Inside the Soviet Army
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #448300 in Books
- Published on: 1984-08-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
Customer Reviews
"If you don't want to, we'll make you."
The most obvious question posed by this book in 2003 is "Why would I want it? It's about an army that doesn't exist anymore."
And indeed, much of "Inside the Soviet Army" is a discussion of military organization and is loaded with outdated facts, figures, and other bumf which are of no interest to anyone 12 years after the fall of Communism.
My answer is simple. In addition to all of that junk, which is of little intrerest except to historians, Suvorov writes with wonderful black humor and irony about not only the mentality of the Soviet/Russian military (which is timeless) but also takes the reader through the daily life of the Soviet soldier. The last two chapters "The Soldier's Lot" and "The Officer's Path" are worth buying the book for alone. The cruelty, stupidity, waste, corruption, and cynicism of this extinct regime are both terrifying and awe-inspiring, and the lot of the Soviet private could scarcely have been worse if he had been in prison. Indeed, an American prison would be a better place than a Soviet army barracks. Starvation, humiliation, physical beatings, Draconian discipline, drunkenness and even mutiny were almost everyday features of life; soldiers routinely killed themselves, sank into stupors of alcoholism, or became vicious predators themselves, devoid of mercy or human feeling. And yet Suvorov wisely concludes that no other type of army was possible for the Soviet Union, or even desirable: one of the central ironies of history is that had Russia been a democracy in 1941, it certainly would have been crushed by the Germans. Only by the most ruthless use of millions of its own citizens in 'penal battalions' and human wave assaults were the Reds able to stem the German advance, not through strategy but simply by choking the Nazis with blood and eventually, washing them away with it. This lesson was not lost on the postwar Communist leadership, and it is a damn good job we never went to war with Soviet Russia. People who view tens of millions of military and civilian deaths as a necessary part of any wartime equation would not have been hesitant to let the nuclear missles fly.
I also found his views on the true nature of Communism and Socialism to be original and fascinating. He dismisses the "Evil Empire" myth and explains why Communist countries, not excluding China, must always conquer their neighobors or die, and why no real, permenent peace is possible between free and repressive nations. In hindsight, his analysis was dead on: if you give oppressed people a choice between their current condition and something else, they will always choose something else. Therefore you must seal your borders with guns, walls, towers, mines, dogs, institute a terror, forbid foreign travel, disseminate lying anti-foreign propiganda, and work tirelessly to bring down any country that offers a better life. This last function was the purpose of the postwar Soviet army, and is also why Suvorov ended up defecting from it.
Suvorov, when he doesn't get bogged down in boring technical detail, is a terrifically funny and cynical writer, a Russian patriot with a searing hatred of Communism. I strongly recommend this book to anyone looking for a non-Western view on war, strategy, and the human condition.
Military manual for a force gone by
It's inviting to ponder "Inside the Soviet Army" today as an artifact of neo-conservative conspiracy: breathlessly invoking the symmetrical waves of motor-rifle divisions and tank armies that would descend upon the West, Suvorov only occasionally halted himself long enough to admit that many of these innumerable divisions were woefully underequipped, and with a perhaps unrecognized pride he terribly miscalculated the fieldworthiness of even the best pieces of Soviet equipment. Perhaps this is understandable, considering how the scrappy weapons of World War II vanquished the Nazis' technologically advanced but underproduced Tigers and Panthers. Still, in hindsight we can see that the Soviet juggernaut was a floundering, rusting mess, technologically disadvantaged not only in regards to ballistic missiles (one issue on which he debunks the myth of Soviet prowess) but more damningly in regards to armour, helicopters, and the infrastructure of modern high-tech warfare.
But Suvorov is indeed a provocative, and occasionally heartbreaking, analyst of the treacherous political ladder of the Soviet military, its revolting barracks life (more corrupt and sadistic than the worst excesses of late Austro-Hungarian decadence) and its lack of faith in its own mission. He admits his pride in his nation's weapons (tellingly though, he says he only wants to collect those which have fallen into the use of Americans and freedom-fighters, as with AK-47s favored by the Marines in Vietnam for their simplicity and reliability) but his is one of the great voices of testimony against the Soviet system. It is the voice of a gruff man, whose feelings have long held the habit of concealment, writing with simple prophetic urgency against the great danger he perceives to his hosts in the West and their treasured way of life. While his summaries of Napoleonic or WWII history sometimes raise a skeptical eyebrow, the broad outlines at least of his portrait of cynicism, violence, and conspiracy inside the USSR are clear and true. Also, he urges points of military doctrine that remain valid and necessary. Finally, one cannot deny the guilty-pleasure aspect of this book for Risk amateurs and military gameplayers: his tables of military organization, and those vast numbers of motorized battalions, have an uncanny fascination that must appeal to every world-conqueror fantasist. Use in moderation.
Welcome to Paradise
This was certainly an interesting read. Suvorov, the Soviet defector, gives quite an extensive look at not only the now defunct Soviet Army, but also the entire Soviet system. Of course, being an army officer, the Soviet military is his area of expertise and the majority of the book's content reflects that, hence the title. I agree with the previous reviewer's that the chapters, `The Soldier's Lot' and `The Officer's Path' (whose content is self-explanatory) were the most interesting of all. Let's just say I don't envy any of the poor souls who had to go through Soviet military training, or for that matter, anyone who grew up in the Soviet Union. Nazi Germany had nothing on these guys in the cruelty department.
I also found interesting Suvorov's description of the Soviet Union's political structure, the "Bermuda Triangle" (The Army, The Party, & The KGB) as he calls it. He cites the well-known fact that a triangle is the strongest geometric shape known to man, and argues that this applies to politics as well. I kind of glossed over the middle of the book where he methodically describes each armed service (combat organization, strategy, equipment, etc.) in minute detail. Military historians will appreciate this, but I found it a bit tedious.
I really didn't see where the author gives that many controversial opinions. Occasionally he'll agree or disagree with the logic or effectiveness of a certain Soviet policy, but other than that, I didn't find too much of what he had to say as particularly controversial. My only concern is the question of reliability. Is he telling the truth? Now I have no reason to believe that he's not, but let's be honest, it is perfectly possible that a book like this could be written for reasons other than it's stated purpose. Overall though, this was well worth the read and I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to those interested in Soviet/Cold War history or military history in general.
I'd like to close with a quote, which I found particularly interesting. I suppose some could find this controversial, I don't:
"Hitler would not give his wholehearted support to...the leader of the Russian anti-Communist movement. With unbelievable shortsightedness, he embarked upon a bloodthirsty campaign of terror against the inhabitants or the territories occupied by his armies. Compared to the liberation and collectivization campaigns carried out by the Communists, the terror was relatively mild, but it deprived Hitler of any hope of winning the laurels of a champion of freedom.....If, if, if only someone had realized how the Russians loathe Communism. If only someone had tried to tap this reserve of hatred."


