On 17 November 1938, Stalin ordered the end of the mass operations, known as the Great Terror or Great Purges (1937–8). Scapegoating police, he appealed implicitly to the party to take control over the NKVD (People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs).Footnote 1 Purportedly, the party had to regain its hegemonic position in the Soviet institutional structure. Punishments in what has been aptly described as a ‘purge of the purgers’ included death sentences or prison terms for Nikolai Yezhov, the chief of the NKVD, and his appointees in the centre and peripheries.Footnote 2 In January 1939, Stalin sent another letter to the regional party bosses to moderate the party's wrath against his henchmen accused of indiscriminate violence against the arrested and cases of mass fabrication. He stated that the all-Union Central Committee of the Communist (Bolshevik) Party allowed using violence, though only against the obvious (yavnye) enemies of the people. However, it is common knowledge that physical violence was not an isolated phenomenon but employed on a mass level during 1937–8.Footnote 3 Stalin implied that the party should not take literally what he said a few months earlier. The party should somewhat restrain the police but not reverse their roles.Footnote 4 The war with Germany and its satellites would strengthen the security organs’ position in the Soviet institutional assemblage by empowering them to employ the most radical measures to ensure victory over the deadly foreign enemy.Footnote 5 After 1945, the post-1938 trend of making the party into the main actor in local Soviet politics resurfaced, though, as I argue, with rather mixed results. This is true in the case of Soviet Moldavia, which brings some new nuances to the conclusions of a recent otherwise very important book on regional power politics in the Soviet Union.Footnote 6
This article aims to shed new light on post-war institutional hierarchies at the regional level, forever changed by the experiences of both the Great Terror and the Great Patriotic War. I argue that the political police (MGB) had a hegemonic role in Soviet Moldavia's institutional design from the mid-1940s to the early 1950s not only because of the specific conditions wrought by the war, combatting war collaborators in the territory of a former Nazi ally (Romania), but also because of the strong personality of the local MGB chief, Iosif Lavrent'evich Mordovets. The issue of institutional hierarchies was addressed in a limited fashion concerning both the 1930s and immediate post-war years. Despite focusing exclusively on the all-Union level and not the republics or regions, Oleg Khlevniuk does convincingly reveal how the party's supreme body, the Politburo and Stalin personally, dominated the main policy issues during the second interwar decade. In turn, the war and the enormity of his formal obligations at various institutions forced Stalin somewhat reluctantly to delegate power to his trusted persons. After 1945, this model continued, even though the aged Stalin grew suspicious of everyone and often reshuffled cadres to ensure his personal dictatorship.Footnote 7 In turn, David Shearer and Paul Hagenloh explained how, by controlling the political (or security) and civil police, the vozhd’ (or supreme leader) secured the party's indisputable hegemonic role in the institutional make-up of the Soviet Union.Footnote 8 For the post-war period, Yoram Gorlizki sheds new light on the Politburo and Stalin's role in the decision-making process, including in their relation to the political police.Footnote 9 Vladimir Khaustov dealt with the relationship between the political and civil police and the party from 1917 to 1953. He argues that the relation between the party and the NKVD was established by a Politburo secret decision of 15 July 1934, which was never formalised by the Council of Ministers, i.e. it existed outside the state's legal framework.Footnote 10
The regional police, in turn, as James Harris put it, had a dual subordination, both to the centre and to the local party organisation and its leaders.Footnote 11 This is a useful observation, and, as I will argue in the case of the immediate post-war Soviet Moldavia, the dynamics of dual subordination varied according to numerous factors. It depended on structural factors to an extent, but more important was the agency of the local elite.Footnote 12 My article seeks to elaborate on the landmark work of Yoram Gorlizki and Oleg Khlevniuk, which examines regional dictatorships in the Soviet Union from the late Stalinist period up to the 1970s. This recently published contribution represents a breakthrough in the literature on Soviet regional and republican politics and substate authoritarianism across various political regimes in the twentieth century. It can serve as a platform for verifying and extending a solid theoretical design, although based on a rather limited number of case-studies. The authors’ assumptions, however, do not fit the realities of the immediate post-war Soviet Moldavia. In fact, they exclude from their analysis Soviet Moldavia and many other union republics altogether. Contrary to Gorlizki and Khlevniuk's conclusions, for most of Stalin's latter years, the role of ‘substate dictator’ in Soviet Moldavia was played by the local MGB chief rather than the republican party leader. The authors themselves reckoned that their source base is limited as a whole to party archives, including that on the reconstitution of party-police relations.Footnote 13
In particular, I will concentrate on the interaction between four leading republican-level institutions during two critical periods in the immediate post-war years – first, during the famine of 1946–7, and second, during the mass pre-collectivisation drive and the deportations of 1949. These institutions are the party, the government, civil police (NKVD/MVD) and political police (NKGB/MGB). The primary purpose of this article is to look at how these institutions cooperated, competed and even clashed over the implementation of various policies, especially those implying the use of violence and repression. To a lesser extent, I will also refer to other instances when the interplay between institutions resulted in tensions or disagreements concerning implementing a given policy.
