Sneha Girap (Editor)

Vitovt Putna

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Years of service
  
1915–1937

Rank
  
Komkor

Name
  
Vitovt Putna


Vitovt Putna httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons88

Born
  
March 31, 1893 Mackonys, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire (now Utena County, Lithuania (
1893-03-31
)

Allegiance
  
Russian Empire (1915–1917) Soviet Russia (1918–1922)  Soviet Union (1922–1937)

Battles/wars
  
World War I Russian Civil War Polish-Soviet War Kronstadt Rebellion

Awards
  
Order of the Red Banner (Three times)

Died
  
June 12, 1937, Moscow, Russia

Battles and wars
  
World War I, Russian Civil War, Polish–Soviet War, Kronstadt rebellion

Similar People
  
Mikhail Tukhachevsky, Franciszek Latinik, Jozef Haller, Wladyslaw Sikorski

Vitovt Kazimirovich Putna (Russian: Ви́товт Казими́рович Пу́тна, Lithuanian: Vytautas Putna; 1893–1937) was a Soviet Red Army officer of Lithuanian origin.

Vitovt Putna General Vitovt Putna the new Soviet military attache in London

A World War I veteran of the Imperial Russian Army and Bolshevik since 1917, Putna was a komdiv during the Polish–Soviet War and commanded a variety of divisions. During the retreat following the Battle of Warsaw, he gathered around him ad-hoc corps out of defeated units and allowed the remnants of the Red Army to escape from a large cauldron near Białystok. In 1921 he took part in suppressing the Kronstadt Rebellion and Peasant uprisings on the Lower Volga. In 1923 he was sent as a military advisor to China and between 1927 and 1931 he was military attaché to Japan, Finland and Germany. He was posted to the Far East Military district in 1931 and was made military attache to Great Britain in 1934.

He was promoted to comcor in 1935. Putna was arrested during the Great Purge on 20 August 1936, tried for alleged espionage and anti-Soviet activities together with Mikhail Tukhachevsky in the so-called Case of Trotskyist Anti-Soviet Military Organization, sentenced to death on 11 June 1937 and executed the next day.

The Soviet government posthumously exonerated him after Joseph Stalin's death, when he was formally rehabilitated in 1957.

References

Vitovt Putna Wikipedia