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Lavrentiy Beria

Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria (/ˈbɛriə/; Russian: Лавре́нтий Па́влович Бе́рия, tr. Lavréntiy Pávlovich Bériya, IPA: [ˈbʲerʲiə]; Georgian: ლავრენტი ბერია, romanized: lavrent'i beria, IPA: [bɛɾiɑ]; 29 March [O.S. 17 March] 1899 – 23 December 1953) was a Georgian Bolshevik and Soviet politician, Marshal of the Soviet Union and state security administrator, chief of the Soviet security, and chief of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) under Joseph Stalin during the Second World War, and promoted to deputy premier under Stalin in 1941. He officially joined the Politburo in 1946.

Lavrentiy Beria
Лавре́нтий Бе́рия (Russian)
ლავრენტი ბერია (Georgian)
Beria c. 1930s
First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers
In office
5 March – 26 June 1953 (1953-03-05 – 1953-06-26)
PremierGeorgy Malenkov
Preceded byVyacheslav Molotov
Succeeded byLazar Kaganovich
Minister of Internal Affairs
In office
5 March – 26 June 1953 (1953-03-05 – 1953-06-26)
Preceded bySemyon Ignatyev
Succeeded bySergei Kruglov
In office
25 November 1938 – 15 January 1946 (1938-11-25 – 1946-01-15)
Preceded byNikolai Yezhov
Succeeded bySergei Kruglov
Additional positions
Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers
In office
19 March 1946 – 5 March 1953 (1946-03-19 – 1953-03-05)
PremierJoseph Stalin
First Secretary of the Georgian Communist Party
In office
15 January 1934 – 31 August 1938 (1934-01-15 – 1938-08-31)
Preceded byPetre Agniashvili
Succeeded byCandide Charkviani
In office
14 November 1931 – 18 October 1932 (1931-11-14 – 1932-10-18)
Preceded byLavrenty Kartvelishvili
Succeeded byPetre Agniashvili
Full member of the 18th, 19th Politburo
In office
18 March 1946 – 7 July 1953 (1946-03-18 – 1953-07-07)
Candidate member of the 18th Politburo
In office
22 March 1939 – 18 March 1946 (1939-03-22 – 1946-03-18)
Personal details
Born
Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria

(1899-03-29)29 March 1899
Merkheuli, Sukhum Okrug, Kutais Governorate, Russian Empire
Died23 December 1953(1953-12-23) (aged 54)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Cause of deathExecution by shooting
CitizenshipSoviet
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1917–1953)
SpouseNina Gegechkori
Parents
  • Pavel Beria (father)
  • Marta Jaqeli (mother)
AwardsHero of Socialist Labour
Signature
Military service
RankMarshal of the Soviet Union
WarsWorld War II

Beria was the longest-lived and most influential of Stalin's secret police chiefs, wielding his most substantial influence during and after the war. Following the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, he was responsible for organizing purges such as the Katyn massacre of 22,000 Polish officers and officials.[1] He would later also orchestrate the forced upheaval of minorities from the Caucasus as head of the NKVD, an act that was declared as genocidal by various scholars and, as concerning Chechens, in 2004 by the European Parliament.[2][3][4][5][6] He simultaneously administered vast sections of the Soviet state, and acted as the de facto Marshal of the Soviet Union in command of NKVD field units responsible for barrier troops and Soviet partisan intelligence and sabotage operations on the Eastern Front. Beria administered the expansion of the Gulag labour camps, and was primarily responsible for overseeing the secret detention facilities for scientists and engineers known as sharashkas.

After the war, Beria organised the communist takeover of the state institutions in central and eastern Europe. His ruthlessness in his duties and skill at producing results culminated in his success in overseeing the Soviet atomic bomb project. Stalin gave it absolute priority, and the project was completed in under five years.[7]

After Stalin's death in March 1953, Beria became First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. In this dual capacity, he formed a troika with Georgy Malenkov and Vyacheslav Molotov that briefly led the country in Stalin's place. A coup d'état by Nikita Khrushchev, with help from former Marshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov, removed Beria from power in June 1953. After being arrested, he was tried for treason and other offenses, sentenced to death, and executed on 23 December 1953. During his trial, and after his death, numerous allegations arose that Beria had been a serial rapist and serial killer.

Early life and rise to power

Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria was born in Merkheuli, near Sukhumi, in the Sukhum Okrug of the Kutais Governorate (now Gulripshi District, de facto Republic of Abkhazia, or Georgia, then part of the Russian Empire). He grew up in a Georgian Orthodox family; his mother, Marta Jaqeli (1868–1955), was deeply religious and church-going (she spent much time in church and died in a church building). Marta was from the Guria region, descended from a noble Georgian family, and was a widow before marrying Beria's father, Pavle Beria (1872–1922), a landowner in Abkhazia, from the Mingrelian ethnic subgroup.[8][9]

In his autobiography, Beria mentions only his sister and his niece, implying that his brother was (or any other siblings were) dead or had no relationship with him after he left Merkheuli. Beria attended a technical school in Sukhumi, and later claimed to have joined the Bolsheviks in March 1917 while a student in the Baku Polytechnicum (subsequently known as the Azerbaijan State Oil Academy). As a student, Beria distinguished himself in mathematics and the sciences.

Beria had earlier worked for the anti-Bolshevik Mussavatists in Baku. After the Red Army captured the city on 28 April 1920, he was saved from execution because there was not enough time to arrange his shooting and replacement; it may also have been that Sergei Kirov intervened.[10] While in prison, Beria formed a connection with Nina Gegechkori (1905–1991),[11] his cellmate's niece, and they eloped on a train.[12]

In 1919, at the age of 20, Beria started his career in state security when the security service of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic hired him while he was still a student at the Polytechnicum. In 1920 or 1921 (accounts vary) he joined the Cheka, the original Bolshevik secret police. At that time, a Bolshevik revolt took place in the Menshevik-controlled Democratic Republic of Georgia, and the Red Army subsequently invaded. The Cheka became heavily involved in the conflict, which resulted in the defeat of the Mensheviks and the formation of the Georgian SSR. Beria led the repression of a Georgian nationalist uprising in 1924, after which up to 10,000 people were executed.[13] In 1926, Beria took control of the Georgian OGPU; Sergo Ordzhonikidze, head of the Transcaucasian party, introduced him to fellow-Georgian Joseph Stalin. As a result, Beria became an ally in Stalin's rise to power. During his years at the helm of the Georgian OGPU, Beria effectively destroyed the intelligence networks that Turkey and Iran had developed in the Soviet Caucasus, while successfully penetrating the governments of these countries with his agents.

Beria was appointed First Secretary of the Communist Party of Georgia in 1931, and party leader for the whole Transcaucasian region in 1932. He became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1934. During this time, he began to attack fellow members of the Georgian Communist Party, particularly Gaioz Devdariani, who served as Minister of Education of the Georgian SSR. Beria ordered the executions of Devdariani's brothers George and Shalva.

By 1935, Beria had become one of Stalin's most trusted subordinates. He cemented his place in Stalin's entourage with a lengthy oration titled, "On the History of the Bolshevik Organisations in Transcaucasia" (later published as a book), which emphasised Stalin's role.[14] When Stalin's purge of the Communist Party and Soviet government began in 1934 after the assassination of Leningrad party boss Sergei Kirov (1 December 1934), Beria ran the purges in Transcaucasia. In June 1937, he said in a speech, "Let our enemies know that anyone who attempts to raise a hand against the will of our people, against the will of the party of Lenin and Stalin, will be mercilessly crushed and destroyed."[15]

Head of the NKVD

 
The first page of Beria's notice (oversigned by Stalin and several other officials), to kill approximately 15,000 Polish officers and some 10,000 more intellectuals in the Katyn Forest and other places in the Soviet Union

In August 1938, Stalin brought Beria to Moscow as deputy head of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD), the ministry which oversaw the state security and police forces. Under Nikolai Yezhov, the NKVD carried out the Great Purge: the imprisonment or execution of a huge number, possibly over a million, of citizens throughout the Soviet Union as alleged "enemies of the people". By 1938, however, the oppression had become so extensive that it was damaging the infrastructure, economy and even the armed forces of the Soviet state, prompting Stalin to wind the purge down. In September, Beria was appointed head of the Main Administration of State Security (GUGB) of the NKVD, and in November he succeeded Yezhov as NKVD head. Yezhov was executed in 1940.

Beria's appointment marked an easing of the repression begun under Yezhov. Over 100,000 people were released from the labour camps. The government officially admitted that there had been some injustice and "excesses" during the purges, which were blamed entirely on Yezhov. But the liberalization was only relative: arrests, torture and executions continued. On 16 January 1940, Beria sent Stalin a list of 457 "enemies of the people" of whom 346 were marked to be shot. They included Yezhov and his brother and nephews; Mikhail Frinovsky and his wife and teenage son, Yefim Yevdokimov and his wife and teenage son, and dozens more former NKVD officers, and the renowned writer Isaac Babel and the journalist Mikhail Koltsov.[16]

Some of the NKVD officers Beria promoted, such as Boris Rodos, Lev Shvartzman, and Bogdan Kobulov were brutal torturers who were executed in the 1950s. The theatre director Vsevolod Meyerhold described being beaten on the spine and soles of his feet until "the pain was so intense that it felt as if boiling water was being poured on these sensitive areas."[17] His interrogation record was signed by Shvartzman. Robert Eikhe, a former high ranking party official, was sadistically beaten and had an eye gouged out by Rodos, in Beria's office, while Beria watched.[18] He not only permitted and encouraged the beating of prisoners, but in some case carried it out in person. One prisoner, S.I.Abramov, who survived to give evidence in the 1950s, testified that he was brought to Beria's office and accused of plotting to blow up the Moscow metro, which he denied.

Beria hit me in the face. After that, I was given 30 minutes to think in the next room, next to his office, from where the screams and groans of the beaten could be heard. An hour later, called to the office, I was met with the words of Kobulov: "What, shall we start beating?"[19]

In March 1939, Beria was appointed as a candidate member of the Communist Party's Politburo. Although he did not rise to full membership until 1946, he was by then one of the senior leaders of the Soviet state. In 1941, he was made a Commissar General of State Security, the highest quasi-military rank within the Soviet police system of that time.

In 1940 the pace of the purges accelerated again. During this period, Beria supervised deportations of people identified as "political enemies" from Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia after Soviet occupation of those countries.

On 5 March 1940, after the Gestapo–NKVD Third Conference was held in Zakopane, Beria sent a note (no. 794/B) to Stalin in which he stated that the Polish prisoners of war kept at camps and prisons in western Belarus and Ukraine were enemies of the Soviet Union, and recommended their execution.[20] Most of them were military officers, but there were also intelligentsia, doctors, priests, and others in a total of 22,000 people. With Stalin's approval, Beria's NKVD executed them in what became known as the Katyn massacre.[21]

From October 1940 to February 1942, the NKVD under Beria carried out a new purge of the Red Army and related industries. In February 1941, Beria became deputy chairman of the Council of People's Commissars, and in June, following Nazi Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union, he became a member of the State Defense Committee (GKO). During the Second World War, he took on major domestic responsibilities and mobilised the millions of people imprisoned in NKVD Gulag camps into wartime production. He took control of the manufacture of armaments, and (with Georgy Malenkov) aircraft and aircraft engines. This was the beginning of Beria's alliance with Malenkov, which later became of central importance.

