Anatoly Kulikov Explained

Anatoly Kulikov
Native Name Lang:ru
Office1:Minister of Internal Affairs
Term Start1:6 July 1995
Term End1:23 March 1998
President1:Boris Yeltsin
Primeminister1:Viktor Chernomyrdin
Predecessor1:Viktor Yerin
Successor1:Sergei Stepashin
Birth Date:September 4, 1946
Birth Place:Aigursky, Stavropol Krai, RSFSR, USSR
Branch:Soviet Internal TroopsRussian Internal troops
Rank:General
Battles:1993 Russian constitutional crisisFirst Chechen War
Serviceyears:1966-1998

Anatoly Sergeyevich Kulikov (Russian: Анатолий Серге́евич Кулико́в; born 4 September 1946) is a Russian General of the Army, former Interior Minister of Russia (1995–1998).

In 1992 Kulikov became Commander of the Interior Troops. Hence he was one of the commanders of pro-government forces during the 1993 Constitutional Crisis in Moscow and the First Chechen War. In early 1995 Kulikov was appointed commander of the Joint Group of Federal Forces in Chechnya and he commanded the Russian forces during the infamous Samashki massacre.

On July 6, 1995, after the Budyonnovsk hostage crisis, he succeeded Viktor Yerin as Interior Minister of Russia. In August 1996 Alexander Lebed, who had just been appointed Secretary of the Security Council of Russia, blamed Kulikov for the disastrous Battle of Grozny and requested that President Boris Yeltsin sack him. However, Yeltsin declined his request and in October fired Lebed from his position.

In 1997, Kulikov linked both the Cherney brothers and Reuben brothers to the Izmaylovskaya mafia which was led by Anton Malevsky in Israel, but, in March 1998, Boris Yeltsin removed Kulikov from his post along with the entire second cabinet of Viktor Chernomyrdin.[1]

While most of the ministers of the old cabinet were reappointed to Sergei Kiriyenko's Cabinet, Kulikov wasn't and Sergei Stepashin became the next interior minister. Afterwards, Kulikov was elected to the State Duma twice, in the 1999 election and 2003 election, and was a member of the pro-government United Russia faction.

Honours and awards

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Notes and References

  1. News: Behar . Richard . Richard Behar . Capitalism in a cold climate . ru . . 12 June 2000 . 19 August 2021 . 19 October 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141019043548/https://archive.fortune.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2000/06/12/281972/index.htm . The story of Trans World's aluminum empire is filled with bribes, shell companies, profiteers, and more than a few corpses. Then again, in today's Russia, that's pretty much par for the course.. Archived as Капитализм в холодном климате in Russian at compromat.ru on 21 June 2000.