Also known as Andrei Andreevich Vlassov, Andrej Andrejewitsch Wlassow, Andreĭ Andreevich Vlasov, A. A. Vlasov, Andrei Andreievitx Vlasov, Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov, Andrei Andreyevich Vlasov, Andrei Vlasov
Russian lieutenant general (1901–1946)
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· 2010 · cited 25,634x
· 2012 · cited 24,111x
· 2018 · cited 21,131x
Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov (Russian: Андре́й Андре́евич Вла́сов, September 14 [O.S. September 1] 1901 – August 1, 1946) was a Soviet Russian Red Army general. During the Axis-Soviet campaigns of World War II, he fought (1941–1942) against the Wehrmacht in the Battle of Moscow and later was captured attempting to lift the siege of Leningrad. After his capture, he defected to the Third Reich and nominally headed the collaborationist Russian Liberation Army (Russkaya osvoboditel'naya armiya, ROA), also becoming the political leader of the Russian collaborationist anti-Soviet movement.
Initially, this army existed only on paper and was used by Germans to goad Red Army troops to surrender, while any political and military activities were officially forbidden to him by the Nazis after his visits to the occupied territory; only in November 1944 did Heinrich Himmler, aware of Germany's shortage of manpower, arrange for Vlasov's formations, composed of Soviet prisoners of war as armed forces of Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia, a political organisation headed by Vlasov. While for the Nazis the ROA was a mere propaganda weapon, Vlasov and his associates attempted to create an armed political movement independent of the Nazi control that would present an anti-Stalinist program described by Robert Conquest as democratic, while attempting to avoid Nazi antisemitism and chauvinism, with "completing the Revolution" of 1917 being the ultimate goal of the movement.
· 2011 · cited 10,548x
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