 
Nestor Lakoba, Nikita Khrushchev, Lavrentiy Beria and Aghasi Khanjian during the opening of the Moscow Metro in 1936, the same year that Lakoba and Khanjian were killed by Beria.

In 1944, as the Soviet Union had repelled the German invasion, Beria was placed in charge of the various ethnic minorities accused of anti-sovietism and/or collaboration with the invaders, including the Balkars, Karachays, Chechens, Ingush, Crimean Tatars, Kalmyks, Pontic Greeks, and Volga Germans.[22] All these groups were deported to Soviet Central Asia (see "Population transfer in the Soviet Union").

In December 1944, the NKVD supervised the Soviet atomic bomb project ("Task No. 1"), which built and tested a bomb by 29 August 1949. The project was extremely labour-intensive. At least 330,000 people, including 10,000 technicians, were involved. The Gulag system provided tens of thousands of people for work in uranium mines and for the construction and operation of uranium processing plants. They also constructed test facilities, such as those at Semipalatinsk and in the Novaya Zemlya archipelago.

In July 1945, as Soviet police ranks were converted to a military uniform system, Beria's rank was officially converted to that of Marshal of the Soviet Union. Although he had never held a traditional military command, he made a significant contribution to the victory of the Soviet Union in the war through his organization of wartime production and his use of partisans.

Abroad, Beria had met with Kim Il-sung, the future leader of North Korea, several times when the Soviet troops had declared war on Japan and occupied the northern half of Korea from August 1945. Beria recommended that Stalin install a communist leader in the occupied territories.[23][24]

Post-war politics

 
Beria with Stalin (in background), Stalin's daughter Svetlana, and Nestor Lakoba (obscured)[25]

With Stalin nearing 70, a concealed struggle for succession amongst his entourage dominated Soviet politics. At the end of the war, Andrei Zhdanov, who had served as the Communist Party leader in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) during the war, seemed the most likely candidate. After 1946, Beria formed an alliance with Malenkov to counter Zhdanov's rise.[26]

In January 1946, Beria resigned as chief of the NKVD while retaining general control over national security matters as Deputy Prime Minister and Curator of the Organs of State Security under Stalin. However, the new NKVD chief, Sergei Kruglov, was not a supporter of Beria. Also by the summer of 1946 Beria's man, Vsevolod Nikolayevich Merkulov, was replaced as head of the Ministry for State Security (MGB) by Viktor Abakumov.

Abakumov had headed SMERSH from 1943 to 1946; his relationship with Beria involved close collaboration (since Abakumov owed his rise to Beria's support and esteem) but also rivalry. Stalin had begun to encourage Abakumov to form his own network inside the MGB to counter Beria's dominance of the power ministries.[27] Kruglov and Abakumov moved expeditiously to replace Beria's men in the security apparatus with new people. Very soon, Deputy Minister Stepan Mamulov of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) was the only close Beria ally left outside foreign intelligence, on which Beria kept a grip.

In the following months, Abakumov started carrying out important operations without consulting Beria, often working with Zhdanov, and on Stalin's direct orders. One of the first such moves involved the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee affair, which commenced in October 1946 and eventually led to the murder of Solomon Mikhoels and the arrest of many other members. After Zhdanov died in August 1948, Beria and Malenkov consolidated their power by means of a purge of Zhdanov's associates in the so-called "Leningrad Affair". Those executed included Zhdanov's deputy, Alexey Kuznetsov; the economic chief, Nikolai Voznesensky; the Party head in Leningrad, Pyotr Popkov; and the Prime Minister of the Russian SFSR, Mikhail Rodionov.[28]

However, Beria was unable to purge Mikhail Suslov, whom he hated. Beria felt increasingly uncomfortable with Suslov's growing relationship with Stalin. Russian historian Roy Medvedev speculates in his book, Neizvestnyi Stalin, that Stalin had made Suslov his "secret heir".[29] Evidently, Beria felt so threatened by Suslov that after his arrest in 1953, documents were found in his safe labelling Suslov the No. 1 person he wanted to "eliminate".[30]

During the postwar years, Beria supervised the establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe and chose their Soviet-backed leaders.[31] Starting in 1948, Abakumov initiated several investigations against these leaders, which culminated with the arrest in November 1952 of Rudolf Slánský, Bedřich Geminder and others in Czechoslovakia. These men were frequently accused of Zionism, "rootless cosmopolitanism", and providing weapons to Israel. Such charges deeply disturbed Beria, as he had directly ordered the sale of large amounts of Czech arms to Israel. Altogether, fourteen Czechoslovak communist leaders, eleven of them Jewish, were tried, convicted and executed as part of Soviet policy to woo Arab nationalists, which culminated in the major Czech-Egypt arms deal of 1955.[32]

The Doctors' Plot began in 1951, when a number of the country's prominent Jewish physicians were accused of poisoning top Soviet leaders and arrested. Concurrently, the Soviet press began an anti-Semitic propaganda campaign, euphemistically termed the "struggle against rootless cosmopolitanism". Initially, 37 men were arrested, but the number quickly grew into hundreds. Scores of Soviet Jews were dismissed from their jobs, arrested, sent to the Gulag, or executed. The "plot" was presumably invented by Stalin. A few days after Stalin's death on 5 March 1953, Beria freed all the arrested doctors, announced that the entire matter was fabricated, and arrested the MGB functionaries directly involved.

Stalin's death

Stalin's aide, Vasili Lozgachev, reported that Beria and Malenkov were the first members of the Politburo to see Stalin's condition when he was found unconscious. They arrived at Stalin's dacha at Kuntsevo at 03:00 on 2 March 1953, after being called by Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin. The latter two did not want to risk Stalin's wrath by checking themselves.[33] Lozgachev tried to explain to Beria that the unconscious Stalin (still in his soiled clothing) was "sick and needed medical attention". Beria angrily dismissed his claims as panic-mongering and quickly left, ordering him, "Don't bother us, don't cause a panic and don't disturb Comrade Stalin!"[34] Alexsei Rybin, Stalin's bodyguard, recalled, "No one wanted to telephone Beria, since most of the personal bodyguards hated Beria".[35]

Calling a doctor was deferred for a full twelve hours after Stalin was rendered paralysed, incontinent and unable to speak. This decision is noted as "extraordinary" by the historian Simon Sebag Montefiore, but also consistent with the standard Stalinist policy of deferring all decision-making (no matter how necessary or obvious) without official orders from higher authority.[36] Beria's decision to avoid immediately calling a doctor was tacitly supported (or at least not opposed) by the rest of the Politburo, which was rudderless without Stalin's micromanagement and paralysed by a legitimate fear that he would suddenly recover and take reprisals on anyone who had dared to act without his orders.[37] Stalin's suspicion of doctors in the wake of the Doctors' Plot was well known at the time of his sickness; his private physician was already being tortured in the basement of the Lubyanka for suggesting the leader required more bed rest.[38]

Khrushchev wrote in his memoirs that Beria had, immediately after Stalin's stroke, gone about "spewing hatred against [Stalin] and mocking him". When Stalin showed signs of consciousness, Beria dropped to his knees and kissed his hand. When Stalin fell unconscious again, Beria immediately stood and spat.[39]

After Stalin's death on 5 March 1953, Beria's ambitions sprang into full force. In the uneasy silence following the cessation of Stalin's last agonies, he was the first to dart forward to kiss his lifeless form (a move likened by Montefiore to "wrenching a dead King's ring off his finger").[40] While the rest of Stalin's inner circle (even Molotov, saved from certain liquidation) stood sobbing unashamedly over the body, Beria reportedly appeared "radiant", "regenerated" and "glistening with ill-concealed relish".[40] When Beria left the room, he broke the sombre atmosphere by shouting loudly for his driver, his voice echoing with what Stalin's daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva called "the ring of triumph unconcealed".[41] Alliluyeva noticed how the Politburo seemed openly frightened of Beria and unnerved by his bold display of ambition. "He's off to take power," Mikoyan recalled muttering to Khrushchev. That prompted a "frantic" dash for their own limousines to intercept him at the Kremlin.[41]

Stalin's death prevented a final purge of Old Bolsheviks Mikoyan and Molotov, for which Stalin had been laying the groundwork in the year prior to his death. Shortly after Stalin's death, Beria announced triumphantly to the Politburo that he had "done [Stalin] in" and "saved [us] all", according to Molotov's memoirs. The assertion that Stalin was poisoned by Beria's associates has been supported by Edvard Radzinsky and other authors.[38][42][43][44]

First Deputy Premier and Soviet triumvirate

After Stalin's death, Beria was appointed First Deputy Premier and reappointed head of the MVD, which he merged with the MGB. His close ally Malenkov was the new Premier and initially the most powerful man in the post-Stalin leadership. Beria was second-most powerful, and given Malenkov's personal weakness, was poised to become the power behind the throne and ultimately leader himself. Khrushchev became Party Secretary. Kliment Voroshilov became Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (i.e., the nominal head of state).

Beria undertook some measures of liberalisation immediately after Stalin's death.[45] He reorganised the MVD and drastically reduced its economic power and penal responsibilities. A number of costly construction projects, such as the Salekhard–Igarka Railway, were scrapped, and the remaining industrial enterprises became affiliated under other economic ministries.[46] The Gulag system was transferred to the Ministry of Justice, and a mass release of over a million prisoners was announced, although only prisoners convicted for "non-political" crimes were released.[47] That amnesty led to a substantial increase in crime and would later be used against Beria by his rivals.[48][49]

To consolidate power, Beria also took steps to recognise the rights of non-Russian nationalities. He questioned the traditional policy of Russification and encouraged local officials to assert their own identities. He first turned to Georgia, where Stalin's fabricated Mingrelian affair was called off and the republic's key posts were filled by pro-Beria Georgians.[50] Beria's policies of granting more autonomy to the Ukrainian SSR alarmed Khrushchev, for whom Ukraine was a power base. Khrushchev then tried to draw Malenkov to his side, warning that "Beria is sharpening his knives".[51]

Khrushchev opposed the alliance between Beria and Malenkov, but he was initially unable to challenge them. Khrushchev's opportunity came in June 1953 when a spontaneous uprising against the East German communist regime broke out in East Berlin. Based on Beria's statements, other leaders suspected that in the wake of the uprising, he would consider trading the reunification of Germany and the end of the Cold War for massive aid from the United States, as had been received in the Second World War.

The cost of the war still weighed heavily on the Soviet economy. Beria craved the vast financial resources that another (more sustained) relationship with the U.S. could provide. According to some later sources, he ostensibly even considered giving the Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian SSRs "serious prospects of national autonomy", possibly similar to the Soviet satellite states in Europe.[52][53][54] Beria said of East Germany, "It is not even a real state but one kept in being only by Soviet troops."[55]

The East German uprising convinced Molotov, Malenkov and Bulganin that Beria's policies were dangerous and destabilising to Soviet power. Within days, Khrushchev persuaded the other leaders to support a coup d'etat against Beria.

Arrest, trial and execution

 
Lavrenty Beria on Time cover, 20 July 1953

Beria, as first deputy chairman of the Council of Ministers and an influential Politburo member, saw himself as Stalin's successor, while wider Politburo members had contrasting thoughts on future leadership. On 26 June 1953, Beria was arrested and held in an undisclosed location near Moscow. Accounts of his downfall vary considerably. The historical consensus is that Khrushchev prepared an elaborate ambush, convening a meeting of the Presidium on 26 June, where he suddenly launched a scathing attack on Beria, accusing him of being a traitor and spy in the pay of British intelligence. Beria was taken completely by surprise. He asked, "What's going on, Nikita Sergeyevich? Why are you picking fleas in my trousers?"

