General of the army (Russia)

This article is about the Soviet OF9-rank "general of the army", not to be mixed up to the Soviet general of the army (USSR). For the equivalent OF9-rank in anglophone countries see general of the army.
General of the army
(from 2013)
Rank insignia Russian Armed Forces
Introduction 1940
Rank group General officer
Army / Air Force General of the army
Navy Admiral of the fleet
Lower:
Higher:
Colonel general
Marshal of the Russian Federation
NATO
equivalent
OF-9
Defence secretary general of the army S.Shoygu with shoulder boards.

General of the army (Russian: генерал армии, general armii) is the second highest military rank in the Russian Federation, inferior only to a marshal and superior to a colonel general. It is a direct counterpart of the Soviet "General of the army" rank.

At present it is also the highest rank in the air force, artillery, aerospace defense forces, armored troops, engineer troops and signal troops. Unlike the Soviet Union where similarly ranked officers were called marshals and chief marshals of a branch. The corresponding naval rank is admiral of the fleet.

On appointment as Defense Minister on 7 May 1992, Pavel Grachev was the first officer to be promoted to this rank.

Rank insignia

Since 2013 rank insignia is one big star and army emblem on straps which was used also till 1997, like in Soviet Army since 1974. Between 1997 and 2013 the rank insignia was 4 stars in a row, like in the Soviet Union from 1943 to 1974.

Until 1997 generals wore a "small" marshal's star. But when in 1993 ranks of chief marshal and marshal of the branch in Russian Federation were abolished, there was no more reason for special rank insignia for generals. By the President's decree of January 27, 1997 generals regained 1943-like straps with 4 stars in a row.

Vladimir Yakovlev was promoted to this grade while serving as commander of the Strategic Missile Troops (1997-2001).

Sequence of ranks ascending
junior rank
Colonel general

General of the army
senior rank
Marshal of the Russian Federation

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, May 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.