Panama -> RE: Could this be a record for Pavlov? (7/25/2011 1:11:10 PM)
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Look, the guy starts the game in a pocket. It's like a duel but the other guy starts the duel with his gun up against your head. Give the poor guy a break. [8|] The accusations against him from the Wiki: "As the members of the anti-Soviet military conspiracy, betrayed the interests of the Motherland, violated the oath of office and damaged the combat power of the Red Army that are crimes under Articles 58-1b, 58-11 RSFSR Criminal Code...A preliminary judicial investigation and determined that the defendants Pavlov and Klimovskikh being: the first - the commander of the Western Front, and the second - the chief of staff of the same front, during the outbreak of hostilities with the German forces against the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, showed cowardice, failure of power, mismanagement, allowed the collapse of command and control, surrender of weapons to the enemy without fighting, willful abandonment of military positions by the Red Army, the most disorganized defense of the country and enabled the enemy to break through the front of the Red Army. Pavlov and his deputies were accused of "failure to perform their duties" rather than treason. On July 22, 1941 the same day the sentence was handed down, Pavlov's property was confiscated, deprived of military rank, shot and buried in a landfill near Moscow by the NKVD. Other death penalties went down for other commanders of Western Front including chief of staff of the front major general B. E. Klimovskikh, chief communications front major-general corps AT Grigoriev, chief of artillery of the front lieutenant general of artillery A. Klich, and air force deputy chief of the Western Front (after the suicide of Major General Aviation II Kopec - Chief of the Air Force of the Western Front), Major General Aviation A. I. Tayursky. Commander of the 14th Mechanized Corps, Major-General C. I. Oborin was arrested on July 8 and shot. The commander of the 4th Army Maj. Gen. A. A. Korobkov was dismissed on July 8, arrested the next day and shot on July 22. After Stalin's death in 1953, Pavlov and other commanders of Western Front were exonerated as lacking evidence in 1956." That last sentence is sad. "Oh, never mind Mr. Pavlov. It was all a mistake. Get up now and go about your non life." Stalin was the one who should have been shot and for treason. The entire debacle can be laid directly at his feet.
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