Konstantin Pulikovsky biography. General's son. Comrade General: Konstantin Pulikovsky celebrates his anniversary

Former chairman of the Krasnodar branch of the A Just Russia party, former head of Rostechnadzor

Former chairman of the Krasnodar branch of the A Just Russia party, he held this position from November 2009 to June 2012. Before that, in 2005-2008 he headed the Federal Service for Environmental, Technological and Nuclear Supervision (Rostechnadzor), in 2000-2005 he was the plenipotentiary representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Far Eastern Federal District. In 1998-2000 he worked at the Krasnodar City Hall. In 1996-1998 he was deputy commander of the North Caucasus Military District. In July-August 1996 he headed the joint group of federal forces in Chechnya, in 1994-1996 - the group of federal forces "North-West". Retired Lieutenant General.

Konstantin Borisovich Pulikovsky was born on February 9, 1948 in the city of Ussuriysk, Primorsky Territory, into a military family. In 1970 he graduated with honors from the Ulyanovsk Higher Command Tank School, in 1982 - from the Military Academy of Armored Forces named after R.Ya. Malinovsky, in 1992 - the Higher Academy of the General Staff. Since 1970, he served in the Belarusian, Baltic and Turkestan military districts. He was the commander of a regiment and division.

From December 1994 to August 1996, he commanded the North-West federal forces group on the territory of the Chechen Republic. From July to August 1996, he headed the joint group of federal forces in Chechnya. In August 1996, when the militants managed to capture Grozny, he presented an ultimatum to the residents of the city - he demanded to leave it before the attack by Russian troops. However, in the end the assault did not take place, and soon the first Chechen campaign ended. In 1996-1998, Pulikovsky was deputy commander of the North Caucasus Military District. In 1998 he retired with the rank of lieutenant general.

After his resignation, Pulikovsky became an assistant to the mayor of Krasnodar for work with municipal enterprises - the head of the city improvement committee. At the beginning of 2000, he was the head of the Krasnodar regional election headquarters of Russian presidential candidate Vladimir Putin. On May 18, 2000, he was appointed presidential plenipotentiary representative in the Far Eastern Federal District (FEFD). In July-August 2001, he accompanied North Korean leader Kim Jong Il during his visit to Russia.

As a plenipotentiary, Pulikovsky clashed with the head of the Primorsky Territory, Evgeny Nazdratenko, who in February 2001 was removed from the post of governor and appointed head of the State Fisheries Committee. In the summer of 2001, Pulikovsky announced the need to cancel gubernatorial elections. He positively assessed the activities of Roman Abramovich, elected head of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in December 2000, and the activities of Sergei Darkin, elected head of the Primorsky Territory in June 2001. He assumed that the place of governor of the Kamchatka Territory in 2007 could be taken by businessman Viktor Vekselberg. At the same time, the current Kamchatka governor, Mikhail Mashkovtsev, accused Pulikovsky of “ordering” the initiation of a criminal case against him.

In November 2003, Ministry of Natural Resources officials Sergei Krupetsky and Vitaly Sevrin, close to Pulikovsky, were arrested for extorting a bribe. In April 2005, the Khabarovsk Regional Court found the defendants guilty and sentenced them to eight and a half and eight years in prison, respectively.

On November 14, 2005, Pulikovsky was relieved of his post as Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Far Eastern Federal District. This post was taken by the mayor of Kazan Kamil Iskhakov. On December 5, 2005, Pulikovsky was appointed head of the Federal Service for Environmental, Technological and Nuclear Supervision (Rostechnadzor). In June 2007, he came into conflict with the governor of the Kemerovo region, Aman Tuleyev. The Rostechnadzor commission, which investigated the May methane explosion at the Yubileinaya mine, identified the cause of the disaster (which killed 39 miners) as the deliberate failure of the gas emission warning system in order to increase coal production volumes. Tuleyev regarded this as an accusation against himself and filed a lawsuit against Pulikovsky. In addition, the governor blamed Rostekhnadzor himself and its head for the accident at the mine, who, according to him, ignored the demands of the regional authorities to restore order at coal enterprises. Pulikovsky expressed his intention to wait for the court's decision. However, no further information about the legal proceedings was published. In July 2008, in connection with new accidents at one of the mines in the region, Tuleyev sent a letter to the Prosecutor General's Office of the Russian Federation and the regional prosecutor's office with a request to review the quality of the activities carried out by Rostechnadzor at the coal mining enterprises of Kuzbass.

On September 5, 2008, Putin, who became the prime minister of the Russian government after the election of the new Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, relieved Pulikovsky from the post of head of Rostechnadzor (it was reported that this was done at the request of Pulikovsky himself).

Pulikovsky was awarded a number of state orders. Married, the couple had two sons. One of them died in 1995 during the military campaign in Chechnya. After this, Pulikovsky was baptized and has since been an Orthodox Christian.

