Alexander Sergeyevich Chubarov is a Soviet and Russian military intelligence officer, retired GRU major general, participant in 39 military operations during the hostilities in the Republic of Afghanistan and the armed conflict in Tajikistan . During his life he managed to serve in the armed forces of five states: the USSR , Afghanistan , Uzbekistan , Tajikistan , Russia [1] . After the collapse of the USSR, he worked as Deputy Minister of Defense of Tajikistan [2] . At the time of his dismissal from the armed forces, he served as the head of the group for peacekeeping and anti-terrorism activities of the headquarters for coordinating military cooperation between the CIS member states .
| Alexander Sergeevich Chubarov | |
|---|---|
| Nickname | Tajik Zhukov |
| Affiliation | |
| Type of army | GRU special forces |
| Rank | major general |
| Battles / wars | War in Afghanistan Tajik Civil War |
| Retired | demobilized from the armed forces |
Some Facts from a Biography
- He was appointed to the Main Intelligence Directorate in March 1984.
- took a training course at the 10th Directorate of the USSR Ministry of Defense.
- served in Afghanistan with the rank of major and lieutenant colonel in the following positions:
- Advisor to the commander of the 466th Special Forces Regiment of the 2nd Army Corps of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan;
- Advisor to the commander of the 38th Guards Airborne Assault Brigade of the special purpose of the 3rd Army Corps of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan.
- Advisor to the commander of the 466th Special Forces Regiment of the 2nd Army Corps of the Armed Forces of Afghanistan;
- September 19, 1986 returned from Afghanistan to the USSR.
- after the collapse of the USSR, he served in the 15th brigade of the GRU special forces of the Turkestan military district under the command of Vladimir Kvachkov .
- He speaks several eastern languages, including Dari .
Notes
- ↑ Belyakov D. Alexander Chubarov. One hundred and ten combat exits // Brother: Monthly magazine of special forces. - M .: Vityaz-Bratishka LLC, 2011. - No. 1 . - S. 12-17 .
- ↑ Major General Alexander Chubarov: “I do not regret” Archived on February 14, 2015.