Between 1946 and 1950, Snetkov was assistant chief of staff for operations of a regiment, and then entered the
Military Academy of the Armored Forces, graduating in 1953. Until 1965, he successively served as a regimental chief of staff, chief of a division's operations staff department, and commander of a tank regiment. Between 1965 and 1966 Snetkov was chief of staff of a division, and in 1968 he graduated from the
Military Academy of the General Staff. After graduating, Snetkov took command of a tank division in the
Kiev Military District, and in May 1971 transferred to the Group of Soviet Forces in Germany (GSFG) as chief of staff and first deputy commander of the
3rd Shock Army. He was promoted to
major general in 1972, and would serve in the GSFG for the better part of the decade. He was appointed commander of the
1st Guards Tank Army in August 1973, after which he was promoted to
lieutenant general in 1974, and became First Deputy Commander in July 1975. He left
East Germany to command the
Siberian Military District in January 1979, and was promoted to
colonel general that year, moving westwards again to lead the
Leningrad Military District in November 1981. On 7 May 1986, Snetkov was promoted to
army general. In November 1987, Snetkov was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the GSFG, which became the Western Group of Forces (WGF) in June 1989 when it was shifted to a defensive role. During upheavals in East Germany during October and November, the WGF's troops did not intervene in the
Leipzig Monday demonstrations and the
Fall of the Berlin Wall as a result of orders given to Snetkov by the Soviet ambassador in East Germany,
Vyacheslav Kochemasov, which were confirmed by the Soviet government. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the easing of
Cold War tensions, discipline in the WGF began to break down. In response to charges of fatal recruit abuse, widespread desertion, and weapons smuggling among Soviet troops, Snetkov held a November 1990 press conference to deny the charges, in which he stated that only 84 soldiers had died in 1990, mostly in training or traffic accidents; that 83 soldiers had "left units without permission"; and denied allegations weapons smuggling, stating that only seven weapons were "missing". In response to German citizens' complaints, he also halted all training on weekends and holidays, and ended low-level flying over populated places. In December, after former East German leader
Erich Honecker was issued an arrest warrant by prosecutors in Berlin and charged with giving orders to fire on escapees, Snetkov refused to hand over Honecker, who was under Soviet protection at a military hospital in
Beelitz. He opposed the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Germany, and stated in multiple early 2000s interviews with Russian military newspaper
Krasnaya Zvezda that his opposition to a Soviet pull-out was the reason for his dismissal from command of the WGF later that month. However, according to a contemporary
Izvestia report, he was fired along with deputies after the desertions of a regimental commander and a supply unit leader on 29 November, who took two missiles, three tank shells and other armaments with them. After his dismissal, Snetkov joined the
Group of Inspectors General of the Ministry of Defense, traditionally a retirement post for elderly generals. He retired in May 1992 after the elimination of the Group of Inspectors General. == Later life ==