Due to his political views and personal style, Alksnis was nicknamed "the Black Colonel",[6][7][8] an allusion to the Soviet term "Black Colonels" (Russian: Чёрные полковники) for the Greek military junta of 1967-1974.
Alksnis's grandmother spent 14 years in labor camps and his father was discriminated for being the son of an "enemy of the people".[10]
During the destalinization of late 1950s Yakov Alksnis was posthumously rehabilitated; the Air Forces college in Riga was named in his honour. Despite these Stalin-era persecutions of his family members, Viktor Alksnis became a staunch supporter of the Soviet political system.
In 1973 Alksnis graduated from the Riga Higher Military Aviation Engineering School named for his grandfather as a qualified military radio engineer.[4]
Alksnis's Latvian heritage was the subject of slander allegations in 2007 involving comments on the Internet.[11]
Attitude to the breakup of the USSR
Viktor Alksnis was a strong opponent of the breakup of the Soviet Union and of the independence of the Baltic States.[12] He claims that the Baltic States are apartheid regimes, that the Russian population in these states suffers repression.[citation needed]
In 1989, he was elected into the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. In 1990, he was elected to the Supreme Council of the Republic of Latvia. In 1990, he was one of the founders of a hard-line group "Soyuz" within the USSR Supreme Soviet.[13] He once proposed the ousting of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev from power, dissolving the parliament, outlawing all parties, the declaration of martial law and the handing of power to a Military "Committee of National Salvation", which would avoid the disintegration of the Soviet Union.[14][15]
He has described the internationally non-recognized Transnistrian Republic as the base from which the restoration of the Soviet Union would begin.[16]
He was designated persona non grata in Latvia after he left the country in 1992.,[12] in Pravda, 1 November 2002. Since that time he has taken part in Russian politics, representing left-wing and nationalist positions. Alksnis was one of the leaders of the National Salvation Front that united nationalist and communist movements that opposed Yeltsin's policies. In 2005, he was named persona non grata in Ukraine as well, after he called for a Russian-Ukrainian border revision while speaking at a rally in Simferopol, Crimea.
Free software advocacy campaign
In 2007, Alksnis launched a campaign to promote the use of Free Software such as the Linux operating system in Russian state institutions to secure software independence.[18][19][20]
Alksnis has met with project coordinator Aleksey Bragin to promote the development of the ReactOS operating system.[22] He also invited Richard Stallman, the founder of the GNU project and Free Software Foundation to Moscow.[23] The visit however was canceled by Stallman due to the controversy surrounding Alksnis.
Views on global politics
In 2006, Alksnis said in an interview that Israel and the United States are enemies of Iran's peaceful nuclear program, and their hostile attitude towards Iran is an attempt to cover up the United States' mistakes in Iraq.[24]
^"Hardliner helped topple leading Soviet reformers; Viktor Alksnis influential as Kremlin turns to right" in The Ottawa Citizen, February 12, 1991, p. E11
^Азар, Илья (2007-03-06). ЖЖ-лузер. Газета.Ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2008-03-17.
^"Mayday for the USSR", in Jerusalem Post, May 3, 1991, p. 6
^"Colonel Urges Shifting of Rule From Gorbachev", in Boston Globe, November 17, 1990, p. 9
^John Mackinlay and Peter Cross (editors), Regional Peacekeepers: The Paradox of Russian Peacekeeping, United Nations University Press, 2003, p. 137. ISBN92-808-1079-0