Minister of Defence (Russia)
The minister of defence of the Russian Federation is the minister responsible for the Russian Armed Forces.
Marshal of Aviation Yevgeny Shaposhnikov was the last minister of defence of the Soviet Union. General Colonel Konstantin Kobets supported then President of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Boris Yeltsin during the August coup of 1991. From 19 August until 9 September 1991, Konstantin Kobets was defence minister of the RSFSR, though there was no ministry. This post was then abolished.
The first minister of defence of the Russian Federation was Boris Yeltsin, who appointed himself to the position by a decree of mid March 1992.
In May 1992, President of Russia Boris Yeltsin appointed General of the Army Pavel Grachev to the post of minister of defence. Grachev's decision to side with Yeltsin in the Russian constitutional crisis of 1993, when the president called up tanks to shell the Russian White House to blast his opponents out of parliament, effectively deprived the Supreme Soviet of Russia of its nominal an opportunity to overturn the president's authority. At least partly for that reason, Yeltsin retained his defence minister despite intense criticism of Grachev's management of the First Chechen War and the Russian military establishment in general. Finally, Yeltsin's victory in the first round of the 1996 Russian presidential election spurred Yeltsin to dismiss Grachev.
In March 2001, Sergei Ivanov, previously secretary of the Security Council of Russia, was appointed defence minister by President Vladimir Putin, becoming Russia's first non-uniformed civilian defence minister.
Putin called the personnel changes in Russia's security structures coinciding with Ivanov's appointment as defence minister "a step toward demilitarizing public life." Putin also stressed Ivanov's responsibility for overseeing military reform as defence minister. What Putin did not emphasise was Ivanov's long service within the KGB and FSB and his then rank of General-Lieutenant within the FSB. Such military and security agency associated men are known as siloviki.
As of 2002 there were four living Marshals of the Soviet Union. Such men were automatically advisors to the defence minister. The Marshals alive at that time were Viktor Kulikov, Vasily Petrov, Sergei Sokolov, a former minister of defence of the Soviet Union, and Dmitri Yazov. Yazov was listed by the American analysts Scott and Scott in 2002 as a consultant to the Directorate for International Military Cooperation. The last of the four, Yazov, died in February 2020.
Perhaps the first 'real' non-uniformed defence minister was Anatoliy Serdyukov, appointed in February 2007. Serdyukov was a former Tax Minister with little siloviki or military associations beyond his two years' military service.
List of ministers of defence
Former first deputy ministers of defence
- Andrei Kokoshin ;, State Secretary
- Pavel Grachyov
- Viktor Dubynin, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- Mikhail Kolesnikov, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- Viktor Samsonov, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- Anatoly Kvashnin, Acting Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces;, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- , State Secretary
- Vladimir Matyukhin
- Yury Baluyevsky, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- Aleksandr Belousov
- Alexander Kolmakov
- Nikolai Makarov, Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces
- Vladimir Popovkin
- Aleksandr Sukhorukov
- Arkady Bakhin
- Ruslan Tsalikov
Former deputy ministers of defence
- Boris Gromov
- , Chief of the Main Directorate of Personnel
- Konstantin Kobets, Chief Military Inspector of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- Matvey Burlakov
- Anatoly Solomatin, Chief of Construction and Quartering of Troops
- , Chief of Logistics of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- Aleksandr Kosovan, Chief of Construction and Quartering of Troops
- Vladimir Isakov, Chief of Logistics of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- , Chief of Armament of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- Igor Puzanov, State Secretary
- , Chief of the Main Financial-Economic Administration of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation and Deputy Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation for Financial-Economic Work;, Deputy Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation for Financial-Economic Work
- Nikolai Kormiltsev, Commander-in-chief of the Land Force
- Anatoly Grebenyuk, Chief of Construction and Quartering of Troops
- Nikolay Pankov
- Nikolai Makarov, Chief of Armament of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- Oleg Eskin
- Vladimir Popovkin, Chief of Armament of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- , Chief of Quartering and Accommodation
- Dmitry Chushkin
- Dmitry Bulgakov, Chief of Logistics of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation
- , Deputy Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation for Financial-Economic Work
- Grigory Naginsky, Chief of Quartering and Accommodation;
- Mikhail Mokretsov, Chief of Staff of the Minister of Defence of the Russian Federation;
- Tatiana Shevtsova
- Yelena Kozlova
- Oleg Ostapenko
- Ruslan Tsalikov
- Pavel Popov
- Aleksei Dyumin
- Anatoly Antonov
- Yury Borisov
- Yuriy Sadovenko
- Timur Ivanov
- Andrey Kartapolov, Head of the Main Military-Political Directorate of the Russian Armed Forces
- Gennady Zhidko, Head of the Main Military-Political Directorate of the Russian Armed Forces
- Mikhail Mizintsev
- Alexey Kuzmenkov