936, the NKVD arrested many close associates and subordinates of Yakir. (This method became an NKVD routine in the course of the purges: this way they were able to create a professional and private vacuum around the target person.) Yakir was one of few top Soviet commanders who appealed to Stalin, even travelled to Moscow and tried to convince Voroshilov in person, claiming the innocence of these officers. However, Yakir's appeals (and his other reactions) were a clear sign of his disagreement with the ongoing purges which alienated Stalin even more.

Arrest, trial and death On 10 and 11 May 1937, the Red Army was shaken up by several major personal changes. Marshal Tukhachevsky was discharged from his position as a deputy commissar and was sent to command the Volga Military District which had little military importance. At the same time Yakir was also sent to a different post: from Kiev to Leningrad. Unlike Tukhachevsky, it wasn't an obvious demotion. Tukhachevsky was arrested on the way to his new post on 22 May. Yakir attended a conference in the Kiev Military District when he heard the news. His mood changed dramatically afterwards – normally he was cheerful, friendly, making jokes. This shift was attributed to his transfer to Leningrad.

On 31 May 1937, the NKVD arrested Yakir, and transported him to the Lubyanka prison in Moscow. He and seven other major military commanders (Robert Eideman, Boris Feldman, Avgust Kork, Vitaly Primakov, Vitovt Putna, Mikhail Tukhachevsky and Ieronim Uborevich) were accused of being members of the alleged Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization and of being Nazi agents. Except for Feldman, who was cooperative, all of them got brutally tortured. Yakir (until they broke him) maintained his innocence, both in correspondence to Joseph Stalin and at his trial on 11 July. Although he generally admitted taking part in a conspiracy, he denied being a spy. During the trial he was asked to provide further details about his written confession but he stated that he couldn't add anything more. One of his last letters to Stalin is really moving. Stalin and other members of the Politburo made a following cynical comments on this, creating a written conversation: "Rascal and prostitute" (Stalin). Kliment Voroshilov and Vyacheslav Molotov added: "A perfectly accurate definition". Lazar Kaganovich finally wrote: "The only punishment for the scoundrel, riffraff and whore is death penalty".

Yakir and the other seven commanders were executed in Moscow, virtually right after their trial at the dawn of 12 June 1937, without even reading their appeals. The man who performed their execution was Vasily Blokhin, the chief executioner of NKVD. The corpses were cremated on site, and the ashes were thrown into a mass grave dug at the Donskoye Cemetery. Members of the Yakir family were either immediately executed, like his younger brother, Moris Emmanuilovich (1902–1937), or sent to Gulag labor camps: Yakir's younger sister, Isabella Emmanuilovna (1900–1986) served there 10 years while his wife, Sarra Lazarevna (1900–1971) and his then-14-year-old son, Pyotr Ionovich (1923–1982),[22] spent almost 20 years there. Yakir's military writings were banned. Plus, to morally finish the generals, newspapers dubbed them "treasonous", and published articles approving their execution, with the signatures of well-known Soviet artists – no matter if they in fact signed these articles or not (among those that refused was Boris Pasternak).

Legacy Opinions on Yakir are mixed, even today. As a young Civil War commander, he is though to have used excessive force and violence (flamethrowers, machine guns) against civilian members of the resistance as well as the Cossack population, and was also involved in requisition. Later, during the years of agricultural collectivization, he launched what are alleged as punitive raids against starving peasants. It is the opinion of many that he was personally liable for the great famine in the Ukraine between 1932 and 1933. He also had other characteristics translated as vices by the puritan Stalin: Yakir never made a secret of his luxurious Kiev lifestyle (he lived in one of the palaces of the Mezhyhirya Residence), and he also lent dachas for profit and never ceased his involvement in trading.

But as a military reformer, Yakir was dedicated and remarkable. He worked on the improvement of the Red Army until his demise. On 10 June 1937, only 2 days before his execution, he wrote an extensive letter to Nikolay Yezhov, head of the NKVD, about his observations and the important duties in the field of military. After his death, Stalin's great purge wiped out large number of the officers who had served under him. Many of Yakir's achievements, including his reforms and preparations for guerrilla activities in the event of an invasion of Ukraine, were dismantled. When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, the Red Army was largely incapable of modern warfare and unprepared to face an enemy who used military art which Yakir and other Soviet innovators were greatly familiar with. The Soviets suffered terrible defeats and huge human and territorial losses before remastering modern operational approaches and tactics. Yakir's disciples who survived the purge used the experiences which they had gained under Yakir to make a vital contribution to Soviet victory over Germany. Among them were Chief of the General Staff of the Red Army Aleksei Antonov, Front commanders Andrei Yeremenko and Ivan Chernyakhovsky, and Army commander Alexander Gorbatov.

During Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinisation, Yakir was rehabilitated on January 31, 1957. His cenotaph is in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery in Moscow.

Further reading Командарм Якир. Воспоминания друзей и соратников (edited by P. I. Yakir and I. A. Geller; 1963) Stalin's Generals (edited by Harold Shukman; 1993) Victor Alexandrov, The Tukhachevsky Affair (1964) Thos. G. Butson, The Tsar's Lieutenant: The Soviet Marshal (1984) Robert Conquest, The Great Terror (2008) John Erickson, The Soviet High Command: A Military-Political History 1918–1941 (2006) Alexander Gorbatov, Years off My Life: The Memoirs of a General of the Soviet Army (New York, 1964) Anna Larina, This I Cannot Forget: The Memoirs of Nikolai Bukharin's Widow (1993) Donald Rayfield, Stalin and His Hangmen: The Tyrant and Those Who Killed for Him (2004) Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar (2005) Brian D. Taylor, Politics in the Russian Army: Civil–Military Relations, 1689–2000 (2003) Pyotr Yakir, A Childhood In Prison (1973) Earl F. Ziemke, The Red Army 1918–1941: From Vanguard of World Revolution to US Ally (2006) Videos https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iona_Yakir



Ио́на Эммануи́лович Яки́р (3 [15] августа 1896, Кишинёв Бессарабская губерния — 12 июня 1937, Москва) — советский деятель, командарм 1-го ранга (1935). Видный военачальник времен Гражданской войны. Расстрелян в ходе «Сталинской чистки» (1937). Посмертно реабилитирован 31 января 1957 г. ВКВС СССР.

Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir (Russian: Иона Эммануилович Якир; August 3, 1896, Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire – June 11, 1937, Moscow, Soviet Union) was the Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World War II. Yakir was born into the prosperous family of a Jewish pharmacist. Because of governmental restrictions on Jewish access to higher education, Yakir studied abroad at the University of Basel in Switzerland. During World War I, he returned to the Russian Empire and worked in a military factory in Odessa, Ukraine. From 1915 to 1917, he was a student of Kharkiv Technological Institute. He was affected by the war and became a follower of Vladimir Lenin. In 1917, he returned to Kishinev, became a member of the Bolshevik Party and took active part in the Bolshevik seizure of power in Bessarabia. When Romania intervened to recapture Bessarabia in 1918, Yakir led Bolshevik resistance but his small force was overwhelmed by the regular Romanian army. Yakir was executed together with Tukhachevsky, and several other Soviet officers, immediately after the trial on June 11, 1937. During Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinisation, Yakir's image was rehabilitated on January 31, 1957.

Cenotaph (a sepulchral monument erected in memory of a deceased person whose body is buried elsewhere) is located at Vvedenskoe Cemetery in Moscow.

About Iona Yakir (עברית)

יונה עמנואלוביץ' יקיר

''''''(ברוסית: Иона Эммануилович Якир;‏ 3 באוגוסט 1896 - 11 ביוני 1937) היה מצביא רוסי סובייטי ממוצא יהודי, מפקד ארמייה מדרגה ראשונה (הדרגה השנייה בבכירותה בצבא האדום באותה תקופה, זוטרה רק למרשל ברית המועצות) בצבא האדום שהוצא להורג בימי הטיהורים הגדולים.

תוכן עניינים 1 ראשית דרכו 2 בימי מלחמת האזרחים 3 ארגון ובניית הצבא הסובייטי 4 מאסר ומשפט 5 גורל בני משפחתו 6 תוצאות טיהור סגל קציני הצבא הסובייטי 7 קישורים חיצוניים ראשית דרכו יונה יקיר נולד בעיר קישינב שבבסרביה (כיום במולדובה) לרוקח יהודי. עקב שיטת הנומרוס קלאוזוס שהגבילה כניסתם של סטודנטים יהודים לאוניברסיטאות ברוסיה הצארית, נאלץ יקיר ללמוד מחוץ לרוסיה. את השכלתו רכש באוניברסיטת בזל שבשווייץ. בעת מלחמת העולם הראשונה שב יקיר לרוסיה ועבד במפעל של תעשייה צבאית בעיר אודסה. ולאחר מכן למד במכון טכנולוגי בחרקוב. כתוצאה ממוראות המלחמה נמשך יקיר לתנועתו של לנין. בשנת 1917 שב יקיר לקישינב והצטרף למפלגה הבולשביקית. יקיר נטל חלק בניסיון השתלטות בולשביקית על בסרביה. ב-1918 התערבו הרומנים בעימות בבסרביה ולבסוף השתלטו על חבל ארץ זה וגברו על ההתנגדות הבולשביקית.