When Beria finally realized what was happening and plaintively appealed to Malenkov (an old friend) to speak for him, Malenkov silently hung his head and pressed a button on his desk. This was an arranged signal to Marshal Georgy Zhukov and a group of armed officers in a nearby room, who burst in and arrested Beria.[note 1]

As Beria's men were guarding the Kremlin at the time, he was held there in a special cell until nightfall and then smuggled out in the trunk of a car.[57] He was taken first to the Moscow guardhouse and then to the bunker of the headquarters of Moscow Military District.[58] Defence Minister Bulganin ordered the Kantemirovskaya Tank Division and Tamanskaya Motor Rifle Division to move into Moscow to prevent security forces loyal to Beria from rescuing him. Many of Beria's subordinates, proteges and associates were also arrested and executed, among them Merkulov, Bogdan Kobulov, Sergey Goglidze, Vladimir Dekanozov, Pavel Meshik, and Lev Vlodzimirskiy.

Beria and his men were tried by a "special session" (специальное судебное присутствие) of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union on 23 December 1953 with no defense counsel and no right of appeal. Marshal Ivan Konev was the chairman of the court.[59][60]

Beria was found guilty of:

  1. Treason. It was alleged that he had maintained secret connections with foreign intelligence services. In particular, attempts to initiate peace talks with Adolf Hitler in 1941 through the ambassador of the Kingdom of Bulgaria were classified as treason, though Beria had been acting on the orders of Stalin and Molotov. It was also alleged that Beria, who in 1942 helped organise the defence of the North Caucasus, tried to let the Germans occupy the Caucasus. Beria's suggestion to his assistants that to improve foreign relations it was reasonable to transfer the Kaliningrad Oblast to Germany, part of Karelia to Finland, the Moldavian SSR to Romania and the Kuril Islands to Japan also formed part of the allegations against him.
  2. Terrorism. Beria's participation in the purge of the Red Army in 1941 was classified as an act of terrorism.
  3. Counter-revolutionary activity during the Russian Civil War. In 1919, Beria worked in the security service of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. Beria maintained that he was assigned to that work by the Hummet party, which subsequently merged with the Adalat Party, the Ahrar Party, and the Baku Bolsheviks to establish the Azerbaijan Communist Party.

Beria and all the other defendants were sentenced to death on the day of the trial. The other six defendants – Dekanozov, Merkulov, Vlodzimirsky, Meshik, Goglidze and Kobulov – were shot immediately after the trial ended.[61]

Beria was executed separately; he allegedly pleaded on his knees before collapsing to the floor wailing.[62] He was shot through the forehead by General Pavel Batitsky.[63] His final moments bore great similarity to those of his own predecessor, Nikolai Yezhov, who begged for his life before his execution in 1940.[64] Beria's body was cremated and the remains buried in Communal Grave No. 3 at Donskoi Monastery Cemetery in Moscow.[65]

Beria's personal archive (said to have included "compromising" material on his former colleagues) was destroyed on Khrushchev's orders.[66]

Sexual predation

At Beria's trial in 1953, it became known that he had committed numerous rapes during the years he was NKVD chief.[67] Montefiore concludes that the information "reveals a sexual predator who used his power to indulge himself in obsessive depravity".[68] After his death, charges of rape and sexual abuse were disputed by people close to Beria, including his wife Nina and his son Sergo.[69]

According to the testimony of Colonel Rafael Semyonovich Sarkisov and Colonel Sardion Nikolaevich Nadaraia – two of Beria's bodyguards – on warm nights during the war, Beria was often driven around Moscow in his limousine. He would point out young women that he wanted to be taken to his dacha, where wine and a feast awaited them. After dining, Beria would take the women into his soundproofed office and rape them.

His bodyguards reported that their duties included handing each victim a flower bouquet as she left the house. Accepting it implied that the sex had been consensual; refusal would mean arrest. Sarkisov reported that after one woman rejected Beria's advances and ran out of his office, Sarkisov mistakenly handed her the flowers anyway. The enraged Beria declared, "Now, it is not a bouquet, it is a wreath! May it rot on your grave!" The NKVD arrested the woman the next day.[68]

The testimony of Sarkisov and Nadaraia has been partially corroborated by Edward Ellis Smith, an American who served in the US embassy in Moscow after the war. According to historian Amy Knight, "Smith noted that Beria's escapades were common knowledge among embassy personnel because his house was on the same street as a residence for Americans, and those who lived there saw girls brought to Beria's house late at night in a limousine."[70]

Women also submitted to Beria's sexual advances in exchange for the promise of freedom for imprisoned relatives. In one case, Beria picked up Tatiana Okunevskaya, a well-known Soviet actress, under the pretence of bringing her to perform for the Politburo. Instead he took her to his dacha, where he offered to free her father and grandmother from prison if she submitted. He then raped her, telling her, "Scream or not, it doesn't matter". In fact, Beria knew that Okunevskaya's relatives had been executed months earlier. Okunevskaya was arrested shortly afterwards and sentenced to solitary confinement in the Gulag, which she survived.[71]

Stalin and other high-ranking officials came to distrust Beria.[72] In one instance, when Stalin learned that his then-teenage daughter, Svetlana, was alone with Beria at his house, he telephoned her and told her to leave immediately. When Beria complimented Alexander Poskrebyshev's daughter on her beauty, Poskrebyshev quickly pulled her aside and instructed her, "Don't ever accept a lift from Beria".[73] After taking an interest in Voroshilov's daughter-in-law during a party at their summer dacha, Beria shadowed their car closely all the way back to the Kremlin, terrifying Voroshilov's wife.[72]

Before and during the war, Beria directed Sarkisov to keep a list of the names and phone numbers of the women that he had sex with. Eventually, he ordered Sarkisov to destroy the list as a security risk, but Sarkisov retained a secret copy. When Beria's fall from power began, Sarkisov passed the list to Viktor Abakumov, the former wartime head of SMERSH and now chief of the MGB – the successor to the NKVD. Abakumov was already aggressively building a case against Beria. Stalin, who was also seeking to undermine Beria, was thrilled by the detailed records kept by Sarkisov, demanding: "Send me everything this asshole writes down!"[71]

In 2003, the Russian government acknowledged Sarkisov's handwritten list of Beria's victims, which reportedly contains hundreds of names.[74] The victims' names were also released to the public in 2003.[74]

Evidence suggests that Beria also murdered some of these women. In 1993, construction workers installing streetlights unearthed human bones near Beria's Moscow villa (now the Tunisian embassy). Skulls, pelvises and leg bones were found.[75] In 1998, the skeletal remains of five young women were discovered during work carried out on the water pipes in the garden of the same villa.[76] In 2011, building workers digging a ditch in Moscow city centre unearthed a common grave near the same residence containing a pile of human bones, including two children's skulls covered with lime or chlorine. The lack of articles of clothing and the condition of the remains indicate that these bodies were buried naked. According to Martin Sixsmith, in a BBC documentary, "Beria spent his nights having teenagers abducted from the streets and brought here for him to rape. Those who resisted were strangled and buried in his wife's rose garden."[77] Vladimir Zharov, head of the Department of Forensic Medicine at Moscow's State University of Medicine and Dentistry and then the head of the criminal forensics bureau, said a torture chamber existed in the basement of Beria's villa and that there was probably an underground passage to burial sites.[75]

Additionally, an American report from 1952 quoted a former Muscovite as having "learned from one of Beria's mistresses that it was Beria's habit to order various women to become intimate with him and that he threatened them with prison if they refused." According to the source's account, "on one occasion Beria appeared, dressed in pajamas at the dacha where his friend was living. He was accompanied by his personal bodyguard."[78]

Honours and awards

Beria was deprived of all titles and awards on 23 December 1953.[79]

Soviet Union

Soviet Republics

Mongolia

In popular culture

Theatre

Beria is the central character in Good Night, Uncle Joe by Canadian playwright David Elendune. The play is a fictionalised account of the events leading up to Stalin's death.[80]

Film

Georgian film director Tengiz Abuladze based the character of dictator Varlam Aravidze on Beria in his 1984 film Repentance. Although banned in the Soviet Union for its semi-allegorical critique of Stalinism, it premiered at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival, winning the FIPRESCI Prize, Grand Prize of the Jury, and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury.[81]

Beria was played by British actor Bob Hoskins in the 1991 film Inner Circle, and by David Suchet in Red Monarch.

Simon Russell Beale played Beria in the 2017 satirical film The Death of Stalin.[82]

Television

In the 1958 CBS production of "The Plot to Kill Stalin" for Playhouse 90, Beria was portrayed by E. G. Marshall. In the 1992 HBO movie Stalin, Roshan Seth was cast as Beria.

In the 1999 film adaptation Animal Farm based on George Orwell's novel, Napoleon's bodyguard Pincher represents Beria.

Beria appears in the third episode ("Superbomb") of the four-part 2007 BBC docudrama series Nuclear Secrets, played by Boris Isarov. In the 2008 BBC documentary series World War II: Behind Closed Doors, Beria was portrayed by Polish actor Krzysztof Dracz [pl].

In the 1969 Doctor Who story The War Games, actor Philip Madoc based the coldly evil War Lord on Beria, even wearing his pince-nez glasses.

Literature

Alan Williams wrote a spy novel titled The Beria Papers, the plot of which revolves around Beria's alleged secret diaries recording his political and sexual depravities.

At the opening of Kingsley Amis' The Alteration, Lavrentiy Beria figures as "Monsignor Laurentius", paired with the similarly black-clad cleric "Monsignor Henricus" of the Holy Office (i.e., the Inquisition); the one to whom Beria was compared by Stalin in our own timeline: Heinrich Himmler. In the novel, both men are on the same side, serving an alternate-world Catholic Empire.

Beria is a significant character in the alternate history/alien invasion novel series Worldwar by Harry Turtledove, as well as the Axis of Time series by John Birmingham.

In the 1981 novel Noble House by James Clavell, set in 1963 Hong Kong, the main character Ian Dunross received from Alan Medford Grant a set of secret documents regarding a Soviet spy-ring in Hong Kong code-named "Sevrin". The document was signed by an LB, believed by Grant (and the mysterious Tip Tok-Toh) to be Lavrentiy Beria (written as Lavrenti Beria in the novel).

Beria is a significant character in the opening chapters of the 1998 novel Archangel by British novelist Robert Harris.