Pulikovsky, Konstantin

Former chairman of the Krasnodar branch of the A Just Russia party, former head of Rostechnadzor

Former chairman of the Krasnodar branch of the A Just Russia party, he held this position from November 2009 to June 2012. Before that, in 2005-2008 he headed the Federal Service for Environmental, Technological and Nuclear Supervision (Rostechnadzor), in 2000-2005 he was the plenipotentiary representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Far Eastern Federal District. In 1998-2000 he worked at the Krasnodar City Hall. In 1996-1998 he was deputy commander of the North Caucasus Military District. In July-August 1996 he headed the joint group of federal forces in Chechnya, in 1994-1996 - the group of federal forces "North-West". Retired Lieutenant General.

Konstantin Borisovich Pulikovsky was born on February 9, 1948 in the city of Ussuriysk, Primorsky Territory, into a family of hereditary military men. Pulikovsky's great-grandfather and grandfather were officers; his father also served in the army, ending his career with the rank of colonel. In 1970, Pulikovsky graduated with honors from the Ulyanovsk Higher Command Tank School, in 1982 - from the Military Academy of Armored Forces named after R.Ya. Malinovsky, in 1992 - the Higher Academy of the General Staff. Since 1970, he served in the Belarusian, Baltic and Turkestan military districts. He was the commander of a tank regiment, then a division.

In 1993, Pulikovsky was sent to serve in Krasnodar. He commanded the troops that took part in the resolution of the Ossetian-Ingush conflict. From December 1994 to August 1996, he commanded the North-West federal forces group on the territory of the Chechen Republic. From July to August 1996, he headed the joint group of federal forces in Chechnya. In August 1996, the militants managed to capture Grozny, which by that time was located in the rear of the united group. Then Pulikovsky presented an ultimatum to the residents of the city - he demanded to leave it before the attack by Russian troops began. The presentation of the ultimatum caused a wide resonance in the Russian and foreign media and was not supported by the command in Moscow. As a result, the assault on Grozny did not take place. Instead, General Alexander Lebed arrived in Chechnya and began the negotiation process, which ended with the signing of the Khasavyurt peace agreements on August 31, 1996.

In 1996-1998, Pulikovsky was deputy commander of the North Caucasus Military District. In 1998 he retired with the rank of lieutenant general. The media noted that Pulikovsky took this step after the leadership of the Russian Ministry of Defense invited him to take the post of commander of the peacekeeping forces in Tajikistan. Pulikovsky, citing the fact that he had “already fought for four years,” asked to find another general for this place. In the same year, Pulikovsky was appointed assistant to the mayor of Krasnodar for work with municipal enterprises - head of the city improvement committee. At the same time he ran for deputies of the Krasnodar Legislative Assembly, but was not elected. He was actively involved in social work and headed the Krasnodar regional branch of the public association "Combat Brotherhood". At the beginning of 2000, he was the head of the Krasnodar regional election headquarters of Russian presidential candidate Vladimir Putin.

On May 18, 2000, Pulikovsky was appointed presidential plenipotentiary representative in the Far Eastern Federal District (FEFD). The institution of plenipotentiary representation was introduced by Putin a month after his election. Representatives of the president also included: former Prime Minister Sergei Kiriyenko in the Volga Federal District (VFD), army general Viktor Kazantsev in the North Caucasus Federal District (NCFD, since June 2000 - Southern Federal District, (SFD)), first deputy director of the FSB Viktor Cherkesov in the Northwestern Federal District (NWFD), diplomat Leonid Drachevsky - in the Siberian Federal District (SFO), ex-tax police general Georgy Poltavchenko - in the Central Federal District (CFD) and ex-police general Pyotr Latyshev - in the Ural Federal District district (Ural Federal District).

In December 2000, Pulikovsky came into conflict with the head of the Primorsky Territory, Evgeny Nazdratenko, saying that the activities of the regional administration, in his opinion, are “a classic of theft of the state.” At the beginning of 2001, when Nazdratenko ended up in the hospital during another energy crisis in Primorye, the plenipotentiary told reporters that “Evgeniy Ivanovich is sick, but his illness is not of a medical nature; its assessment and diagnosis will be given by law enforcement agencies.” As a result, in February 2001, Nazdratenko left the post of governor and was appointed head of the State Fisheries Committee. Pulikovsky was skeptical about this appointment.

In March 2001, speaking to journalists from the Primorsky Territory, Pulikovsky said that he had challenged the mayor of Vladivostok, Yuri Kopylov, to a duel. Pulikovsky named the reason for this step as the appearance in December 2000 on the streets of Vladivostok of posters and banners with offensive statements addressed to the plenipotentiary representative. In the same month, on the air of the regional radio, Kopylov apologized to Pulikovsky, stating that the posters were hung without his knowledge.

