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Anastas Mikoyan

Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan (English: /mkˈjɑːn/; Russian: Анаста́с Ива́нович Микоя́н; Armenian: Անաստաս Հովհաննեսի Միկոյան, romanizedAnastas Hovhannesi Mikoyan; 25 November 1895 – 21 October 1978) was an Armenian Communist revolutionary, Old Bolshevik and Soviet statesman. Having been elected to the Central Committee in 1923, he was the only Soviet politician who managed to remain at the highest levels of power within the Communist Party from the latter days of Lenin, through the eras of Stalin and Khrushchev, to his peaceful retirement under Brezhnev.

Anastas Mikoyan
Анастас Микоян
Անաստաս Միկոյան
Mikoyan in 1941
Chairman of the Presidium of the
Supreme Soviet
In office
15 July 1964 – 9 December 1965
Preceded byLeonid Brezhnev
Succeeded byNikolai Podgorny
First Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union
In office
28 February 1955 – 15 July 1964
PremierNikolai Bulganin
Nikita Khrushchev
Preceded byNikolai Bulganin
Succeeded byAlexei Kosygin
Additional positions
Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union
In office
27 April 1954 – 28 February 1955
PremierGeorgy Malenkov
In office
19 March 1946 – 5 March 1953
PremierJoseph Stalin
Minister of Foreign Trade
In office
15 March 1946 – 4 March 1949
PremierVyacheslav Molotov
Joseph Stalin
Preceded byHimself (as People's Commissar for Foreign Trade)
Succeeded byEvgeny Chvyalev
In office
24 August 1953 – 22 January 1955
PremierGeorgy Malenkov
Preceded byDmitry Pavlov
Succeeded byBasil Lark
Personal details
Born
Anastas Ovaneysovich Mikoyan

(1895-11-25)25 November 1895
Sanahin, Tiflis Governorate, Russian Empire
Died21 October 1978(1978-10-21) (aged 82)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Resting placeNovodevichy Cemetery, Moscow
CitizenshipSoviet
NationalityArmenian
Political partyCPSU (1918–1966)
Other political
affiliations
RSDLP (Bolsheviks) (1915–1918)
Spouse
Ashkhen Tumanyan
(m. 1920; died 1962)
Children5 (Stepan, Vladimir, Aleksei, Vano, and Sergo)
OccupationCivil servant, statesman
Signature
Central institution membership

Other offices held
  • 1938–45: People's Commissar for Foreign Trade
  • 1934–38: People's Commissar for Food
  • 1930–34: People's Commissar of Supplies
  • 1926–30: People's Commissar for Trade

An early convert to the Bolshevik cause, Mikoyan participated in the Baku Commune under the leadership of Stepan Shahumyan during the Russian Civil War in the Caucasus. In the 1920s, he served as the First Secretary of the North Caucasus region. During Stalin's rule, Mikoyan held several high governmental posts, including that of Minister of Foreign Trade. However, by the 1940s, Mikoyan began to lose favour with Stalin. In 1949, he lost his long-standing post of minister of foreign trade, and in October 1952, Stalin attacked him harshly at the 19th Party Congress. When Stalin died in 1953, Mikoyan again took a leading role in policy-making. Together, he and Khrushchev crafted the de-Stalinization policy and later he became First Deputy Premier under Khrushchev. Mikoyan's position during the Thaw made him the second most powerful figure in the Soviet Union at the time.

Mikoyan made several key trips to communist Cuba and to the United States, acquiring an important stature on the international diplomatic scene, especially with his skill in exercising soft power to further Soviet interests. In 1964 Khrushchev was forced to step down in a coup that brought Brezhnev to power. Mikoyan served as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, the nominal Head of State, from 1964 until his forced retirement in 1965.

Early life and career edit

 
Sanahin, Mikoyan's native village, in the Debed River valley of Armenia

Mikoyan was born to Armenian parents in the village of Sanahin, then part of the Tiflis Governorate of the Russian Empire (today part of Alaverdi in Armenia's Lori Province) in 1895. His father, Hovhannes, was a carpenter and his mother, a rug weaver. He had one younger brother, Artem Mikoyan, who would be the co-founder of the MiG aviation design bureau, which became one of the primary design bureaus of fast jets in Soviet military aviation.[1]

Mikoyan received his education at the Nersisian School in Tiflis and the Gevorgian Seminary in Vagharshapat (Echmiadzin), both affiliated with the Armenian Apostolic Church.[2] Religion, however, played an increasingly insignificant role in his life. He would later remark that his continued studies in theology drew him closer to atheism: "I had a very clear feeling that I didn't believe in God and that I had in fact received a certificate in materialist uncertainty; the more I studied religious subjects, the less I believed in God." Before becoming active in politics Mikoyan had already dabbled in the study of liberalism and socialism.[3]

At the age of twenty, he formed a workers' soviet in Echmiadzin. In 1915 Mikoyan formally joined the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (later known as the Bolshevik Party) and became a leader of the revolutionary movement in the Caucasus.[2] His interactions with Soviet revolutionaries led him to Baku, where he became the co-editor for the Armenian-language newspaper Sotsyal-Demokrat and later for the Russian-language paper Izvestia Bakinskogo Soveta.[2] During this time, he is said to have robbed a bank in Tiflis with TNT and had his nose broken in street fighting.[4]

Baku Commune edit

 
1925 Soviet poster: "We will never forget the 26 murdered by English imperialists. 1918, September 20."

After the February 1917 revolution that toppled the Tsarist government, Mikoyan and other Bolsheviks fought against anti-Bolshevik elements in the Caucasus.[2] Mikoyan became a commissar in the newly formed Red Army and continued to fight in Baku against anti-Bolshevik forces. He was wounded in the fighting and was noted for saving the life of fellow Party-member Sergo Ordzhonikidze.[5] Afterwards, he continued his Party work, becoming one of the co-founders of the Baku Commune under the leadership of Stepan Shaumian. In Baku, he worked as the editor of the commune's official Armenian newspaper Teghekatu, and as the political commissar supervising its armed Armenian militia. He directed the seizure of the banks in April 1918, and the defence of Baku against the advancing Turkish army in July 1918.[6]

After the fall of Baku, Shaumian and other Bolshevik leaders were arrested by the Centrocaspian Dictatorship. A commando unit, led by Mikoyan, organized their escape from prison, and they fled across the Caspian Sea to Krasnovodsk (today Türkmenbaşy in present-day Turkmenistan). However, at Krasnovodsk they were arrested by the Transcaspian Government, which was controlled by the British-allied Socialist Revolutionaries. The SR authorities executed the 26 Baku commissars, including Shaumian, on 20 September 1918 in the Turkmen desert.[7] It was only by accident that Mikoyan avoided their fate. As American journalist Harrison Salisbury wrote:

Had Mikoyan's name been on a list of the party leaders as it properly should have been he would have been held, as was Shaumian, and would have been executed with him—there would have been twenty-seven, not twenty-six commissars executed. By that simple accident Mikoyan escaped and Shaumian did not. All his life Mikoyan was to wonder over this accident, feeling somehow at fault that he had lived while his beloved leader, Shaumian, and his other comrades had died.[8]

After his release in February 1919, Mikoyan returned to Baku and resumed his activities there, helping to establish the Baku Bureau of the Caucasus Regional Committee (kraikom).[9] In the middle of the Russian Civil War, the Central Committee assigned Mikoyan to the party organization in Nizhny Novgorod in 1920. In 1922-26, he became Secretary of the South East Bureau of the Communist Party and its successor, the North Caucasus kraikom. It was in that position that Mikoyan advocated granting Chechnya autonomous status.[10] In 1923, he was elected to the Central Committee and remained a member of that body for more than 50 years.

Politburo member edit

 
The Caucasus trio: From left to right, Mikoyan, Joseph Stalin and Sergo Ordzhonikidze in 1925

Mikoyan supported Stalin, whom he had first met in 1919, in the power struggle that followed Lenin's death in 1924;[11] During the 11th Congress of the CPSU, in 1922, before the power struggle between Stalin and Leon Trotsky had broken out into the open, Mikoyan characterised Trotsky as "a man of the state but not of the party". By saying that -according to Trotsky's biographer, Isaac Deutscher, "he summed up what many members of the Old Guard thought but did not yet utter in public." [12]

As People's Commissar for External and Internal Trade from 1926, he imported ideas from the West, such as the manufacture of canned goods.[2] In 1935 he was elected to the Politburo and was one of the first Soviet leaders to pay goodwill trips to the United States in order to boost economic cooperation. Mikoyan spent three months in the United States, where he not only learned more about its food industry but also met and spoke with Henry Ford and inspected Macy's in New York. When he returned, Mikoyan introduced a number of popular American consumer products to the Soviet Union, including American hamburgers, ice cream, corn flakes, popcorn, tomato juice, grapefruit and corn on the cob.[13]

Mikoyan spearheaded a project to produce a home cookbook, which would encourage a return to the domestic kitchen. The result, The Book of Tasty and Healthy Food (Книга о вкусной и здоровой пище, Kniga o vkusnoi i zdorovoi pishche), was published in 1939, and the 1952 edition sold 2.5 million copies.[14] Mikoyan helped initiate the production of ice cream in the USSR and kept the quality of ice cream under his own personal control until he was dismissed. Stalin made a joke about this, stating, "You, Anastas, care more about ice cream, than about communism."[15] Mikoyan also contributed to the development of meat production in the USSR (particularly, the so-called Mikoyan cutlet), and one of the Soviet-era sausage factories was named after him.[16]

The Great Purge edit

In the late 1930s Stalin embarked upon the Great Purge, a series of campaigns of political repression and persecution in the Soviet Union orchestrated against members of the Communist Party, as well as the peasantry and unaffiliated persons. In assessing Mikoyan's role in the purges, historian Simon Sebag-Montefiore states that he "enjoyed the reputation of one of the more decent leaders: he certainly helped the victims later and worked hard to undo Stalin's rule after the Leader's death." Mikoyan tried to save some close-knit companions from being executed. However, in 1936 he enthusiastically supported the execution of Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev, claiming it to be a "just verdict." As with other leading officials in 1937, Mikoyan signed death-lists given to him by the NKVD.[17] The purges were often accomplished by officials close to Stalin, giving them the assignment largely as a way to test their loyalty to the regime.