בימי מלחמת האזרחים עד למלחמת האזרחים שפרצה ברוסיה בעקבות מהפכת אוקטובר לא היה ליקיר ניסיון צבאי של ממש. במלחמת האזרחים שהתנהלה בין הכוחות הבולשיביקים לבין הצבא הלבן בין השנים 1918 ל-1921, נתמנה יקיר לקומיסר, תפקיד שהיה צירוף של מפקד צבאי ופעיל פוליטי. הוא גילה כישרון צבאי ונתמנה למפקד שדה. הוא נלחם בחזית הדרומית נגד צבא הקוזקים של הדון. לימים יאשימו אותו מתנגדי הקומוניזם בהפעלת טרור נגד אוכלוסייה אזרחית.

בקיץ 1919 נשלח יקיר לאוקראינה לפקד על אוגדת חיל רגלים. ולאחר מכן מונה למפקד ארמייה שכללה שתי אוגדות חיל רגלים. שתי אוגדותיו הוקפו על ידי הצבא הלבן ויקיר בצעד נועז פרץ את המצור והוביל את חילותיו למרחק של 400 ק"מ לחבור עם הצבא האדום בז'יטומיר. על פעולותיו בשדה הקרב עוטר יקיר פעמיים בעיטור הדגל האדום, אות ההצטיינות הסוביטי הגבוה ביותר באותה עת. בהמשך לחמו גיסותיו של יקיר בצבא הלבן בחזית פטרוגרד (לימים לנינגרד וכיום סנקט פטרבורג). לאחר מכן לחם נגד פרטיזנים אנרכיסטים בדרום אוקראינה. בתקופה זו תחת פיקודו הייתה גם יחידה של גריגורי קוטובסקי שהיה בין גיבורי מלחמת האזרחים. בסוף הוא השתתף במלחמה הפולנית סובייטית בשנת 1920, במהלכה הגיע הצבא האדום אל שערי ורשה, אך בסיומה הייתה לפולין השליטה בליטא ובחלקים נרחבים ממערב אוקראינה ורוסיה הלבנה (כיום בלארוס). על השתתפותו בקרבות אלו זכה יקיר בשלישית בעיטור הדגל האדום והיה לאחד המפקדים המעוטרים ביותר בצבא האדום.

יקיר היה הבולט בשורה של גנרלים יהודים שתרמו רבות לניצחון הצבא האדום במלחמת האזרחים, בהם יעקב גמרניק וגרגורי שטרן, שהיה לימים ממפקדי הכוחות הסוביטיים שלחמו נגד יפן במלחמת הגבול הסובייטית-יפנית. במזרח הרחוק ולאחר מכן ממפקדי מלחמת החורף.

ארגון ובניית הצבא הסובייטי

חברי הסובייט המהפכני הצבאי של ברית המועצות (ЧЛЕНЫ РЕВВОЕНСОВЕТА СССР) בשנת 1927 יושב ראשון משמאל - יונה יקיר הגנרל מיכאיל טוכאצ'בסקי שבנה ואירגן את הצבא האדום בשנים שלאחר מלחמת האזרחים סמך על קבוצת הגנרלים היהודים והיה קשור במיוחד לגנרל יקיר, שהיה בין מפקדי השריון בצבא האדום. טוכאצ'בסקי שהנהיג רפורמות בצבא האדום מינה את יקיר בשנת 1924 לראש מינהל האקדמיות הצבאיות של הצבא האדום.

בשנת 1925 נתמנה יקיר לעמוד בראש המחוז הצבאי של אוקראינה, שהיה אחד מהפיקודים הטריטוריאליים החשובים של הצבא האדום. יקיר הפך את הפיקוד לזירת ניסיונות בתחומי האסטרטגיה והטקטיקה של הפעלת מבצעים של עוצבות הצבא.

בשנים 1928–1929 היה יקיר חניך באקדמיה הצבאית העליונה בברלין.

לאחר שחזר לפיקוד האוקראיני המשיך יקיר בביצוע רפורמות. הוא היה אחד מהיוצרים של עוצבות גדולות של השריון וחיל האוויר.