In the elections for the governor of Primorye in June 2001, Pulikovsky supported the candidacy of his deputy Gennady Apanasenko, but Sergei Darkin was elected governor. After this, the plenipotentiary proposed to abolish gubernatorial elections altogether, saying that regional heads should be appointed by the president. Subsequently, however, Pulikovsky supported Darkin. Thus, after Putin submitted Darkin’s candidacy to the regional parliament for approval in January 2005, the plenipotentiary noted that “in eight years of work he will become a manager of the highest class, and he may be offered to lead a larger region. He has a wide open road ahead.” , . In February 2005, the legislative assembly of Primorye approved Darkin as governor.

In July-August 2001, Pulikovsky accompanied North Korean leader Kim Jong Il during a visit to Russia, which took the form of a long train trip. The plenipotentiary spoke respectfully of the head of the DPRK, stated that “he is an intelligent and erudite person, a subtle politician” and that during a trip to Russia “we talked with him every day for three to four hours.”

In October 2003, a criminal case was opened against the communist governor of Kamchatka Mikhail Mashkovtsev and his deputy Vladislav Skvortsov. They were accused of misuse of 120 million rubles. Mashkovtsev himself considered the case a “political order” that came from “the apparatus of the plenipotentiary representative of the Far Eastern District and personally from Pulikovsky.” In July 2005, the Kamchatka prosecutor's office stopped criminal prosecution of the governor and his deputy, reclassifying their actions from misuse to negligence and closing the case due to the expiration of the statute of limitations.

In November 2003, the head of state control of the Ministry of Natural Resources for the Far Eastern Federal District, Sergei Krupetsky, and the head of the environmental resources department of the Ministry of Natural Resources for the Khabarovsk Territory, Vitaly Sevrin, were arrested. According to the investigation, officials extorted 100 thousand dollars from the Amur Prospector Artel CJSC for resolving the issue of rights to the Konder-Worgolan platinum deposit. Russian Interior Minister Boris Gryzlov called the arrested “werewolves in jackets” (similar to what began in June of that same year, the case of “werewolves in uniform" - a group of MUR employees and EMERCOM General Vladimir Ganeev, accused of organizing a criminal community.) According to media reports, Krupetsky was “Pulikovsky’s man.” Until 2001, he served as vice-mayor of Krasnodar and worked together with future plenipotentiary. Pulikovsky himself told reporters that officials of the Ministry of Natural Resources, in his opinion, were “victims of a frame-up.” In April 2005, the Khabarovsk Regional Court found the accused guilty of attempted bribery and sentenced Krupetsky to eight years and six months in prison, and Sevrin to eight years.In December of the same year, the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation upheld the sentence unchanged.

Pulikovsky positively assessed the work experience of entrepreneur Roman Abramovich, who was elected governor of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in December 2000. The plenipotentiary spoke about him like this: “I’m not even interested in how Abramovich got Sibneft. The main thing is that people in Chukotka treat him with great respect, love and idolize him.” In August 2005, in an interview with the media, Pulikovsky made the assumption that a major businessman, chairman of the board of directors of the SUAL company, Viktor Vekselberg, could become one of the candidates for the post of governor of the Kamchatka Territory in 2007.

On November 14, 2005, Pulikovsky was relieved of his post as Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Far Eastern Federal District. This post was taken by the mayor of Kazan Kamil Iskhakov. A version appeared in the media that Pulikovsky was fired for promoting Vekselberg’s candidacy for the post of head of Kamchatka. According to another version, the reason for the resignation was the negative result of the economic and administrative activities of the plenipotentiary representative. The decision to remove Pulikovsky was made at a meeting of Russian President Putin with members of the government, at which other important personnel changes were announced: the head of the presidential administration, Dmitry Medvedev, became the first deputy prime minister of the government and the head of the commission responsible for the implementation of national projects; Governor of the Tyumen region Sergei Sobyanin was appointed to replace Medvedev; Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov received the post of Deputy Prime Minister in addition to his ministerial portfolio. In addition, the prosecutor of Bashkiria, Alexander Konovalov, was appointed to the place of the Presidential Plenipotentiary Envoy in the Volga Federal District Kiriyenko.

On December 5, 2005, Pulikovsky was appointed head of the Federal Service for Environmental, Technological and Nuclear Supervision (Rostechnadzor). On August 1, 2006, he was included in the government commission for administrative reform.

In the spring of 2007, accidents occurred at two mines owned by the Yuzhkuzbassugol company in the Kemerovo region. On March 19, a methane explosion occurred at the Ulyanovskaya mine, killing 110 miners. On April 18, Pulikovsky and the governor of the Kemerovo region, Aman Tuleyev, announced the results of a departmental investigation into the causes of the incident. It was found that 42 mine employees were guilty of the incident, including eight dead, who deliberately interfered with the operation of sensors that recorded the level of methane in the underground tunnels. It was especially emphasized that the intervention was dictated by the desire of management to increase coal production, since if the level of methane in the faces exceeded more than 2 percent, work should have automatically stopped.

