Born at
Zima station in
Irkutsk Governorate, now a city in
Irkutsk Oblast. Son of a blacksmith (one of the political exiles) and a peasant woman. Before the
October Revolution of 1917, he moved to Kyrgyzstan with his family. Lived in the city of Przhevalsk (now
Karakol). He finished 2 classes of evening workers' school. Worked as a groom, hammerman, assistant blacksmith at the Uryuktinsky stud farm, from 1925 - a blacksmith in the village of
Sazanovka,
Issyk-Kul District, from 1928 to September 1929 - a member of the trade union committee of the Uryuktinsky stud farm in Karakol, from February 1929 - an instructor in the trade union committee of agricultural workers in the village of Sazanovka,
Kirghiz ASSR and an instructor of the district branch of the
trade union of agricultural workers in Karakol. In the autumn of 1929, the
Soviet-Chinese conflict on the
Chinese Eastern Railway arose. In October 1929, Nikolai Lyashchenko voluntarily joined the
Red Army to participate in the defense of the CER from Chinese militarists. The conflict was soon resolved, and he was sent to study at the
Lenin United Central Asian Military School in
Tashkent, from which he graduated in 1932. He was a member of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union since 1931. During his studies, as part of the combined cadet detachments, he repeatedly participated in combat operations against the
Basmachi movement in
Central Asia. For distinction in battle, he was awarded a personalized weapon. After finishing school, in 1932 he served in the 217th Rifle Regiment of the
73rd Rifle Division of the
Siberian Military District in
Omsk: rifle platoon commander, assistant commander and commander of a rifle company, deputy battalion commander, head of a sniper team, head of the regimental school for junior commanders. For the excellent combat training of the unit, in 1936 he was awarded his first order - the
Order of the Red Star. From May 1937 to October 1938, Major Lyashchenko participated in the
Spanish Civil War, was a
military advisor to the commanders of the division and corps of the Republican Army. He was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner. Immediately after returning to the Soviet Union, he was sent to study. In 1941 he graduated from the
Frunze Military Academy. From May 1941 - deputy commander of the 737th rifle regiment of the
206th Rifle Division in the
Odessa Military District in
Zaporozhye.
World War II Major Lyashchenko fought in the Great Patriotic War from the very first days. From June 25 - commander of the 2nd reserve rifle regiment of the 11th rifle brigade (Dnepropetrovsk), from July 13 - commander of the 972nd rifle regiment of the
255th Rifle Division. He took part in the defense of Dnepropetrovsk in August–September 1941, his regiment was the last to leave the city and blew up the bridges across the Dnieper behind them; then he took part in the
Tiraspol-Melitopol offensive and
Donbass defensive operations and in the
Barvenkovo–Lozovaya offensive. From February 1, 1942, he was deputy commander of the 255th rifle division on the
Southern Front. From March 7, 1942 he was the commander of the
106th Rifle Division. In May 1942, during the
Second Battle of Kharkov, the division was surrounded, but Lyashchenko led the greatly depleted, but still combat-ready units of the division to their own (on May 20, the division broke out of the encirclement, and on May 25, it was reintroduced into battle). During the
Voronezh-Voroshilovgrad defensive operation on July 17, 1942, he was surrounded for the second time on the
Southwestern Front in the
Millerovo area, and on August 3, he reached his own with a detachment of fighters. He was already officially declared
missing in action. After an
NKVD check in September 1942, he was demoted to deputy commander of the
18th Rifle Division on the
Volkhov Front. He took part in
breaking the
Siege of Leningrad. In March 1942, he was slightly wounded, and in July 1942, he was shell-shocked. From March 3, 1943 - commander of the
73rd Marine Rifle Brigade on the
Leningrad Front. From May 29, 1943 until the end of the war, he commanded the
90th Rifle Division as part of the
2nd Shock Army on the
Leningrad and
2nd Belorussian Front. In January 1944, Lyashchenko's division distinguished itself in the
Leningrad–Novgorod offensive, during which, with a blow from the
