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Ivan Serov

Ivan Alexandrovich Serov (Russian: Ива́н Алекса́ндрович Серóв; 13 August 1905 – 1 July 1990) was a Soviet intelligence officer who served as Chairman of the KGB from March 1954 to December 1958 and Director of the GRU from December 1958 to February 1963. Serov was NKVD Commissar of the Ukrainian SSR from 1939 to 1941 and Deputy Commissar of the NKVD under Lavrentiy Beria from 1941 to 1954.

Ivan Serov
Иван Серов
1st Chairman of the
Committee for State Security (KGB)
In office
13 March 1954 – 8 December 1958
PremierGeorgy Malenkov
Nikolai Bulganin
Nikita Khrushchev
Preceded bySergei Kruglov
Succeeded byAleksandr Shelepin
People's Commissar for Internal Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR
In office
1939–1941
Personal details
Born
Ivan Alexandrovich Serov
Иван Александрович Серов

13 August 1905
Afimskoye, Kadnikovsky Uyezd, Vologda Governorate, Russian Empire
Died1 July 1990(1990-07-01) (aged 84)
Krasnogorsk, Moscow Oblast, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1926–1965)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch/serviceNKVD
MGB
MVD
KGB
GRU
Years of service1923–1965
Rank Major general

Serov was active in organizing NKVD activities against anti-Soviet forces during the Soviet Invasion of Poland and World War II, including the Katyn massacre. Serov issued the Serov Instructions and helped organize the mass deportations of people from Poland, Baltic states and the Caucasus. Serov helped establish secret police forces in the Eastern Bloc after the war and played an important role in suppressing the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.[1][page needed] Serov was removed from power in 1963 when his protégé Oleg Penkovsky was exposed as a double agent. Serov was stripped of his position, Communist Party membership and Hero of the Soviet Union award in 1965, and lived in obscurity until his death in 1990.

Early life and military career edit

Ivan Alexandrovich Serov was born on 13 August 1905 in Afimskoe, a village in the Vologda Governorate of the Russian Empire, into a Russian peasant family.[2] In 1923, when he was 18-years-old, Serov joined the Red Army shortly after the end of the Russian Civil War. In 1926, he became a member of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), and in 1928 graduated from the Artillery Officers' School of Leningrad.[3] A major step in his career as a Red Army officer was his attendance in the mid-1930s of Higher Academic Courses in the prestigious Frunze Military Academy.[4] He married during these years and had two children: a son, Vladimir, who became an engineering officer in the USSR Air Force followed by a daughter, Svetlana.[5]

Commissar of Ukraine edit

In 1939, Serov joined the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD), the main security agency and secret police of the Soviet Union. He was appointed to the high-ranking position of NKVD Commissar of the Ukrainian SSR in 1940. As well as performing his duties in this post, Serov was also responsible for the co-ordination of deportation from the Baltic States and Poland.[5] He was one of the top ranked officials responsible for the Katyn massacre of Polish officer POWs.[6][7]

In 1956, an article in Time magazine accused Serov of being responsible for the death of "hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian peasants" during this period.[8] Serov was also a colleague in Ukraine of Nikita Khrushchev, the local Head of State.[5][9]

Deputy Commissar of the NKVD edit

In 1941, Serov was promoted to Deputy Commissar of the NKVD as a whole, becoming one of the primary lieutenants of NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria. In this function, Serov was responsible for the mass deportation of a variety of Caucasian peoples, including the deportation of the Chechens. He issued the so-called Serov Instructions, which detailed procedures for mass deportations from the Baltic States, which was for some time confused with the NKVD Order No. 001223 by historians.[10] He also coordinated the mass expulsion of Crimean Tatars from the Crimean ASSR at the end of World War II. Viktor Suvorov claims that in 1946, Serov had oversight of the execution of Andrey Vlasov and the rest of the command of the Russian Liberation Army, an organization that had co-operated with the Nazis in World War II.[6]

Serov was one of the senior figures in SMERSH, the wartime counterintelligence department of the Red Army, Soviet Navy and NKVD troops, serving as a deputy to Viktor Abakumov. It was in this function that he founded the Ministry of Public Security, the secret police of the Soviet-backed Polish People's Republic until 1956, acting as its main Soviet adviser and organizer. Serov organized the persecution of the anti-Soviet Home Army and helped to establish Stalinism in Poland.

