Grigory Shtern: Soviet War Hero Executed by Stalin’s Great Purge
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12m
The 1930s, the Soviet Union. As Joseph Stalin tightens his grip on power, paranoia spreads through the ranks of the Communist Party and the Red Army. Suspected enemies are arrested, tortured, and executed in what becomes known as the Great Purge.
At the center of this campaign is the NKVD, the Soviet Union’s secret police and interior ministry, responsible for state security, mass arrests, interrogations, and executions. Acting on Stalin’s orders, the NKVD uses torture, forced confessions, and fabricated charges to eliminate anyone deemed a threat.
Among the victims is Colonel-General Grigory Shtern, a decorated commander and Hero of the Soviet Union. From the battlefields of the Russian Civil War to key victories in the Spanish Civil War, Lake Khasan, and Khalkhin Gol, Shtern proves himself as one of the Soviet Union’s most capable military leaders. He later plays a crucial role in the Winter War against Finland and in strengthening Soviet air defenses on the eve of World War II.
Yet even loyalty and success cannot protect him. Arrested in 1941, Shtern is brutally tortured by the NKVD and forced to confess to false charges of espionage and conspiracy. Without trial, he is executed on Stalin’s orders.
This is the story of a brilliant commander destroyed by the very regime he served—a chilling example of how Stalin’s terror consumed even the Soviet Union’s finest leaders.
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