Beria is a minor character in the 2009 novel The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson. Beria is described as the boss of the Soviet state's security and is in attendance at a meal with the main character and Stalin.[83][page needed]

As "der Kleine Große Mann" ("the Little Big Man"), Beria appears as the lover of one of the leading characters, Christine, in the 2014 novel Das achte Leben (Für Brilka) (translated as "The Eighth Life (For Brilka)") by Nino Haratischwili.[84]

In the 2015–2017 serialized science fiction novel Unsong by writer Scott Alexander, Beria is mentioned as being in the nicest part of hell, reserved for the worst sinners, along with Hitler and LaLaurie.[85]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This fits an account from Khrushchev's perspective.[56]

References

  1. ^ Fischer, Benjamin B. . cia.gov. Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007.
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  3. ^ Courtois 2010, pp. 121–122.
  4. ^ Werth, Nicolas (2006). "The 'Chechen Problem': Handling an Awkward Legacy, 1918–1958". Contemporary European History. 15 (3): 347–366. doi:10.1017/S0960777306003365. S2CID 145083075.
  5. ^ Williams 2015, p. 67.
  6. ^ Jones, Adam (2016). Genocide: A Comprehensive Introduction (revised ed.). Routledge. p. 203. ISBN 9781317533856.
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  12. ^ Montefiore, Simon (2008). Young Stalin. New York: Vintage. p. 67. ISBN 978-1400096138. OCLC 276996699.
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  27. ^ Parrish 1996.
  28. ^ Knight 1996, p. 151.
  29. ^ Montefiore 2003, p. 642n.
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  31. ^ . Mix Top Ten. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  32. ^ How Rivalries End, Karen Rasler et al. p.39
  33. ^ Montefiore 2003, p. 639.
  34. ^ Montefiore 2003, p. 605.
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  36. ^ Montefiore 2003, pp. 640–644.
  37. ^ Montefiore 2003, pp. 638–641.
  38. ^ a b Montefiore 2003, p. 640.
  39. ^ Montefiore 2003, p. 571.
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  43. ^ Brent & Naumov 2003, p. [page needed].
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  45. ^ Knight 1996, p. 184.
  46. ^ Kozlov & Gilburd 2013, p. 111.
  47. ^ Kozlov & Gilburd 2013, p. 112.
  48. ^ Hardy 2016, pp. 23–24.
  49. ^ Kozlov & Gilburd 2013, p. 114.
  50. ^ Knight 1996, p. 187.
  51. ^ Knight 1996, p. 190.
  52. ^ Wydra, Harald (2007). Communism and the Emergence of Democracy. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-521-85169-5.
  53. ^ Gaddis, John Lewis (2005). The Cold War: a new history. New York City: Penguin Press. ISBN 1-59420-062-9.
  54. ^ Knight 1996, p. 189.
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  56. ^ Andrew, Christopher; Gordievsky, Oleg (1990). "11". KGB: The Inside Story (1st ed.). New York: HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 423–424. ISBN 0-06-016605-3.
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  58. ^ Cavendish, Richard. "Lavrenti Beria Executed". History Today. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  59. ^ Kramer, Mark (1999). "The Early Post-Stalin Succession Struggle and Upheavals in East-Central Europe: Internal-External Linkages in Soviet Policy Making (Part 2)". Journal of Cold War Studies. 1 (2): 3–38. ISSN 1520-3972. JSTOR 26925014.
  60. ^ Schwartz, Harry (24 December 1953). "Beria Trial Shows Army's Rising Role; BERIA TRIAL SHOWS ARMY'S RISING ROLE". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 23 October 2021.
  61. ^ "Citizen Kurchatov Stalin's Bomb Maker" (documentary). PBS. Retrieved 12 February 2007.
  62. ^ Rhodes 1995, p. 523.
  63. ^ "Лаврентия Берию в 1953 году расстрелял лично советский маршал" (in Russian). 24 June 2010.
  64. ^ Jansen, Marc; Petrov, Nikita (2002). Stalin's Loyal Executioner: People's Commissar Nikolai Ezhov, 1895–1940. Stanford, California: Hoover Institution Press. pp. 186–189. ISBN 0-8179-2902-9.
  65. ^ "Beria, Lavrenti Pavlovich". WW2 Gravestone. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  66. ^ Medvedev, Zhores & Medvedev, Roy (2003), The Unknown Stalin, trans. Ellen Dahrendorf, I. B. Tauris, London, p. 86.
  67. ^ Rayfield, Donald (2005). Stalin and His Hangmen: The Tyrant and Those Who Killed for Him. New York City: Random House. pp. 466–467. ISBN 978-0-375-75771-6.
  68. ^ a b Montefiore 2003, p. 506.
  69. ^ Sudoplatov 1995, p. 97.
  70. ^ Knight 1996, p. 97.
  71. ^ a b Montefiore 2003, p. 507.
  72. ^ a b Montefiore, Simon Sebag (3 June 2010). Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar. Orion. pp. chapter 45. ISBN 978-0-297-86385-4.
  73. ^ Montefiore 2003, p. 508.
  74. ^ a b Shepard, Robin (18 January 2003). "Beria's terror files are opened". The Times.
  75. ^ a b "Grim reminder of Beria terror". Herald Scotland. Moscow. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
  76. ^ Sixsmith, Martin (2011). Russia: A 1,000-Year Chronicle of the Wild East. Random House. p. 396. ISBN 978-1-4464-1688-4.
  77. ^ Sixsmith, Martin (2 August 2011). "The Secret Speech/The Scramble For Power". Russia, The Wild East. Season 2. Episode 17. BBC. Retrieved 17 July 2012.
  78. ^ The Soviet Union as Reported by Former Soviet Citizens; Interview Report No.5 (Washington D.C.: United States Department of State, September 1952), p. 4.
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  81. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Repentance". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 19 July 2009.
  82. ^ "The Death of Stalin".
  83. ^ Jonasson 2012.
  84. ^ Haratischwili, Nino (2014). Das achte Leben (Für Brilka). Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt. ISBN 978-3-627-02208-2.
  85. ^ Alexander, Scott (22 June 2016). "Interludeי: The Broadcast". unsongbook.com.

Works cited

  • Williams, Brian Glyn (2015). Inferno in Chechnya: The Russian-Chechen Wars, the Al Qaeda Myth, and the Boston Marathon Bombings. University Press of New England. p. 67. ISBN 9781611688016. LCCN 2015002114.
  • Courtois, Stephane (2010). "Raphael Lemkin and the Question of Genocide under Communist Regimes". In Bieńczyk-Missala, Agnieszka; Dębski, Sławomir (eds.). Rafał Lemkin. PISM. pp. 121–122. ISBN 9788389607850. LCCN 2012380710.
  • Alliluyeva, Svetlana (1967). Twenty Letters to a Friend. Hutchinson. ISBN 978-0-06-010099-5.
  • Beria, Sergo (2003). Beria, My Father: Inside Stalin's Kremlin. London: Duckworth. ISBN 0715632051. OCLC 51068942.
  • Brent, Jonathan; Naumov, Vladimir Pavlovich (2003). Stalin's Last Crime: The Doctor's Plot. John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-5448-3.
  • Chang, June; Halliday, Jon (2005). Mao: The Unknown Story. New York: Alfred a Knopf.
  • Hardy, Jeffrey S. (18 October 2016). The Gulag After Stalin: Redefining Punishment in Khrushchev's Soviet Union, 1953-1964. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-0604-2.
  • Jonasson, Jonas (11 September 2012). The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared. Hachette Books. ISBN 978-1-4013-0439-3.
  • Knight, Amy (1996). Beria: Stalin's First Lieutenant. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-03257-2. OCLC 804864639.
  • Kozlov, Denis; Gilburd, Eleonory (2013). The Thaw: Soviet Society and Culture during the 1950s and 1960s. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1442618954.
  • McDermott, K. (1995). "Stalinist Terror in the Comintern: New Perspectives". Journal of Contemporary History. 20 (1): 111–130. doi:10.1177/002200949503000105. JSTOR 260924. S2CID 161318303.
  • Montefiore, Simon (2003). Stalin: Court of the Red Tsar. Random House. ISBN 978-1400076789.
  • Parrish, Michael (1996). The Lesser Terror: Soviet State Security, 1939-53: Soviet State Security, 1939-1953. Westport, CT: Praeger.
  • Rhodes, Richard (1995). Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-684-82414-0.
  • Sudoplatov, Pavel (1995). Special Tasks: The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness – A Soviet Spymaster. Boston: ittle Brown & Co. ISBN 0-316-77352-2. OCLC 35547754.

Further reading

  • Antonov-Ovseenko, Anton (2007). [Beria] (PDF) (in Russian). Sukhumi: Дом печати. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 September 2015.
  • Avtorkhanov, Abdurahman (1991). "The Mystery of Stalin's Death". Novyi Mir (in Russian). pp. 194–233.
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila (1996). Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Fitzpatrick, Sheila (1999). Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times: Soviet Russia in the 1930s. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Hastings, Max (2015). The Secret War: Spies, Codes and Guerrillas 1939–1945. London: William Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-750374-2.
  • Khruschev, Nikita (1977). Khruschev Remembers: Last Testament. Random House. ISBN 0-517-17547-9.
  • Kotkin, Stephen (2017). Stalin: Waiting for Hitler, 1929-1941. New York: Random House.
  • Kikodze, Geronti (2003). ქიქოძე, გერონტი, თანამედროვის ჩანაწერები. – [1-ლი გამოც.]. – თბ. : არეტე [Writings of Contemporary Records]. ISBN 99940-745-6-3. OCLC 59109649..
  • Stove, Robert (2003). The Unsleeping Eye: Secret Police and Their Victims. San Francisco: Encounter Books. ISBN 1-893554-66-X. OCLC 470173678.
  • Sukhomlinov, Andrey (2004). Кто вы, Лаврентий Берия? : неизвестные страницы уголовного дела (in Russian). Moscow: Detektiv-Press. ISBN 5-89935-060-1. OCLC 62421057.
  • Wittlin, Thaddeus (1972). Commissar: The Life and Death of Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria. New York: The Macmillan Co. OCLC 462215687.
  • Yakovlev, A.N.; Naumov, V.; Sigachev, Y., eds. (1999). Lavrenty Beria, 1953. Stenographic Report of July's Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and Other Documents (in Russian). Moscow: International Democracy Foundation. ISBN 5-89511-006-1.
  • Zalessky, Konstantin [in Russian] (2000). Империя Сталина: Биографический энциклопедический словарь (in Russian). Veche. p. 605. ISBN 5-7838-0716-8. OCLC 237410276.