In 1945, Serov was transferred to the 2nd Belorussian Front and went to Berlin in May that year. He stayed there until 1947 and helped to organise a security agency that would become the Stasi, the secret police of the German Democratic Republic.[11] Serov was also there to monitor and spy on Marshal Georgy Zhukov (who Stalin was personally suspicious of) while acting as his political advisor.

Chairman of the KGB edit

After the death of Joseph Stalin in March 1953, Serov was one of the few senior members of the political police to survive the wave of demotions and forced retirements of Stalinist officials. Serov, who had Beria's trust, betrayed him when he conspired with officers of GRU to avoid his own downfall.

In March 1954, Serov was appointed Chairman of the KGB, making him head of the greater part of the Soviet secret police. Serov organized security for the tours of Nikolai Bulganin and Nikita Khrushchev in the United Kingdom, where he was decried by the British media as "Ivan the Terrible" and "the Butcher".[10]

Hungary edit

Serov played a key role in the suppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 which attempted to overthrow the Soviet-backed Hungarian People's Republic. Serov was active in Hungary, sending reports to the Kremlin from Budapest, and escorting visiting Soviet Presidium leaders Anastas Mikoyan and Mikhail Suslov via an armoured personnel carrier into Budapest on 24 October, as there was too much shooting in the streets.[12] Serov organized the deportation of Hungarian revolutionaries, including Nagy, and also tried stopping The Workers' Council of Budapest from negotiating for the return of deportees and political rights, using Soviet troops to prevent the council from meeting in the city's Sports Hall.[8] Serov co-ordinated the abduction of Pál Maléter and the disruption of peace talks between the Red Army and the Hungarian forces.[5]

Director of the GRU edit

In December 1958, Serov was removed from his post as Chairman of the KGB after hints by Khrushchev, who had said that Western visitors could expect that they "wouldn't see so many policemen around the place" and that the Soviet police force would undergo a restructuring. Serov was instead appointed as the Director of the GRU, with the official reason being a need to strengthen the agency's leadership. Serov was active in the Cuban Missile Crisis, helping the Soviet leadership with American intelligence.

Removal from power edit

In February 1963, Serov was dismissed as Director of the GRU when it was discovered that Oleg Penkovsky, a GRU colonel and his protégé, was a double agent spying for the British. The affair was an embarrassment and irreparably damaged his reputation. Khrushchev, feeling he could no longer trust Serov, had him appointed to an unimportant position as assistant to the commander of the Turkestan Military District. A month later, he was demoted to major general. In August, he was transferred to the Volga Military District. In November 1964, Serov wrote a letter to the Politburo expressing his dismay at his treatment in the aftermath of the Penkovsky affair. In April 1965, he was stripped of his party membership and dismissed. Serov spent the rest of his life unsuccessfully seeking rehabilitation in the eyes of the public, restoration of his party membership, and the return of his rank of general and Hero of the Soviet Union to him.