In September 1937, Stalin dispatched Georgy Malenkov and Mikhail Litvin (1892-1938) of the NKVD to Yerevan, the capital of Soviet Armenia, in response to the death of Sahak Ter-Gabrielyan. Their mission was to oversee the purge of the Armenian Communist Party and its leaders First Secretary Amatuni Amatuni and NKVD chief Khachik Mughdusi, both Beria loyalists.[18] Stalin later dispatched Mikoyan too, in order to test his loyalty and send a signal to Soviet Armenian leaders.[18] Stalin did not trust Mikoyan due to his leniency towards the persecuted. In several instances, Mikoyan had intervened on behalf of his friends and colleagues to save them.[17] During his trip to Armenia, he tried, but failed, to save one individual (Daniel "Danush" Shahverdyan) from being executed.[18] However, on Stalin's orders, he led the attack during a stormy session of the Central Committee of the Armenian Communist Party in September 1937, during which Amatuni angrily called him a "liar."[19] More than a thousand people were arrested and seven of nine members of the Armenian Politburo were sacked from office.[20]

World War II edit

In September 1939, under the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union each carved out their own spheres of influence in Poland and Eastern Europe. The Soviets arrested 26,000 Polish officers in the eastern portion of Poland and in March 1940, after some deliberation, Stalin and five other members of the Politburo, Mikoyan included, signed an order for their execution as "nationalists and counterrevolutionaries".[21] When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941, Mikoyan was placed in charge of organizing the transportation of food and supplies. His son Vladimir, a pilot in the Red Air Force, died in combat when his plane was shot down over Stalingrad.[22] Mikoyan's main assignment throughout the war was supplying the Red Army with materiel, food and other necessities.[23]

Mikoyan is also credited for his significant role in the 1941 relocation of Soviet industry from the threatened western cities, such as Moscow and Leningrad, eastward to the Urals, Western Siberia, the Volga region, and other safer zones.[24]

In February 1942, by order of Stalin, Mikoyan became a Special Representative of the State Defense Committee. He had not been a member until that point because Beria believed he would be of more use in government administration.[25] Mikoyan was decorated with a Hero of Socialist Labor in 1943 for his efforts. In 1946, he became the Vice-Premier of the Council of Ministers.[26] As Minister of Foreign Trade, he was responsible for the dismantlement of industry and infrastructure in Soviet-occupied Eastern Germany for collection as reparations.[27]

Thaw and de-Stalinization edit

 
Anastas Mikoyan with Nikita Khrushchev (sitting left) in Berlin, 1957

Shortly before his death in 1953, Stalin considered launching a new purge against Mikoyan, Vyacheslav Molotov, and several other Party leaders. Mikoyan and others gradually began to fall out of favor and, in one instance, were accused of plotting against Stalin.[28] Stalin's plans never came to fruition, however, as he died before he could put them into motion.[5] Mikoyan originally argued against punishing Stalin's right-hand man, Beria, but later gave in to popular support among Party members for his arrest. Mikoyan remained in the government after Stalin's death, in the post of Minister of Trade under Malenkov.[29] He supported Nikita Khrushchev in the power struggle to succeed Stalin and became First Deputy Premier in recognition of his services.[30]

In 1956, Mikoyan helped Khrushchev organize the "Secret Speech", delivered by Khrushchev at the 20th Party Congress, which denounced Stalin's personality cult.[31] It was he, and not Khrushchev, who made the first anti-Stalinist speech at the 20th Congress.[32] Along with Khrushchev, he helped roll back some of the stifling restrictions on national cultures imposed during Stalin's time.[18] In 1954, he visited his native Armenia and gave a speech in Yerevan, where he encouraged Armenians to republish the works of Raffi and the purged writer Yeghishe Charents.[33] Behind the scenes, he assisted Soviet Armenian leaders in the rehabilitation of former "enemies" in the republic,[18] and worked with Lev Shahumyan (son of Stepan) and Gulag returnees Alexei Snegov and Olga Shatunovskaya on the process of de-Stalinization.[34][18]

In 1957, Mikoyan refused to back an attempt by Malenkov and Molotov to remove Khrushchev from power, and thus secured his position as one of Khrushchev's closest allies during the Thaw. He backed Khrushchev because of his strong support for de-Stalinization, and his belief that a triumph by the plotters might have given way to purges similar to those in the 1930s.[35] In recognition of his support and his economic talents, Khrushchev appointed Mikoyan First Deputy Premier[clarification needed].

In 1962, Khrushchev sent Mikoyan and Frol Kozlov to Novocherkassk to deal with growing unrest in the southern city. Although Mikoyan opposed force and sought dialogue with the demonstrators, Kozlov pushed for a harsh response, resulting in the Novocherkassk massacre.[36]

Foreign diplomacy edit

 
Mikoyan welcomes Kim Il Sung to Moscow at the Yaroslav Station, March, 1949

China edit

Mikoyan was the first Politburo member to make direct contact with the Chinese Communist Party chairman, Mao Zedong. He arrived at Mao's headquarters on 30 January 1949, one day before the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek was forced to abandon Nanjing, which was then China's capital, and move to Guangzhou. Mikoyan reported that Mao was proclaiming Stalin to be the supreme leader of world communism and 'teacher of the Chinese people', but in his report he added that Mao did not genuinely believe what he was saying.[37] It was at Stalin's behest that Mikoyan asked that the Chinese communists arrest the US journalist Sidney Rittenberg.[38]

Czechoslovakia edit

On 11 November 1951, Mikoyan made a sudden visit to Prague to deliver a message from Stalin to President Klement Gottwald insisting that Rudolf Slánský, former Secretary-General of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, should be arrested. When Gottwald demurred, Mikoyan broke off the interview to ring Stalin, before repeating the demand, after which Gottwald capitulated. This was the biggest single step towards the preparation of the Slánský Trial.[39] Mikoyan's role in the repression in Czechoslovakia was kept secret until the Prague Spring of 1968.

Hungary edit

In July 1956, Mikoyan visited the People's Republic of Hungary to oversee the removal of the dictator Mátyás Rákosi. He returned in October to gather information on the developing crisis caused by the revolution against the Hungarian Working People's Party government there. Together with Mikhail Suslov, Mikoyan traveled to Budapest in an armored personnel carrier, in view of the shooting in the streets. He sent a telegram to Moscow reporting his impressions of the situation. "We had the impression that Ernő Gerő especially, but the other comrades as well, are exaggerating the strength of the opponent and underestimating their own strength," he and Suslov wrote.[40] Mikoyan strongly opposed the decision by Khrushchev and the Politburo to use Soviet troops, believing it would destroy the Soviet Union's international reputation, instead arguing for the application of "military intimidation" and economic pressure.[41] The crushing of the revolution by Soviet forces nearly led to Mikoyan's resignation.[42]

United States edit

 
Mikoyan with John F. Kennedy and State Department interpreter Natalie Kushnir at the Oval Office, 1962.

Khrushchev's liberalization of hardline policies led to an improvement in relations between the Soviet Union and the United States during the late 1950s. As Khrushchev's primary emissary, Mikoyan visited the United States several times. Despite the volatility of the Cold War between the two superpowers, many Americans received Mikoyan amiably, including Minnesota Democrat Hubert Humphrey, who characterized him as someone who showed a "flexibility of attitude" and New York governor Averell Harriman, who described him as a "less rigid" Soviet politician.[43]

During November 1958 Khrushchev made an unsuccessful attempt to turn all of Berlin into an independent, demilitarized "free city", giving the United States, Great Britain, and France a six-month ultimatum to withdraw their troops from the sectors they still occupied in West Berlin, or he would transfer control of Western access rights to the East Germans. Mikoyan disapproved of Khrushchev's actions, claiming they violated "Party principle." Khrushchev had proposed the ultimatum to the West before discussing it with the Central Committee. Ruud van Djik, a historian, believed Mikoyan was angry because Khrushchev did not consult him about the proposal. When asked by Khrushchev to ease tension with the United States, Mikoyan responded, "You started it, so you go!"[44]

 
Mikoyan with Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi in Moscow, 1956

However, Mikoyan eventually left for Washington DC, which was the first time a senior governing member of the USSR's Council of Ministers visited the United States on a diplomatic mission to its leadership. Furthermore, Mikoyan approached the mission with unprecedented informality, beginning with phrasing his visa request to US Embassy as "a fortnight's holiday" to visit his friend, Mikhail Menshikov, the then Soviet Ambassador to the United States. While the White House was taken off guard by this seemingly impromptu diplomatic mission, Mikoyan was invited to speak to numerous elite American organizations such as the Council on Foreign Relations and the Detroit Club in which he professed his hopes for the USSR to have a more peaceful relationship with the US. While in Cleveland, Mikoyan gifted a troika to industrialist Cyrus Eaton and admired the city's Terminal Tower, which reminded him of the tower at Moscow State University.[45]

In addition to such well received engagements, Mikoyan indulged in more informal opportunities to meet the public such as having breakfast at a Howard Johnson's restaurant on the New Jersey Turnpike, visiting Macy's Department Store in New York City and meeting celebrities in Hollywood like Jerry Lewis and Sophia Loren before having an audience with President Dwight Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles.[46] Although Mikoyan failed to alter the US's Berlin policy,[47] he was hailed in the US for easing international tensions with an innovative emphasis on soft diplomacy that largely went over well with the American public.[48]