On May 24, methane gas exploded at the Yubileiny mine. This time 39 miners died. On June 6, Pulikovsky again cited interference in the gas release prevention system to increase coal production as the cause of the accident. On June 7, Tuleyev described Pulikovsky’s statement as a provocation. According to the governor, the head of Rostekhnadzor claimed that the leadership of the Kemerovo region knew about the deliberate blocking of the gas protection system at Ulyanovskaya, but did not take action. In response to this, Tuleyev told the media that, in his opinion, the specialists of Rostechnadzor and personally the head of this department were to blame for the latest accidents that occurred in the mines of Kuzbass, who, according to the governor, have repeatedly ignored the demands of the regional authorities to restore order at coal enterprises. The next day, Tuleyev told reporters that he had sued the head of Rostekhnadzor for libel. Pulikovsky did not file a counterclaim against the governor and expressed hope for a fair court decision. No further information about the legal proceedings was published.

In December 2007, Pulikovsky was included in the organizing committee for the preparation and provision of the Russian Federation's chairmanship of the Asia-Pacific Cooperation (APEC) forum in Vladivostok in 2012, and in February 2008, Pulikovsky created the Rostechnadzor Coordination Council for preparations for the APEC forum.

The accidents at the Lenin mine in Mezhdurechensk, which occurred in 2008, became the reason for a new aggravation of relations between the regional and federal authorities. In July 2008, Tuleyev sent a letter to the General Prosecutor's Office of Russia and the regional prosecutor's office with a request to review the quality of Rostechnadzor's activities at coal mining enterprises in Kuzbass. According to the governor, “Rostechnadzor’s inspections at coal enterprises in the region were carried out superficially.” In addition, Tuleyev stated that “in the case of the Lenin Mine, it smacks of bribes in order to quickly put the longwall into operation.”

On September 3, 2008, President Dmitry Medvedev, elected to this position in March of the same year, approved an expanded list of the organizing committee for the preparation of Russia's chairmanship of APEC in 2012 and again included Pulikovsky as the head of Rostechnadzor. However, already on September 5, Putin, who became the prime minister of the Russian government after Medvedev assumed the office of president, by his order relieved Pulikovsky from the post of head of the Federal Service for Environmental, Technological and Nuclear Supervision. Reports about this said that Pulikovsky himself asked to resign. Nikolai Kutin, Pulikovsky's deputy, became the acting head of the department.

In November 2009, Pulikovsky was elected chairman of the Krasnodar branch of the A Just Russia party. In December 2011, he headed one of the regional lists of candidates from this party in the elections to the State Duma, but did not get into parliament (“A Just Russia” gained 13.24 percent in the elections, losing to “United Russia” and the Communist Party of the Russian Federation). In June 2012, Pulikovsky voluntarily resigned as chairman of the regional branch of A Just Russia and announced his resignation from the party. Pulikovsky explained his decision by disagreement with the leadership of A Just Russia on the organization of political work.

Pulikovsky was awarded the orders "For Service to the Motherland in the USSR Armed Forces", "For Personal Courage" and "For Services to the Fatherland" IV degree. Married, wife Vera Pulikovskaya is a nurse. The couple had two sons - Alexey and Sergey. Both became officers. Alexey died in December 1995 during the military campaign in Chechnya. Pulikovsky is an Orthodox Christian (according to media reports, he was baptized after the death of his son); before his departure to the Far East, in connection with his appointment as plenipotentiary, he asked for the blessing of the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) Alexy II. Hobbies include hunting, fishing and driving.

Used materials

Anna Perova. General Pulikovsky post surrendered. - Kommersant Rostov, 19.06.2012. - № 109 (4891)

Tatiana Pavlovskaya. The general returned his party card. - Rossiyskaya Gazeta (rg.ru), 17.06.2012

The Central Election Commission of the Russian Federation announced the official results of the State Duma elections. - RBC, 09.12.2011

Federal list of candidates, candidates for deputies of the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation of the sixth convocation, nominated by the political party "Political Party A Just Russia". - Central Election Commission of the Russian Federation (www.cikrf.ru), 17.10.2011

General Pulikovsky headed the “Fair Russia” in Kuban. - South, 28.11.2009

Sergey Subbotin. Pulikovsky has been relieved of his post as head of Rostechnadzor. - RIA News, 05.09.2008

Konstantin Pulikovsky left the post of head of the department, his duties will be performed by Nikolai Kutyin. - Russian newspaper, 05.09.2008

Medvedev expanded the composition of the organizing committee for the preparation of the Russian Presidency of APEC in 2012. - RIA Novosti Real Estate, 03.09.2008

Aman Tuleyev asks the prosecutor’s office to check the quality of Rostechnazor’s work. - Express News Bureau, 31.07.2008

Maxim Gladky, Alexey Grishin. After the collapse. - News time, 30.07.2008. - №136

The State Duma approved Putin as Prime Minister of the Russian Federation. - RIA News, 08.05.2008

Russian officer, Captain Pulikovsky Alexey Konstantinovich, was born in Belarus, in the city of Borisov. His father was not a parquet general. It never occurred to the Russian general to “excuse” his son from serving...

