Read Stalin and His Hangmen Online
Authors: Donald Rayfield
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Historical, #History, #Modern, #20th Century, #Europe, #General
49
. Head of SMERSH Viktor Abakumov,
c.
1946
50
. Abakumov after his arrest, 1951
51
. Latvians being deported to Siberia, 1946
52
. Show trial, 1938
53
. Vsevolod Meierkhold
54
. Meierkhold and a portrait of his wife Zinaida Raikh
55
. Charlatan biologist Trofim Lysenko, late 1930s
56
.
Geneticist Nikolai Vavilov, Lysenko’s victim, late 1930s
57
. Marina Tsvetaeva and her daughter Ariadna, 1925
58
. Nuclear physicist Piotr Kapitsa with Jewish actor Solomon Mikhoels, 1946
59.
Nine NKVD men:
a
. Leonid Zakovsky (Štubis), head of Leningrad NKVD, 1937
b
. Genrikh Liushkov, head of secret political section, defected to Japan 1938
c
. Baron Romuald Pillar von Pilchau, last aristocrat in NKVD
d
. Anatoli Esaulov, who interrogated Ezhov
e
. Vsevolod Merkulov, physics graduate and Beria’s deputy
f
. Akvsenti Rapava, head of Georgian NKVD, after his second arrest, 1953
g
. Bogdan Kobulov, Beria’s associate and NKVD representative East Germany
h
. General Vlasik, chief of Stalin’s household and tutor to his children, after his arrest, 1952
i
. Iakov Agranov, NKVD specialist for intellectuals and associate of Mayakovsky
ILLUSTRATION ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Except where indicated in the following list, all the photographs are reproduced courtesy of the David King Archive, London.
3 from Ostrovsky, Aleksandr,
Kto stoial za spinoi Stalina,
St Petersburg, Neva, 2002; 13 from Litvin, A. L.
et al
(eds.)
Boris Savinkov na Lubianke. Dokumenty;
18 from Kollontai, A. M.,
Diplomaticheskie dnevniki,
Moscow, Academia, 2001; 21, 24, 44, 45, 46 from Lakoba Archive, Hoover Institute, Stanford, USA, courtesy of Memed Jikhashvili; 25 from Chuev, Feliks,
Molotov: poluderzhavnyi vlastelin,
Moscow, Olma, 2002; 26, 27, 28 from Kirilina, Alla,
Neizvestnyi Kirov
, St Petersburg, Neva, 2001; 33 from Zviagintsev, A. G., Orlov Iu. G.
Raspiatye revoliutsiei: rossiiskie i sovetskie prokurory, 1922–36
, Moscow, ROSSPÈN, 1998; 35 from Memorial Society, Moscow; 39 from
Stalin i Kaganovich: perepiska, 1931–6 gg,
Moscow, ROSSPÈN, 2001; 41, 43, 59 a, b, e, g, h from Antonov-Ovseenko, A.,
Beriia
, Moscow, AST, 1999; 42, 50, 51, 59f from
Stoliarov, Kirill,
Igry v pravosudie,
Moscow, Olma, 2000; 47 from Petrov, N. V., Skorkin, K. V.,
Kto rukovodil NKVD 1934–41: spravochnik
, Moscow, Zven’ia, 1999; 48 from Gusliarov, Evgeni,
Stalin v zhizni
, Moscow, Olma, 2003; 55, 56 from Rokitianskii, Ia. G., Vavilov, Iu., N., Goncharov, V. A.,
Sud palacha. Nikolai Vivilov, v zastenkakh NKVD
, Moscow, Academia, 1999; 57 from Andreev A. F. (ed.),
Kapitsa, Tamm, Semionov v ocherkakh i pis’makh
, Moscow, Vagrius, 1998; 58 from
Marina Tsvetaeva, a Pictorial Biography
, Ann Arbor, USA, 1980
Chronology
Date | Russian and Soviet History | Stalin and His Hangmen |
1874 | Menzhinsky born | |
1877 | Russo-Turkish war | Dzierżyński born |
1878 | Stalin born | |
1881 | Tsar Alexander II murdered | Voroshilov born |
1887 | Lenin’s brother hanged | |
1889 | Mekhlis born | |
1890 | Molotov born | |
1891 | Volga famine begins | Iagoda born |
1893 | Franco-Russian entente | Lazar Kaganovich born |
1895 | Ezhov born | |
1896 | Tsar Nicolas II crowned | Dzierżyński’s mother dies |
1897 | Lenin sent to Siberia | |
1899 | Beria born; Stalin expelled from | |
seminary | ||
1900 | Lenin leaves for Europe | |
1903 | Bolsheviks split from socialists | |
1904 | Russo-Japanese war begins | |
1905 | Uprisings in Russia: constitution | |
1906 | Menzhinsky leaves for exile | |
1907 | Second and third Dumas | Stalin’s first wife dies |
convened | ||
1908 | Stalin in prison with Vyshinsky | |
1909 | Stalin’s father dies | |
1911 | Prime minister Stolypin | Peterss acquitted of murders |
murdered | ||
1912 | Fourth Duma convened | Lenin founds |
co-opted to Central Committee | ||
1913 | Strikes in major Russian cities | Stalin sent to Siberia |
1914 | First World War begins | |
1916 | Iagoda’s brother shot | |
1917 | Tsar abdicates March; Bolsheviks | Stalin in Politbiuro; Dzierżyński |
overthrow provisional | heads Cheka | |
government November | ||
1918 | Treaty of Brest-Litovsk signed; | Lenin fired on |
Bliumkin kills Count Mirbach | ||
1919 | Petrograd defended from Whites | Stalin and Dzierżyński in Perm |
1920 | War with Poland; Bolsheviks win | |
civil war | ||
