In 1952, Ustinov became a member of the Central Committee. In March 1953, after Stalin died, the
Ministry of Armaments was combined with the
Ministry of Aviation Industry to become the
Ministry of Defense Industry, with Ustinov assigned as head of this new ministry. In 1957, he was appointed a Deputy Premier of the Soviet Union and became chairman of the
Military-Industrial Commission.
Rise to the Soviet leadership Leonid Brezhnev took power after the ousting of Khrushchev, and Ustinov returned to the defence industry. In 1965, Brezhnev made Ustinov a candidate member of the
Politburo and secretary of the Central Committee with oversight of the military, the defense industry, and certain security organs. He was also placed in charge of developing the Soviet Union's strategic bomber force and intercontinental ballistic missile system. Ustinov was known in the defense industry as Uncle Mitya. He was also missile engineer
Vladimir Chelomey's stolid personal adversary. He issued a
directive, in February 1970, that ordered Chelomey's
OKB-52 design bureau to combine its
Almaz space station with
Sergei Korolyov's OKB-1 design bureau, then headed by
Vasili Mishin. This order was designed as an impetus towards the development of the
Salyut space station. Ustinov gained power in the
bureaucracy as he rose in the
defence industry.
Minister of Defence In 1976, after Andrei Grechko died on 26 April, Ustinov became the Defence Minister and was promoted to
General of the Army on 29 April. On 30 July, he was promoted to the highest military rank in the
Soviet Union,
Marshal of the Soviet Union, although he had no prior military career. Together, with Marshal
Nikolai Ogarkov and the Soviet General Staff, Ustinov embarked on a programme to enhance and modernise the Soviet Union's development of military sciences. In 1979, he confidently asserted that "The armed forces of the USSR are on a high level that ensures the accomplishment of any tasks set by the party and the people". Parade on
Red Square celebrating the 62nd anniversary of the revolution.The growing influence of the Soviet military gave Ustinov the role of Kremlin kingmaker, for his support was decisive in allowing
Yuri Andropov to succeed
Brezhnev. Ustinov was also influential in the
Chernenko regime, compensating for the latter's serious health problems and inexperience in military affairs. . In 1979,
Hafizullah Amin assassinated the leader of Afghanistan,
Nur Muhammad Taraki. In October 1979, the sentiment for Soviet military intervention in Afghanistan grew stronger in the Soviet politburo where Ustinov and Andropov were the strongest proponents of military intervention. Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko also lent his support for an invasion. The introduction of US forces into the
Persian Gulf after the 1979
Iran hostage crisis particularly alarmed the Soviet General Staff. Ustinov began to wonder, "If the Americans do all these preparations under our noses, then why should we hunker down, play cautious, and lose Afghanistan?" In November, Ustinov and Andropov began to formulate plans for a Soviet military invasion of Afghanistan. On 12 December 1979, the Politburo approved the Ustinov-Andropov plan to invade Afghanistan. On 24 December 1979,
Soviet troops entered Afghanistan. In the early 1980s, the development of the
Space Shuttle program in the United States caused considerable concern in the Soviet defense industry. While Defence Minister, Ustinov received a report from his analysts that the
US Shuttle could be used to deploy space based nuclear missiles over Soviet territory.
Russian space programme academic
Boris Chertok recounts that Ustinov was so worried about the US Shuttle that he gave the development of the Soviet response program, the
Buran Shuttle, top priority.
Involvement in the KAL 007 Disaster In 1992, Russian president
Boris Yeltsin disclosed five top-secret memos dating from late 1983, memos that had been written within weeks of the downing of
Korean Air Lines Flight 007. These memos were published in
Izvestia number 228 on 16 October 1992. According to these memos, the Soviet Union had been able to recover the "
Black Box" from KAL 007 and decipher its tapes. Thereafter, Ustinov, along with
Viktor Chebrikov, head of the KGB, recommended to General Secretary Yuri Andropov that their possession of the Black Box not be made public since its tapes could not support the Soviet contention that KAL 007 was on a U.S. espionage mission. "In connection with all mentioned above it seems highly preferable not to transfer the flight recorders to the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) or any third party willing to decipher their contents. The fact that the recorders are in possession of the USSR shall be kept secret. As far as we are aware neither the US nor Japan has any information on the flight recorders. We have made necessary efforts in order to prevent any disclosure of the information in future." (Memo 5.) ==Death and legacy==