Russian officer, Captain Pulikovsky Alexey Konstantinovich, was born in Belarus, in the city of Borisov. His father was not a parquet general.

It never occurred to the Russian general to “excuse” his son from serving in hot spots. Officer dynasty of Russia. Several photo albums on a shelf in the apartment can tell a lot about the life of the Pulikovsky family.

A whole life in officer's uniform. The family traveled across the expanses of the country, and the son changed school after school. Any parent will tell you how difficult it is for a child to adjust to another team.

But the son, having graduated from high school with honors, entered the same school that his father had once graduated from. He really wanted to become an officer. After graduating from college with excellent marks and receiving lieutenant's shoulder straps, Alexey was assigned to the Kantemirovsky division.

The mountain republic was already on fire. Alexey Pulikovsky wrote report after report with a request to send him to Chechnya. The troops had long known everything about possible military operations in Chechnya.

The mountains are poorly adapted to tank forced marches. Alexey, realizing that the battles would be severe... Their lives in the war depended on how prepared the fighters were.

The young officer’s third report was satisfied and he was appointed deputy commander of a tank battalion. On October 4, 1995, he was near Shatoy.

Voluntary hostage

The son of the commander of a military operation in the Chechen Republic was shot three times. His father couldn't keep track of him. He simply had no time. There was a war going on. And the general found out that his son was under his command 20 days after the regiment arrived near Shata.

There has been no open confrontation yet. But the militants went armed. And then, by chance, a contract soldier hit a civilian with his car. This happens everywhere, but the militants used this fact to start a confrontation.

The threats began. No matter how hard Pulikovsky tried to smooth out the conflict, the militants heard nothing. The militants were not going to comply with any laws, fueled by extremist literature.

Alexey, deciding to prevent direct clashes, gave himself and the signalman hostage. The militants mocked him for several days. Trying to break the officer, he was taken out to be shot three times.

And he continued to negotiate with the Chechens and the federal command. Major General Shamanov personally arrived to negotiate the release of the hostages. He was accompanied by Colonel Yakovlev.

Last Stand

On December 14, 1995, the scouts went on patrol and did not return. The search for the group was led by the son of General Pulikovsky. And immediately his tanks and infantry fighting vehicles ran into an ambush. Skillfully, the captain deployed the armored vehicles and ordered the attack.


He hoped to save the armored vehicles and soldiers. A grenade from a hand grenade launcher hit the side of an infantry fighting vehicle. Alexey died from its explosion. The explosion of a grenade that hit the side of the infantry fighting vehicle ended the life of captain Alexei Konstantinovich Pulikovsky. The last resting place of the general's son in the cemetery of Krasnodar. His widow and daughter Sonechka visit him.

In Khabarovsk, in the house of the parents of a Russian officer, a portrait hangs on the wall. Every year, on December 11 (the day of the entry of troops into the Chechen Republic), his parents go to the city cemetery of Khabarovsk to visit the graves of fallen soldiers, like the grave of their beloved son.

Their son was an ordinary boy. He loved to play football. Father often joined the boys. He fought with rivals, returning home with scratches and bruises. His father, general, and mother tried to instill in him a sense of duty, devotion to the Motherland, and honesty.

Pride and grief coexist together in the hearts of the parents of the Russian officer Alexei Pulikovsky, the son of a Russian general.

Captain Pulikovsky Alexei Konstantinovich was awarded the Order of Courage (posthumously).

Captain Pulikovsky Alexey Konstantinovich, deputy commander of the tank battalion of the 245th combined regiment. Russian. Born on June 7, 1971 in the family of a professional military man in the city of Borisov, BSSR. During his father’s service, he changed six schools. He graduated with honors from an eleven-year secondary school in the city of Gusev, Kaliningrad region, and the Ulyanovsk Higher Military Tank School, which his father graduated from. Before the Chechen events, he was the commander of a tank company of the 13th regiment of the Kantemirovskaya Tank Division. In the Chechen Republic since October 4, 1995. He died on December 14, 1995 in an operation to liberate a regiment reconnaissance group that was ambushed. Buried in Krasnodar. Awarded the Order of Courage (posthumously).