The Moldavian MGB (political or security police, 1946–53) and the MVD (civil or regular police since 1946) submitted reports to both higher officials in Moscow and the republican party-state leadership. What in fact was dual subordination, or rather double oversight, offered the opportunity for independent action by the MGB and MVD. Communication between the MGB and MVD, on the one hand, and party, on the other, had its peculiarities. Usually, only the first secretary of the Central Committee (CC) had access to the top-secret information produced by the political and civil police. Moreover, the most sensitive reports to the republican boss were returned immediately to the MGB or the MVD, without copies remaining at the party headquarters.Footnote 14
The local party institution in Soviet Moldavia itself, formally responsible for coordinating all institutions’ activity on the ground, was supervised by the Bureau of the CC of the All-Union Communist (Bolshevik) Party for Moldavia (All-Union C(b)P or Moscow Bureau for Moldavia). This bureau was established in March 1945 and disbanded in April 1949. As Elena Zubkova argued for the Baltic republics, Moscow's bureaus were established in areas where the local authorities did not entirely control the situation,Footnote 15 and one may add, in sensitive areas where a direct oversight of the local elites was needed. According to its statute, it doubled and overlapped with the local CC departments. All its decisions were mandatory for the republican CC. The Moscow Bureau in Moldavia included a special representative of the Soviet Union's MGB and MVD, who, in turn, was charged with supervising and coordinating the activity of both the political and the civil police. Nikolai Golubev, who filled in this position for three years (1945–7), seems not to have had sufficient authority, the personal capacity or networks in Moscow to dominate the republican police institutions.Footnote 16 In many instances, his power was challenged by the shrewder and better-connected Iosif Mordovets, a former SMERSHFootnote 17 officer. Mordovets was the longstanding head of Soviet Moldavia's state secret police and the only republican official to serve without interruption from 1944 well into the post-Stalin period, up to 1955.Footnote 18 He was, for that matter, a ‘Moldavian Beria’, either participating in or coordinating all repressive campaigns in post-war Moldavia. Lucky for him, he avoided the fate that befell others associated with Lavrenti Beria or Viktor Abakumov.Footnote 19
There were tensions not only between the local party (including their representatives from Moscow) and the local MGB chief, but also between the political and civil police. This competition echoes the interwar squabbles between the militia, i.e. NKVD, and the political police, the Cheka, and later the OGPU (Joint State Political Directorate), which lasted until their fusion in 1934. These conflicts continued up to the Soviet collapse in 1991. The chekists, or secret police, pretended they were better educated, had a purer ideological background and purportedly dealt with fundamental issues, like catching spies and saboteurs, terrorists and political enemies. Their condescending view of the militia was grounded in the latter's specialisation in non-state security issues such as petty thefts, hooliganism, illegal trade, embezzlement, robbery – in a word, in ordinary crime and public order policing. In practice, however, the civil police dealt with political issues as well and the dividing line between social order and state security was blurred.Footnote 20
The political police's weight in the institutional structure of the Soviet regime in Soviet Moldavia is understandable for various reasons. The NKGB/MGB had its network of agents in every government agency. This network had the aim to prevent financial irregularities, stealing, and embezzlement. The political police also approved the persons responsible for protecting state secrets in all state institutions. Thus, the heads of the secret departments existing within state agencies and organisations acted as informal political police agents.Footnote 21 In this way, the political police held substantial leverage over the party and governmental institutions and, indeed, could easily blackmail their representatives.