Mikoyan disapproved of Khrushchev's walkout from the 1960 Paris Summit over the U-2 Crisis of 1960, which he believed kept tension in the Cold War high for another fifteen years. However, throughout this time, he remained Khrushchev's closest ally in the upper echelons of the Soviet leadership. As Mikoyan later noted, Khrushchev "engaged [in] inexcusable hysterics".[49]

In November 1963 Mikoyan was asked by Khrushchev to represent the USSR at President John F. Kennedy's funeral.[50] At the funeral ceremony, Mikoyan appeared visibly shaken by the president's death and was approached by Jacqueline Kennedy, who took his hand and conveyed to him the following message: "Please tell Mr. Chairman [Khrushchev] that I know he and my husband worked together for a peaceful world, and now he and you must carry on my husband's work."[51]

Cuba and the Missile Crisis edit

The Soviet government welcomed the overthrow of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista by Fidel Castro's pro-socialist rebels in the Cuban Revolution of 1959. Khrushchev realized the potential of a Soviet ally in the Caribbean and dispatched Mikoyan as one of the top diplomats in Latin America. He was the first Soviet official to visit Cuba after the revolution, except for Soviet intelligence officers, and he secured important trade agreements with the new government.[47] He left Cuba with a very positive impression, saying that the atmosphere there made him feel "as though I had returned to my childhood."[52]

Khrushchev told Mikoyan of his idea of shipping Soviet missiles to Cuba. Mikoyan was opposed to the idea, and was even more opposed to giving the Cubans control over the Soviet missiles.[47] In early November 1962, after the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to a framework to remove Soviet nuclear missiles from Cuba, Khrushchev dispatched Mikoyan to Havana to help persuade Castro to cooperate in the withdrawal.[53][54] Just prior to beginning negotiations with Castro, Mikoyan was informed about the death of his wife, Ashkhen, in Moscow; rather than return there for the funeral, Mikoyan opted to stay and sent his son Sergo there instead.[55]

Castro was adamant that the missiles remain but Mikoyan, seeking to avoid a full-fledged confrontation with the United States, attempted to convince him otherwise. He told Castro, "You know that not only in these letters but today also, we hold to the position that you will keep all the weapons and all the military specialists with the exception of the 'offensive' weapons and associated service personnel, which were promised to be withdrawn in Khrushchev's letter [of October 27]."[56] Castro balked at the idea of further concessions, namely the removal of the Il-28 bombers and tactical nuclear weapons still left in Cuba. But after several tense and grueling weeks of negotiations, he finally relented, and the missiles and the bombers were removed in December of that year.[57]

Head of state and retirement edit

On 15 July 1964, Mikoyan was appointed as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, replacing Leonid Brezhnev, who received a promotion within the Party. Mikoyan's new position was largely ceremonial; it was noted that his declining health and old age were being considered.[58]

Some historians are convinced that by 1964 Mikoyan believed that Khrushchev had turned into a liability to the Party, and that he was involved in the October 1964 coup that brought Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin to power.[59] However, William Taubman disputes this, as Mikoyan was the only member of the Presidium (the name for the Politburo at this time) to defend Khrushchev. Mikoyan, however, did vote to force Khrushchev's retirement (so as, in traditional Soviet style, to make the vote unanimous). Alone among Khrushchev's colleagues, Mikoyan wished the former leader well in his retirement, and he, alone, visited Khrushchev at his dacha a few years later. Mikoyan laid a wreath and sent a letter of condolence at Khrushchev's funeral in 1971.[60]

Due to his partial defense of Khrushchev during his ouster, Mikoyan lost his high standing with the new Soviet leadership. The Politburo forced Mikoyan to retire from his seat in the Politburo due to old age. Mikoyan quickly also lost his post as head of state and was succeeded in this post by Nikolai Podgorny on 9 December 1965.[61] In retirement, Mikoyan, like Khrushchev, wrote frank but selective memoirs from his political career, including his revolutionary activity in Baku.[62] He died on 21 October 1978, at the age of 82, from natural causes and was buried at Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow. He received six commendations of the Order of Lenin.[2][63]

Personality and legacy edit

 
The Mikoyan Brothers Museum in Sanahin, Alaverdi, Armenia

Simon Sebag-Montefiore referred to Mikoyan as "slim, circumspect, wily and industrious". An intelligent man, he had the command of several languages. In addition to Armenian and Russian, he understood English and learned German on his own by translating the German version of Karl Marx's Das Kapital into Russian. Unlike many others, Mikoyan was not afraid to get into heated arguments with Stalin. "One was never bored with Mikoyan", Artyom Sergeev notes, while Khrushchev called him a true cavalier. However, Khrushchev warned of trusting "that shrewd fox from the east."[64] In a close conversation with Vyacheslav Molotov and Nikolai Bukharin, Stalin referred to Mikoyan as a "duckling in politics"; he noted, however, that if Mikoyan ever took a serious shot he would improve.[65] Mikoyan had five boys (Stepan, Vladimir, Aleksei, Vano, and Sergo), and adopted the two sons of the late Bolshevik leader Stepan Shahumyan. He had so many children under his care that he and his wife faced financial problems. His wife Ashkhen would borrow money from Politburo wives who had fewer children. If Mikoyan had discovered this, he would, according to his children, have become furious.[66]

Mikoyan was defiantly proud of his Armenian identity, and in a 1959 meeting with U.S. Vice President Richard Nixon in Washington, he even raised the issue of the treatment of the Armenians in Turkey.[67] He greatly enjoyed meeting fellow Armenians abroad, including former U.S. ambassador Edward Djerejian.[68] However, in post-Soviet Armenia, Mikoyan's legacy is contentious.[69] His critics point to his participation in the 1930s purges in Armenia on the orders of Stalin.[69] His supporters argue that he was a major figure on the global political stage and usually point to his role in defusing the Cuban missile crisis.[69] Others emphasize Mikoyan's important role in de-Stalinization in Armenia, including his March 1954 speech in Yerevan and his significant involvement in rehabilitations.[18] Mikoyan's contributions to the development of the Soviet Armenian state included support for major economic projects, such as the Arpa–Sevan canal.[70] As a Supreme Soviet Deputy for Yerevan, he maintained close ties with Soviet Armenian leaders like Yakov Zarobyan and Anton Kochinyan and regularly consulted with them on Armenian affairs.[70] Although limited in his ability to assist Armenian leaders on Nagorno-Karabakh, he was sympathetic to Armenian concerns,[70][71] and his son Sergo was later a prominent advocate for the Karabakh movement.[72] Despite his break with the Armenian Church, Mikoyan maintained good relations with Catholicos Vazgen I.[73] He was also a supporter of composer Aram Khachaturian,[74] and counted Marshal Ivan Bagramyan among his personal friends.[75]

Dubbed the Vicar of Bray of politics and known as the "Survivor" during his time, Mikoyan was one of the few Old Bolsheviks who was spared from Stalin's purges and was able to retire comfortably from political life. This was highlighted in a number of popular sayings in Russian, including "From Ilyich [Lenin] to Ilyich [Brezhnev] ... without heart attack or stroke!"(Ot Ilyicha do Ilyicha bez infarkta i paralicha).[64] One veteran Soviet official described his political career in the following manner: "The rascal was able to walk through Red Square on a rainy day without an umbrella [and] without getting wet. He could dodge the raindrops."[64]

Portrayals edit

Paul Whitehouse played Mikoyan in the 2017 satirical film The Death of Stalin.[76]