He wrote a dispatch report three times. Events in Chechnya were brewing like an invisible thundercloud. Information about upcoming military operations spread much faster among the military. The commander of the tank company, Senior Lieutenant Alexei Pulikovsky, was well aware that they would not be easy. Therefore, the educational process was built taking into account the upcoming hostilities, without giving concessions to conscript soldiers. The life of each soldier and the unit as a whole depended on the quality of training. He himself wrote three reports asking to be sent to Chechnya. And only on the third day I received the go-ahead from the unit’s command. By order, he was appointed deputy commander of the tank battalion of the 245th prefabricated regiment, and on October 4, 1995, the regiment was already stationed near Shatoi.
He was shot three times. The commander of the entire military group in Chechnya, Lieutenant General Pulikovsky K.B. in the bustle and leapfrog of the redeployment of troops, he could not keep track of his own son’s movements in the service and only twenty days later he learned that Alexei was under his command.
And at the checkpoint, the battalion carried out the assigned task of the younger Pulikovsky. During the next truce there was no open confrontation between bandit groups and federal troops. But all residents of Chechnya carried weapons. The teips (related clan) were armed to the limit.
A contract soldier of the tank battalion Somov (last name changed) accidentally shot down a Chechen resident. Suleiman Kadanov's entire pace made threats. Alexey Kon tried to resolve it peacefully, according to the law, but the Chechens, fueled by Wahhabi propaganda, only aggravated the situation. How to get out of this conflict peacefully? Alexey decided to take himself and the signalman hostage. They stayed with the Chechens for two days. Mocking and trying to break the captain’s will, they took him out to be shot three times. Alexey did not give up hope of freeing Somov and persistently negotiated with his command and Kadanov. Colonel Yakovlev and Major General Shamanov came to free the fighters.
On December 14, the regiment's reconnaissance group went on patrol and did not return at the appointed time. The regiment command decided to conduct a search operation, headed by Alexey. When we moved to the given area, we were ambushed. Alexey competently and quickly deployed tanks and infantry fighting vehicles into battle formation and organized an attack on the superior forces of the bandits. To prevent the Chechens from hitting the armored vehicles with grenade launchers, the detachment’s personnel, on Alexey’s orders, attacked on foot. Standing next to the armored vehicles, detachment commander Alexey Pulikovsky led the battle. A grenade from a hand grenade launcher hit the side of an infantry fighting vehicle. Alexey died from its explosion. He was buried in the city of Krasnodar. His wife and daughter Sonya also live there.
Time has not dulled the pain of the loss of a son from his father Konstantin Borisovich and mother Vera Ivanovna Pulikovsky. They live in Khabarovsk and every year, on the days of remembrance of the entry of troops into Chechnya on December 11, they visit the graves of fallen servicemen in the city cemetery, as the grave of their son.
He grew up, like all boys, smart and restless. I played football and came home with cuts and bruises. His parents instilled in him independence, dedication, and a sense of duty. Many decisions and actions were unknown to the parents, but they can be proud of their son's actions.

Retired

Konstantin Borisovich Pulikovsky(February 9, Ussuriysk, Primorsky Krai, RSFSR, USSR) - Russian military and statesman, reserve lieutenant general, plenipotentiary representative of the President of the Russian Federation from May 2000 to November 2005, head of Rostechnadzor from December 2005 to September 2008 .

Education

Biography

Service in the Armed Forces

He served in the Armed Forces of the USSR and Russia for 33 years, holding command positions in units, formations, operational and operational-strategic formations of the Armed Forces. He served in military service in Belarus, Turkmenistan, Estonia, Lithuania and the Caucasus.

  • In 1996 - commander of the united group of federal forces in the Chechen Republic.
  • In 1996 - Deputy Commander of the North Caucasus Military District.
  • 1997 - retired from the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation.

Civil service

In 1998, he was elected chairman of the Krasnodar regional branch of the all-Russian social movement of veterans "Combat Brotherhood", uniting veterans of local wars, which was headed by Colonel General Boris Vsevolodovich Gromov. In the same year, he became assistant to the mayor of Krasnodar for work with municipal enterprises and headed the city improvement committee.

Ratings

During that worst period of Russian history, combat experience, decency, and soldier’s loyalty to the oath were not particularly valuable. His fatherly feelings were dirtyly distorted, used for selfish purposes, his general's honor was tarnished, forced to break his word, not to fulfill his promise. What normal combat officer can stand this? Of course, Konstantin Borisovich broke down internally, withdrew into himself, left the army, to which he had given the best three decades of his life. It seemed to me that he had lost everything in this war. I admit, I was afraid that he would not rise again. But, thank God, other times have come.

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Notes

Literature

  • Book: Krasnodar Red Banner: 90 years of the military path (9th Motorized Rifle Division, 131st Omsbr, 7th Military Base) / edited by L.S. Rudyak, consultant Major General A.A. Dorofeev - Maykop : LLC "Quality", 2009.-419 p. ISBN 978-5-9703-0221-7. pp.228,229.
  • Book: Konstantin Pulikovsky. Book series "Combat Brotherhood" / edited by O.I. Ryabov, author Yu.O. Gen; LLC "ID "Not Secret", 2013. - 252 pages. ISBN 978-5-7992-0774-8
  • Book: This is where the Motherland begins./Literary editor O.I. Ryabov, author K.B. Pulikovsky; LLC "ID "Not Secret", 2013. - 332 pages. ISBN 978-5-7992-0801-1
  • Book: Orient Express. Around Russia with Kim Jong Il./author K.B. Pulikovsky, -M.: "Ark", 2010. -272 pp. ISBN 5-98317-174-7
  • Book: Stolen Retribution. About the First Chechen War and the price of betrayal. Historical essay/author K.B.Pulikovsky, literary record by M.Volkov, -M.: Foundation "Military Affairs", 2010. - 288 pp.

