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he headed the
Chernigov Military Aviation School of Pilots until December 1955, for the next four years afterwards he headed the 10th Military Aviation School. Earlier in 1959 he had been promoted to the rank of general-major. From December 1959 to October 1961 he was deputy commander of 69th Air Army, after which he became deputy commander of the 37th Reserve Air Force where he remained until December 1969. He then served as deputy commander of the Air Force of the Moscow Military District until he retired from the military in February 1974; in 1972 he was featured in the Soviet magazine "Aviation and Cosmonautics" in an article about his wartime exploits as well as his status as a general. After retiring from the air force he worked as a senior engineer, sector head, and eventually lead engineer at the Scientific Experimental Center for Air Traffic Control Automation. Having retired in 1988, he lived in Moscow, where he died on 15 December 1989 and was buried in the
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the 1st
Reserve Fighter Aviation Regiment he took command of the 814th Fighter Aviation Regiment in June that year. Despite holding the high post of regimental commander he frequently flew combat sorties and participated in aerial battles, resulting him tallying enough shootdowns of enemy to be nominated for the title Hero of the Soviet Union on 2 August 1943 for having totaled 245 sorties, entered 53 dogfights, and gained 17 solo aerial victories. That month his regiment was awarded the guards designation and renamed as the 106th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment. Later in the war on 22 February 1945 he and his comrades flying in a group of six Yak-1s participated in an intense aerial battle with a large group of German FW-190s; during the engagement Kuznetsov personally shot down two of them. In April he was nominated for a second gold star, which was awarded after the surrender of Nazi Germany.
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317:. During the conflict his unit was one of the highest-performing fighter regiments in the Soviet Air Forces, tallying 296 enemy aircraft shot down in addition to 18 destroyed on the ground. By the end of the war he totaled 344 sorties, participating in 73 aerial battles, tallying 19 solo and one shared shootdown while flying the
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Almost immediately after completing training to become a squadron commander in June 1941 he was deployed with his previous regiment to combat the German invasion of the Soviet Union; before leaving the unit in March 1942 he had been promoted to navigator; after briefly serving as deputy commander of
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Kuznetsov remained in command of the 106th Guards
Fighter Aviation Regiment until July 1945. From then until February 1946 he served as the deputy commander of the 11th Guards Fighter Aviation Division; afterwards he attended the Air Force Academy in Monino. Upon graduation from the academy in 1951
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of
Kirovsky district of the city, serving as deputy chairman of a bureau of young pioneers, secretary of a university Komsomol committee, and secretary of a factory Komsomol committee. After graduating from the Yeisk Military School of Marine and Observer Pilots in December 1934 he was assigned to
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25 October] 1913 to a
Russian family in Agarino village, located within the present-day borders of the Moscow oblast. Having moved to the city of Moscow in 1921, he went on to complete his seventh grade of school in 1930, after which he worked as an electrician at a
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the 6th Light Bomber
Aviation Squadron as a pilot. Later he transferred to the 106th Fighter Aviation Squadron, and in August 1938 he became adjutant and assistant squadron commander in the 15th Fighter Aviation Regiment. In that position he saw combat during the
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25 October] 1913 – 15 December 1989) was a regimental commander flying ace in the Soviet Air Forces during the Second World War who was twice awarded the title
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until 1932. From then until he entering the military in mid 1933 he worked for the
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464:Люди бессмертного подвига: очерки о дважды Героях Советского Союза Volume I
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368:(26 February 1942, 28 February 1943, 24 April 1945, and 3 November 1953)
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Recipients of the Order of Bogdan
Khmelnitsky (Soviet Union), 2nd class
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Combat pilots – twice and three times Heroes of the Soviet Union
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during the war, but did not gain any aerial victories in them.
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504:Журнал «Авиация и космонавтика» № 6 от 1972 (стр 16-18)
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Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
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Renamed as the 4th
Reserve Air Force in April 1968.
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615:Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner
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146:106th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment
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261:Throughout the war he fought on the
650:Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery
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391:Order of the Red Banner of Labour
610:Recipients of the Order of Lenin
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645:Soviet World War II flying aces
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205:Михаи́л Васи́льевич Кузнецо́в
197:Mikhail Vasilyevich Kuznetsov
20:Mikhail Vasilyevich Kuznetsov
515:Simonov & Bodrikhin 2017
492:Simonov & Bodrikhin 2017
477:Simonov & Bodrikhin 2017
450:Simonov & Bodrikhin 2017
585:People from Kashirsky Uyezd
380:, 1st class (11 March 1985)
372:Order of Bogdan Khmelnitsky
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600:Heroes of the Soviet Union
378:Order of the Patriotic War
39:Михаил Васильевич Кузнецов
630:Soviet Air Force generals
590:People from Moscow Oblast
239:Soviet invasion of Poland
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138:General-major of Aviation
52:25 October] 1913
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412:Kuznetsov also flew the
366:Orders of the Red Banner
353:Hero of the Soviet Union
340:Troyekurovskoye Cemetery
213:Hero of the Soviet Union
188:Hero of the Soviet Union
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385:Orders of the Red Star
635:Soviet major generals
127:Years of service
48:7 November [
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35:Native name
569:Categories
558:1005741956
437:References
243:Winter War
219:Early life
168:Winter War
90:Allegiance
400:Footnotes
291:Leningrad
279:Southwest
267:Leningrad
263:Northwest
130:1933–1974
234:Komsomol
143:Commands
108:Service/
333:Postwar
307:Silesia
295:Baltics
271:Kalinin
230:tannery
201:Russian
190:(twice)
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351:Twice
346:Awards
325:, and
315:Prague
313:, and
311:Berlin
293:, the
285:, and
184:Awards
110:branch
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80:Moscow
538:[
414:I-153
364:Four
327:Yak-9
323:Yak-1
319:MiG-3
299:Kursk
247:I-153
554:OCLC
544:ISBN
416:and
383:Two
303:Lviv
275:West
225:O.S.
209:O.S.
135:Rank
70:Died
50:O.S.
45:Born
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484:^
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