Moreover, the MGB's sixth department, charged with the protection of the party leaders, in reality had them under surveillance. In Lithuania, First Secretary Antonas Sniečkus, an authoritative party leader highly valued by Moscow, gave up the MGB protection precisely for that reason. In Soviet Moldavia, no party leader even dared to raise this question.Footnote 22 Even though both party leaders in Moldavia and Lithuania had formally the same status in their own republics, agency is essential in explaining the difference in dealing with local republican political police.
To better understand the specificity of the Moldavian case, I draw some parallels with new Soviet territories such as the Baltic republics, especially with Lithuania and old Soviet territories, like Azerbaijan, and a few Russian regions such as Sverdlovsk, Pskov and Chelyabinsk. In addition to the above-mentioned factors shaping the specificities of the Moldavian case, one should also take into account the fact historical Bessarabia (mostly part of Soviet Moldavia, now the Republic of Moldova) has been the apple of discord in Romanian-Russian/Soviet relations. The majority of the population then and now speaks Romanian, but the sense of national identity remains confused.Footnote 23 The Soviet border guards on the Prut River, the newly Soviet-Romanian border, were ordered to execute anyone trying to cross into Romania during the 1946–7 famine. As Colonel Vladimir Ashakhmanov, the main perpetrator of these executions, reckoned, the harsh measures were taken ‘to teach a lesson’ to the Bessarabians and ‘frighten them to death’,Footnote 24 i.e. to make them understand their inclusion in the Soviet Union is for good and cannot be reversed. The aim of the Soviet nationalities policy in Soviet Moldavia was to create a new nation and build a new language, an endeavour which has been largely compromised by the Khrushchev ottepel’ (thaw) in the late 1950s–early 1960s.Footnote 25
Institutional and Bureaucratic Tensions in 1944–5
The military operations in Soviet Moldavia in March–August 1944 witnessed cooperation, but also tensions and even open conflicts between various institutions. In issues pertaining to crimes committed by the Soviet soldiers, the party and civil police were aligned against the Red Army and political police. September 1944, when the capital Chișinău was reoccupied, witnessed a growing conflict between the party and local city government on the one hand, and the republican government, as well as civil and political police on the other. As war operations ended and Soviet-type pacification ensued, one can notice the political police trying to avoid a collision with the party by being more cooperative while also trying to control it. Meanwhile, in contrast, the civil police became more antagonistic to the party. The demise of the NKVD chief in early 1946 at the initiative of the republic's party leadership probably persuaded the MGB chief to be more cautious, avoiding overt conflicts with the party.
In the spring of 1944, after crossing the Dniester River, the party organs and the Red Army worked together at coordinating certain activities determined by the development of war operations. On 5 May 1944, an operation to evacuate the population inhabiting a 25 km strip close to the frontline in central Bessarabia was launched. About 265,000 persons from sixteen districts were displaced, which was a common occurrence during the war. It aimed at protecting the population from the enemy artillery attacks but was also necessary for tactical reasons, such as planning deception operations in the wake of an offence. The task of protecting peasant households and property in the evacuated areas fell to the Red Army. Still, in many instances, whole villages were subject to all-out robbery and destruction by the Soviet soldiers and officers for reasons not connected in any way to the war effort. Nikita Salogor, the ad interim republican party leader, was informed in detail about these transgressions by Mikhail Markeyev, head of Soviet Moldavia's NKVD (civil police until March 1946). Salogor sent several protests to General Ivan Susaykov, a member of the second Ukrainian Front's War Council.Footnote 26 As the latter did not react, Salogor sent a letter to Malenkov, asking for the offenders to be punished, but also to no avail. However, in a few cases after Beria informed Stalin, some measures were taken, even though the exact results are unknown.Footnote 27 In other incidents, the Red Army's notorious counterintelligence department, the SMERSH, interrogated several transgressors involved in robbery of local peasants.Footnote 28 However, these actions were the exception rather than the rule.