בתמרונים הגדולים שערך הצבא האדום בשנת 1935 הרשים יקיר את הנספחים הצבאיים והמשקיפים הזרים כשפיקד על תרגיל הצניחה המשולב עם הפעלת כוחות שריון, הגדול ביותר שנערך עד אז בברית המועצות. בתרגיל השתתפו 65,000 חיילים, מהם 1,888 צנחנים, 1,200 טנקים ו-600 מטוסים. התרגיל נערך על פני שטח שאורכו 250 ק"מ ורוחבו 200 ק"מ. מטרת התרגיל הייתה לבחון את רעיונותיו של יקיר בדבר פעולה משולבת בעומק שטח האויב. הגנרל הבריטי ארצ'יבלד וובל שנכח בתרגיל דיווח לממשלתו:

"אלמלא הייתי עד לכך בעצמי, לעולם לא היתי מאמין שמבצע כזה אפשרי". לאחר מכן צורף יקיר למטה הכללי הסובייטי והועלה לדרגה השנייה במעלה של הצבא האדום דרגת קומנדארם (командарм).

מאסר ומשפט

בול דואר מברית המועצות שהונפק לציבור בשנת 1966 המנציח את זכרו של יקיר בתחילת הטיהורים הגדולים, כאשר רבים מחבריו ומפיקודיו נעצרו, היה יקיר אחד הקצינים הבודדים שהעזו לפנות לסטלין בתחינה על חפותם של העצורים. ביוני 1937 הוגלה יקיר לפקד על האזור הצבאי של לנינגרד, דבר שרמז כי גורלו נחרץ. לא חלף זמן רב ויקיר הועמד לדין באשמה כי השתייך לארגון טרוצקיסטי אנטי-סובייטי והיה סוכן נאצי. יקיר טען לחפותו וכתב על כך מכתב לסטלין. סטלין הוסיף הערה על גבי המכתב "נוכל וזונה". יקיר נדון למוות והוצא להורג ב-11 ביוני 1937, כאחד הנדונים האחרים מקרב הקצונה הבכירה ובהם המרשל מיכאיל טוכאצ'בסקי. רק לאחר מותו של סטלין טוהר שמו של יקיר ב-31 בינואר 1957 והוא זכה להוקרה על חלקו בבניית הצבא הסובייטי. ברית המועצות הנציחה את זכרו בבול דואר שהוצא בשנת 1966.

גורל בני משפחתו עם מאסרו של יונה יקיר נאסרה מיד אשתו שרה יקיר (שם נעוריה - אורטנברג) והוגלתה לעיר אסטרחן בדלתא של נהר הוולגה. ב-8 ביוני 1937 נתפרסם בעיתון פראבדה מכתב שנכתב לכאורה על ידה ובו היא מבקשת שלא להקרא יותר בשם המשפחה יקיר. בהמשך נדונה לעשר שנות מאסר שלאחר מכן נוספו אליהן עשר שנות מאסר נוספות. היא שוחררה מהכלא בשנת 1955, לאחר מותו של סטלין, ובילתה את שארית חייה עד למותה בשנת 1971, בדירה קטנה במוסקבה.

בנו, פיוטר יקיר, שהיה רק בן 14 שנים נעצר בעת מאסרו של אביו והוכנס למחנות עבודת הכפייה של הגולאג, בהם הוחזק במשך כל ימי נערותו ושוחרר רק כעבור 18 שנים בהוראת ניקיטה חרושצ'וב. לימים הפך פיוטר יקיר לאחד מפעילי תנועת החופש בברית המועצות.

נכדתו, אירינה יקיר, הייתה פעילה בתנועת הדיסידנטים בברית המועצות. נפטרה בשנת 1999 בירושלים ממחלת הסרטן.

תוצאות טיהור סגל קציני הצבא הסובייטי השפעה הרסנית הייתה לטיהורים הגדולים, שיונה יקיר היה אחד מקורבנותיהם, על הצבא האדום. עד שנת 1938 הוצאו להורג רוב אנשי הקצונה הבכירה, ובראשם המרשל מיכאיל טוכאצ'בסקי. היה זה טיהור של אלפים רבים של קצינים, עד לדרגת מפקד פלוגה. הנזק ירד ממש עד לבסיס הצבא, והפך את הצבא האדום לגוף ענקי, אך מסורבל ונטול יכולת לפעולה עצמאית. הדבר בא לידי ביטוי במלחמת החורף בפינלנד ב-1939 שבה סבל הצבא האדום אבדות כבדות ובשלבים הראשונים של הפלישה הגרמנית לברית המועצות במלחמת העולם השנייה בחודשי הקיץ של שנת 1941, שבה הובס הצבא הסובייטי ונאלץ לסגת משטחים נרחבים של ברית המועצות.

