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- Q17087022 subject Q7685807.
- Q17087022 abstract "Reserve Officer Training in Soviet Union was established in the 1920s. Many military chairs and departments survived in Soviet universities and academies despite the setback which struck military education in the early 1990s after Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev announced his program of unilateral military force withdrawals and reductions. There are 48 military chairs, and 16 military departments within the Russian Ministry of Education, plus one military department, which has been expanded to a separate institute led by Leonid Khabarov.According to Lt. Col. F. Edward Jones, an American military analyst with the U.S. Army War College who studied Reserve Forces in the Soviet Military, not all men served on active duty with the Red Army. All students, who were enrolled in a reserve officer training program while in school were exempt from conscript service. An undetermined number of them, particularly those in engineering fields, were later called to active duty as reserve officers for periods ranging from two to three years.There was a particular goal in cross-training civil specialists. In the classless society of the Soviet Union every individual was guaranteed a job. In so doing, those individuals that have a job, have a dual function. Truck drivers for example, worked for whatever organization their job is associated with; they could be drivers who shuttle machine parts from their factory in Kiev to outlying areas, but they were also registered with the local civilian transport enterprise (Avtokolonna) who receive requirements from the local Military commissariat (Voenkomat) for a designated number of trucks for mobilization or a particular military exercise. As these drivers are well trained and are driving a truck that they have driven many times before (civilian trucks are identical to the military version – one could do a one-for-one exchange and not suffer any decrement of the mission) the system works out very well. The commanders who are receiving these drivers with their trucks, know exactly how many vehicles they will receive, where they're coming from, their license numbers, and the driver's name. The same is applicable for the rest of the civil specialties, such as medics, mechanics, radio operators, telegraph operators or even jewelers, as well as many others.Christina F. Shelton, the USAF Intelligence employee, noted that contrary to the conventional military educational facilities, whose manpower could be estimated quite precisely, the extent of the Soviet reserve officer corps (those who receive commissions at civilian universities) was unknown.".
- Q17087022 thumbnail Colonel_Khabarov_leading_the_Honour_Guard_in_front_of_his_subordinates.jpg?width=300.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q11223.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q1571775.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q167634.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q1899.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q242412.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q251395.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q2625105.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q30487.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q357104.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q460254.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q467564.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q489983.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q508846.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q635078.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q6852276.
- Q17087022 wikiPageWikiLink Q7685807.
- Q17087022 comment "Reserve Officer Training in Soviet Union was established in the 1920s. Many military chairs and departments survived in Soviet universities and academies despite the setback which struck military education in the early 1990s after Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev announced his program of unilateral military force withdrawals and reductions.".
- Q17087022 label "Reserve Officer Training in Russia".
- Q17087022 depiction Colonel_Khabarov_leading_the_Honour_Guard_in_front_of_his_subordinates.jpg.