External links

  • Beria, Lavrentiy (1936), The Victory of the National Policy of Lenin and Stalin, Marxists.
  • ——— (1950), The Great Contrast, Marxists.
  • Interview with Sergo Beria
  • An outline of the Russian Supreme Court decision of 29 May 2000
  • Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Current Intelligence. , 17 July 1953.
  • Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Current Intelligence. , 17 April 1954.
  • Central Intelligence Agency, Office of Current Intelligence. , 17 August 1954.
  • Newspaper clippings about Lavrentiy Beria in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

lavrentiy, beria, beria, redirects, here, town, australia, beria, western, australia, language, known, beria, zaghawa, language, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, pavlovich, family, name, beria, lavrentiy, pavlovich, . Beria redirects here For the town in Australia see Beria Western Australia For the language known as Beria see Zaghawa language In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Pavlovich and the family name is Beria Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria ˈ b ɛ r i e Russian Lavre ntij Pa vlovich Be riya tr Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beriya IPA ˈbʲerʲie Georgian ლავრენტი ბერია romanized lavrent i beria IPA bɛɾiɑ 29 March O S 17 March 1899 23 December 1953 was a Georgian Bolshevik and Soviet politician Marshal of the Soviet Union and state security administrator chief of the Soviet security and chief of the People s Commissariat for Internal Affairs NKVD under Joseph Stalin during the Second World War and promoted to deputy premier under Stalin in 1941 He officially joined the Politburo in 1946 Lavrentiy BeriaLavre ntij Be riya Russian ლავრენტი ბერია Georgian Beria c 1930sFirst Deputy Chairman of the Council of MinistersIn office 5 March 26 June 1953 1953 03 05 1953 06 26 PremierGeorgy MalenkovPreceded byVyacheslav MolotovSucceeded byLazar KaganovichMinister of Internal AffairsIn office 5 March 26 June 1953 1953 03 05 1953 06 26 Preceded bySemyon IgnatyevSucceeded bySergei KruglovIn office 25 November 1938 15 January 1946 1938 11 25 1946 01 15 Preceded byNikolai YezhovSucceeded bySergei KruglovAdditional positionsDeputy Chairman of the Council of MinistersIn office 19 March 1946 5 March 1953 1946 03 19 1953 03 05 PremierJoseph StalinFirst Secretary of the Georgian Communist PartyIn office 15 January 1934 31 August 1938 1934 01 15 1938 08 31 Preceded byPetre AgniashviliSucceeded byCandide CharkvianiIn office 14 November 1931 18 October 1932 1931 11 14 1932 10 18 Preceded byLavrenty KartvelishviliSucceeded byPetre AgniashviliFull member of the 18th 19th PolitburoIn office 18 March 1946 7 July 1953 1946 03 18 1953 07 07 Candidate member of the 18th PolitburoIn office 22 March 1939 18 March 1946 1939 03 22 1946 03 18 Personal detailsBornLavrentiy Pavlovich Beria 1899 03 29 29 March 1899Merkheuli Sukhum Okrug Kutais Governorate Russian EmpireDied23 December 1953 1953 12 23 aged 54 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionCause of deathExecution by shootingCitizenshipSovietPolitical partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union 1917 1953 SpouseNina GegechkoriParentsPavel Beria father Marta Jaqeli mother AwardsHero of Socialist LabourSignatureMilitary serviceRankMarshal of the Soviet UnionWarsWorld War IIBeria was the longest lived and most influential of Stalin s secret police chiefs wielding his most substantial influence during and after the war Following the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 he was responsible for organizing purges such as the Katyn massacre of 22 000 Polish officers and officials 1 He would later also orchestrate the forced upheaval of minorities from the Caucasus as head of the NKVD an act that was declared as genocidal by various scholars and as concerning Chechens in 2004 by the European Parliament 2 3 4 5 6 He simultaneously administered vast sections of the Soviet state and acted as the de facto Marshal of the Soviet Union in command of NKVD field units responsible for barrier troops and Soviet partisan intelligence and sabotage operations on the Eastern Front Beria administered the expansion of the Gulag labour camps and was primarily responsible for overseeing the secret detention facilities for scientists and engineers known as sharashkas After the war Beria organised the communist takeover of the state institutions in central and eastern Europe His ruthlessness in his duties and skill at producing results culminated in his success in overseeing the Soviet atomic bomb project Stalin gave it absolute priority and the project was completed in under five years 7 After Stalin s death in March 1953 Beria became First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs In this dual capacity he formed a troika with Georgy Malenkov and Vyacheslav Molotov that briefly led the country in Stalin s place A coup d etat by Nikita Khrushchev with help from former Marshal of the Soviet Union Georgy Zhukov removed Beria from power in June 1953 After being arrested he was tried for treason and other offenses sentenced to death and executed on 23 December 1953 During his trial and after his death numerous allegations arose that Beria had been a serial rapist and serial killer Contents 1 Early life and rise to power 2 Head of the NKVD 3 Post war politics 4 Stalin s death 5 First Deputy Premier and Soviet triumvirate 6 Arrest trial and execution 7 Sexual predation 8 Honours and awards 8 1 Soviet Union 8 1 1 Soviet Republics 8 2 Mongolia 9 In popular culture 9 1 Theatre 9 2 Film 9 3 Television 9 4 Literature 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Works cited 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and rise to power EditLavrentiy Pavlovich Beria was born in Merkheuli near Sukhumi in the Sukhum Okrug of the Kutais Governorate now Gulripshi District de facto Republic of Abkhazia or Georgia then part of the Russian Empire He grew up in a Georgian Orthodox family his mother Marta Jaqeli 1868 1955 was deeply religious and church going she spent much time in church and died in a church building Marta was from the Guria region descended from a noble Georgian family and was a widow before marrying Beria s father Pavle Beria 1872 1922 a landowner in Abkhazia from the Mingrelian ethnic subgroup 8 9 In his autobiography Beria mentions only his sister and his niece implying that his brother was or any other siblings were dead or had no relationship with him after he left Merkheuli Beria attended a technical school in Sukhumi and later claimed to have joined the Bolsheviks in March 1917 while a student in the Baku Polytechnicum subsequently known as the Azerbaijan State Oil Academy As a student Beria distinguished himself in mathematics and the sciences Beria had earlier worked for the anti Bolshevik Mussavatists in Baku After the Red Army captured the city on 28 April 1920 he was saved from execution because there was not enough time to arrange his shooting and replacement it may also have been that Sergei Kirov intervened 10 While in prison Beria formed a connection with Nina Gegechkori 1905 1991 11 his cellmate s niece and they eloped on a train 12 In 1919 at the age of 20 Beria started his career in state security when the security service of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic hired him while he was still a student at the Polytechnicum In 1920 or 1921 accounts vary he joined the Cheka the original Bolshevik secret police At that time a Bolshevik revolt took place in the Menshevik controlled Democratic Republic of Georgia and the Red Army subsequently invaded The Cheka became heavily involved in the conflict which resulted in the defeat of the Mensheviks and the formation of the Georgian SSR Beria led the repression of a Georgian nationalist uprising in 1924 after which up to 10 000 people were executed 13 In 1926 Beria took control of the Georgian OGPU Sergo Ordzhonikidze head of the Transcaucasian party introduced him to fellow Georgian Joseph Stalin As a result Beria became an ally in Stalin s rise to power During his years at the helm of the Georgian OGPU Beria effectively destroyed the intelligence networks that Turkey and Iran had developed in the Soviet Caucasus while successfully penetrating the governments of these countries with his agents Beria was appointed First Secretary of the Communist Party of Georgia in 1931 and party leader for the whole Transcaucasian region in 1932 He became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1934 During this time he began to attack fellow members of the Georgian Communist Party particularly Gaioz Devdariani who served as Minister of Education of the Georgian SSR Beria ordered the executions of Devdariani s brothers George and Shalva By 1935 Beria had become one of Stalin s most trusted subordinates He cemented his place in Stalin s entourage with a lengthy oration titled On the History of the Bolshevik Organisations in Transcaucasia later published as a book which emphasised Stalin s role 14 When Stalin s purge of the Communist Party and Soviet government began in 1934 after the assassination of Leningrad party boss Sergei Kirov 1 December 1934 Beria ran the purges in Transcaucasia In June 1937 he said in a speech Let our enemies know that anyone who attempts to raise a hand against the will of our people against the will of the party of Lenin and Stalin will be mercilessly crushed and destroyed 15 Head of the NKVD Edit The first page of Beria s notice oversigned by Stalin and several other officials to kill approximately 15 000 Polish officers and some 10 000 more intellectuals in the Katyn Forest and other places in the Soviet Union In August 1938 Stalin brought Beria to Moscow as deputy head of the People s Commissariat for Internal Affairs NKVD the ministry which oversaw the state security and police forces Under Nikolai Yezhov the NKVD carried out the Great Purge the imprisonment or execution of a huge number possibly over a million of citizens throughout the Soviet Union as alleged enemies of the people By 1938 however the oppression had become so extensive that it was damaging the infrastructure economy and even the armed forces of the Soviet state prompting Stalin to wind the purge down In September Beria was appointed head of the Main Administration of State Security GUGB of the NKVD and in November he succeeded Yezhov as NKVD head Yezhov was executed in 1940 Beria s appointment marked an easing of the repression begun under Yezhov Over 100 000 people were released from the labour camps The government officially admitted that there had been some injustice and excesses during the purges which were blamed entirely on Yezhov But the liberalization was only relative arrests torture and executions continued On 16 January 1940 Beria sent Stalin a list of 457 enemies of the people of whom 346 were marked to be shot They included Yezhov and his brother and nephews Mikhail Frinovsky and his wife and teenage son Yefim Yevdokimov and his wife and teenage son and dozens more former NKVD officers and the renowned writer Isaac Babel and the journalist Mikhail Koltsov 16 Some of the NKVD officers Beria promoted such as Boris Rodos Lev Shvartzman and Bogdan Kobulov were brutal torturers who were executed in the 1950s The theatre director Vsevolod Meyerhold described being beaten on the spine and soles of his feet until the pain was so intense that it felt as if boiling water was being poured on these sensitive areas 17 His interrogation record was signed by Shvartzman Robert Eikhe a former high ranking party official was sadistically beaten and had an eye gouged out by Rodos in Beria s office while Beria watched 18 He not only permitted and encouraged the beating of prisoners but in some case carried it out in person One prisoner S I Abramov who survived to give evidence in the 1950s testified that he was brought to Beria s office and accused of plotting to blow up the Moscow metro which he denied Beria hit me in the face After that I was given 30 minutes to think in the next room next to his office from where the screams and groans of the beaten could be heard An hour later called to the office I was met with the words of Kobulov What shall we start beating 19 In March 1939 Beria was appointed as a candidate member of the Communist Party s Politburo Although he did not rise to full membership until 1946 he was by then one of the senior leaders of the Soviet state In 1941 he was made a Commissar General of State Security the highest quasi military rank within the Soviet police system of that time In 1940 the pace of the purges accelerated again During this period Beria supervised deportations of people identified as political enemies from Poland Lithuania Latvia and Estonia after Soviet occupation of those countries On 5 March 1940 after the Gestapo NKVD Third Conference was held in Zakopane Beria sent a note no 794 B to Stalin in which he stated that the Polish prisoners