1921 | Georgia invaded; Kronstadt | Iagoda deputy to Menzhinsky; |
rebellion; Volga famine | Ezhov’s first party job | |
1922 | New Economic Plan begins; | Stalin general secretary; |
Rapallo Treaty | Menzhinsky crushes Church and | |
deports academics | ||
1923 | Warsaw citadel blown up | Lenin incapacitated |
1924 | ‘Socialism in one country’ | Lenin dies; USSR founded |
1925 | Bukharin tells peasants, ‘Get | Savinkov falls to his death |
rich!’ | ||
1926 | Dzierżyński dies; Zinoviev | |
ousted | ||
1927 | Communists in Shanghai killed | Trotsky expelled from party |
1928 | Shakhty trial | Trotsky exiled |
1929 | Collectivization begins; first | Trotsky deported from USSR; |
five-year plan implemented | Bukharin ousted | |
1930 | After pause, elimination of kulaks | Menzhinsky ‘tries’ Prompartiia |
1932 | Second five-year plan | Stalin’s second wife kills herself |
1933 | Famine in Volga, Ukraine, | |
Kuban | ||
1934 | USSR joins League of Nations; | Menzhinsky dies; Kirov |
Union of Writers meets | murdered | |
1935 | Rationing ends | Iagoda general secretary of |
NKVD | ||
1936 | Soviet constitution promulgated; | Kamenev, Zinoviev shot; Ezhov |
Gorky dies | takes over NKVD; Lakoba killed | |
1937 | USSR intervenes in Spanish civil | Army purged; Great Terror starts; |
war; February–March plenum | Orjonikidze dies | |
starts purges | ||
1938 | Czechoslovakia invaded; | Bukharin, Iagoda shot; Beria |
Mandelstam dies in camp | takes over NKVD | |
1939 | Molotov – Ribbentrop pact; | |
Hitler and Stalin invade Poland | ||
1940 | Baltic states invaded; Finland | Ezhov shot; Trotsky murdered; |
attacked | Katyn massacres; Babel, Mikhail | |
Koltsov shot | ||
1941 | Hitler attacks USSR | Merkulov runs MGB |
1942 | Battle of Stalingrad | |
1943 | Kursk victory; Comintern | Abakumov runs SMERSH |
abolished | ||
1944 | Warsaw uprising; Baltic states | Deportations of Tatars, |
reoccupied | Kalmyks, Chechens, Karachai, | |
etc. | ||
1945 | Berlin falls | Stalin takes first holiday for nine |
years | ||
1946 | Nuremberg trials; Fulton speech | Abakumov takes over MGB; |
Zhdanov attacks poets | ||
1947 | Communist coups in east | Malenkov sent to Kazakhstan |
Europe; Death penalty suspended | ||
1948 | USSR quarrels with Yugoslavia | Mikhoels murdered; Zhdanov |
dies | ||
1949 | Soviet atomic test; NATO born; | Leningrad party purged |
Vyshinsky foreign minister | ||
1950 | Korean War; Death penalty | |
returns | ||
1951 | Riumin arrests Abakumov; | |
Rukhadze arrests Beria’s men | ||
1952 | Czech communists hanged | Kremlin doctors arrested |
1953 | Stalin dies 5 March; Beria | |
arrested June, shot December | ||
1954 | Riumin and Abakumov shot | |
1955 | Malenkov ousted by Bulganin | Rukhadze shot |
1956 | Khrushchiov’s ‘destalinization’ | Rodos, last Beria man, shot |
Preface
Everything might have come right in the course of time. Russian life could have been pulled into order… What bitch woke up Lenin? Who couldn’t bear the child sleeping?
There is no precise answer to this question…
Anyway, he himself probably didn’t know, although his supply of vengeance never dried up… And spiteful in his failure, he immediately started a revolution for all, so that nobody escaped punishment.
And our fathers followed him to Golgothas with banners and songs…
In Russia you mustn’t wake anybody.
Naum Korzhavin
I have tried, rather than write a new biography of Stalin or another history of the USSR, to examine Stalin’s path to total power and the means – and the men – which enabled him to hold on to it. The careers and personalities of Stalin’s henchmen occupy the foreground, especially the five who headed the security forces and secret police which we call by a sequence of different names: the Cheka (Extraordinary Commission), GPU and OGPU ((United) State Political Directorate), NKVD (People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs), MVD (Ministry of Internal Affairs) and MGB (Ministry of State Security). After Stalin, the latter became known as the KGB and is today the Russian FSB.
Of these five – Feliks Dzierżyński, Viacheslav Menzhinsky, Genrikh Iagoda, Nikolai Ezhov and Lavrenti Beria – the last two were appointed by Stalin, while the first three were induced to do his bidding. They were the instruments of a mind more malevolent than theirs. They looked after the means, while Stalin looked after the end. A study of their motivations and actions sheds a very strong light on Stalin’s tyranny.