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Defying gender barriers in the Red Army, she commanded tanks against Nazi Germany

By Harsh Thakor* 
Aleksandra Grigorievna Samusenko occupies a permanent niche in the history of the Red Army. She symbolised, in a stark way, the very essence of Soviet armoured warfare and the human price it demanded. Born in 1922, she belonged to a generation crushed by World War II before even reaching adulthood. As she emerged from adolescence, she entered the army at a time when the Soviet Union’s very existence was under threat.
Samusenko was a woman who defied conventional gender norms and societal expectations to fight for her country during one of the most challenging periods in history. As a Soviet World War II heroine, Samusenko played a notable role in the war effort and contributed to the eventual defeat of Nazi forces.
Samusenko died on March 3, 1945. According to one account, she was accidentally crushed by a Soviet tank in the darkness of night; another claims she was struck by a retreating German vehicle. A third version suggests she was mortally wounded by fire from a German self-propelled gun.
Credited with leading survivors out of a German ambush, she later became the only known female tank battalion commander in the Red Army after her position was made permanent. She is also remembered as the Soviet tank officer who allowed Joseph Beyrle, an American paratrooper and escaped prisoner of war, to assist her unit with engineering and demolition work in January 1945.
Samusenko combined courage, military skill and revolutionary commitment. Confronting the harshest dangers, she helped sustain the fighting spirit of her unit and contributed to counter-offensives launched under extremely adverse conditions. Her conduct left a lasting impression on those who fought alongside her.
Her qualities were often described as methodical and composed under fire, with the ability to make quick decisions amid chaos. There was little heroic posing or theatrical display in her demeanour. Photographs show a young officer in a standard uniform, sometimes bearing the badge of the Guards, her face marked by experience and her gaze direct and unsentimental. Being a woman in a tank crew on the Eastern Front brought no privileges; it meant constant vigilance, where even a small error could prove fatal.
Samusenko came to symbolise a sacrificed generation of tank crews for whom every mission might be the last. Her journey also testifies to the genuine place Soviet women held in direct combat—not as romanticised figures, but as full-fledged fighters carrying the same risks, fears and psychological strain as their male comrades.
Ultimately, Aleksandra Grigorievna Samusenko represents the paradoxical union of youth and steel, human fragility and the brutal machinery of total industrial war.
It remains unusual that Samusenko, from around 1934 or 1935 according to various sources, became a pupil within the Red Army, effectively a “daughter of the regiment.” How a twelve-year-old girl came to link her fate with the army remains unclear; perhaps misfortune befell her family or her parents had died.
From the beginning, Samusenko served with the armoured troops, one of the most complex and dangerous branches on the Eastern Front. She began as a driver-mechanic, a position demanding technical mastery and considerable physical endurance. Soviet tanks imposed harsh working conditions: scorching heat in summer, biting cold in winter, the constant smell of oil, fuel and gunpowder, and the relentless roar of engines and tracks. Every sortie was perilous, with death potentially arriving in the form of an anti-tank shell, a mine or an enemy aircraft.
In 1943, Samusenko was promoted to officer in the 1st Guards Tank Army, an elite formation engaged in some of the most decisive battles of the war. Such promotion reflected both competence and reliability in an army where failure could bring severe consequences.
She had already taken part in the heavy fighting of the summer and autumn of 1941 while serving on the Western and Bryansk Fronts. During the battles of August and October that year, she was slightly wounded. In total, she was wounded three times during the war, the last time seriously in September 1943. At one point she wrote to Mikhail Kalinin, Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, requesting assistance to enter tank school. Her request was granted.
In the summer of 1943, Samusenko took part in the Battle of Kursk as part of the Voronezh Front. By then she was a Guards senior lieutenant and served as a communications officer in the 97th Tank Brigade. At the end of July 1943 she was awarded the Order of the Red Star. The citation recorded that between July 19 and July 28 she remained in the brigade’s battle formations, ensuring accurate communication and timely reporting on the positions of units engaged in combat. Under enemy fire and air bombardment she delivered crucial orders that helped coordinate further operations.
By early 1945 she held the rank of captain and participated directly in the liberation of Poland from Nazi occupation. Fighting with her unit, she advanced more than 700 kilometres across Polish territory to the Oder River. In February 1945 she encountered the American paratrooper Joseph Beyrle, who had escaped from German captivity and briefly fought alongside Soviet troops.
Tank warfare on the Eastern Front was brutal and chaotic. Crews inside T-34 tanks endured extreme heat and suffocating conditions as their vehicles thundered across fields and steppes. Battles often involved hundreds of tanks clashing at close range, with crews firing on the move and manoeuvring constantly to avoid enemy fire. German Tiger tanks, with their superior armour and firepower, inflicted heavy losses on Soviet formations, yet Soviet forces continued pressing forward in massive numbers.
During one fierce engagement, Samusenko reportedly found herself facing several German Tiger tanks from the 3rd SS Panzer Division. Refusing to retreat, she steadied her crew and directed fire with determination. Despite intense enemy shelling, her tank fought aggressively at close range. Her actions during such engagements earned her the Order of the Red Star and reinforced her reputation for composure and leadership in combat. Later, when her commanding officer was killed, she assumed responsibility for the battalion and helped lead surviving tanks out of a dangerous firefight.
Samusenko was killed during the East Pomeranian Offensive. On March 3, 1945, she died from wounds received near the village of Żółtno close to the town of Łobez, today located in Poland’s West Pomeranian Voivodeship. She was later reburied in the central square of the town.
Accounts of her death differ. One version recounts that during a night march the column of the 1st Tank Brigade came under German fire. Samusenko had been sitting on the tank with other soldiers. When the shelling began she jumped down to take cover, but in the darkness the driver, unable to see those moving beside the vehicle, turned the tank and she was accidentally crushed beneath its tracks. Another version states that she died during a combat mission when the armoured vehicle she was travelling in encountered retreating German troops near Łobez. The driver was killed, the vehicle caught fire, and Samusenko continued firing back before she herself was fatally hit.
On April 10, 1945, Aleksandra Samusenko was posthumously awarded the Order of the Patriotic War (Second Class) for her active participation in offensive operations from January 15, 1945 and for successfully carrying out critical command tasks in battle.
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*Freelance journalist

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