of war kept at camps and prisons in western Belarus and Ukraine were enemies of the Soviet Union and recommended their execution 20 Most of them were military officers but there were also intelligentsia doctors priests and others in a total of 22 000 people With Stalin s approval Beria s NKVD executed them in what became known as the Katyn massacre 21 From October 1940 to February 1942 the NKVD under Beria carried out a new purge of the Red Army and related industries In February 1941 Beria became deputy chairman of the Council of People s Commissars and in June following Nazi Germany s invasion of the Soviet Union he became a member of the State Defense Committee GKO During the Second World War he took on major domestic responsibilities and mobilised the millions of people imprisoned in NKVD Gulag camps into wartime production He took control of the manufacture of armaments and with Georgy Malenkov aircraft and aircraft engines This was the beginning of Beria s alliance with Malenkov which later became of central importance Nestor Lakoba Nikita Khrushchev Lavrentiy Beria and Aghasi Khanjian during the opening of the Moscow Metro in 1936 the same year that Lakoba and Khanjian were killed by Beria In 1944 as the Soviet Union had repelled the German invasion Beria was placed in charge of the various ethnic minorities accused of anti sovietism and or collaboration with the invaders including the Balkars Karachays Chechens Ingush Crimean Tatars Kalmyks Pontic Greeks and Volga Germans 22 All these groups were deported to Soviet Central Asia see Population transfer in the Soviet Union In December 1944 the NKVD supervised the Soviet atomic bomb project Task No 1 which built and tested a bomb by 29 August 1949 The project was extremely labour intensive At least 330 000 people including 10 000 technicians were involved The Gulag system provided tens of thousands of people for work in uranium mines and for the construction and operation of uranium processing plants They also constructed test facilities such as those at Semipalatinsk and in the Novaya Zemlya archipelago In July 1945 as Soviet police ranks were converted to a military uniform system Beria s rank was officially converted to that of Marshal of the Soviet Union Although he had never held a traditional military command he made a significant contribution to the victory of the Soviet Union in the war through his organization of wartime production and his use of partisans Abroad Beria had met with Kim Il sung the future leader of North Korea several times when the Soviet troops had declared war on Japan and occupied the northern half of Korea from August 1945 Beria recommended that Stalin install a communist leader in the occupied territories 23 24 Post war politics Edit Beria with Stalin in background Stalin s daughter Svetlana and Nestor Lakoba obscured 25 With Stalin nearing 70 a concealed struggle for succession amongst his entourage dominated Soviet politics At the end of the war Andrei Zhdanov who had served as the Communist Party leader in Leningrad now Saint Petersburg during the war seemed the most likely candidate After 1946 Beria formed an alliance with Malenkov to counter Zhdanov s rise 26 In January 1946 Beria resigned as chief of the NKVD while retaining general control over national security matters as Deputy Prime Minister and Curator of the Organs of State Security under Stalin However the new NKVD chief Sergei Kruglov was not a supporter of Beria Also by the summer of 1946 Beria s man Vsevolod Nikolayevich Merkulov was replaced as head of the Ministry for State Security MGB by Viktor Abakumov Abakumov had headed SMERSH from 1943 to 1946 his relationship with Beria involved close collaboration since Abakumov owed his rise to Beria s support and esteem but also rivalry Stalin had begun to encourage Abakumov to form his own network inside the MGB to counter Beria s dominance of the power ministries 27 Kruglov and Abakumov moved expeditiously to replace Beria s men in the security apparatus with new people Very soon Deputy Minister Stepan Mamulov of the Ministry of Internal Affairs MVD was the only close Beria ally left outside foreign intelligence on which Beria kept a grip In the following months Abakumov started carrying out important operations without consulting Beria often working with Zhdanov and on Stalin s direct orders One of the first such moves involved the Jewish Anti Fascist Committee affair which commenced in October 1946 and eventually led to the murder of Solomon Mikhoels and the arrest of many other members After Zhdanov died in August 1948 Beria and Malenkov consolidated their power by means of a purge of Zhdanov s associates in the so called Leningrad Affair Those executed included Zhdanov s deputy Alexey Kuznetsov the economic chief Nikolai Voznesensky the Party head in Leningrad Pyotr Popkov and the Prime Minister of the Russian SFSR Mikhail Rodionov 28 However Beria was unable to purge Mikhail Suslov whom he hated Beria felt increasingly uncomfortable with Suslov s growing relationship with Stalin Russian historian Roy Medvedev speculates in his book Neizvestnyi Stalin that Stalin had made Suslov his secret heir 29 Evidently Beria felt so threatened by Suslov that after his arrest in 1953 documents were found in his safe labelling Suslov the No 1 person he wanted to eliminate 30 During the postwar years Beria supervised the establishment of communist regimes in Eastern Europe and chose their Soviet backed leaders 31 Starting in 1948 Abakumov initiated several investigations against these leaders which culminated with the arrest in November 1952 of Rudolf Slansky Bedrich Geminder and others in Czechoslovakia These men were frequently accused of Zionism rootless cosmopolitanism and providing weapons to Israel Such charges deeply disturbed Beria as he had directly ordered the sale of large amounts of Czech arms to Israel Altogether fourteen Czechoslovak communist leaders eleven of them Jewish were tried convicted and executed as part of Soviet policy to woo Arab nationalists which culminated in the major Czech Egypt arms deal of 1955 32 The Doctors Plot began in 1951 when a number of the country s prominent Jewish physicians were accused of poisoning top Soviet leaders and arrested Concurrently the Soviet press began an anti Semitic propaganda campaign euphemistically termed the struggle against rootless cosmopolitanism Initially 37 men were arrested but the number quickly grew into hundreds Scores of Soviet Jews were dismissed from their jobs arrested sent to the Gulag or executed The plot was presumably invented by Stalin A few days after Stalin s death on 5 March 1953 Beria freed all the arrested doctors announced that the entire matter was fabricated and arrested the MGB functionaries directly involved Stalin s death EditMain article Death and state funeral of Joseph Stalin Stalin s aide Vasili Lozgachev reported that Beria and Malenkov were the first members of the Politburo to see Stalin s condition when he was found unconscious They arrived at Stalin s dacha at Kuntsevo at 03 00 on 2 March 1953 after being called by Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin The latter two did not want to risk Stalin s wrath by checking themselves 33 Lozgachev tried to explain to Beria that the unconscious Stalin still in his soiled clothing was sick and needed medical attention Beria angrily dismissed his claims as panic mongering and quickly left ordering him Don t bother us don t cause a panic and don t disturb Comrade Stalin 34 Alexsei Rybin Stalin s bodyguard recalled No one wanted to telephone Beria since most of the personal bodyguards hated Beria 35 Calling a doctor was deferred for a full twelve hours after Stalin was rendered paralysed incontinent and unable to speak This decision is noted as extraordinary by the historian Simon Sebag Montefiore but also consistent with the standard Stalinist policy of deferring all decision making no matter how necessary or obvious without official orders from higher authority 36 Beria s decision to avoid immediately calling a doctor was tacitly supported or at least not opposed by the rest of the Politburo which was rudderless without Stalin s micromanagement and paralysed by a legitimate fear that he would suddenly recover and take reprisals on anyone who had dared to act without his orders 37 Stalin s suspicion of doctors in the wake of the Doctors Plot was well known at the time of his sickness his private physician was already being tortured in the basement of the Lubyanka for suggesting the leader required more bed rest 38 Khrushchev wrote in his memoirs that Beria had immediately after Stalin s stroke gone about spewing hatred against Stalin and mocking him When Stalin showed signs of consciousness Beria dropped to his knees and kissed his hand When Stalin fell unconscious again Beria immediately stood and spat 39 After Stalin s death on 5 March 1953 Beria s ambitions sprang into full force In the uneasy silence following the cessation of Stalin s last agonies he was the first to dart forward to kiss his lifeless form a move likened by Montefiore to wrenching a dead King s ring off his finger 40 While the rest of Stalin s inner circle even Molotov saved from certain liquidation stood sobbing unashamedly over the body Beria reportedly appeared radiant regenerated and glistening with ill concealed relish 40 When Beria left the room he broke the sombre atmosphere by shouting loudly for his driver his voice echoing with what Stalin s daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva called the ring of triumph unconcealed 41 Alliluyeva noticed how the Politburo seemed openly frightened of Beria and unnerved by his bold display of ambition He s off to take power Mikoyan recalled muttering to Khrushchev That prompted a frantic dash for their own limousines to intercept him at the Kremlin 41 Stalin s death prevented a final purge of Old Bolsheviks Mikoyan and Molotov for which Stalin had been laying the groundwork in the year prior to his death Shortly after Stalin s death Beria announced triumphantly to the Politburo that he had done Stalin in and saved us all according to Molotov s memoirs The assertion that Stalin was poisoned by Beria s associates has been supported by Edvard Radzinsky and other authors 38 42 43 44 First Deputy Premier and Soviet triumvirate EditAfter Stalin s death Beria was appointed First Deputy Premier and reappointed head of the MVD which he merged with the MGB His close ally Malenkov was the new Premier and initially the most powerful man in the post Stalin leadership Beria was second most powerful and given Malenkov s personal weakness was poised to become the power behind the throne and ultimately leader himself Khrushchev became Party Secretary Kliment Voroshilov became Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet i e the nominal head of state Beria undertook some measures of liberalisation immediately after Stalin s death 45 He reorganised the MVD and drastically reduced its economic power and penal responsibilities A number of costly construction projects such as the Salekhard Igarka Railway were scrapped and the remaining industrial enterprises became affiliated under other economic ministries 46 The Gulag system was transferred to the Ministry of Justice and a mass release of over a million prisoners was announced although only prisoners convicted for non political crimes were released 47 That amnesty led to a substantial increase in crime and would later be used against Beria by his rivals 48 49 To consolidate power Beria also took steps to recognise the rights of non Russian nationalities He questioned the traditional policy of Russification and encouraged local officials to assert their own identities He first turned to Georgia where Stalin s fabricated Mingrelian affair was called off and the republic s key posts were filled by pro Beria Georgians 50 Beria s policies of granting more autonomy to the Ukrainian SSR alarmed Khrushchev for whom Ukraine was a power base Khrushchev then tried to draw Malenkov to his side warning that Beria is sharpening his knives 51 Khrushchev opposed the alliance between Beria and Malenkov but he was initially unable to challenge them Khrushchev s opportunity came in June 1953 when a spontaneous uprising against the East German communist regime broke out in East Berlin Based on Beria s statements other leaders suspected that in the wake of the uprising he would consider trading the reunification of Germany and the end of the Cold War for massive aid from the United States as had been received in the Second World War The cost of the war still weighed heavily on the Soviet economy Beria craved the vast financial resources that another more sustained relationship with the U S could provide According to some later sources he ostensibly even considered giving the Estonian Latvian and Lithuanian SSRs serious prospects of national autonomy possibly similar to the Soviet satellite states in Europe 52 