Decorations and awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mikoyan, Stepan Anastasovich (1999). Stepan Anastasovich Mikoyan: An Autobiography. Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing. p. 522. ISBN 978-1-85310-916-4. LCCN 99488415. OCLC 41594812.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Միկոյան, Անաստաս Հովհաննեսի [Mikoyan, Anastas Hovhannesi] (in Armenian). Vol. vii. Yerevan: Armenian Academy of Sciences. 1981. p. 542.
  3. ^ Staff writer (16 September 1957). . Time. p. 2. Archived from the original on 22 November 2007. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  4. ^ Staff writer (23 December 1958). "Mikoyan: Soviet Union's Shrewd Trader". Milwaukee Sentinel. p. 7. Retrieved 8 May 2012.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b Staff writer (16 September 1957). . Time. p. 4. Archived from the original on 29 May 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  6. ^ Mikoyan's activities in Baku are treated in passim in Ronald Grigor Suny, The Baku Commune, 1917-1918: Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1972.
  7. ^ Suny, The Baku Commune, pp. 341–343.
  8. ^ Salisbury, Harrison (1988). Preface. The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan, Vol. 1: The Path of Struggle. By Mikoyan, Anastas I. Translated by O'Connor, Katherine T.; Burgin, Diana L. Madison, CT: Sphinx Press. pp. xii–xiii. ISBN 0-943071-04-6.
  9. ^ Hovannisian, Richard G. (1971). The Republic of Armenia: The First Year, 1918–1919. Vol. 1. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 401. ISBN 978-0-520-01984-3. LCCN 72129613. OCLC 797273730.
  10. ^ Marshall, Alex (2010). The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule. London: Routledge. pp. 163–164. ISBN 9780415410120.
  11. ^ For more on Mikoyan's and Stalin's first encounter see Stephen Kotkin, Stalin: Volume I: Paradoxes of Power, 1878-1928. New York: Penguin Press, 2014, p. 465.
  12. ^ Deutscher, Isaac (1989). The Prophet Unarmed, Trotsky 1921-1929. Oxford: Oxford U.P. p. 32. ISBN 0-19-281065-0.
  13. ^ Montefiore 2005, pp. 192–193n.
  14. ^ Russell, Polly; The history cook; The Financial Times (FT Weekend Magazine), 17/18 August 2013, p36.
  15. ^ (in Russian) Bogdanov, Igor A. Лекарство от скуки, или, История мороженого. Moscow: Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie, 2007, p. 100.
  16. ^ (in Russian) "."
  17. ^ a b Montefiore 2005, p. 256.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Shakarian, Pietro A. (12 November 2021). "Yerevan 1954: Anastas Mikoyan and Nationality Reform in the Thaw, 1954–1964". Peripheral Histories. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  19. ^ Conquest, Robert (1971). The Great Terror. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin. p. 341.
  20. ^ Tucker, Robert C. (1992). Stalin in Power: The Revolution from Above, 1928–1941. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 488–489. ISBN 978-0-393-30869-3. LCCN 89078047. OCLC 26298147.
  21. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 333.
  22. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 463.
  23. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 373.
  24. ^ Keegan, John (2005). The Second World War. New York: Penguin Books. p. 209.
  25. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 383.
  26. ^ Vasilyevich, Ufarkinym Nikolai. Анастас Иванович, Микоян [Mikoyan, Anastas Ivanovich] (in Russian). warheroes.ru. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
  27. ^ Naimark, Norman M. The Russians In Germany: a History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949. E-book, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1995
  28. ^ Service, Robert, Stalin: A Biography. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press, 2005, pp. 533, 577-80.
  29. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 662.
  30. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 666.
  31. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 652.
  32. ^ Staff writer (16 September 1957). . Time. Archived from the original on 29 May 2008. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  33. ^ Matossian, Mary Kilbourne (1962). The Impact of Soviet Policies in Armenia. Leiden: E.J. Brill. p. 201.
  34. ^ Cohen, Stephen F. (2011). The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag After Stalin. London: I. B. Tauris & Company. pp. 89–91. ISBN 9781848858480.
  35. ^ Laqueur, Walter (1990) [1965]. Russia and Germany: A Century of Conflict. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. p. 313. ISBN 978-0-88738-349-6. LCCN 89020685. OCLC 20932380.
  36. ^ Baron, Samuel H. (2001). Bloody Saturday in the Soviet Union: Novocherkassk, 1962. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 47, 56. ISBN 9780804740937.
  37. ^ Chang, Jung; Halliday, Jon (2007) [2005]. Mao, the Unknown Story. London: Vintage Books. pp. 416–417. ISBN 978-0-09-950737-6. OCLC 774136780.
  38. ^ Chang & Halliday 2007, p. 418.
  39. ^ Komunistická Strana C̆eskoslovenska, Komise pro vyr̆izování stranických rehabilitací. (1971). Pelikán, Jiří (ed.). The Czechoslovak Political Trials, 1950-1954: The Suppressed Report of the Dubcek Government's Commission of Inquiry, 1968. London: MacDonald & Co. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-356-03585-7. LCCN 72877920. OCLC 29358222.
  40. ^ Mikoyan, Anastas; Suslov, Mikhail (24 October – 4 November 1956). . Cold War International History Project Bulletin. Government of the Soviet Union. pp. 22–23 and 29–34. Archived from the original on 18 August 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
    • Note: See the Mikoyan-Suslov Report of 24 October in Johanna Granville.
  41. ^ Gati, Charles (2003). "Foreword". In Békés, Csaba; Byrne, Malcolm; Ranier, János M. (eds.). The 1956 Hungarian Revolution: A History in Documents. Budapest: Central European University Press. p. xv. ISBN 978-963-9241-66-4. OCLC 847476436.
  42. ^ Taubman 2004, p. 312.
  43. ^ Staff writer (26 January 1959). . Time. Archived from the original on 1 February 2011. Retrieved 19 January 2011.
  44. ^ Taubman 2004, p. 409.
  45. ^ Shakarian, Pietro A. (6 January 2019). "Cleveland visit 60 years ago this week of No. 2 Soviet official Anastas Mikoyan reflected a detente that served both nations well". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  46. ^ Kaplan, Fred (2009). 1959: The Year Everything Changed ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Hoboken, N.J.: J. Wiley & Sons. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-0-470-38781-8.
  47. ^ a b c Van Djik, Ruud (2008). Encyclopedia of the Cold War. Vol. 1. New York: Taylor & Francis. p. 586. ISBN 978-0-415-97515-5.
  48. ^ Kaplan (2009). 1959. J. Wiley & Sons. p. 13. ISBN 9780470387818.
  49. ^ Newman, Kitty (2007). Macmillan, Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis 1958–1960. New York: Taylor & Francis. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-415-35463-9.
  50. ^ Leffler, Melvyn P. (2007). For the Soul of Mankind: The United States, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War. New York: Hill and Wang. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-8090-9717-3.
  51. ^ According to then Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Jacqueline Kennedy's message was much shorter and to the point: "My husband's dead. Now peace is up to you": Douglass, James W (2008). JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 380. ISBN 978-1-4391-9388-4.
  52. ^ Taubman 2004, pp. 532–533.
  53. ^ See Mikoyan, Sergo; Svetlana Savranskaya (ed.) The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis: Castro, Mikoyan, Kennedy, Khrushchev, and the Missiles of November. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012.
  54. ^ Taubman 2004, pp. 580ff.
  55. ^ Khrushchev, Sergei; Benson, Shirley (2008). Nikita Khrushchev and the Creation of a Superpower. Vol. 1. University Park, PA: Penn State Press. pp. 652–653. ISBN 978-0-271-02170-6.
  56. ^ Savranskaya, Svetlana. "The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis: Castro, Mikoyan, Kennedy, Khrushchev, and the Missiles of November." George Washington University.
  57. ^ Matthews, Joe. "Cuban Missile Crisis: The Other, Secret One." BBC News Magazine. 12 October 2012. Retrieved 13 October 2012.
  58. ^ Staff writer (24 July 1964). . Time. p. 1. Archived from the original on 28 June 2011. Retrieved 14 February 2011.
  59. ^ Taubman 2004, pp. 3–17.
  60. ^ Khrushchev, Nikita (2006). Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev: Reformer, 1945–1964. Vol. 2. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State Press. p. 700. ISBN 978-0-271-02332-8.
  61. ^ Brown, Archie (2009). The Rise and Fall of Communism. New York: Ecco. p. 402. ISBN 978-0-06-113879-9.
  62. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 669.
  63. ^ Staff writer (17 December 1965). . Time. p. 1. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 14 February 2011.
  64. ^ a b c Montefiore 2005, p. 83n.
  65. ^ Montefiore 2005, p. 52.
  66. ^ Montefiore 2005, pp. 12n., 43–44.
  67. ^ "Document 97: Memorandum of Conversation: Vice President's Kremlin Conversation with Mikoyan". Office of the Historian - U.S. Department of State. 25 July 1959. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  68. ^ "Matlock and Djerejian talk Stalin's monument and meeting with Mikoyan". Mediamax. 23 May 2017. Retrieved 21 August 2022. 'Mikoyan asked, 'So you're Armenian, right?' When I confirmed, he clapped me on the shoulder and said he was glad Armenians were doing well in America,' Edward Djerejian recalled.
  69. ^ a b c Poghosyan, Yekaterina (29 May 2014). "Stalin's Man Mikoyan to Get Statue in Yerevan". Institute for War and Peace Reporting. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  70. ^ a b c "Q&A With Pietro Shakarian: On Anastas Mikoyan, Armenia and Karabakh". USC Institute of Armenian Studies. 16 September 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  71. ^ Astsatryan, Yeghishe [in Russian] (2004). XX դար. Հայաստանի կառուցման ճանապարհին (in Armenian). Yerevan: Edit Print. pp. 81–84.
  72. ^ Libaridian, Gerard, ed. (1988). The Karabagh File: Documents and Facts on the Question of Mountainous Karabagh, 1918-1988. Cambridge, MA: Zoryan Institute. p. 69.
  73. ^ Mikoyan, Anastas I. (2014). Так было. Размышления о минувшем (in Russian). Moscow: Центрполиграф. p. 48. ISBN 9785227051097.
  74. ^ Yuzefovich, Victor (1985). Aram Khachaturyan. Translated by Kournokoff, Nicholas; Bobrov, Vladimir. New York: Sphinx Press. p. 128.
  75. ^ Gasparyan, Albert (1992). I. C. Bagramyan. Moscow: MaRafon. pp. 300–303.
  76. ^ "The Death of Stalin".