Death edit

Serov died in 1990 at the Central Military Clinical Hospital in Krasnogorsk. He was buried at the cemetery in the village of Ilyinskoye in Krasnogorsky District, Moscow Oblast.[13]

Awards and decorations edit

Soviet Union
  Hero of the Soviet Union (29 May 1945) (deprived on 12 March 1963)
  Order of Lenin, seven times (26 April 1940, 13 December 1942, 29 May 1945, 30 January 1951, 19 September 1952, 25 August 1955) (third award deprived on 12 March 1963)
  Order of the Red Banner, five times (20 September 1943, 7 July 1944, 3 November 1944, 5 November 1954, 31 December 1955)
  Order of Suvorov, 1st class (8 March 1944) (deprived on 6 April 1962)
  Order of Kutuzov, 1st class, twice (24 April 1945, 18 December 1956)
  Order of the Patriotic War, 1st class (11 March 1985)
  Medal "For the Defence of Stalingrad" (22 December 1942)
  Medal "For the Defence of Moscow" (1 May 1944)
  Medal "For the Defence of Leningrad" (22 December 1942)
  Medal "For the Defence of the Caucasus" (1 May 1944)
  Medal "For the Liberation of Warsaw" (9 June 1945)
  Medal "For the Capture of Berlin" (9 June 1945)
  Medal "For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945" (9 May 1945)
  • jubilee medals

SOURCE:[14]

Foreign

Serov's award of the Gold's Cross of the Virtuti Militari was posthumously deprived in 1995 by the decision of the President of Poland Lech Wałęsa.[15]

Personality edit

In MI5 files about Serov, British agents who had met him called him "something of a ladies' man," good mannered, carefully dressed and a moderate drinker. He displayed a considerable familiarity with detective fiction such as Sherlock Holmes. His sense of humour was somewhat heavy, and his jokes were broadly sarcastic and, on occasion, strongly anti-Semitic.[16]

According to the MI5 reports, Serov was "a capable organiser with a cunning mind".[16]

Significance edit

Serov, although generally considered less significant than Beria in modern literature, helped to bring Stalinism to Europe and to Stalinise the Soviet Union. Serov's consolidation of Soviet power in Eastern Europe was helped by his organization of both the Urząd Bezpieczeństwa (Polish Intelligence Service) in Poland and the Stasi in East Germany.

Cultural references edit

Serov makes a brief appearance at the beginning of Ian Fleming's 1957 James Bond novel From Russia, With Love. Fleming writes that he "was in every respect a bigger man than Beria" and that "he, with Bulganin and Khrushchev, now ruled Russia. One day, he might even stand on the peak, alone."

Serov also briefly features in the 1950s novel Berlin by the German anti-Nazi writer Theodor Plievier, who lived in the USSR throughout the Hitler years. Plievier says Serov was nicknamed chramoi (which he translates as "Old Cripple Foot", Russian: хромой, lit.'lame, limping'), a reference to a supposed deformity (presumably a club foot).[17]

Sources edit

  • Nikita Petrov, "The First Chairman of the KGB: Ivan Serov" (Pervy predsedatel KGB : Ivan Serov), Moscow: Materik (2005) ISBN 5-85646-129-0
  • Johanna Granville, The First Domino: International Decision Making During the Hungarian Crisis of 1956, Texas A & M University Press, 2004. ISBN 1-58544-298-4
  • Viktor Suvorov, "Inside Soviet Military Intelligence" (1984), ISBN 0-02-615510-9

