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  1. Count Dmitry Alekseyevich Milyutin (Russian: Дмитрий Алексеевич Милютин, tr. Dmitrij Alekseevič Miljutin; 28 June 1816, Moscow – 25 January 1912, Simeiz near Yalta) was a military historian, Minister of War (1861–81) and the last Field Marshal of Imperial Russia (1898).

  2. Dmitry Alekseyevich, Count Milyutin was a Russian military officer and statesman who, as minister of war (1861–81), was responsible for the introduction of important military reforms in Russia. Graduated from the Nicholas Military Academy in 1836, Milyutin served in the Caucasus (1838–45) and then.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. In 1857, Dmitry Milyutin published the idea of mass expulsions of Circassian natives. Milyutin argued that the goal was not to simply move them so that their land could be settled by productive farmers, but rather that "eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself – to cleanse the land of hostile elements".

  4. The mysterious passenger was Dmitry Milyutin, a general at the FSB, and his visit would be kept off the press range. And yet his co-workers as well as Moldovan politicians they guided would play a major role in numerous secret operations inside Moldova’s politics.

  5. MILYUTIN, DMITRY ALEXEYEVICH. (1816 – 1912), count (1878), political and military figure, military historian, and Imperial Russian war minister (1861 – 1881). General Adjutant Milyutin was born in Moscow, the scion of a Tver noble family.

  6. 28 de oct. de 2022 · Since 2016, FSB operations in Moldova have been led by Dmitry Milyutin, a general in the security service who serves as deputy head of the Department of Operational Information, according to...

  7. 22 de feb. de 2024 · The bloc also imposed sanctions on Dmitry Milyutin, the deputy head of the Russian Federal Security Service Department of Operational Intelligence who oversees the agency’s actions in Moldova and...