Further reading edit

  • Cohen, Stephen F. (2011). The Victims Return: Survivors of the Gulag After Stalin. London: I. B. Tauris & Company. ISBN 9781848858480.
  • Medvedev, Roy A. (1984). All Stalin's Men. Translated by Shukman, Harold. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. ISBN 9780385190626.
  • Mikoyan, Anastas I. (1988). The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan, Vol. 1: The Path of Struggle. Translated by O'Connor, Katherine T.; Burgin, Diana L. Madison, CT: Sphinx Press. ISBN 0-943071-04-6.
  • Mikoyan, Anastas I. (2014). Так было. Размышления о минувшем (in Russian). Moscow: Центрполиграф. ISBN 9785227051097.
  • Mikoyan, Sergo A. (2012). Savranskaya, Svetlana (ed.). The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis: Castro, Mikoyan, Kennedy, Khrushchev, and the Missiles of November. Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center Press. ISBN 9780804762014.
  • Mikoyan, Stepan A. (1999). Stepan Anastasovich Mikoyan: An Autobiography. Translated by Mikoyan, Aschen. Shrewsbury: Airlife Publishing. ISBN 1-85310-916-9.
  • Pavlov, Mikhail (2014). Анастас Микоян. Политический портрет на фоне советской эпохи (in Russian). Moscow: Международные отношения. ISBN 9785713313647.
  • Sebag-Montefiore, Simon (2005). Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-7678-9.
  • Shakarian, Pietro A. (2021). An Armenian Reformer in Khrushchev's Kremlin: Anastas Mikoyan and the Politics of Difference in the USSR, 1953-1964 (Ph.D.). The Ohio State University.
  • Smith, Kathleen E. (2017). Moscow 1956: The Silenced Spring. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674972001.
  • Taubman, William C. (2004). Khrushchev: The Man and His Era. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-32484-6.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet
1964–1965
Succeeded by

