Jānis Balodis (born Feb. 20, 1881, Trikata, Latvia, Russian Empire [now in Latvia]—died Aug. 8, 1965, Saulkrasti, Latvia, U.S.S.R.) was an army officer and politician who was a principal figure in the foundation and government of independent Latvia. He was commander in chief of the army and navy in Latvia’s war of independence and later was a cabinet member and vice president.
Graduated from the military academy at Vilnius in 1902 and commissioned an officer in the Russian army, Balodis was decorated for his service in the Russo-Japanese War (1904–05). He was wounded in action in East Prussia at the beginning of World War I and imprisoned by the Germans but eventually escaped and returned in November 1918 to Latvia. There the movement for national independence was asserting itself against both the Germans, to whom Bolshevik Russia had ceded the country in March 1918, and the Bolsheviks, who were now trying to reconquer it. Balodis took command of the Latvian national army on the death of Colonel Oskars Kalpaks in March 1919 and was officially appointed commander in chief in October. He defended the newly founded national state against Bolshevik, German-Balt, German, and White Russian attacks.
In 1925 Balodis was elected to the Latvian Saeima (parliament), and in December 1931 he became the minister of war. Appointed deputy prime minister in the cabinet of Kārlis Ulmanis on May 15, 1934, he became vice president when Ulmanis assumed the presidency on April 11, 1936. Shortly after the Soviet army occupied Latvia in June 1940, Ulmanis’ government was deposed, and in July 1940 Ulmanis and Balodis were arrested and deported to the Soviet Union. After several years Balodis was permitted to return to Latvia and was allotted a small pension.