References edit

  1. ^ Erwin A Schmidl, Laszlo Ritter, Peter Dennis, The Hungarian Revolution 1956, 2006 ISBN 978-1-84603-079-6
  2. ^ "Серов Иван Александрович". warheroes.ru. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  3. ^ Jeanne Vronskaya, Vladimir Chuguev, A biographical dictionary of the Soviet Union 1917-1988, 1989. p. 375
  4. ^ H.W. Wilson Company, Current biography yearbook, vol 17, 1957
  5. ^ a b c d Arneson, R. Gordon (30 September 1958). "Biography of Ivan Aleksandrovich Serov" (PDF). CIA Reading Room. Washington, D.C.: Central Intelligence Agency. pp. 4–5. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  6. ^ a b Suvorov, V.: Inside Soviet Military Intelligence. Appendix A.
  7. ^ William Taubman, Khrushchev: The Man and His Era (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004: ISBN 0-393-32484-2), p. 370: "He had helped organize the Katyn Forest massacre of Polish officers, had helped Stalinize Ukraine and the Baltics, had deported the Crimean Tatars and other 'lesser' peoples, had pacified Soviet-occupied East Germany, and had been Beria's MVD first deputy in Stalin's last years."
  8. ^ a b : Time, December 3, 1956. Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  9. ^ BBC h2g2: The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics: retrieved November 25, 2007.
  10. ^ a b : Time, December 22, 1958. Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  11. ^ Koehler, J.: "Stasi: The Untold Story of the East German Secret Police" ISBN 0-8133-3409-8
  12. ^ Johanna Granville, trans., "Soviet Documents on the Hungarian Revolution, 24 October - 4 November 1956", Cold War International History Project Bulletin, no. 5 (Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Washington, DC), Spring, 1995, pp. 22-23, 29-34.
  13. ^ "СЕРОВ Иван Александрович (1905 – 1990)". moscow-tombs.ru. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  14. ^ "Ива́н Алекса́ндрович Серóв". warheroes.ru. Retrieved May 22, 2021.
  15. ^ Łydka, Andrzej (2015-03-27). "Aresztowanie przywódców Państwa Podziemnego" [Arrest of leaders of the Underground State]. Polska Zbrojna (in Polish). Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Archives, The National (February 28, 2014). "The National Archives - When 'Ivan the terrible' visited Britain". The National Archives blog.
  17. ^ Theodor Plievier, Berlin (Mayflower Books, 1976) p.247 ISBN 0-586-02906-0

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ivan Aleksandrovich Serov at Wikimedia Commons
Government offices
Preceded byas Minister of State Security Chairman of the
Committee for State Security

1954–1958
Succeeded by
Preceded by People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs of Ukraine
1939–1941
Succeeded by
Vasyl Serhiyenko