הדעה המקובלת בקרב מומחים צבאיים מערביים היא כי אילו המלחמה הגרמנית-סובייטית הייתה נפתחת ב-1937 לפני טיהור סגל קציני הצבא האדום, כי אז היו תוצאותיה שונות מאלו של המערכה שנפתחה ב-1941.

קישורים חיצוניים

יונה יקיר , במהדורת האינטרנט של האנציקלופדיה היהודית בשפה הרוסית (ברוסית) הגנרל היהודי ששינה את ההיסטוריה , בלוג באתר בית התפוצות, ספטמבר 2019 https://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%99%D7%95%D7%A0%D7%94_%D7%99%D7%A7...


Iona Emmanuilovich Yakir

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(Russian: Ио́на Эммануи́лович Яки́р; August 3, 1896 – June 12, 1937) was a Red Army commander and one of the world's major military reformers between World War I and World War II. He was an early and major military victim of the Great Purge, alongside Mikhail Tukhachevsky.

Contents
1 Early years 2 In the Civil War 3 Military reform 4 Political involvements 5 Arrest, trial and death 6 Legacy 7 Further reading 8 Videos 9 References Early years Yakir was born in Kishinev, Bessarabia, Russian Empire, into the prosperous family of a Jewish pharmacist.[1][2] He graduated from the local secondary school in 1914. Because of governmental restrictions on Jewish access to higher education, Yakir studied abroad at the University of Basel in Switzerland, in the field of chemistry.[1][2] During World War I, he returned to the Russian Empire and worked as a turner in a military factory in Odessa, Ukraine (he was a reservist).[1][2] From 1915 to 1917, he attended the Kharkiv Technological Institute.[1][2] He was affected by the war and became a follower of Vladimir Lenin. In 1917, he returned to Kishinev, and in April became a member of the Bolshevik Party.[3] He also became a member of the Bessarabian Governorate's Council, the Governorate's Committee and the Revolutionary Committee.[1][2] From January 1918, he took active part in the Bolshevik seizure of power in Bessarabia. When Romania intervened to recapture Bessarabia, Yakir led Bolshevik resistance but his small force was overwhelmed by the regular Romanian army.[1][2]

In the Civil War Yakir retreated to Ukraine and fought against Austro-Hungarian occupation forces as a commander of a Chinese regiment of the Red Army.[1][2] He was severely wounded in March 1918 near Ekaterinoslav.[1][2] At the beginning of the Russian Civil War between Bolshevik forces, the White Army and various other anti-Bolshevik movements, Yakir was a member of the Bolshevik Party in Voronezh Province and started his service in the Red Army as a commissar. He showed military talent and was assigned as a field commander. In October 1918, he served as a member of the Revolutionary Council of the 8th Army in the Southern Front and simultaneously commanded the Southern Front's several key formations in operations against the Don Cossacks of Pyotr Krasnov.[1][2] He carried out Lenin's order of persecution against the Cossack civilians and the extermination of almost half of the male Cossack population.[1][4] The war against armed combatants plus the terror against the civilians were coming together in the Russian Civil War. Encouraged by the Bolshevik theory of class struggle, Yakir, like other members of the Communist party, took part in terror. For his services, he became the second individual (after Vasily Blyukher) to receive the highest Soviet military award of that time, the Order of the Red Banner (engraved as No. 2).

In the summer of 1919, Yakir was sent to Ukraine to command the 45th Rifle Division, and in August 1919, he became the commander of the Southern Group of the 12th Army, which included the 45th and 58th Rifle Divisions.[1][2] Both divisions were surrounded in Odessa by the White forces. Yakir undertook one of the most unusual Civil War military operations. He breached the encirclement and led his forces through the enemy rear for a distance of 400 kilometres (250 mi) to join the Red Army in Zhitomir.[1][2][5] Like other Bolshevik commanders who did not have military education he was assisted in this operation by former tsarist army officers on his staff but this fact does not negate his own role in planning and leading the campaign. For this campaign he received his second Order of the Red Banner, and both of his divisions received Red Banners of Honor.[1] Yakir took part in actions against the White forces of Nikolai Yudenich in defense of Petrograd, in suppression of Ukrainian anarchist guerrilla forces of Nestor Makhno, and in the Polish-Soviet War.[1] He was awarded the Order of the Red Banner three times (twice in 1919 and once in 1930), and he became one of the most-decorated Red Army commanders.

