After the end of the war, Radzievsky continued to serve as chief of staff of the 2nd Guards Tank Army, which was redesignated as the 2nd Guards Mechanized Army on 12 June 1946. He rose to command the army, stationed in occupied Germany, on 28 May 1947. Radzievsky was promoted to a series of progressively more senior posts: to command of the
Northern Group of Forces in Poland on 18 September 1950, the
Turkestan Military District on 8 July 1952, and the Armored and Mechanized Forces of the Soviet Army on 22 April 1953. He was promoted to the rank of
colonel general on 3 August 1953. The title of his position was changed to Chief of the Armored Forces of the Soviet Army on 11 January 1954. Radzievsky was appointed commander of the
Odesa Military District on 31 May 1954, his last operational command before being appointed to the training post of deputy chief of the
Military Academy of the General Staff on 3 June 1959. Radzievsky was transferred to serve as chief of the Main Directorate for Military Training Institutions on 11 April 1968 and became chief of the
Frunze Military Academy on 18 July 1969, being promoted to the rank of
army general on 2 November 1972. This was his last active post before his transfer to the retirement position of inspector of the
Group of Inspectors General of the Ministry of Defense on 7 February 1978. He died in Moscow on 30 August 1979. Radzievsky was twice awarded the
Order of Lenin and was also appointed as a member of the
Order of the Red Banner, the
Order of Kutuzov (1st class), the
Order of Suvorov (2nd class), and of many other Soviet and foreign Orders. In 1972 he achieved the rank of
Army General and in 1978 was made a
Hero of the Soviet Union. == Dates of rank ==