ivan, serov, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, aleksandrovich, family, name, serov, ivan, alexandrovich, serov, russian, Ива, Алекса, ндрович, Серóв, august, 1905, july, 1990, soviet, intelligence, officer, served, chairm. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Aleksandrovich and the family name is Serov Ivan Alexandrovich Serov Russian Iva n Aleksa ndrovich Serov 13 August 1905 1 July 1990 was a Soviet intelligence officer who served as Chairman of the KGB from March 1954 to December 1958 and Director of the GRU from December 1958 to February 1963 Serov was NKVD Commissar of the Ukrainian SSR from 1939 to 1941 and Deputy Commissar of the NKVD under Lavrentiy Beria from 1941 to 1954 Ivan SerovIvan Serov1st Chairman of theCommittee for State Security KGB In office 13 March 1954 8 December 1958PremierGeorgy Malenkov Nikolai Bulganin Nikita KhrushchevPreceded bySergei KruglovSucceeded byAleksandr ShelepinPeople s Commissar for Internal Affairs of the Ukrainian SSRIn office 1939 1941Personal detailsBornIvan Alexandrovich SerovIvan Aleksandrovich Serov13 August 1905Afimskoye Kadnikovsky Uyezd Vologda Governorate Russian EmpireDied1 July 1990 1990 07 01 aged 84 Krasnogorsk Moscow Oblast Russian SFSR Soviet UnionPolitical partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union 1926 1965 SignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance Soviet UnionBranch serviceNKVD MGB MVD KGB GRUYears of service1923 1965RankMajor generalSerov was active in organizing NKVD activities against anti Soviet forces during the Soviet Invasion of Poland and World War II including the Katyn massacre Serov issued the Serov Instructions and helped organize the mass deportations of people from Poland Baltic states and the Caucasus Serov helped establish secret police forces in the Eastern Bloc after the war and played an important role in suppressing the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 1 page needed Serov was removed from power in 1963 when his protege Oleg Penkovsky was exposed as a double agent Serov was stripped of his position Communist Party membership and Hero of the Soviet Union award in 1965 and lived in obscurity until his death in 1990 Contents 1 Early life and military career 1 1 Commissar of Ukraine 1 2 Deputy Commissar of the NKVD 2 Chairman of the KGB 2 1 Hungary 3 Director of the GRU 4 Removal from power 5 Death 6 Awards and decorations 7 Personality 8 Significance 9 Cultural references 10 Sources 11 References 12 External linksEarly life and military career editIvan Alexandrovich Serov was born on 13 August 1905 in Afimskoe a village in the Vologda Governorate of the Russian Empire into a Russian peasant family 2 In 1923 when he was 18 years old Serov joined the Red Army shortly after the end of the Russian Civil War In 1926 he became a member of the All Union Communist Party Bolsheviks and in 1928 graduated from the Artillery Officers School of Leningrad 3 A major step in his career as a Red Army officer was his attendance in the mid 1930s of Higher Academic Courses in the prestigious Frunze Military Academy 4 He married during these years and had two children a son Vladimir who became an engineering officer in the USSR Air Force followed by a daughter Svetlana 5 Commissar of Ukraine edit In 1939 Serov joined the People s Commissariat for Internal Affairs NKVD the main security agency and secret police of the Soviet Union He was appointed to the high ranking position of NKVD Commissar of the Ukrainian SSR in 1940 As well as performing his duties in this post Serov was also responsible for the co ordination of deportation from the Baltic States and Poland 5 He was one of the top ranked officials responsible for the Katyn massacre of Polish officer POWs 6 7 In 1956 an article in Time magazine accused Serov of being responsible for the death of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian peasants during this period 8 Serov was also a colleague in Ukraine of Nikita Khrushchev the local Head of State 5 9 Deputy Commissar of the NKVD edit In 1941 Serov was promoted to Deputy Commissar of the NKVD as a whole becoming one of the primary lieutenants of NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria In this function Serov was responsible for the mass deportation of a variety of Caucasian peoples including the deportation of the Chechens He issued the so called Serov Instructions which detailed procedures for mass deportations from the Baltic States which was for some time confused with the NKVD Order No 001223 by historians 10 He also coordinated the mass expulsion of Crimean Tatars from the Crimean ASSR at the end of World War II Viktor Suvorov claims that in 1946 Serov had oversight of the execution of Andrey Vlasov and the rest of the command of the Russian Liberation Army an organization that had co operated with the Nazis in World War