Military reform

1966 USSR stamp of Yakir After the war, Yakir commanded army formations in Ukraine. Yakir was a close associate of Mikhail Frunze and belonged to his inner circle of innovative Red Army officers who assisted Frunze in starting far-reaching military reforms. Among these reformers was Mikhail Tukhachevsky who became Yakir's friend. In April 1924 Yakir was appointed a head of Main Directorate of Military Academies of the Red Army[1][2][6] and simultaneously editor[1] of a major military periodical devoted to development of military theory, Voennyi Vestnik.[7]

In November 1925, after Frunze's death, Yakir was appointed commander of the most powerful territorial formations of the Red Army, the newly reorganized Ukrainian Military District (see: Kiev Military District).[1][2][8] Yakir, in close coordination with Tukhachevsky and other reformers, made his district into a laboratory of wide-ranging experiments in strategy, tactical and operational techniques, army formations and equipment. In training his troops, Yakir encouraged his officers' initiative and ability to make their own judgments. In 1928 and 1929, Yakir studied at the Higher Military Academy in Berlin.[1][2] This was possible because of the intensive military cooperation between the Soviet Union and Germany. Yakir's innovative approaches to the military art impressed his German colleagues. German Field Marshal of World War I fame, Paul von Hindenburg,[9] praised him as one of the most-talented military commanders of the post-World War I era.[1][10] Upon repeated requests from German officers, Yakir gave special lectures on the Russian Civil War.

After returning to his district, Yakir continued military reform. He was one of the creators of the first large tank and air force formations in the world. Not a military theorist in his own right, Yakir strongly supported Tukhachevsky's endeavor in developing the theory of deep operations. Military historians across the world still consider this theory an outstanding theoretical innovation. In 1934 Yakir requested that Tukhachevsky would be appointed to conduct advanced courses on operational theory for high-ranking officers of the Red Army General Staff and commanders of military districts. He did it even though he knew about Joseph Stalin's dislike of Tukhachevsky. In retribution, Stalin instructed Kliment Voroshilov, the Peoples Commissar of Defense, to bar Yakir from membership in the prestigious Advisory Council of the Defense Commissariat. In 1935, in order to diminish Yakir's power, the Ukrainian Military District was divided into two new districts: Kiev,[11] under Yakir's command, and Kharkov.

In September 1935, Yakir conducted major military maneuvers in Kiev, with the Kiev and Kharkov Military Districts' forces. The event resulted in several cover page articles in the Defense Comissariat's official journal, Krasnaya Zvezda (Red Star).[12] The major aim of these maneuvers was to test the theory of deep operations and the latest technology. A total of 65,000 troops, including 1,888 paratroopers, 1,200 tanks and 600 aircraft participated in these maneuvers. These were first maneuvers in the world that used combined operations of large tank, air force and airborne formations. The troops acted along a front of 250 kilometres (160 mi) and a depth of 200 kilometres (120 mi). The representatives of major world armies attended the maneuvers. French general Lucien Loizeau made very favorable comments about the technical and moral readiness of the Red Army.[11][13] The German Wehrmacht copied Soviet innovations in preparation for World War II. The reform started by Frunze, and continued by Yakir, Tukhachevsky and many other commanders, made the Red Army into one of the most advanced armies in the world. During these years, Yakir regularly gave lectures to the Red Army General Staff Academy, informing the students about the newest developments in military affairs; his students considered him both an excellent speaker and tutor.[14] In 1935 he was promoted to Komandarm 1st rank, the second-highest military rank in the Soviet Union at the time.

Political involvements Stalin, who was consolidating his power over the country, approved Yakir's appointment to the Ukrainian Military District in 1925. However, he did not trust him fully and instructed his political ally Lazar Kaganovich to become friends with Yakir and to report about his activities.[15][16][17][18] Yakir, who was a firm believer in the Communist cause, was actively involved in internal politics. He was member of the party Central Committee in Moscow[19] and member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Ukraine.[1][2] While ingenious and independent in his thinking as a military commander, in Soviet politics he was a docile party member and followed the Stalinist line.[20] As a party member, he lacked the power of conviction and independent thinking to defy Stalin.

His blind obedience did not spare him. Stalin would not allow to his military commanders any independent thinking – he was paranoid of a coup plot. While Stalin's attitude toward Yakir was apparently friendly, the leader could not tolerate him.[21] Starting with the Great Purge in 1936, the NKVD arrested many close associates and subordinates of Yakir. (This method became an NKVD routine in the course of the purges: this way they were able to create a professional and private vacuum around the target person.) Yakir was one of few top Soviet commanders who appealed to Stalin, even travelled to Moscow and tried to convince Voroshilov in person, claiming the innocence of these officers. However, Yakir's appeals (and his other reactions) were a clear sign of his disagreement with the ongoing purges which alienated Stalin even more.