53 54 Beria said of East Germany It is not even a real state but one kept in being only by Soviet troops 55 The East German uprising convinced Molotov Malenkov and Bulganin that Beria s policies were dangerous and destabilising to Soviet power Within days Khrushchev persuaded the other leaders to support a coup d etat against Beria Arrest trial and execution Edit Lavrenty Beria on Time cover 20 July 1953 Beria as first deputy chairman of the Council of Ministers and an influential Politburo member saw himself as Stalin s successor while wider Politburo members had contrasting thoughts on future leadership On 26 June 1953 Beria was arrested and held in an undisclosed location near Moscow Accounts of his downfall vary considerably The historical consensus is that Khrushchev prepared an elaborate ambush convening a meeting of the Presidium on 26 June where he suddenly launched a scathing attack on Beria accusing him of being a traitor and spy in the pay of British intelligence Beria was taken completely by surprise He asked What s going on Nikita Sergeyevich Why are you picking fleas in my trousers When Beria finally realized what was happening and plaintively appealed to Malenkov an old friend to speak for him Malenkov silently hung his head and pressed a button on his desk This was an arranged signal to Marshal Georgy Zhukov and a group of armed officers in a nearby room who burst in and arrested Beria note 1 As Beria s men were guarding the Kremlin at the time he was held there in a special cell until nightfall and then smuggled out in the trunk of a car 57 He was taken first to the Moscow guardhouse and then to the bunker of the headquarters of Moscow Military District 58 Defence Minister Bulganin ordered the Kantemirovskaya Tank Division and Tamanskaya Motor Rifle Division to move into Moscow to prevent security forces loyal to Beria from rescuing him Many of Beria s subordinates proteges and associates were also arrested and executed among them Merkulov Bogdan Kobulov Sergey Goglidze Vladimir Dekanozov Pavel Meshik and Lev Vlodzimirskiy Beria and his men were tried by a special session specialnoe sudebnoe prisutstvie of the Supreme Court of the Soviet Union on 23 December 1953 with no defense counsel and no right of appeal Marshal Ivan Konev was the chairman of the court 59 60 Beria was found guilty of Treason It was alleged that he had maintained secret connections with foreign intelligence services In particular attempts to initiate peace talks with Adolf Hitler in 1941 through the ambassador of the Kingdom of Bulgaria were classified as treason though Beria had been acting on the orders of Stalin and Molotov It was also alleged that Beria who in 1942 helped organise the defence of the North Caucasus tried to let the Germans occupy the Caucasus Beria s suggestion to his assistants that to improve foreign relations it was reasonable to transfer the Kaliningrad Oblast to Germany part of Karelia to Finland the Moldavian SSR to Romania and the Kuril Islands to Japan also formed part of the allegations against him Terrorism Beria s participation in the purge of the Red Army in 1941 was classified as an act of terrorism Counter revolutionary activity during the Russian Civil War In 1919 Beria worked in the security service of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic Beria maintained that he was assigned to that work by the Hummet party which subsequently merged with the Adalat Party the Ahrar Party and the Baku Bolsheviks to establish the Azerbaijan Communist Party Beria and all the other defendants were sentenced to death on the day of the trial The other six defendants Dekanozov Merkulov Vlodzimirsky Meshik Goglidze and Kobulov were shot immediately after the trial ended 61 Beria was executed separately he allegedly pleaded on his knees before collapsing to the floor wailing 62 He was shot through the forehead by General Pavel Batitsky 63 His final moments bore great similarity to those of his own predecessor Nikolai Yezhov who begged for his life before his execution in 1940 64 Beria s body was cremated and the remains buried in Communal Grave No 3 at Donskoi Monastery Cemetery in Moscow 65 Beria s personal archive said to have included compromising material on his former colleagues was destroyed on Khrushchev s orders 66 Sexual predation EditAt Beria s trial in 1953 it became known that he had committed numerous rapes during the years he was NKVD chief 67 Montefiore concludes that the information reveals a sexual predator who used his power to indulge himself in obsessive depravity 68 After his death charges of rape and sexual abuse were disputed by people close to Beria including his wife Nina and his son Sergo 69 According to the testimony of Colonel Rafael Semyonovich Sarkisov and Colonel Sardion Nikolaevich Nadaraia two of Beria s bodyguards on warm nights during the war Beria was often driven around Moscow in his limousine He would point out young women that he wanted to be taken to his dacha where wine and a feast awaited them After dining Beria would take the women into his soundproofed office and rape them His bodyguards reported that their duties included handing each victim a flower bouquet as she left the house Accepting it implied that the sex had been consensual refusal would mean arrest Sarkisov reported that after one woman rejected Beria s advances and ran out of his office Sarkisov mistakenly handed her the flowers anyway The enraged Beria declared Now it is not a bouquet it is a wreath May it rot on your grave The NKVD arrested the woman the next day 68 The testimony of Sarkisov and Nadaraia has been partially corroborated by Edward Ellis Smith an American who served in the US embassy in Moscow after the war According to historian Amy Knight Smith noted that Beria s escapades were common knowledge among embassy personnel because his house was on the same street as a residence for Americans and those who lived there saw girls brought to Beria s house late at night in a limousine 70 Women also submitted to Beria s sexual advances in exchange for the promise of freedom for imprisoned relatives In one case Beria picked up Tatiana Okunevskaya a well known Soviet actress under the pretence of bringing her to perform for the Politburo Instead he took her to his dacha where he offered to free her father and grandmother from prison if she submitted He then raped her telling her Scream or not it doesn t matter In fact Beria knew that Okunevskaya s relatives had been executed months earlier Okunevskaya was arrested shortly afterwards and sentenced to solitary confinement in the Gulag which she survived 71 Stalin and other high ranking officials came to distrust Beria 72 In one instance when Stalin learned that his then teenage daughter Svetlana was alone with Beria at his house he telephoned her and told her to leave immediately When Beria complimented Alexander Poskrebyshev s daughter on her beauty Poskrebyshev quickly pulled her aside and instructed her Don t ever accept a lift from Beria 73 After taking an interest in Voroshilov s daughter in law during a party at their summer dacha Beria shadowed their car closely all the way back to the Kremlin terrifying Voroshilov s wife 72 Before and during the war Beria directed Sarkisov to keep a list of the names and phone numbers of the women that he had sex with Eventually he ordered Sarkisov to destroy the list as a security risk but Sarkisov retained a secret copy When Beria s fall from power began Sarkisov passed the list to Viktor Abakumov the former wartime head of SMERSH and now chief of the MGB the successor to the NKVD Abakumov was already aggressively building a case against Beria Stalin who was also seeking to undermine Beria was thrilled by the detailed records kept by Sarkisov demanding Send me everything this asshole writes down 71 In 2003 the Russian government acknowledged Sarkisov s handwritten list of Beria s victims which reportedly contains hundreds of names 74 The victims names were also released to the public in 2003 74 Evidence suggests that Beria also murdered some of these women In 1993 construction workers installing streetlights unearthed human bones near Beria s Moscow villa now the Tunisian embassy Skulls pelvises and leg bones were found 75 In 1998 the skeletal remains of five young women were discovered during work carried out on the water pipes in the garden of the same villa 76 In 2011 building workers digging a ditch in Moscow city centre unearthed a common grave near the same residence containing a pile of human bones including two children s skulls covered with lime or chlorine The lack of articles of clothing and the condition of the remains indicate that these bodies were buried naked According to Martin Sixsmith in a BBC documentary Beria spent his nights having teenagers abducted from the streets and brought here for him to rape Those who resisted were strangled and buried in his wife s rose garden 77 Vladimir Zharov head of the Department of Forensic Medicine at Moscow s State University of Medicine and Dentistry and then the head of the criminal forensics bureau said a torture chamber existed in the basement of Beria s villa and that there was probably an underground passage to burial sites 75 Additionally an American report from 1952 quoted a former Muscovite as having learned from one of Beria s mistresses that it was Beria s habit to order various women to become intimate with him and that he threatened them with prison if they refused According to the source s account on one occasion Beria appeared dressed in pajamas at the dacha where his friend was living He was accompanied by his personal bodyguard 78 Honours and awards EditBeria was deprived of all titles and awards on 23 December 1953 79 Soviet Union Edit Hero of Socialist Labour 1943 Order of Lenin 1935 1943 1945 1949 1949 Order of the Red Banner 1924 1942 1944 Order of Suvorov 1st class 1944 Medal For the Victory over Germany in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 1945 Medal For the Defence of Stalingrad 1942 Medal For the Defence of Moscow 1944 Medal For the Defence of the Caucasus 1944 Jubilee Medal 30 Years of the Soviet Army and Navy 1948 Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow 1947 Honorary State Security Officer twice Stalin Prize 1949 1951 Soviet Republics Edit Order of the Red Banner of Labour Armenian SSR Order of the Red Banner of Labour Azerbaijan SSR Order of the Red Banner of Labour Georgian SSR Order of the Red Banner Georgian SSR Order of the Republic Republic of Tuva Mongolia Edit Order of Sukhbaatar Mongolia Order of the Red Banner Mongolia Medal 25 Years of the Mongolian People s Revolution Mongolia In popular culture EditTheatre Edit Beria is the central character in Good Night Uncle Joe by Canadian playwright David Elendune The play is a fictionalised account of the events leading up to Stalin s death 80 Film Edit Georgian film director Tengiz Abuladze based the character of dictator Varlam Aravidze on Beria in his 1984 film Repentance Although banned in the Soviet Union for its semi allegorical critique of Stalinism it premiered at the 1987 Cannes Film Festival winning the FIPRESCI Prize Grand Prize of the Jury and the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury 81 Beria was played by British actor Bob Hoskins in the 1991 film Inner Circle and by David Suchet in Red Monarch Simon Russell Beale played Beria in the 2017 satirical film The Death of Stalin 82 Television Edit In the 1958 CBS production of The Plot to Kill Stalin for Playhouse 90 Beria was portrayed by E G Marshall In the 1992 HBO movie Stalin Roshan Seth was cast as Beria In the 1999 film adaptation Animal Farm based on George Orwell s novel Napoleon s bodyguard Pincher represents Beria Beria appears in the third episode Superbomb of the four part 2007 BBC docudrama series Nuclear Secrets played by Boris Isarov In the 2008 BBC documentary series World War II Behind Closed Doors Beria was portrayed by Polish actor Krzysztof Dracz pl In the 1969 Doctor Who story The War Games actor Philip Madoc based the coldly evil War Lord on Beria even wearing his pince nez glasses Literature Edit Alan Williams wrote a spy novel titled The Beria Papers the plot of which revolves around Beria s alleged secret diaries recording his political and sexual depravities At the opening of Kingsley Amis The Alteration Lavrentiy Beria figures as Monsignor Laurentius paired with the similarly black clad cleric Monsignor Henricus of the Holy Office i e the Inquisition the one to whom Beria was compared by Stalin in our own timeline Heinrich Himmler In the novel both men are on the same side serving an alternate world Catholic Empire Beria is a significant character in the alternate history alien invasion novel series Worldwar by Harry Turtledove as well as the Axis of Time series by John Birmingham In the 1981 novel Noble House by James Clavell set in 1963 Hong Kong the main character Ian Dunross received from Alan Medford Grant a set of