II 6 Serov was one of the senior figures in SMERSH the wartime counterintelligence department of the Red Army Soviet Navy and NKVD troops serving as a deputy to Viktor Abakumov It was in this function that he founded the Ministry of Public Security the secret police of the Soviet backed Polish People s Republic until 1956 acting as its main Soviet adviser and organizer Serov organized the persecution of the anti Soviet Home Army and helped to establish Stalinism in Poland In 1945 Serov was transferred to the 2nd Belorussian Front and went to Berlin in May that year He stayed there until 1947 and helped to organise a security agency that would become the Stasi the secret police of the German Democratic Republic 11 Serov was also there to monitor and spy on Marshal Georgy Zhukov who Stalin was personally suspicious of while acting as his political advisor Chairman of the KGB editAfter the death of Joseph Stalin in March 1953 Serov was one of the few senior members of the political police to survive the wave of demotions and forced retirements of Stalinist officials Serov who had Beria s trust betrayed him when he conspired with officers of GRU to avoid his own downfall In March 1954 Serov was appointed Chairman of the KGB making him head of the greater part of the Soviet secret police Serov organized security for the tours of Nikolai Bulganin and Nikita Khrushchev in the United Kingdom where he was decried by the British media as Ivan the Terrible and the Butcher 10 Hungary edit Serov played a key role in the suppression of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 which attempted to overthrow the Soviet backed Hungarian People s Republic Serov was active in Hungary sending reports to the Kremlin from Budapest and escorting visiting Soviet Presidium leaders Anastas Mikoyan and Mikhail Suslov via an armoured personnel carrier into Budapest on 24 October as there was too much shooting in the streets 12 Serov organized the deportation of Hungarian revolutionaries including Nagy and also tried stopping The Workers Council of Budapest from negotiating for the return of deportees and political rights using Soviet troops to prevent the council from meeting in the city s Sports Hall 8 Serov co ordinated the abduction of Pal Maleter and the disruption of peace talks between the Red Army and the Hungarian forces 5 Director of the GRU editIn December 1958 Serov was removed from his post as Chairman of the KGB after hints by Khrushchev who had said that Western visitors could expect that they wouldn t see so many policemen around the place and that the Soviet police force would undergo a restructuring Serov was instead appointed as the Director of the GRU with the official reason being a need to strengthen the agency s leadership Serov was active in the Cuban Missile Crisis helping the Soviet leadership with American intelligence Removal from power editIn February 1963 Serov was dismissed as Director of the GRU when it was discovered that Oleg Penkovsky a GRU colonel and his protege was a double agent spying for the British The affair was an embarrassment and irreparably damaged his reputation Khrushchev feeling he could no longer trust Serov had him appointed to an unimportant position as assistant to the commander of the Turkestan Military District A month later he was demoted to major general In August he was transferred to the Volga Military District In November 1964 Serov wrote a letter to the Politburo expressing his dismay at his treatment in the aftermath of the Penkovsky affair In April 1965 he was stripped of his party membership and dismissed Serov spent the rest of his life unsuccessfully seeking rehabilitation in the eyes of the public restoration of his party membership and the return of his rank of general and Hero of the Soviet Union to him Death editSerov died in 1990 at the Central Military Clinical Hospital in Krasnogorsk He was buried at the cemetery in the village of Ilyinskoye in Krasnogorsky District Moscow Oblast 13 Awards and decorations editSoviet Union nbsp Hero of the Soviet Union 29 May 1945 deprived on 12 March 1963 nbsp Order of Lenin seven times 26 April 1940 13 December 1942 29 May 1945 30 January 1951 19 September 1952 25 August 1955 third award deprived on 12 March 1963 nbsp Order of the Red Banner five times 20 September 1943 7 July 1944 3 November 1944 5 November 1954 31 December 1955 nbsp Order of Suvorov 1st class 8 March 1944 deprived on 6 April 1962 nbsp Order of Kutuzov 1st class twice 24 April 1945 18 December 1956 nbsp Order of the Patriotic War 1st class 11 March 1985 nbsp Medal For the Defence of Stalingrad 22 December 1942 nbsp Medal For the Defence of Moscow 1 May 1944 nbsp Medal For the Defence of Leningrad 22 December 1942 nbsp Medal For the Defence of the Caucasus 1 May 1944 nbsp Medal For the Liberation of Warsaw 9 June 1945 nbsp Medal For the Capture of Berlin 