anastas, mikoyan, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, ivanovich, family, name, mikoyan, anastas, ivanovich, mikoyan, english, ɑː, russian, Анаста, Ива, нович, Микоя, armenian, Անաստաս, Հովհաննեսի, Միկոյան, romanized, an. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Ivanovich and the family name is Mikoyan Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan English m iː k oʊ ˈ j ɑː n Russian Anasta s Iva novich Mikoya n Armenian Անաստաս Հովհաննեսի Միկոյան romanized Anastas Hovhannesi Mikoyan 25 November 1895 21 October 1978 was an Armenian Communist revolutionary Old Bolshevik and Soviet statesman Having been elected to the Central Committee in 1923 he was the only Soviet politician who managed to remain at the highest levels of power within the Communist Party from the latter days of Lenin through the eras of Stalin and Khrushchev to his peaceful retirement under Brezhnev Anastas MikoyanAnastas Mikoyan Անաստաս ՄիկոյանMikoyan in 1941Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme SovietIn office 15 July 1964 9 December 1965Preceded byLeonid BrezhnevSucceeded byNikolai PodgornyFirst Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet UnionIn office 28 February 1955 15 July 1964PremierNikolai BulganinNikita KhrushchevPreceded byNikolai BulganinSucceeded byAlexei KosyginAdditional positionsDeputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet UnionIn office 27 April 1954 28 February 1955PremierGeorgy MalenkovIn office 19 March 1946 5 March 1953PremierJoseph StalinMinister of Foreign TradeIn office 15 March 1946 4 March 1949PremierVyacheslav Molotov Joseph StalinPreceded byHimself as People s Commissar for Foreign Trade Succeeded byEvgeny ChvyalevIn office 24 August 1953 22 January 1955PremierGeorgy MalenkovPreceded byDmitry PavlovSucceeded byBasil LarkPersonal detailsBornAnastas Ovaneysovich Mikoyan 1895 11 25 25 November 1895Sanahin Tiflis Governorate Russian EmpireDied21 October 1978 1978 10 21 aged 82 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionResting placeNovodevichy Cemetery MoscowCitizenshipSovietNationalityArmenianPolitical partyCPSU 1918 1966 Other politicalaffiliationsRSDLP Bolsheviks 1915 1918 SpouseAshkhen Tumanyan m 1920 died 1962 wbr Children5 Stepan Vladimir Aleksei Vano and Sergo OccupationCivil servant statesmanSignatureCentral institution membership 1942 1945 Member State Defense Committee1935 1966 Full member 17th 18th 19th 20th 21st 22nd Politburo1926 1935 Candidate Member 14th 15th 16th 17th Politburo1923 1976 Full member 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th 22nd 23rd amp 24th Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Other offices held 1938 45 People s Commissar for Foreign Trade1934 38 People s Commissar for Food1930 34 People s Commissar of Supplies1926 30 People s Commissar for TradeAn early convert to the Bolshevik cause Mikoyan participated in the Baku Commune under the leadership of Stepan Shahumyan during the Russian Civil War in the Caucasus In the 1920s he served as the First Secretary of the North Caucasus region During Stalin s rule Mikoyan held several high governmental posts including that of Minister of Foreign Trade However by the 1940s Mikoyan began to lose favour with Stalin In 1949 he lost his long standing post of minister of foreign trade and in October 1952 Stalin attacked him harshly at the 19th Party Congress When Stalin died in 1953 Mikoyan again took a leading role in policy making Together he and Khrushchev crafted the de Stalinization policy and later he became First Deputy Premier under Khrushchev Mikoyan s position during the Thaw made him the second most powerful figure in the Soviet Union at the time Mikoyan made several key trips to communist Cuba and to the United States acquiring an important stature on the international diplomatic scene especially with his skill in exercising soft power to further Soviet interests In 1964 Khrushchev was forced to step down in a coup that brought Brezhnev to power Mikoyan served as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet the nominal Head of State from 1964 until his forced retirement in 1965 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Baku Commune 3 Politburo member 4 The Great Purge 5 World War II 6 Thaw and de Stalinization 7 Foreign diplomacy 7 1 China 7 2 Czechoslovakia 7 3 Hungary 7 4 United States 7 5 Cuba and the Missile Crisis 8 Head of state and retirement 9 Personality and legacy 10 Portrayals 11 Decorations and awards 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and career edit nbsp Sanahin Mikoyan s native village in the Debed River valley of ArmeniaMikoyan was born to Armenian parents in the village of Sanahin then part of the Tiflis Governorate of the Russian Empire today part of Alaverdi in Armenia s Lori Province in 1895 His father Hovhannes was a carpenter and his mother a rug weaver He had one younger brother Artem Mikoyan who would be the co founder of the MiG aviation design bureau which became one of the primary design bureaus of fast jets in Soviet military aviation 1 Mikoyan received his education at the Nersisian School in Tiflis and the Gevorgian Seminary in Vagharshapat Echmiadzin both affiliated with the Armenian Apostolic Church 2 Religion however played an increasingly insignificant role in his life He would later remark that his continued studies in theology drew him closer to atheism I had a very clear feeling that I didn t believe in God and that I had in fact received a certificate in materialist uncertainty the more I studied religious subjects the less I believed in God Before becoming active in politics Mikoyan had already dabbled in the study of liberalism and socialism 3 At the age of twenty he formed a workers soviet in Echmiadzin In 1915 Mikoyan formally joined the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party later known as the Bolshevik Party and became a leader of the revolutionary movement in the Caucasus 2 His interactions with Soviet revolutionaries led him to Baku where he became the co editor for the Armenian language newspaper Sotsyal Demokrat and later for the Russian language paper Izvestia Bakinskogo Soveta 2 During this time he is said to have robbed a bank in Tiflis with TNT and had his nose broken in street fighting 4 Baku Commune edit nbsp 1925 Soviet poster We will never forget the 26 murdered by English imperialists 1918 September 20 After the February 1917 revolution that toppled the Tsarist government Mikoyan and other Bolsheviks fought against anti Bolshevik elements in the Caucasus 2 Mikoyan became a commissar in the newly formed Red Army and continued to fight in Baku against anti Bolshevik forces He was wounded in the fighting and was noted for saving the life of fellow Party member Sergo Ordzhonikidze 5 Afterwards he continued his Party work becoming one of the co founders of the Baku Commune under the leadership of Stepan Shaumian In Baku he worked as the editor of the commune s official Armenian newspaper Teghekatu and as the political commissar supervising its armed Armenian militia He directed the seizure of the banks in April 1918 and the defence of Baku against the advancing Turkish army in July 1918 6 After the fall of Baku Shaumian and other Bolshevik leaders were arrested by the Centrocaspian Dictatorship A commando unit led by Mikoyan organized their escape from prison and they fled across the Caspian Sea to Krasnovodsk today Turkmenbasy in present day Turkmenistan However at Krasnovodsk they were arrested by the Transcaspian Government which was controlled by the British allied Socialist Revolutionaries The SR authorities executed the 26 Baku commissars including Shaumian on 20 September 1918 in the Turkmen desert 7 It was only by accident that Mikoyan avoided their fate As American journalist Harrison Salisbury wrote Had Mikoyan s name been on a list of the party leaders as it properly should have been he would have been held as was Shaumian and would have been executed with him there would have been twenty seven not twenty six commissars executed By that simple accident Mikoyan escaped and Shaumian did not All his life Mikoyan was to wonder over this accident feeling somehow at fault that he had lived while his beloved leader Shaumian and his other comrades had died 8 After his release in February 1919 Mikoyan returned to Baku and resumed his activities there helping to establish the Baku Bureau of the Caucasus Regional Committee kraikom 9 In the middle of the Russian Civil War the Central Committee assigned Mikoyan to the party organization in Nizhny Novgorod in 1920 In 1922 26 he became Secretary of the South East Bureau of the Communist Party and its successor the North Caucasus kraikom It was in that position that Mikoyan advocated granting Chechnya autonomous status 10 In 1923 he was elected to the Central Committee and remained a member of that body for more than 50 years Politburo member edit nbsp The Caucasus trio From left to right Mikoyan Joseph Stalin and Sergo Ordzhonikidze in 1925Mikoyan supported Stalin whom he had first met in 1919 in the power struggle that followed Lenin s death in 1924 11 During the 11th Congress of the CPSU in 1922 before the power struggle between Stalin and Leon Trotsky had broken out into the open Mikoyan characterised Trotsky as a man of the state but not of the party By saying that according to Trotsky s biographer Isaac Deutscher he summed up what many members of the Old Guard thought but did not yet utter in public 12 As People s Commissar for External and Internal Trade from 1926 he imported ideas from the West such as the manufacture of canned goods 2 In 1935 he was elected to the Politburo and was one of the first Soviet leaders to pay goodwill trips to the United States in order to boost economic cooperation Mikoyan spent three months in the United States where he not only learned more about its food industry but also met and spoke with Henry Ford and inspected Macy s in New York When he returned Mikoyan introduced a number of popular American consumer products to the Soviet Union including American hamburgers ice cream corn flakes popcorn tomato juice grapefruit and corn on the cob 13 Mikoyan spearheaded a project to produce a home cookbook which would encourage a return to the domestic kitchen The result The Book of Tasty and Healthy Food Kniga o vkusnoj i zdorovoj pishe Kniga o vkusnoi i zdorovoi pishche was published in 1939 and the 1952 edition sold 2 5 million copies 14 Mikoyan helped initiate the production of ice cream in the USSR and kept the quality of ice cream under his own personal control until he was dismissed Stalin made a joke about this stating You Anastas care more about ice cream than about communism 15 Mikoyan also contributed to the development of meat production in the USSR particularly the so called Mikoyan cutlet and one of the Soviet era sausage factories was named after him 16 The Great Purge editIn the late 1930s Stalin embarked upon the Great Purge a series of campaigns of political repression and persecution in the Soviet Union orchestrated against members of the Communist Party as well as the peasantry and unaffiliated persons In assessing Mikoyan s role in the purges historian Simon Sebag Montefiore states that he enjoyed the reputation of one of the more decent leaders he certainly helped the victims later and worked hard to undo Stalin s rule after the Leader s death Mikoyan tried to save some close knit companions from being executed However in 1936 he enthusiastically supported the execution of Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev claiming it to be a just verdict As with other leading officials in 1937 Mikoyan signed death lists given to him by the NKVD 17 The purges were often accomplished by officials close to Stalin giving them the assignment largely as a way to test their loyalty to the regime In September 1937 Stalin dispatched Georgy Malenkov and Mikhail Litvin 1892 1938 of the NKVD to Yerevan the capital of Soviet Armenia in response to the death of Sahak Ter Gabrielyan Their mission was to oversee the purge of the Armenian Communist Party and its leaders First Secretary Amatuni Amatuni and NKVD chief Khachik Mughdusi both Beria loyalists 18 Stalin later dispatched Mikoyan too in order to test his loyalty and send a signal to Soviet Armenian leaders 18 Stalin did not trust Mikoyan due to his leniency towards the persecuted In several instances Mikoyan had intervened on behalf of his friends and colleagues to save them 17 During his trip to Armenia he tried but failed to save one individual Daniel Danush Shahverdyan from being executed 18 However on Stalin s orders he led the attack during a stormy session of the Central Committee of the Armenian Communist Party in September 1937 during which Amatuni angrily called him a liar 19 More than a thousand people were arrested and seven of nine members of the Armenian Politburo were sacked from office 20 World War II editIn September 1939 under the Molotov Ribbentrop Pact Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union each carved out their own spheres of influence in Poland and Eastern Europe The Soviets arrested 26 000 Polish officers in the eastern portion of Poland and in March 1940 after some deliberation Stalin and five other members of the Politburo Mikoyan included signed an order for their execution as nationalists and counterrevolutionaries 21 When Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941 Mikoyan was placed in charge of organizing the transportation of food and supplies His son Vladimir a pilot in the Red Air Force died in combat when his plane was shot down over Stalingrad 22 Mikoyan s main assignment throughout the war was supplying the Red Army with materiel food and other necessities 23 Mikoyan is also credited for his significant role in the 1941 relocation of Soviet industry from the threatened western cities such as Moscow and Leningrad eastward to the