Links

  • - article in Lentapedia. year 2012.
Predecessor:
position established
1st Plenipotentiary Representative of the President of the Russian Federation in the Far Eastern Federal District

May 18 -November 14
Successor:
Kamil Shamilevich Iskhakov

An excerpt characterizing Pulikovsky, Konstantin Borisovich

- Oh, damned ones! - said the officer following him, holding his nose and running past the workers.
“There they are!.. They’re carrying, they’re coming... There they are... they’re coming in now...” suddenly voices were heard, and officers, soldiers and militiamen ran forward along the road.
A church procession rose from under the mountain from Borodino. Ahead of everyone, infantry marched orderly along the dusty road with their shakos removed and guns lowered downwards. Church singing could be heard behind the infantry.
Overtaking Pierre, soldiers and militiamen ran without hats towards the marchers.
- They are carrying Mother! Intercessor!.. Iverskaya!..
“Mother of Smolensk,” corrected another.
The militia - both those who were in the village and those who worked at the battery - threw down their shovels and ran towards the church procession. Behind the battalion, walking along a dusty road, were priests in robes, one old man in a hood with a clergyman and a chanter. Behind them, soldiers and officers carried a large icon with a black face in the frame. It was an icon taken from Smolensk and from that time carried with the army. Behind the icon, around it, in front of it, from all sides, crowds of military men walked, ran and bowed to the ground with their heads naked.
Having ascended the mountain, the icon stopped; The people holding the icon on the towels changed, the sextons lit the censer again, and the prayer service began. The hot rays of the sun beat vertically from above; a weak, fresh breeze played with the hair of open heads and the ribbons with which the icon was decorated; singing was heard softly in the open air. A huge crowd of officers, soldiers, and militiamen with their heads open surrounded the icon. Behind the priest and sexton, in a cleared area, stood the officials. One bald general with George around his neck stood right behind the priest and, without crossing himself (obviously, he was a man), patiently waited for the end of the prayer service, which he considered necessary to listen to, probably to arouse the patriotism of the Russian people. Another general stood in a militant pose and shook his hand in front of his chest, looking around him. Among this circle of officials, Pierre, standing in the crowd of men, recognized some acquaintances; but he did not look at them: all his attention was absorbed by the serious expression of faces in this crowd of soldiers and soldiers, monotonously greedily looking at the icon. As soon as the tired sextons (singing the twentieth prayer service) began to lazily and habitually sing: “Save your servants from troubles, Mother of God,” and the priest and deacon picked up: “As we all resort to you for God’s sake, as for an indestructible wall and intercession,” - to everyone the same expression of consciousness of the solemnity of the coming moment, which he saw under the mountain in Mozhaisk and in fits and starts on many, many faces he met that morning, flared up on their faces again; and more often heads were lowered, hair was shaken, and sighs and the blows of crosses on chests were heard.
The crowd surrounding the icon suddenly opened up and pressed Pierre. Someone, probably a very important person, judging by the haste with which they shunned him, approached the icon.
It was Kutuzov, driving around the position. He, returning to Tatarinova, approached the prayer service. Pierre immediately recognized Kutuzov by his special figure, different from everyone else.
In a long frock coat on a huge thick body, with a stooped back, an open white head and a leaky white eye on his swollen face, Kutuzov entered the circle with his diving, swaying gait and stopped behind the priest. He crossed himself with the usual gesture, reached his hand to the ground and, sighing heavily, lowered his gray head. Behind Kutuzov was Bennigsen and his retinue. Despite the presence of the commander-in-chief, who attracted the attention of all the highest ranks, the militia and soldiers continued to pray without looking at him.
When the prayer service ended, Kutuzov went up to the icon, fell heavily on his knees, bowing to the ground, and tried for a long time and could not get up from heaviness and weakness. His gray head twitched with effort. Finally, he stood up and, with a childishly naive stretching of his lips, kissed the icon and bowed again, touching the ground with his hand. The generals followed his example; then the officers, and behind them, crushing each other, trampling, puffing and pushing, with excited faces, soldiers and militia climbed.

