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Feliks Gromov

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Feliks Gromov
Born(1937-08-29)August 29, 1937
Vladivostok, Soviet Union
DiedJanuary 22, 2021(2021-01-22) (aged 83)
Buried
Allegiance Soviet Union (to 1991)
 Russia
Service / branch Soviet Navy
 Russian Navy
Years of service1955–1997
RankAdmiral of the Fleet
CommandsCommander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy
Northern Fleet
AwardsOrder of Merit for the Fatherland
Order of Military Merit
Order of the October Revolution
Order for Service to the Homeland in the Armed Forces of the USSR, 1st & second class

Feliks Nikolayevich Gromov (Russian: Феликс Николаевич Громов; 29 August 1937 – 22 January 2021)[1] was a Russian Navy admiral of the fleet who was Commander-in-Chief of the Navy from 1992 to 1997.

Early life and education

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Gromov was born in Vladivostok and joined the navy in 1955. He completed the S.O. Makarov Pacific Higher Naval School in 1959.

Military career

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He served as an officer on a destroyer and in 1961 served in the strategic missile troops on an exchange programme. Gromov returned to the navy in 1962 and served on the Sverdlov-class cruiser Admiral Senyavin and the Kotlin-class destroyer Vdokhnovennyy. He subsequently commanded the cruisers Senyavin and Dmitriy Pozharsky.

In 1977 Gromov became commander of a squadron of surface ships in the Baltic Fleet and was transferred to the Soviet Northern Fleet in 1982. In 1984 he became deputy commander of the Soviet Northern Fleet and was promoted to its commander in 1988.

In 1992 Gromov was given command of the Russian Navy following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. He was promoted to Admiral of the Fleet by Boris Yeltsin in 1996 and retired on 7 November 1997 at age 60, the mandated retirement age for Admirals and Fleet Admirals.

The Jamestown Foundation speculated that Gromov was dismissed because of a Russian Pacific Fleet ammunition explosion which seems to have attracted wide attention. He died in his dacha and was buried at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery.

References

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Sources

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Military offices
Preceded by Commander of the Northern Fleet
1988–1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy
1992–1997
Succeeded by