Valery Asapov

Valery Grigorievich Asapov (Валерий Григорьевич Асапов; 1 January 1966 – 23 September 2017) was Lieutenant General in the Russian Army. According to the Russian Defence Ministry, he was killed on 23 September 2017 by mortar fire from ISIL militants near the city of Deir ez-Zor during the Russian military campaign in the course of the Syrian Civil War. Asapov's position in Syria was described by the Ministry of Defence as the chief of the group of Russian military advisers in Syria.

Education and career
Valery Asapov was born in Malmyzhsky District, Kirov Oblast, to a working-class family as the eldest of four brothers in the family. He graduated from the Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School and was commissioned lieutenant in 1987.

He began his military career in the 76th Guards Airborne Division, based in Pskov, having grown to the position of a battalion commander.

In 1992–1993, Valery Asapov served in South Ossetia. In January 1995, he was sent to Chechnya in Southern Russia. He was seriously wounded during the battle of Grozny in the course of the first First Chechen War. He was operated on four times in various medical institutions and fully recovered a year after, but remained lame.

He entered the Frunze Academy in 1997 and took a degree in 2000, whereafter he was appointed deputy commander of the former 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment that was then part of the peace-keeping force stationed in Georgia's breakaway region of  Abkhazia. In 2001, he was appointed commander of the 345th Independent Guards Airborne Regiment. In 2003, Colonel Asapov became first deputy Commander of the 98th Guards Airborne Division based in Ivanovo and 18 months later he became chief of staff of the division. In 2003—2004, he participated in the Second Chechen War.

In 2007, he was transferred from the Airborne Troops to the Ground Troops and became commander of the 18th Machine Gun Artillery Division based in the Kuril Islands in the Far East.

In 2011, he graduated from the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia. In June, Col Valery Asapov was appointed commander of the 37th Guards Independent Motor Rifle Brigade (in Kyakhta) of the 36th Army stationed in Buryatia.

On 23 February 2013, Col Valery Asapov, then commander of the Motor Rifle brigade, was awarded the 4th Class of the Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" by Russian president Vladimir Putin.

In early 2014, Asapov assumed command of the 68th Army Corps that was reinstated on the basis of the units already stationed in Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands: the 18th Machine Gun Artillery Division, and the 39th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade.

In July 2015, he was transferred to the Southern Military District, and, according to Ukrainian Army's Intelligence Department as well as other sources, under the alias of "Primakov" participated in the Russian military intervention in Ukraine as commander of the Donetsk People's Republic's 1st Army Corps.

In August 2016, Lt Gen Valery Asapov was appointed commander of the 5th Red Banner Army. Since February 2017, he was seconded to Syria, where he headed a group of Russian military advisers, according to the Russian official sources. He was unofficially said to have been assigned to the command post of the Syrian Army's 5th Corps shortly before his death.

On 23 September 2017, he was killed by ISIS in the course of the fighting near Deir ez-Zor by fire from ISIL while assisting the Syrian army.

He was buried with full military honors in the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery near Moscow on 27 September; the funeral was attended by the Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov. Gerasimov acknowledged Asapov's ″invaluable help to the Syrian army's command in planning and conducting military operations against international terrorists″.

Official reactions and investigation
Shortly after his death, Russian deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said, "The death of the Russian commander is the price, the bloody price, for two-faced American policy in Syria".

A senior member of the Federation Council said that there was intelligence indicating the killing had been facilitated by treason and the relevant investigation was ongoing.

On 26 September 2017, Russia's media reported that, according to the preliminary investigation being conducted by the government of Syria, the killing of Asapov was made possible as a result of the leaking of information about his precise location to the enemy.