Swaying from the crush that gripped him, Pierre looked around him.
- Count, Pyotr Kirilych! How are you here? - said someone's voice. Pierre looked around.
Boris Drubetskoy, cleaning his knees with his hand, which he had soiled (probably also kissing the icon), approached Pierre with a smile. Boris was dressed elegantly, with a touch of camp militancy. He was wearing a long frock coat and a whip over his shoulder, just like Kutuzov.
Meanwhile, Kutuzov approached the village and sat down in the shade of the nearest house on a bench, which one Cossack ran and quickly covered with a rug. A huge brilliant retinue surrounded the commander-in-chief.
The icon moved on, followed by the crowd. Pierre stopped about thirty paces from Kutuzov, talking to Boris.
Pierre explained his intention to participate in the battle and inspect the position.
“Here’s how to do it,” said Boris. – Je vous ferai les honneurs du camp. [I will treat you to the camp.] You will best see everything from where Count Bennigsen will be. I'm with him. I'll report to him. And if you want to go around the position, then come with us: we are now going to the left flank. And then we’ll come back, and you’re welcome to spend the night with me, and we’ll form a party. You know Dmitry Sergeich, right? He’s standing here,” he pointed to the third house in Gorki.
“But I would like to see the right flank; they say he is very strong,” said Pierre. – I would like to drive from the Moscow River and the entire position.
- Well, you can do that later, but the main one is the left flank...
- Yes Yes. Can you tell me where Prince Bolkonsky’s regiment is? asked Pierre.
- Andrey Nikolaevich? We'll pass by, I'll take you to him.
- What about the left flank? asked Pierre.
“To tell you the truth, entre nous, [between us], God knows what position our left flank is in,” said Boris, trustingly lowering his voice, “Count Bennigsen did not expect it at all.” He intended to strengthen that mound over there, not at all like that... but,” Boris shrugged. – His Serene Highness didn’t want to, or they told him to. After all... - And Boris did not finish, because at that time Kaysarov, Kutuzov’s adjutant, approached Pierre. - A! Paisiy Sergeich,” said Boris, turning to Kaisarov with a free smile, “But I’m trying to explain the position to the count.” It’s amazing how His Serene Highness could so correctly guess the intentions of the French!
– Are you talking about the left flank? - said Kaisarov.
- Yes yes exactly. Our left flank is now very, very strong.
Despite the fact that Kutuzov kicked out all unnecessary people from the headquarters, Boris, after the changes made by Kutuzov, managed to stay at the main apartment. Boris joined Count Bennigsen. Count Bennigsen, like all the people with whom Boris was, considered the young Prince Drubetskoy an unappreciated person.
There were two sharp, definite parties in command of the army: the party of Kutuzov and the party of Bennigsen, the chief of staff. Boris was present at this last game, and no one knew better than he, while paying servile respect to Kutuzov, to make one feel that the old man was bad and that the whole business was being conducted by Bennigsen. Now the decisive moment of the battle had come, which was either to destroy Kutuzov and transfer power to Bennigsen, or, even if Kutuzov had won the battle, to make it felt that everything had been done by Bennigsen. In any case, big rewards were to be given out tomorrow and new people were to be brought forward. And as a result of this, Boris was in irritated animation all that day.
After Kaisarov, other of his acquaintances still approached Pierre, and he did not have time to answer the questions about Moscow with which they bombarded him, and did not have time to listen to the stories they told him. All faces expressed animation and anxiety. But it seemed to Pierre that the reason for the excitement expressed on some of these faces lay more in matters of personal success, and he could not get out of his head that other expression of excitement that he saw on other faces and which spoke of issues not personal, but general , matters of life and death. Kutuzov noticed the figure of Pierre and the group gathered around him.
“Call him to me,” said Kutuzov. The adjutant conveyed the wishes of his Serene Highness, and Pierre headed to the bench. But even before him, an ordinary militiaman approached Kutuzov. It was Dolokhov.
- How is this one here? asked Pierre.
- This is such a beast, it will crawl everywhere! - they answered Pierre. - After all, he was demoted. Now he needs to jump out. He submitted some projects and climbed into the enemy’s chain at night... but well done!..
Pierre, taking off his hat, bowed respectfully in front of Kutuzov.
“I decided that if I report to your lordship, you can send me away or say that you know what I am reporting, and then I won’t be killed...” said Dolokhov.
- So-so.
“And if I’m right, then I will benefit the fatherland, for which I am ready to die.”
- So-so…
“And if your lordship needs a person who would not spare his skin, then please remember me... Maybe I will be useful to your lordship.”
“So... so...” repeated Kutuzov, looking at Pierre with a laughing, narrowing eye.
At this time, Boris, with his courtly dexterity, advanced next to Pierre in the proximity of his superiors and with the most natural look and not loudly, as if continuing the conversation he had begun, said to Pierre:
– The militia – they directly put on clean, white shirts to prepare for death. What heroism, Count!
Boris said this to Pierre, obviously in order to be heard by his Serene Highness. He knew that Kutuzov would pay attention to these words, and indeed His Serene Highness addressed him:
-What are you talking about the militia? - he said to Boris.