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Commissar
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==Variants== ===People's Commissar=== A People's Commissar (informally abbreviated ''narkom'') was a government official serving in a [[Council of People's Commissars]]. This title was first used by the [[Russian SFSR]] (out of dislike for the tsarist and bourgeois term ''minister'') and then copied among the many Soviet and Bolshevik-controlled states in the [[Russian Civil War]]. The government departments headed by a People's Commissar were called ''[[People's Commissariat]]'' (informally abbreviated narkomat). People's Commissars and People's Commissariats were renamed Ministers and Ministries in 1946 by a decree of the [[Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union]]. ===Political commissar=== {{Main|Political commissar#Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc}} In the [[Red Army]], a [[political commissar]] was a high-ranking functionary at a military headquarters who held coequal rank and authority with the military commander of the unit. The [[Bolshevik Party]] established political commissars in 1918 to control and improve morale in the military forces. Commissars were in charge of communist political propaganda and indoctrinating the public with communist ideology. From 1917 the Bolshevik administration, like the Provisional Government before it, relied on experienced (ex-Tsarist) army-officers whose loyalty it distrusted. [[Leon Trotsky|Trotsky]] summarised the solution to the issue: "We took a military specialist and we put on his right hand and on his left a commissar [...]."<ref> {{cite book | last = Trotsky | first = Lev Davidovich | author-link = Leon Trotsky | translator = Brian Pearce | title = How the Revolution armed, Volumes 4-5 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=jexoAAAAMAAJ | access-date = 2013-10-16 | year = 1981 | publisher = New Park Publications | page = 125 | isbn = 9780861510030 | quote = We took a military specialist and we put on his right hand and on his left a commissar — who was in those days something different from what he is today. }} </ref> During the early stages of the usage of commissars, no military order might be issued which did not have the prior approval of both the commander and the commissar. Many lower-level political officers never received the same military training as commanding officers. Prior to becoming a commissar an individual had to be registered as a communist for a minimum of three years and had to attend specific political institutions, many of which never offered any military-oriented training. Following the problems encountered [[Operation Barbarossa|in 1941]] with dual commanders in units, commissars and other political officers were removed from direct command-roles. Political officers were then more directly tasked with morale- and regulation-based goals. A political officer's classification changed to the form of a "Deputy for Political Matters" in 1942. The specific position of "Commissar" itself survived only at [[regiment]]al and [[Front (Soviet Army)|front levels]], where the Commissars formed the Military Councils with their corresponding military commanders. Other Communist-bloc militaries also adopted systems of using political commissars. Mulvenon and Yang (2002) report that the role of the political commissar in the [[People's Liberation Army]] (PLA) of China has become one resembling that of an [[human resources|HR]] specialist.<ref> {{cite book | editor1-last = Mulvenon | editor1-first = James C. | editor2-last = Yang | editor2-first = Andrew N. D. | title = The People's Liberation Army as Organization | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=rtO5AAAAIAAJ | series = Volume 182 of Conference proceedings (Rand Corporation) | year = 2002 | volume = V 1.0, Volume 1 | publisher = Rand | publication-date = 2002 | page = 483 | isbn = 9780833033031 | access-date = 29 March 2021 | quote = Some analysts of the PLA believe that professional performance is increasingly important, and that the political commissar's job is increasingly that of a personnel manager and 'human resources' specialist, rather than ideological policeman }} </ref> ===Military commissar=== The '''voenkom''' ({{langx|ru|военком|links=no}}), translated as [[war commissar]], is the head of a [[military commissariat]] — a regional office that [[conscription|conscript]]s men for military service, executes plans for military [[mobilization]] and maintains records on military reserves. ===NKVD=== Until the late 1930s, the [[Militsiya|People's Militsiya]] and [[Internal Troops]] of the [[NKVD]] had no personal ranks, and used many various position-ranks instead. In 1935, the Militsiya created a special system of personal ranks that was a blend of standard military ranks and position-ranks; this system was largely reused by the newly created [[Main Directorate of State Security]] (GUGB) in their rank structure, although they had Commissar-style ranks for top officers in place of Militsiya-style ''inspector'' and ''director''. From 1943, the Militsiya switched to a new rank system and insignia introduced in the [[Soviet Army]]. Instead of General ranks, top officers used ''Commissar of Militsiya'' 3rd, 2nd, and 1st rank, even though they used army-standard Major General, Lieutenant General and Colonel General shoulder boards. These Commissar ranks were replaced by corresponding General ranks in 1975. The GUGB also switched to military-style ranks and insignia in 1945, although they replaced Commissar-style ranks with General officer ranks right away.
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