Arrest, trial and death On 10 and 11 May 1937, the Red Army was shaken up by several major personal changes. Marshal Tukhachevsky was discharged from his position as a deputy commissar and was sent to command the Volga Military District which had little military importance. At the same time Yakir was also sent to a different post: from Kiev to Leningrad. Unlike Tukhachevsky, it wasn't an obvious demotion. Tukhachevsky was arrested on the way to his new post on 22 May. Yakir attended a conference in the Kiev Military District when he heard the news. His mood changed dramatically afterwards – normally he was cheerful, friendly, making jokes. This shift was attributed to his transfer to Leningrad.

On 31 May 1937, the NKVD arrested Yakir, and transported him to the Lubyanka prison in Moscow. He and seven other major military commanders (Robert Eideman, Boris Feldman, Avgust Kork, Vitaly Primakov, Vitovt Putna, Mikhail Tukhachevsky and Ieronim Uborevich) were accused of being members of the alleged Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization and of being Nazi agents. Except for Feldman, who was cooperative, all of them got brutally tortured. Yakir (until they broke him) maintained his innocence, both in correspondence to Joseph Stalin and at his trial on 11 July. Although he generally admitted taking part in a conspiracy, he denied being a spy. During the trial he was asked to provide further details about his written confession but he stated that he couldn't add anything more. One of his last letters to Stalin is really moving. Stalin and other members of the Politburo made a following cynical comments on this, creating a written conversation: "Rascal and prostitute" (Stalin). Kliment Voroshilov and Vyacheslav Molotov added: "A perfectly accurate definition". Lazar Kaganovich finally wrote: "The only punishment for the scoundrel, riffraff and whore is death penalty".

Yakir and the other seven commanders were executed in Moscow, virtually right after their trial at the dawn of 12 June 1937, without even reading their appeals. The man who performed their execution was Vasily Blokhin, the chief executioner of NKVD. The corpses were cremated on site, and the ashes were thrown into a mass grave dug at the Donskoye Cemetery. Members of the Yakir family were either immediately executed, like his younger brother, Moris Emmanuilovich (1902–1937), or sent to Gulag labor camps: Yakir's younger sister, Isabella Emmanuilovna (1900–1986) served there 10 years while his wife, Sarra Lazarevna (1900–1971) and his then-14-year-old son, Pyotr Ionovich (1923–1982),[22] spent almost 20 years there. Yakir's military writings were banned. Plus, to morally finish the generals, newspapers dubbed them "treasonous", and published articles approving their execution, with the signatures of well-known Soviet artists – no matter if they in fact signed these articles or not (among those that refused was Boris Pasternak).

Legacy Opinions on Yakir are mixed, even today. As a young Civil War commander, he is though to have used excessive force and violence (flamethrowers, machine guns) against civilian members of the resistance as well as the Cossack population, and was also involved in requisition. Later, during the years of agricultural collectivization, he launched what are alleged as punitive raids against starving peasants. It is the opinion of many that he was personally liable for the great famine in the Ukraine between 1932 and 1933. He also had other characteristics translated as vices by the puritan Stalin: Yakir never made a secret of his luxurious Kiev lifestyle (he lived in one of the palaces of the Mezhyhirya Residence), and he also lent dachas for profit and never ceased his involvement in trading.

But as a military reformer, Yakir was dedicated and remarkable. He worked on the improvement of the Red Army until his demise. On 10 June 1937, only 2 days before his execution, he wrote an extensive letter to Nikolay Yezhov, head of the NKVD, about his observations and the important duties in the field of military. After his death, Stalin's great purge wiped out large number of the officers who had served under him. Many of Yakir's achievements, including his reforms and preparations for guerrilla activities in the event of an invasion of Ukraine, were dismantled. When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, the Red Army was largely incapable of modern warfare and unprepared to face an enemy who used military art which Yakir and other Soviet innovators were greatly familiar with. The Soviets suffered terrible defeats and huge human and territorial losses before remastering modern operational approaches and tactics. Yakir's disciples who survived the purge used the experiences which they had gained under Yakir to make a vital contribution to Soviet victory over Germany. Among them were Chief of the General Staff of the Red Army Aleksei Antonov, Front commanders Andrei Yeremenko and Ivan Chernyakhovsky, and Army commander Alexander Gorbatov.

During Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinisation, Yakir was rehabilitated on January 31, 1957. His cenotaph is in the Vvedenskoye Cemetery in Moscow.