9 June 1945 nbsp Medal For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 9 May 1945 jubilee medalsSOURCE 14 Foreign nbsp Patriotic Order of Merit in gold East Germany nbsp Gold s Cross of the Virtuti Militari Poland nbsp Order of the Cross of Grunwald 2nd class Poland nbsp Medal For Oder Neisse and the Baltic Poland nbsp Medal For Warsaw 1939 1945 Poland Serov s award of the Gold s Cross of the Virtuti Militari was posthumously deprived in 1995 by the decision of the President of Poland Lech Walesa 15 Personality editIn MI5 files about Serov British agents who had met him called him something of a ladies man good mannered carefully dressed and a moderate drinker He displayed a considerable familiarity with detective fiction such as Sherlock Holmes His sense of humour was somewhat heavy and his jokes were broadly sarcastic and on occasion strongly anti Semitic 16 According to the MI5 reports Serov was a capable organiser with a cunning mind 16 Significance editSerov although generally considered less significant than Beria in modern literature helped to bring Stalinism to Europe and to Stalinise the Soviet Union Serov s consolidation of Soviet power in Eastern Europe was helped by his organization of both the Urzad Bezpieczenstwa Polish Intelligence Service in Poland and the Stasi in East Germany Cultural references editSerov makes a brief appearance at the beginning of Ian Fleming s 1957 James Bond novel From Russia With Love Fleming writes that he was in every respect a bigger man than Beria and that he with Bulganin and Khrushchev now ruled Russia One day he might even stand on the peak alone Serov also briefly features in the 1950s novel Berlin by the German anti Nazi writer Theodor Plievier who lived in the USSR throughout the Hitler years Plievier says Serov was nicknamed chramoi which he translates as Old Cripple Foot Russian hromoj lit lame limping a reference to a supposed deformity presumably a club foot 17 Sources editNikita Petrov The First Chairman of the KGB Ivan Serov Pervy predsedatel KGB Ivan Serov Moscow Materik 2005 ISBN 5 85646 129 0 Johanna Granville The First Domino International Decision Making During the Hungarian Crisis of 1956 Texas A amp M University Press 2004 ISBN 1 58544 298 4 Viktor Suvorov Inside Soviet Military Intelligence 1984 ISBN 0 02 615510 9References edit Erwin A Schmidl Laszlo Ritter Peter Dennis The Hungarian Revolution 1956 2006 ISBN 978 1 84603 079 6 Serov Ivan Aleksandrovich warheroes ru Retrieved 2024 03 02 Jeanne Vronskaya Vladimir Chuguev A biographical dictionary of the Soviet Union 1917 1988 1989 p 375 H W Wilson Company Current biography yearbook vol 17 1957 a b c d Arneson R Gordon 30 September 1958 Biography of Ivan Aleksandrovich Serov PDF CIA Reading Room Washington D C Central Intelligence Agency pp 4 5 Retrieved 9 October 2023 a b Suvorov V Inside Soviet Military Intelligence Appendix A William Taubman Khrushchev The Man and His Era W W Norton amp Company 2004 ISBN 0 393 32484 2 p 370 He had helped organize the Katyn Forest massacre of Polish officers had helped Stalinize Ukraine and the Baltics had deported the Crimean Tatars and other lesser peoples had pacified Soviet occupied East Germany and had been Beria s MVD first deputy in Stalin s last years a b The Shadow of Ivan Serov Time December 3 1956 Retrieved November 25 2007 BBC h2g2 The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics retrieved November 25 2007 a b Dropping the Cop Time December 22 1958 Retrieved November 25 2007 Koehler J Stasi The Untold Story of the East German Secret Police ISBN 0 8133 3409 8 Johanna Granville trans Soviet Documents on the Hungarian Revolution 24 October 4 November 1956 Cold War International History Project Bulletin no 5 Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars Washington DC Spring 1995 pp 22 23 29 34 SEROV Ivan Aleksandrovich 1905 1990 moscow tombs ru Retrieved May 21 2022 Iva n Aleksa ndrovich Serov warheroes ru Retrieved May 22 2021 Lydka Andrzej 2015 03 27 Aresztowanie przywodcow Panstwa Podziemnego Arrest of leaders of the Underground State Polska Zbrojna in Polish Retrieved May 22 2022 a b Archives The National February 28 2014 The National Archives When Ivan the terrible visited Britain The National Archives blog Theodor Plievier Berlin Mayflower Books 1976 p 247 ISBN 0 586 02906 0External links edit nbsp Media related to Ivan Aleksandrovich Serov at Wikimedia CommonsGovernment officesPreceded bySergei Kruglovas Minister of State Security Chairman of the Committee for State Security1954 1958 Succeeded byAleksandr ShelepinPreceded byAmayak Kobulov People s Commissariat of Internal Affairs of Ukraine1939 1941 Succeeded byVasyl Serhiyenko Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ivan Serov amp oldid 1214759270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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