This year has brought us quite a few losses. In the summer, we were shocked by the tragic death of 52-year-old Major General Yuri Ivanov, deputy chief of the Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU) of the General Staff.
October began no less tragically. The general, the former head of the intelligence department of the High Command of the Internal Troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, 47-year-old Viktor Chevrizov committed suicide by shooting himself in the head with an award pistol right at the entrance.
29th of October. Balashikha district, Moscow region. Lieutenant-General Dubrov G. K. was returning home from a meeting of the headquarters on holding a protest rally against Serdyukov's "military reform". In other words, he never made it to the house. The chairman of the Supreme Officers' Council of Russia, who was in support of the paratroopers, "fell" from the platform and died. The same day. Friday. The body of Boris Debashvili, born in 1929, retired lieutenant general of the Russian Defense Ministry, was found in the center of Moscow. Details of the death were not reported.
October 30. Tula region. The service car of the Commander of the Airborne Forces of Russia, Lieutenant General Vladimir Shamanov, rammed a truck at great speed. In this serious accident, he miraculously survived.
Maybe the deaths of generals and the "accidental" accident near Tula are, in a way, the elimination of unwanted ones? Doesn't it seem that tragic deaths and accidents are links in the same chain? It is no coincidence that the book "Generals on the Jewish Mafia" published by General Dubrov and the article with the loud title "The Jewish Yoke in Russia" became a bone of contention between him and representatives of the modern liberal-Darwinian government. The president of Russia, and along with him the "red-haired" Tolik, as well as other oligarchs and officials, expressed sharp discontent. Dubrov was a member of the coordinating council of military-patriotic public organizations of Russia, and recently served as chairman of the presidium of the Russian anti-fascist committee. Many of the general's colleagues know that Grigory Dubrov is the closest associate of retired colonel Vladimir Kvachkov. At one time, Kvachkov was accused of attempting to assassinate A. Chubais, but he was acquitted. Apparently V. Kvachkova was saved by the fact that he was “resting” in Belarus. All the generals listed here are associates of the colonel, who is the chairman of the Minin and Pozharsky People's Militia.
And here are other no less mysterious deaths of Russian generals: 1998. Night from 2 to 3 July. "Tragic death" of General Rokhlin. The investigation put forward two versions. On one he was shot by his wife, on the other he was killed because of the idea of a military coup.
2002 year. April 28. General Lebedev died in a plane crash. The versions of the investigation were heavy fog and the human factor. There is also a version that Lebedev is also up to something.
2008 year. September 14th. The death of General Troshev is also in a plane crash. There were many versions put forward by the investigation: from “fire in engines” to “drunken pilots”.
More than strange deaths overtook the generals in 2009. A "heart attack" ended the life of FSB General Alexander Rogachev in February 2009 right at the wheel of his own car. However, the investigation found a gunshot wound to the head. General Petrov died on June 21 in Moscow. According to his supporters, the general was poisoned. November of the same year. Mysterious death of GRU officer Anton Surikov after drinking a cup of coffee in a cafe.
General Shamanov was appointed commander of the Airborne Forces with great creak. Soon an information campaign was launched to discredit him. Questions involuntarily arise: Who is behind all these "cleansings"? Who benefits from this? And who will be next?