Oranienbaum Bridgehead, it broke through the German defenses that had been under construction for two and a half years, closed the encirclement ring around the enemy group and liberated the cities of
Ropsha and
Gatchina. In March 1944, he took part in
offensive battles in the
Pskov direction, which ended in failure. During the Vyborg Operation in June 1944, he distinguished himself in the capture of the city of
Uuras and the storming of the fortress city of
Vyborg. Lyashchenko was the first Soviet military
commandant of Vyborg. In September 1944, the
90th Rifle Division was transferred to the
Baltics, where it again distinguished itself in the liberation of the
Estonian SSR from the enemy (the
Tallinn offensive, during which the division not only broke through the German defenses, but over the next 10 days fought its way through almost 300 kilometers, liberating two cities and about 300 other settlements), in the
East Prussian,
East Pomeranian, and
Berlin Operations. General Lyashchenko's division liberated the cities of
Pärnu,
Osterode,
Gniew,
Starogard,
Danzig, and
Swinemünde. The last combat operation of the 90th Division was the landing on the island of
Rügen off the German coast. In total, during the war, the 90th Rifle Division was mentioned 16 times in the orders of the Supreme
Commander-in-Chief,
Joseph Stalin. Its commander, Major General Lyashchenko, was nominated for the title of
Hero of the Soviet Union in May 1945 for the breakthrough from the
Oder to
Rügen during the
Battle of Berlin (the division covered over 250 kilometers, captured 170 guns, 850 machine guns and over 5,000 prisoners). The nomination was signed by the commander of the 108th Rifle Corps
Vitaliy Polenov, he was supported by the commander of the 2nd Shock Army
Ivan Fedyuninsky, but he was not awarded the title of Hero, instead he was awarded a third Order of the Red Banner. On November 13, 1945, he signed an agreement with British Major General
Colin Barber, which is well known in Western historiography, on the
demarcation of the border between the
Soviet and
British occupation zones (which
later became the border between the
GDR and the
FRG) in the provinces of
Mecklenburg and
Schleswig-Holstein.
Post-war He commanded the 90th Rifle Division until February 1946, then was sent for training. In February 1948, Lyaschenko graduated from the
Voroshilov Higher Military Academy, and in 1957 and 1970 - the Higher Academic Courses at Voroshilov Military Academy of the General Staff of the USSR Armed Forces. After graduating from the academy, he successively commanded the 10th Mechanized Division in the
39th Army in
Transbaikal (since May 1948), the 11th Guards Rifle Corps in the
Moscow Military District (since October 1953), and the 12th Rifle Corps in the
North Caucasus Military District (since June 1956). From December 24, 1957 - First Deputy Commander of the
Turkestan Military District. From November 1963 — Commander of the
Volga Military District. From December 1965 — Commander of the Turkestan Military District. On February 22, 1968 Lyashchenko was awarded the military rank of
General of the Army. From August 1969 he served as Commander of the
Central Asian Military District, led the strengthening of the defense of the
Soviet-Chinese border after the
Border conflict near Lake Zhalanashkol in 1969. From November 1977 — Military Inspector-Adviser to the
Group of Inspectors General in the
Soviet Ministry of Defense. He was awarded the title of
Hero of the Soviet Union by decree of the
President of the USSR Mikhail Gorbachev on October 4, 1990 for courage and heroism shown on the fronts of the Great Patriotic War. In May 1992 he formally retired. After retirement, he actively participated in public life, appeared in the
press a lot. He lived in
Moscow. He died at the age of 91 and was buried at the
Kuntsevo Cemetery. From 1966 to 1971 he was a candidate member of the
Central Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union. From 1971 to 1981 he was a full member of that body. Deputy of the
Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union of the 7th-9th convocations (1966-1979). He was also a member of the Bureau of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Uzbekistan (1966-1971) and
Kazakhstan (1971-1976). Deputy of the
Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, deputy of the
Supreme Soviet of the Kyrgyz SSR. == Awards ==