Further reading Командарм Якир. Воспоминания друзей и соратников (edited by P. I. Yakir and I. A. Geller; 1963) Stalin's Generals (edited by Harold Shukman; 1993) Victor Alexandrov, The Tukhachevsky Affair (1964) Thos. G. Butson, The Tsar's Lieutenant: The Soviet Marshal (1984) Robert Conquest, The Great Terror (2008) John Erickson, The Soviet High Command: A Military-Political History 1918–1941 (2006) Alexander Gorbatov, Years off My Life: The Memoirs of a General of the Soviet Army (New York, 1964) Anna Larina, This I Cannot Forget: The Memoirs of Nikolai Bukharin's Widow (1993) Donald Rayfield, Stalin and His Hangmen: The Tyrant and Those Who Killed for Him (2004) Simon Sebag Montefiore, Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar (2005) Brian D. Taylor, Politics in the Russian Army: Civil–Military Relations, 1689–2000 (2003) Pyotr Yakir, A Childhood In Prison (1973) Earl F. Ziemke, The Red Army 1918–1941: From Vanguard of World Revolution to US Ally (2006) Videos https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iona_Yakir

О Iona Yakir (русский)

Википедия

Ио́на Эммануи́лович Яки́р (3 [15] августа 1896, Кишинёв Бессарабская губерния — 12 июня 1937, Москва) — советский военный деятель, командарм 1-го ранга (1935). Видный военачальник времён Гражданской войны. Осуждён и расстрелян по делу Тухачевского (1937). Посмертно реабилитирован (1957).



Иона Эммануилович Якир Родился 3.08.1896, Кишиневе; еврей; образование незаконченное высшее; член ВКП(б); командующий войсками Ленинградского военного окр., командарм 1-го ранга.. Проживал: Киев, ул.Кирова, д.3 (особняк)..

Арестован 28 мая 1937 г.

Приговорен: Специальным судебным присутствием Верховного суда СССР 11 июня 1937 г., обв.: участии в военном заговоре в Красной Армии и в подготовке свержения советской власти путем вооруженного восстания и поражения СССР в будущей войне..

Расстрелян 12 июня 1937 г. Место захоронения - место захоронения - Москва, Донское кладбище. Реабилитирован 31 января 1957 г. ВКВС СССР

~ Источник: Москва, расстрельные списки - Донской крематорий

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание



Иона Эммануилович Якир Родился в 1896 г., Молдавия, г. Кишенев; еврей; образование высшее; член ВКП(б) с 1917; военноначальник, командарм 1-го ранга, ХВО.

Приговорен: Военная Коллегия Верховного Суда СССР , обв.: 58.

Приговор: ВМН Реабилитирован в 1956 г.

~ Источник: База данных о жертвах репрессий Харьковской обл. (Украина)

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание



Иона Эммануилович Якир Родился 3.08.1896, Кишиневе; еврей; образование незаконченное высшее; член ВКП(б); командующий войсками Ленинградского военного окр., командарм 1-го ранга.. Проживал: Киев, ул.Кирова, д.3 (особняк)..

Арестован 28 мая 1937 г.

Приговорен: Специальным судебным присутствием Верховного суда СССР 11 июня 1937 г., обв.: участии в военном заговоре в Красной Армии и в подготовке свержения советской власти путем вооруженного восстания и поражения СССР в будущей войне..

Расстрелян 12 июня 1937 г. Место захоронения - место захоронения - Москва, Донское кладбище. Реабилитирован 31 января 1957 г. ВКВС СССР

~ Источник: Москва, расстрельные списки - Донской крематорий

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание



Профиль создан автоматически, исходя из отчества и фамилии репрессированного ребёнка

~ Источник: Архив НИПЦ "Мемориал", Москва

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание



Профиль создан автоматически, исходя из отчества и фамилии репрессированного ребёнка

~ Источник: НИПЦ "Мемориал", Москва

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание



Профиль создан автоматически, исходя из отчества и фамилии репрессированного ребёнка

~ Источник: Архив НИПЦ "Мемориал", Москва

~ Жертвы политического террора в СССР, 4-ое издание

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Iona Yakir's Timeline

1896
August 15, 1896
Chisinau, Chisinau, Moldova (Moldova, Republic of)
1923
January 20, 1923
Kiev, undefined, Ukraine
1937
June 12, 1937
Age 40
Moscow, Moscow, Russian Federation
June 12, 1937
Age 40
Donskoye kladbishche, Moscow, Russian Federation
????
Soviet Army