2006 Soviet war documents declassification
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In 2006, the Russian Ministry of Defence declassified about a hundred pages of archived documents concerning Soviet preparedness for the German invasion on 22 June 1941 at the Eastern Front of World War II. On 22 June 2017 the Ministry published them online on a subdomain of its official website, stating that they had never been published before.[1] The documents from the early 1950s were authored by Soviet military commanders of various ranks at the request of a fact-finding panel. The online publication was made on the 76th anniversary of Operation Barbarossa.[citation needed]
The documents coming from the Central Archive of the Russian Ministry of Defence were written mostly by seven Soviet military commanders (Pyotr Sobennikov, Pavel Abramidze, Mikhail Zashibalov, Nikolai Ivanov, Ivan Bagramian, Boris Fomin and Kuzma Derevyanko) at the request of the fact-finding panel of the Military History Department of the General Staff of the Soviet Army.[2] Headed by Colonel General Alexander Pokrovsky, the panel was formed in 1952 and put five questions about the preparedness of the Baltic, Kiev and Belorussian military districts.[2] The questions concerned the receipt of the border defence plan by the Soviet troops, the deployment of covering forces on the state border, the receipt of the order on combat readiness, the reason why the majority of Soviet artillery units were in training camps and the preparedness of the unit staffs for troops management.[2] The questions were addressed to persons who on the eve of Operation Barbarossa held high-ranking military positions, down to division and corps commanders.[2] At that time, Sobennikov was the commander of the 8th Army of the Baltic Military District staff.[2] Abramidze was the commander of the 72nd Rifle Division of the 26th Army.[2] Zashibalov was the commander of the 86th Rifle Division of the 10th Army.[2] Ivanov was the chief of staff of the Kiev Military District's 6th Army.[2] Bagramian was the chief of operations staff of the Kiev Military District.[2] Fomin was the chief of operations staff of the 12th Army.[2] Derevyanko was deputy chief of the intelligence department of the Baltic Military District staff.[2] The documents were mostly published as scans of the typewritten originals.