Background
He is the son of Yakov Dzhugashvili, the eldest son of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, and has gained note as a defender of his grandfather"s reputation.
He is the son of Yakov Dzhugashvili, the eldest son of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, and has gained note as a defender of his grandfather"s reputation.
Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy. Military Political Academy.
In the 1999 elections of the Russian State Duma, he was one of the faces of the Stalin Bloc – Foreign the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics, a league of communist parties. On October 13, 2009, the Russian court rejected Dzhugashvili"s case, stating that its reasons would be made public at a later date. Dzhugasvili was given five days to appeal.
In January 2015, responding to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s macho acts in a video, where he appears shirtless and is seen taming and riding a horse in great style, Dzhugashvili said it is "all a publicity stunt and only showed how the president was leading the country without brains.” He also said the mess in Russia would have been avoided if Stalin had lived for five more years, reports The Independent.
Quotations: "all a publicity stunt and only showed how the president was leading the country without brains.”.