Background
KAMENEV, Sergey was born on April 4, 1881 in Kiev. Son of military engineering
KAMENEV, Sergey was born on April 4, 1881 in Kiev. Son of military engineering
1900 graduate Alexandrine Military College. 1907 graduate General Staff Academy.
From 1898 in Russian Army. 1900-1904 officer, 165th Lutsk Infantry Regiment 1907-1914 staff work in Vilnius Military district.
1914-1917 junior, then senior postgraduate military student, then head Staff Operations Department, 1st Army. 1917 commander, 30th Poltava Infantry Regiment
Chief of staff, 15th Army Corps. 1917-1918 chief of staff, 3rd Army. From April 1918 in Red Army.
1918 commander, Nevel’ Rayon, Western Flank. September 1918 - July 1919 commander, Eastern Front. 8 July 1919 - April 1924 commander in chief, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Armed Forces.
April 1924 - November 1925 inspector. Red Army; from January 1925 also chief of staff Red Army; November 1925 - August 1926 chief inspector, Red Army.
August 1926 - May 1927 head, Main Board, Red Army. Also directed instruction in tactics at Frunze Military Academy. 20 May 1927-1934 Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Deputy People's Commissar of Military and Naval Affairs and chairman, Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Rcvol Military Council.
July 1934 - 25 August 1936 head Red Army Antiaircraft Defense Board. From November 1934 also member.
Military Council, Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics People's Commissariat of Defense. Spring 1919 devised plan for routing Admiral Kolchak’s forces. Late 1919 devised and carried out plan for routing General Denikin’s forces.
Summer 1920, during Western Front’s offensive against Warsaw, displayed indecisiveness in commanding Southwestern Front, resulting in delay in transferring 1st Mounted Army, 12th Army and 14th Army to reinforce Tukhachevskiy’s forces. Member, All-Russian and Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Central Executive Committee of all convocations.
Religion divides people, and is a cause of numerous wars and conflicts throughout the human history.
The emphasis on peaceful coexistence doesn’t mean that the Soviet Union accepted a static world with clear lines. Socialism is inevitable and the "correlations of forces" were moving towards socialism.
Communist Party member from 1930.