Urals Western Siberia the Volga region and other safer zones 24 In February 1942 by order of Stalin Mikoyan became a Special Representative of the State Defense Committee He had not been a member until that point because Beria believed he would be of more use in government administration 25 Mikoyan was decorated with a Hero of Socialist Labor in 1943 for his efforts In 1946 he became the Vice Premier of the Council of Ministers 26 As Minister of Foreign Trade he was responsible for the dismantlement of industry and infrastructure in Soviet occupied Eastern Germany for collection as reparations 27 Thaw and de Stalinization edit nbsp Anastas Mikoyan with Nikita Khrushchev sitting left in Berlin 1957Shortly before his death in 1953 Stalin considered launching a new purge against Mikoyan Vyacheslav Molotov and several other Party leaders Mikoyan and others gradually began to fall out of favor and in one instance were accused of plotting against Stalin 28 Stalin s plans never came to fruition however as he died before he could put them into motion 5 Mikoyan originally argued against punishing Stalin s right hand man Beria but later gave in to popular support among Party members for his arrest Mikoyan remained in the government after Stalin s death in the post of Minister of Trade under Malenkov 29 He supported Nikita Khrushchev in the power struggle to succeed Stalin and became First Deputy Premier in recognition of his services 30 In 1956 Mikoyan helped Khrushchev organize the Secret Speech delivered by Khrushchev at the 20th Party Congress which denounced Stalin s personality cult 31 It was he and not Khrushchev who made the first anti Stalinist speech at the 20th Congress 32 Along with Khrushchev he helped roll back some of the stifling restrictions on national cultures imposed during Stalin s time 18 In 1954 he visited his native Armenia and gave a speech in Yerevan where he encouraged Armenians to republish the works of Raffi and the purged writer Yeghishe Charents 33 Behind the scenes he assisted Soviet Armenian leaders in the rehabilitation of former enemies in the republic 18 and worked with Lev Shahumyan son of Stepan and Gulag returnees Alexei Snegov and Olga Shatunovskaya on the process of de Stalinization 34 18 In 1957 Mikoyan refused to back an attempt by Malenkov and Molotov to remove Khrushchev from power and thus secured his position as one of Khrushchev s closest allies during the Thaw He backed Khrushchev because of his strong support for de Stalinization and his belief that a triumph by the plotters might have given way to purges similar to those in the 1930s 35 In recognition of his support and his economic talents Khrushchev appointed Mikoyan First Deputy Premier clarification needed In 1962 Khrushchev sent Mikoyan and Frol Kozlov to Novocherkassk to deal with growing unrest in the southern city Although Mikoyan opposed force and sought dialogue with the demonstrators Kozlov pushed for a harsh response resulting in the Novocherkassk massacre 36 Foreign diplomacy edit nbsp Mikoyan welcomes Kim Il Sung to Moscow at the Yaroslav Station March 1949China edit Mikoyan was the first Politburo member to make direct contact with the Chinese Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong He arrived at Mao s headquarters on 30 January 1949 one day before the Nationalist government of Chiang Kai shek was forced to abandon Nanjing which was then China s capital and move to Guangzhou Mikoyan reported that Mao was proclaiming Stalin to be the supreme leader of world communism and teacher of the Chinese people but in his report he added that Mao did not genuinely believe what he was saying 37 It was at Stalin s behest that Mikoyan asked that the Chinese communists arrest the US journalist Sidney Rittenberg 38 Czechoslovakia edit On 11 November 1951 Mikoyan made a sudden visit to Prague to deliver a message from Stalin to President Klement Gottwald insisting that Rudolf Slansky former Secretary General of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia should be arrested When Gottwald demurred Mikoyan broke off the interview to ring Stalin before repeating the demand after which Gottwald capitulated This was the biggest single step towards the preparation of the Slansky Trial 39 Mikoyan s role in the repression in Czechoslovakia was kept secret until the Prague Spring of 1968 Hungary edit In July 1956 Mikoyan visited the People s Republic of Hungary to oversee the removal of the dictator Matyas Rakosi He returned in October to gather information on the developing crisis caused by the revolution against the Hungarian Working People s Party government there Together with Mikhail Suslov Mikoyan traveled to Budapest in an armored personnel carrier in view of the shooting in the streets He sent a telegram to Moscow reporting his impressions of the situation We had the impression that Erno Gero especially but the other comrades as well are exaggerating the strength of the opponent and underestimating their own strength he and Suslov wrote 40 Mikoyan strongly opposed the decision by Khrushchev and the Politburo to use Soviet troops believing it would destroy the Soviet Union s international reputation instead arguing for the application of military intimidation and economic pressure 41 The crushing of the revolution by Soviet forces nearly led to Mikoyan s resignation 42 United States edit nbsp Mikoyan with John F Kennedy and State Department interpreter Natalie Kushnir at the Oval Office 1962 Khrushchev s liberalization of hardline policies led to an improvement in relations between the Soviet Union and the United States during the late 1950s As Khrushchev s primary emissary Mikoyan visited the United States several times Despite the volatility of the Cold War between the two superpowers many Americans received Mikoyan amiably including Minnesota Democrat Hubert Humphrey who characterized him as someone who showed a flexibility of attitude and New York governor Averell Harriman who described him as a less rigid Soviet politician 43 During November 1958 Khrushchev made an unsuccessful attempt to turn all of Berlin into an independent demilitarized free city giving the United States Great Britain and France a six month ultimatum to withdraw their troops from the sectors they still occupied in West Berlin or he would transfer control of Western access rights to the East Germans Mikoyan disapproved of Khrushchev s actions claiming they violated Party principle Khrushchev had proposed the ultimatum to the West before discussing it with the Central Committee Ruud van Djik a historian believed Mikoyan was angry because Khrushchev did not consult him about the proposal When asked by Khrushchev to ease tension with the United States Mikoyan responded You started it so you go 44 nbsp Mikoyan with Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi in Moscow 1956However Mikoyan eventually left for Washington DC which was the first time a senior governing member of the USSR s Council of Ministers visited the United States on a diplomatic mission to its leadership Furthermore Mikoyan approached the mission with unprecedented informality beginning with phrasing his visa request to US Embassy as a fortnight s holiday to visit his friend Mikhail Menshikov the then Soviet Ambassador to the United States While the White House was taken off guard by this seemingly impromptu diplomatic mission Mikoyan was invited to speak to numerous elite American organizations such as the Council on Foreign Relations and the Detroit Club in which he professed his hopes for the USSR to have a more peaceful relationship with the US While in Cleveland Mikoyan gifted a troika to industrialist Cyrus Eaton and admired the city s Terminal Tower which reminded him of the tower at Moscow State University 45 In addition to such well received engagements Mikoyan indulged in more informal opportunities to meet the public such as having breakfast at a Howard Johnson s restaurant on the New Jersey Turnpike visiting Macy s Department Store in New York City and meeting celebrities in Hollywood like Jerry Lewis and Sophia Loren before having an audience with President Dwight Eisenhower and Secretary of State John Foster Dulles 46 Although Mikoyan failed to alter the US s Berlin policy 47 he was hailed in the US for easing international tensions with an innovative emphasis on soft diplomacy that largely went over well with the American public 48 Mikoyan disapproved of Khrushchev s walkout from the 1960 Paris Summit over the U 2 Crisis of 1960 which he believed kept tension in the Cold War high for another fifteen years However throughout this time he remained Khrushchev s closest ally in the upper echelons of the Soviet leadership As Mikoyan later noted Khrushchev engaged in inexcusable hysterics 49 In November 1963 Mikoyan was asked by Khrushchev to represent the USSR at President John F Kennedy s funeral 50 At the funeral ceremony Mikoyan appeared visibly shaken by the president s death and was approached by Jacqueline Kennedy who took his hand and conveyed to him the following message Please tell Mr Chairman Khrushchev that I know he and my husband worked together for a peaceful world and now he and you must carry on my husband s work 51 Cuba and the Missile Crisis edit The Soviet government welcomed the overthrow of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista by Fidel Castro s pro socialist rebels in the Cuban Revolution of 1959 Khrushchev realized the potential of a Soviet ally in the Caribbean and dispatched Mikoyan as one of the top diplomats in Latin America He was the first Soviet official to visit Cuba after the revolution except for Soviet intelligence officers and he secured important trade agreements with the new government 47 He left Cuba with a very positive impression saying that the atmosphere there made him feel as though I had returned to my childhood 52 Khrushchev told Mikoyan of his idea of shipping Soviet missiles to Cuba Mikoyan was opposed to the idea and was even more opposed to giving the Cubans control over the Soviet missiles 47 In early November 1962 after the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to a framework to remove Soviet nuclear missiles from Cuba Khrushchev dispatched Mikoyan to Havana to help persuade Castro to cooperate in the withdrawal 53 54 Just prior to beginning negotiations with Castro Mikoyan was informed about the death of his wife Ashkhen in Moscow rather than return there for the funeral Mikoyan opted to stay and sent his son Sergo there instead 55 Castro was adamant that the missiles remain but Mikoyan seeking to avoid a full fledged confrontation with the United States attempted to convince him otherwise He told Castro You know that not only in these letters but today also we hold to the position that you will keep all the weapons and all the military specialists with the exception of the offensive weapons and associated service personnel which were promised to be withdrawn in Khrushchev s letter of October 27 56 Castro balked at the idea of further concessions namely the removal of the Il 28 bombers and tactical nuclear weapons still left in Cuba But after several tense and grueling weeks of negotiations he finally relented and the missiles and the bombers were removed in December of that year 57 Head of state and retirement editOn 15 July 1964 Mikoyan was appointed as Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet replacing Leonid Brezhnev who received a promotion within the Party Mikoyan s new position was largely ceremonial it was noted that his declining health and old age were being considered 58 Some historians are convinced that by 1964 Mikoyan believed that Khrushchev had turned into a liability to the Party and that he was involved in the October 1964 coup that brought Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin to power 59 However William Taubman disputes this as Mikoyan was the only member of the Presidium the name for the Politburo at this time to defend Khrushchev Mikoyan however did vote to force Khrushchev s retirement so as in traditional Soviet style to make the vote unanimous Alone among Khrushchev s colleagues Mikoyan wished the former leader well in his retirement and he alone visited Khrushchev at his dacha a few years later Mikoyan laid a wreath and sent a letter of condolence at Khrushchev s funeral in 1971 60 Due to his partial defense of Khrushchev during his ouster Mikoyan lost his high standing with the new Soviet leadership The Politburo forced Mikoyan to retire from his seat in the Politburo due to old age Mikoyan quickly also lost his post as head of state and was succeeded in this post by Nikolai Podgorny on 9 December 1965 61 In retirement Mikoyan like Khrushchev wrote frank but selective memoirs from his political career including his revolutionary activity in Baku 62 He died on 21 October 1978 at the age of 82 from natural causes and was buried at Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow He received six commendations of the Order of Lenin 2 63 Personality and legacy edit nbsp The Mikoyan Brothers Museum in Sanahin Alaverdi ArmeniaSimon Sebag Montefiore referred to Mikoyan as slim circumspect wily and industrious An intelligent man he had the command of several languages In addition to Armenian and Russian he understood English and learned German on his own by translating the German version of Karl Marx s Das Kapital into Russian Unlike many others Mikoyan was not afraid to get into heated arguments with Stalin One was never bored with Mikoyan Artyom Sergeev notes while Khrushchev called him a true cavalier However Khrushchev warned of trusting that shrewd fox from the east 64 In a close conversation with Vyacheslav Molotov and Nikolai Bukharin Stalin referred to Mikoyan as a duckling in politics he noted however that if Mikoyan ever took a serious shot he would improve 65 Mikoyan had five boys Stepan Vladimir Aleksei Vano and Sergo