Nikolai Yevgenievich Solovtsov (Russian: Николай Евгеньевич Соловцов; born 1 January 1949) is a Russian former Russian Strategic Missile Forces colonel general.

He joined the Soviet Armed Forces in 1966. He graduated from the Rostov Higher Military Command Engineering School named after the Chief Marshal of Artillery M. I. Nedelin (1966–1971), the Dzerzhinsky Military Academy (1974–1977); The academic courses of the same academy (1984), and the Military Academy of the General Staff (1991, external). He was promoted to colonel general in 1995.

He commanded the 35th Rocket Division (1984–89), the 53rd Rocket Army, and later became Commander, Strategic Rocket Forces (April 27, 2001 - July–August 2009). He was the first officer to occupy the post as Commander, rather than as Commander-in-Chief, of the SRF. In early 2009, Solovtsov said that 96% of all Russian ICBMs were ready to be launched within a minute's notice.[citation needed]

Solovtsov was dismissed in July–August 2009. Speculation over why Solovtsov was dismissed included opposition to further cuts in deployed nuclear ballistic missile warheads below the April 2009 figure of 1,500,[citation needed] the fact that he had reached the retirement age of 60, despite that he had recently been extended another year's service, or the failure of the Russian Navy's Bulava missile.

Military offices

Military offices
Preceded byVladimir MuravyovCommander of the 53rd Rocket Army 1992–1994Succeeded byYuri Kirillov
Preceded byAleksandr VolkovFirst Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Strategic Rocket Forces 1994–1997Succeeded byAnatoly Perminov
Preceded byYuri PlotnikovDirector of the Peter the Great Military Academy 1997–2001Succeeded byYuri Kirillov
Preceded byVladimir YakovlevCommander of the Strategic Rocket Forces 2001–2009Succeeded byAndrey Shvaichenko