secret documents regarding a Soviet spy ring in Hong Kong code named Sevrin The document was signed by an LB believed by Grant and the mysterious Tip Tok Toh to be Lavrentiy Beria written as Lavrenti Beria in the novel Beria is a significant character in the opening chapters of the 1998 novel Archangel by British novelist Robert Harris Beria is a minor character in the 2009 novel The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson Beria is described as the boss of the Soviet state s security and is in attendance at a meal with the main character and Stalin 83 page needed As der Kleine Grosse Mann the Little Big Man Beria appears as the lover of one of the leading characters Christine in the 2014 novel Das achte Leben Fur Brilka translated as The Eighth Life For Brilka by Nino Haratischwili 84 In the 2015 2017 serialized science fiction novel Unsong by writer Scott Alexander Beria is mentioned as being in the nicest part of hell reserved for the worst sinners along with Hitler and LaLaurie 85 See also EditHistory of the Soviet Union Democracy and Totalitarianism Kang ShengNotes Edit This fits an account from Khrushchev s perspective 56 References Edit Fischer Benjamin B The Katyn Controversy Stalin s Killing Field cia gov Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Chechnya European Parliament recognises the genocide of the Chechen People in 1944 Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization 27 February 2004 Archived from the original on 4 June 2012 Retrieved 23 May 2012 Courtois 2010 pp 121 122 Werth Nicolas 2006 The Chechen Problem Handling an Awkward Legacy 1918 1958 Contemporary European History 15 3 347 366 doi 10 1017 S0960777306003365 S2CID 145083075 Williams 2015 p 67 Jones Adam 2016 Genocide A Comprehensive Introduction revised ed Routledge p 203 ISBN 9781317533856 Manhattan Project Espionage and the Manhattan Project 1940 1945 US Department of Energy Office of History and Heritage Resources Knight 1996 pp 14 16 Poslednie Gody Pravleniya Stalina Alliluyeva 1967 p 138 Mikalaj Alyaksandravich Zyankovich Nikolaj Zenkovich 2005 Samye sekretnye rodstvenniki OLMA Media Grupp ISBN 978 5948504087 Montefiore Simon 2008 Young Stalin New York Vintage p 67 ISBN 978 1400096138 OCLC 276996699 History s Forgotten People Lavrentiy Beria Sky History TV Sky TV Retrieved 26 October 2021 Knight 1996 p 57 McDermott 1995 Marc Jansen and Nikita Petrov 2002 Stalin s Loyal Executioner People s Commissar Nikolai Ezhov 1895 1940 Stanford CA Hoover Institution Press p 186 ISBN 978 0 8179 2902 2 Shentalinsky Vitaly 1995 The KGB s Literary Archive The Discovery of the Ultimate Fate of Russia s Suppressed Writers London The Harvill Press p 25 ISBN 1 86046 072 0 Slezkine Yuri 2017 The House of Government A Saga of the Russian Revolution Prinveton N J Princeton U P pp 841 42 ISBN 978 06911 9272 7 Zapiska R A Rudenko v CK KPSS o reabilitacii A I Ugarova i S M Soboleva 3 yanvarya 1956 g Istoricheskie Materialy Retrieved 25 February 2023 Rotfeld Adam Daniel Torkunov Anatoly 14 August 2015 White Spots Black Spots Difficult Matters in Polish Russian Relations 1918 2008 doi 10 2307 j ctt166grd4 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help page needed Russian parliament condemns Stalin for Katyn massacre BBC News 26 November 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2011 Pohl Jonathan Otto 1999 Ethnic Cleansing in the USSR 1937 1949 Westport CN Greenwood Press p 122 ISBN 978 0313309212 OCLC 40158950 Wisdom of Korea ysfine com Archived from the original on 28 May 2013 Mark O Neill 17 October 2010 Kim Il sung s secret history South China Morning Post Archived from the original on 27 February 2014 Retrieved 15 April 2014 Berthold Seewald 10 February 2014 Ferien mit Stalin Als Sotschi das Zentrum des Terrors war Die Welt in German Retrieved 6 September 2015 Knight 1996 p 143 Parrish 1996 Knight 1996 p 151 Montefiore 2003 p 642n Skvortsova Elena 7 December 2021 Unknown history The Gray Eminence of the Soviet system Mikhail Suslov sobesednik Retrieved 22 February 2022 Top 10 Odd Facts about Stalin Mix Top Ten Archived from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 6 August 2014 How Rivalries End Karen Rasler et al p 39 Montefiore 2003 p 639 Montefiore 2003 p 605 Next to Stalin Notes of a Bodyguard Toronto Northstar Compass Journal 1996 p 61 Montefiore 2003 pp 640 644 Montefiore 2003 pp 638 641 a b Montefiore 2003 p 640 Montefiore 2003 p 571 a b Montefiore 2003 p 649 a b Montefiore 2003 p 650 Faria MA 2011 Stalin s mysterious death Surg Neurol Int 2 161 doi 10 4103 2152 7806 89876 PMC 3228382 PMID 22140646 Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Brent amp Naumov 2003 p page needed Wines Michael 5 March 2003 New Study Supports Idea Stalin Was Poisoned The New York Times Retrieved 24 September 2022 Knight 1996 p 184 Kozlov amp Gilburd 2013 p 111 Kozlov amp Gilburd 2013 p 112 Hardy 2016 pp 23 24 Kozlov amp Gilburd 2013 p 114 Knight 1996 p 187 Knight 1996 p 190 Wydra Harald 2007 Communism and the Emergence of Democracy Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 165 ISBN 978 0 521 85169 5 Gaddis John Lewis 2005 The Cold War a new history New York City Penguin Press ISBN 1 59420 062 9 Knight 1996 p 189 History s forgotten people Lavrentiy Beria History com Retrieved 19 July 2019 Andrew Christopher Gordievsky Oleg 1990 11 KGB The Inside Story 1st ed New York HarperCollins Publishers pp 423 424 ISBN 0 06 016605 3 Remnick David SOVIETS CHRONICLE DEMISE OF BERIA Washington Post Retrieved 20 August 2021 Cavendish Richard Lavrenti Beria Executed History Today Retrieved 20 August 2021 Kramer Mark 1999 The Early Post Stalin Succession Struggle and Upheavals in East Central Europe Internal External Linkages in Soviet Policy Making Part 2 Journal of Cold War Studies 1 2 3 38 ISSN 1520 3972 JSTOR 26925014 Schwartz Harry 24 December 1953 Beria Trial Shows Army s Rising Role BERIA TRIAL SHOWS ARMY S RISING ROLE The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 23 October 2021 Citizen Kurchatov Stalin s Bomb Maker documentary PBS Retrieved 12 February 2007 Rhodes 1995 p 523 Lavrentiya Beriyu v 1953 godu rasstrelyal lichno sovetskij marshal in Russian 24 June 2010 Jansen Marc Petrov Nikita 2002 Stalin s Loyal Executioner People s Commissar Nikolai Ezhov 1895 1940 Stanford California Hoover Institution Press pp 186 189 ISBN 0 8179 2902 9 Beria Lavrenti Pavlovich WW2 Gravestone Retrieved 9 July 2020 Medvedev Zhores amp Medvedev Roy 2003 The Unknown Stalin trans Ellen Dahrendorf I B Tauris London p 86 Rayfield Donald 2005 Stalin and His Hangmen The Tyrant and Those Who Killed for Him New York City Random House pp 466 467 ISBN 978 0 375 75771 6 a b Montefiore 2003 p 506 Sudoplatov 1995 p 97 Knight 1996 p 97 a b Montefiore 2003 p 507 a b Montefiore Simon Sebag 3 June 2010 Stalin The Court of the Red Tsar Orion pp chapter 45 ISBN 978 0 297 86385 4 Montefiore 2003 p 508 a b Shepard Robin 18 January 2003 Beria s terror files are opened The Times a b Grim reminder of Beria terror Herald Scotland Moscow Retrieved 3 December 2021 Sixsmith Martin 2011 Russia A 1 000 Year Chronicle of the Wild East Random House p 396 ISBN 978 1 4464 1688 4 Sixsmith Martin 2 August 2011 The Secret Speech The Scramble For Power Russia The Wild East Season 2 Episode 17 BBC Retrieved 17 July 2012 The Soviet Union as Reported by Former Soviet Citizens Interview Report No 5 Washington D C United States Department of State September 1952 p 4 Statesman Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria Brief biography of Lavrenty Beria kaskadtuning ru Retrieved 17 February 2022 Good Night Uncle Joe One Act Version stageplays com Retrieved 4 October 2013 Festival de Cannes Repentance festival cannes com Retrieved 19 July 2009 The Death of Stalin Jonasson 2012 Haratischwili Nino 2014 Das achte Leben Fur Brilka Frankfurter Verlagsanstalt ISBN 978 3 627 02208 2 Alexander Scott 22 June 2016 Interludeי The Broadcast unsongbook com Works cited Edit Williams Brian Glyn 2015 Inferno in Chechnya The Russian Chechen Wars the Al Qaeda Myth and the Boston Marathon Bombings University Press of New England p 67 ISBN 9781611688016 LCCN 2015002114 Courtois Stephane 2010 Raphael Lemkin and the Question of Genocide under Communist Regimes In Bienczyk Missala Agnieszka Debski Slawomir eds Rafal Lemkin PISM pp 121 122 ISBN 9788389607850 LCCN 2012380710 Alliluyeva Svetlana 1967 Twenty Letters to a Friend Hutchinson ISBN 978 0 06 010099 5 Beria Sergo 2003 Beria My Father Inside Stalin s Kremlin London Duckworth ISBN 0715632051 OCLC 51068942 Brent Jonathan Naumov Vladimir Pavlovich 2003 Stalin s Last Crime The Doctor s Plot John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 5448 3 Chang June Halliday Jon 2005 Mao The Unknown Story New York Alfred a Knopf Hardy Jeffrey S 18 October 2016 The Gulag After Stalin Redefining Punishment in Khrushchev s Soviet Union 1953 1964 Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 5017 0604 2 Jonasson Jonas 11 September 2012 The 100 Year Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared Hachette Books ISBN 978 1 4013 0439 3 Knight Amy 1996 Beria Stalin s First Lieutenant Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 03257 2 OCLC 804864639 Kozlov Denis Gilburd Eleonory 2013 The Thaw Soviet Society and Culture during the 1950s and 1960s Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 1442618954 McDermott K 1995 Stalinist Terror in the Comintern New Perspectives Journal of Contemporary History 20 1 111 130 doi 10 1177 002200949503000105 JSTOR 260924 S2CID 161318303 Montefiore Simon 2003 Stalin Court of the Red Tsar Random House ISBN 978 1400076789 Parrish Michael 1996 The Lesser Terror Soviet State Security 1939 53 Soviet State Security 1939 1953 Westport CT Praeger Rhodes Richard 1995 Dark Sun The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 684 82414 0 Sudoplatov Pavel 1995 Special Tasks The Memoirs of an Unwanted Witness A Soviet Spymaster Boston ittle Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 77352 2 OCLC 35547754 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union Antonov Ovseenko Anton 2007 Beriya Beria PDF in Russian Sukhumi Dom pechati Archived from the original PDF on 4 September 2015 Avtorkhanov Abdurahman 1991 The Mystery of Stalin s Death Novyi Mir in Russian pp 194 233 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1996 Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization New York Oxford University Press Fitzpatrick Sheila 1999 Everyday Stalinism Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times Soviet Russia in the 1930s New York Oxford University Press Hastings Max 2015 The Secret War Spies Codes and Guerrillas 1939 1945 London William Collins ISBN 978 0 00 750374 2 Khruschev Nikita 1977 Khruschev Remembers Last Testament Random House ISBN 0 517 17547 9 Kotkin Stephen 2017 Stalin Waiting for Hitler 1929 1941 New York Random House Kikodze Geronti 2003 ქიქოძე გერონტი თანამედროვის ჩანაწერები 1 ლი გამოც თბ არეტე Writings of Contemporary Records ISBN 99940 745 6 3 OCLC 59109649 Stove Robert 2003 The Unsleeping Eye Secret Police and Their Victims San Francisco Encounter Books ISBN 1 893554 66 X OCLC 470173678 Sukhomlinov Andrey 2004 Kto vy Lavrentij Beriya neizvestnye stranicy ugolovnogo dela in Russian Moscow Detektiv Press ISBN 5 89935 060 1 OCLC 62421057 Wittlin Thaddeus 1972 Commissar The Life and Death of Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria New York The Macmillan Co OCLC 462215687 Yakovlev A N Naumov V Sigachev Y eds 1999 Lavrenty Beria 1953 Stenographic Report of July s Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and Other Documents in Russian Moscow International Democracy Foundation ISBN 5 89511 006 1 Zalessky Konstantin in Russian 2000 Imperiya Stalina Biograficheskij enciklopedicheskij slovar in Russian Veche p 605 ISBN 5 7838 0716 8 OCLC 237410276 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Lavrentiy Beria Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lavrentiy Beria Beria Lavrentiy 1936 The Victory of the National Policy of Lenin and Stalin Marxists 1950 The Great Contrast Marxists Interview with Sergo Beria An outline of the Russian Supreme Court decision of 29 May 2000 Annotated bibliography for Lavrentiy Beria from the Alsos Digital Library for Nuclear Issues Central Intelligence Agency Office of Current Intelligence The Reversal of the Doctors Plot and Its Immediate Aftermath 17 July 1953 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Current Intelligence Purge of L P Beria 17 April 1954 Central Intelligence Agency Office of Current Intelligence Summarization of Reports Preceding Beria Purge 17 August 1954 Lavrenty Beria performed by Bob Hoskins and other Russian historical celebrities played by foreign stars Newspaper clippings about Lavrentiy Beria in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lavrentiy Beria amp oldid 1152406519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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