and adopted the two sons of the late Bolshevik leader Stepan Shahumyan He had so many children under his care that he and his wife faced financial problems His wife Ashkhen would borrow money from Politburo wives who had fewer children If Mikoyan had discovered this he would according to his children have become furious 66 Mikoyan was defiantly proud of his Armenian identity and in a 1959 meeting with U S Vice President Richard Nixon in Washington he even raised the issue of the treatment of the Armenians in Turkey 67 He greatly enjoyed meeting fellow Armenians abroad including former U S ambassador Edward Djerejian 68 However in post Soviet Armenia Mikoyan s legacy is contentious 69 His critics point to his participation in the 1930s purges in Armenia on the orders of Stalin 69 His supporters argue that he was a major figure on the global political stage and usually point to his role in defusing the Cuban missile crisis 69 Others emphasize Mikoyan s important role in de Stalinization in Armenia including his March 1954 speech in Yerevan and his significant involvement in rehabilitations 18 Mikoyan s contributions to the development of the Soviet Armenian state included support for major economic projects such as the Arpa Sevan canal 70 As a Supreme Soviet Deputy for Yerevan he maintained close ties with Soviet Armenian leaders like Yakov Zarobyan and Anton Kochinyan and regularly consulted with them on Armenian affairs 70 Although limited in his ability to assist Armenian leaders on Nagorno Karabakh he was sympathetic to Armenian concerns 70 71 and his son Sergo was later a prominent advocate for the Karabakh movement 72 Despite his break with the Armenian Church Mikoyan maintained good relations with Catholicos Vazgen I 73 He was also a supporter of composer Aram Khachaturian 74 and counted Marshal Ivan Bagramyan among his personal friends 75 Dubbed the Vicar of Bray of politics and known as the Survivor during his time Mikoyan was one of the few Old Bolsheviks who was spared from Stalin s purges and was able to retire comfortably from political life This was highlighted in a number of popular sayings in Russian including From Ilyich Lenin to Ilyich Brezhnev without heart attack or stroke Ot Ilyicha do Ilyicha bez infarkta i paralicha 64 One veteran Soviet official described his political career in the following manner The rascal was able to walk through Red Square on a rainy day without an umbrella and without getting wet He could dodge the raindrops 64 Portrayals editPaul Whitehouse played Mikoyan in the 2017 satirical film The Death of Stalin 76 Decorations and awards editHero of Socialist Labour Order of Lenin six times Order of the October Revolution Order of the Red BannerReferences edit Mikoyan Stepan Anastasovich 1999 Stepan Anastasovich Mikoyan An Autobiography Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing p 522 ISBN 978 1 85310 916 4 LCCN 99488415 OCLC 41594812 a b c d e f Միկոյան Անաստաս Հովհաննեսի Mikoyan Anastas Hovhannesi in Armenian Vol vii Yerevan Armenian Academy of Sciences 1981 p 542 Staff writer 16 September 1957 Russia The Survivor Time p 2 Archived from the original on 22 November 2007 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Staff writer 23 December 1958 Mikoyan Soviet Union s Shrewd Trader Milwaukee Sentinel p 7 Retrieved 8 May 2012 permanent dead link a b Staff writer 16 September 1957 Russia The Survivor Time p 4 Archived from the original on 29 May 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Mikoyan s activities in Baku are treated in passim in Ronald Grigor Suny The Baku Commune 1917 1918 Class and Nationality in the Russian Revolution Princeton Princeton University Press 1972 Suny The Baku Commune pp 341 343 Salisbury Harrison 1988 Preface The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan Vol 1 The Path of Struggle By Mikoyan Anastas I Translated by O Connor Katherine T Burgin Diana L Madison CT Sphinx Press pp xii xiii ISBN 0 943071 04 6 Hovannisian Richard G 1971 The Republic of Armenia The First Year 1918 1919 Vol 1 Berkeley University of California Press p 401 ISBN 978 0 520 01984 3 LCCN 72129613 OCLC 797273730 Marshall Alex 2010 The Caucasus Under Soviet Rule London Routledge pp 163 164 ISBN 9780415410120 For more on Mikoyan s and Stalin s first encounter see Stephen Kotkin Stalin Volume I Paradoxes of Power 1878 1928 New York Penguin Press 2014 p 465 Deutscher Isaac 1989 The Prophet Unarmed Trotsky 1921 1929 Oxford Oxford U P p 32 ISBN 0 19 281065 0 Montefiore 2005 pp 192 193n Russell Polly The history cook The Financial Times FT Weekend Magazine 17 18 August 2013 p36 in Russian Bogdanov Igor A Lekarstvo ot skuki ili Istoriya morozhenogo Moscow Novoe literaturnoe obozrenie 2007 p 100 in Russian Ceny na assortiment TD Agrotorg a b Montefiore 2005 p 256 a b c d e f g Shakarian Pietro A 12 November 2021 Yerevan 1954 Anastas Mikoyan and Nationality Reform in the Thaw 1954 1964 Peripheral Histories Retrieved 14 November 2021 Conquest Robert 1971 The Great Terror Harmondsworth Middlesex Penguin p 341 Tucker Robert C 1992 Stalin in Power The Revolution from Above 1928 1941 New York W W Norton amp Company pp 488 489 ISBN 978 0 393 30869 3 LCCN 89078047 OCLC 26298147 Montefiore 2005 p 333 Montefiore 2005 p 463 Montefiore 2005 p 373 Keegan John 2005 The Second World War New York Penguin Books p 209 Montefiore 2005 p 383 Vasilyevich Ufarkinym Nikolai Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan Mikoyan Anastas Ivanovich in Russian warheroes ru Retrieved 27 January 2011 Naimark Norman M The Russians In Germany a History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 E book Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1995 Service Robert Stalin A Biography Cambridge MA Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press 2005 pp 533 577 80 Montefiore 2005 p 662 Montefiore 2005 p 666 Montefiore 2005 p 652 Staff writer 16 September 1957 Russia The Survivor page 5 Time Archived from the original on 29 May 2008 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Matossian Mary Kilbourne 1962 The Impact of Soviet Policies in Armenia Leiden E J Brill p 201 Cohen Stephen F 2011 The Victims Return Survivors of the Gulag After Stalin London I B Tauris amp Company pp 89 91 ISBN 9781848858480 Laqueur Walter 1990 1965 Russia and Germany A Century of Conflict New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers p 313 ISBN 978 0 88738 349 6 LCCN 89020685 OCLC 20932380 Baron Samuel H 2001 Bloody Saturday in the Soviet Union Novocherkassk 1962 Stanford CA Stanford University Press pp 47 56 ISBN 9780804740937 Chang Jung Halliday Jon 2007 2005 Mao the Unknown Story London Vintage Books pp 416 417 ISBN 978 0 09 950737 6 OCLC 774136780 Chang amp Halliday 2007 p 418 Komunisticka Strana C eskoslovenska Komise pro vyr izovani stranickych rehabilitaci 1971 Pelikan Jiri ed The Czechoslovak Political Trials 1950 1954 The Suppressed Report of the Dubcek Government s Commission of Inquiry 1968 London MacDonald amp Co p 106 ISBN 978 0 356 03585 7 LCCN 72877920 OCLC 29358222 Mikoyan Anastas Suslov Mikhail 24 October 4 November 1956 Soviet Documents on the Hungarian Revolution 24 October 4 November 1956 Cold War International History Project Bulletin Government of the Soviet Union pp 22 23 and 29 34 Archived from the original on 18 August 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Note See the Mikoyan Suslov Report of 24 October in Johanna Granville Gati Charles 2003 Foreword In Bekes Csaba Byrne Malcolm Ranier Janos M eds The 1956 Hungarian Revolution A History in Documents Budapest Central European University Press p xv ISBN 978 963 9241 66 4 OCLC 847476436 Taubman 2004 p 312 Staff writer 26 January 1959 Foreign Relations Down to Hard Cases Time Archived from the original on 1 February 2011 Retrieved 19 January 2011 Taubman 2004 p 409 Shakarian Pietro A 6 January 2019 Cleveland visit 60 years ago this week of No 2 Soviet official Anastas Mikoyan reflected a detente that served both nations well The Plain Dealer Retrieved 26 July 2022 Kaplan Fred 2009 1959 The Year Everything Changed Online Ausg ed Hoboken N J J Wiley amp Sons pp 8 9 ISBN 978 0 470 38781 8 a b c Van Djik Ruud 2008 Encyclopedia of the Cold War Vol 1 New York Taylor amp Francis p 586 ISBN 978 0 415 97515 5 Kaplan 2009 1959 J Wiley amp Sons p 13 ISBN 9780470387818 Newman Kitty 2007 Macmillan Khrushchev and the Berlin Crisis 1958 1960 New York Taylor amp Francis p 175 ISBN 978 0 415 35463 9 Leffler Melvyn P 2007 For the Soul of Mankind The United States the Soviet Union and the Cold War New York Hill and Wang p 192 ISBN 978 0 8090 9717 3 According to then Secretary of State Dean Rusk Jacqueline Kennedy s message was much shorter and to the point My husband s dead Now peace is up to you Douglass James W 2008 JFK and the Unspeakable Why He Died and Why It Matters New York Simon and Schuster p 380 ISBN 978 1 4391 9388 4 Taubman 2004 pp 532 533 See Mikoyan Sergo Svetlana Savranskaya ed The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis Castro Mikoyan Kennedy Khrushchev and the Missiles of November Stanford Stanford University Press 2012 Taubman 2004 pp 580ff Khrushchev Sergei Benson Shirley 2008 Nikita Khrushchev and the Creation of a Superpower Vol 1 University Park PA Penn State Press pp 652 653 ISBN 978 0 271 02170 6 Savranskaya Svetlana The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis Castro Mikoyan Kennedy Khrushchev and the Missiles of November George Washington University Matthews Joe Cuban Missile Crisis The Other Secret One BBC News Magazine 12 October 2012 Retrieved 13 October 2012 Staff writer 24 July 1964 Russia Successor Confirmed Time p 1 Archived from the original on 28 June 2011 Retrieved 14 February 2011 Taubman 2004 pp 3 17 Khrushchev Nikita 2006 Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev Reformer 1945 1964 Vol 2 University Park Pa Pennsylvania State Press p 700 ISBN 978 0 271 02332 8 Brown Archie 2009 The Rise and Fall of Communism New York Ecco p 402 ISBN 978 0 06 113879 9 Montefiore 2005 p 669 Staff writer 17 December 1965 Russia Kicks Upstairs amp Down Time p 1 Archived from the original on 3 February 2011 Retrieved 14 February 2011 a b c Montefiore 2005 p 83n Montefiore 2005 p 52 Montefiore 2005 pp 12n 43 44 Document 97 Memorandum of Conversation Vice President s Kremlin Conversation with Mikoyan Office of the Historian U S Department of State 25 July 1959 Retrieved 21 August 2021 Matlock and Djerejian talk Stalin s monument and meeting with Mikoyan Mediamax 23 May 2017 Retrieved 21 August 2022 Mikoyan asked So you re Armenian right When I confirmed he clapped me on the shoulder and said he was glad Armenians were doing well in America Edward Djerejian recalled a b c Poghosyan Yekaterina 29 May 2014 Stalin s Man Mikoyan to Get Statue in Yerevan Institute for War and Peace Reporting Retrieved 25 June 2014 a b c Q amp A With Pietro Shakarian On Anastas Mikoyan Armenia and Karabakh USC Institute of Armenian Studies 16 September 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2022 Astsatryan Yeghishe in Russian 2004 XX դար Հայաստանի կառուցման ճանապարհին in Armenian Yerevan Edit Print pp 81 84 Libaridian Gerard ed 1988 The Karabagh File Documents and Facts on the Question of Mountainous Karabagh 1918 1988 Cambridge MA Zoryan Institute p 69 Mikoyan Anastas I 2014 Tak bylo Razmyshleniya o minuvshem in Russian Moscow Centrpoligraf p 48 ISBN 9785227051097 Yuzefovich Victor 1985 Aram Khachaturyan Translated by Kournokoff Nicholas Bobrov Vladimir New York Sphinx Press p 128 Gasparyan Albert 1992 I C Bagramyan Moscow MaRafon pp 300 303 The Death of Stalin Further reading edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Anastas Mikoyan See also Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union and Bibliography of the Post Stalinist Soviet Union Cohen Stephen F 2011 The Victims Return Survivors of the Gulag After Stalin London I B Tauris amp Company ISBN 9781848858480 Medvedev Roy A 1984 All Stalin s Men Translated by Shukman Harold Garden City NY Doubleday ISBN 9780385190626 Mikoyan Anastas I 1988 The Memoirs of Anastas Mikoyan Vol 1 The Path of Struggle Translated by O Connor Katherine T Burgin Diana L Madison CT Sphinx Press ISBN 0 943071 04 6 Mikoyan Anastas I 2014 Tak bylo Razmyshleniya o minuvshem in Russian Moscow Centrpoligraf ISBN 9785227051097 Mikoyan Sergo A 2012 Savranskaya Svetlana ed The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis Castro Mikoyan Kennedy Khrushchev and the Missiles of November Washington D C Woodrow Wilson Center Press ISBN 9780804762014 Mikoyan Stepan A 1999 Stepan Anastasovich Mikoyan An Autobiography Translated by Mikoyan Aschen Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing ISBN 1 85310 916 9 Pavlov Mikhail 2014 Anastas Mikoyan Politicheskij portret na fone sovetskoj epohi in Russian Moscow Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniya ISBN 9785713313647 Sebag Montefiore Simon 2005 Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 1 4000 7678 9 Shakarian Pietro A 2021 An Armenian Reformer in Khrushchev s Kremlin Anastas Mikoyan and the Politics of Difference in the USSR 1953 1964 Ph D The Ohio State University Smith Kathleen E 2017 Moscow 1956 The Silenced Spring Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674972001 Taubman William C 2004 Khrushchev The Man and His Era New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 32484 6 External links editMikoyan Brothers Museum Archived 18 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine Sanahin Alaverdi Armenia Newspaper clippings about Anastas Mikoyan in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byLeonid Brezhnev Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet1964 1965 Succeeded byNikolai Podgorny Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anastas Mikoyan amp oldid 1187088536, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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