Russia’s brutal 1994-1996 Chechen campaign mastermind and former Defence Minister Pavel Grachev died in Moscow yesterday at the age of 64 after a highly divisive but historic career.

He played roles for which he was not very well suited and that he did not want

The Afghan war veteran was the target of rights groups for convincing the late Boris Yeltsin to unleash what he had promised would be a “victorious Blitzkrieg in Chechnya” meant to stamp out a growing insurgency.

Grachev’s tanks ended up going up in flames in the first offensive on the capital Grozny – a humiliation that prompted him to order carpet bombings that subsequently claimed the lives of tens of thousands and displaced many more.

“We just received a call from the Vishnevsky hospital confirming that Pavel Sergeyevich (Grachev) is dead,” his colleague Nikolai Deryabin told the Interfax-AVN military news agency.

Grachev had been resting at the military hospital’s emergency ward since September 12 with an unspecified medical condition.

The plain-talking minister headed defence from Russia’s first full year of post-Soviet independence in 1992 until the summer of 1996. He was removed during a heated political power struggle with the late General Alexander Lebed that was quickly followed by a truce agreement in which Chechnya gained de facto independence in a sovereign Russia.

Federal troops rumbled back into the area in 1999 in the final months of Yeltsin’s presidency under the leadership of then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.

Grachev had by this time effectively vanished from politics and assumed a quiet role as a paid adviser to a Russian military production plant.

“He was a very ambiguous figure. You could say that he was quite unfortunate – both in terms of his military fate and political career,” said Alexander Konovalov, an analyst with the Institute of Strategic Assessment think tank.

“After all, it was his orders that brought in (elite) Kantemirov Division tanks to Moscow” in 1993 during Yeltsin’s bloody constitutional battle with the pro-Soviet Parliament – a building he eventually pulverised into submission.

“He played roles for which he was not very well suited and that he did not really want,” Konovalov told Vesti 24 state TV.

The gruff and stocky general’s career began brightly enough in the Soviet era with an assignment to train scout platoons in the Baltic republics – a politically explosive region that was the first to break away from Moscow.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.