Most of the Red Army's criminal behaviour toward the local population remained unpunished. The disdainful attitude of the Red Army toward the local communities was far from unique, nor was it limited to Bessarabia or the non-Russian areas as a whole. Stalin himself was known to be rather lenient toward crimes committed by his soldiers.Footnote 29 What was peculiar about crossing the Dniester into Bessarabia was that, for the first time, the Red Army entered the territory of a Nazi ally who fought against the Soviet Union. Special orders were given to the Red Army before entering Bessarabia, asking the military to behave appropriately. However, this did not make much of a difference.Footnote 30
One of the reasons behind these opposing institutional approaches in 1944 was that the party authorities did not want to alienate further the population than was already the case. Simultaneously, the military had its priorities and did not feel bound to consider the population's susceptibilities. Thus, the republic's party institution, as well as its civil police, cared to a much greater extent about the local population's perception of the incoming Soviet regime than did the Red Army officials, who did not feel connected to any particular territory. Regarding the crimes perpetrated by the Red Army, the NKVD shared the local party's position.Footnote 31 The latter would become, however, antagonistic to the party on other issues after the capital Chișinău was taken from German forces later that summer for reasons that will be explained further.
The return of Soviet authorities in 1944 led to the emergence of tensions between civil police on the one hand, and republican party institutions and Chișinău's Gorispolkom (city government) on the other. After the successful conclusion of the Jassy-Chișinău operation in late August 1944, the first arrivals to Soviet Moldavia's capital following the Red Army units were the NKVD staff, while the NKGB reached county and district centres. The party leadership arrived in the capital city a week and a half later. Better equipped with transport means, the NKVD came earlier and seized entire streets in the downtown area, not allowing the representatives of other institutions to get in, including high party officials looking for apartments. More or less sophisticated negotiations, and at times mutual threats involving armed guards on both sides, were employed to reach a compromise. An official from the city military commissariat, for instance, was desperate to get a piano, which had already been inventoried by the financial organs. To this end, he used two armed guards, but ultimately the militia resorted to force to confiscate the piano and returned it to city officials.Footnote 32 The illegal confiscation of property and apartments from the evacuated population reached a massive scale. The political police would frequently threaten residents outright to give up their goods, such as furniture, carpets, and sometimes their own houses. The redistribution of the living spaces especially in the urban areas was an intrinsic and essential part of reshaping the power relations after the October 1917 Revolution and again in 1944 and the following years, especially in the newly annexed Soviet territories.Footnote 33 As more than half of the housing in Chișinău had been destroyed by the war, the struggle for a living space was marked by stiff competition.Footnote 34
By these brutal actions, the NKVD and the NKGB disregarded the joint decision of the Chișinău Gorispolkom and Gorkom (city party organisation) issued on 25 August 1944, concerning the distribution of available housing. That seems like a contradiction to the way the NKVD (as mentioned above) sided with party leadership in 1944 in combatting Red Army crimes, including robberies, theft and destruction of homes belonging to the local peasants. The explanation could be that the NKVD as an institution was not interested in seizing peasant property in the spring and summer of 1944, but arriving in the capital late August–early September, it became keenly interested in seizing as much property as possible in order to satisfy the needs of its own cadres.Footnote 35
The Moldavian Central Committee (CC) tried to act as an arbiter in this delicate situation when every institution was striving to provide its employees with the best possible living conditions in a conquered city. The party depicted the NKVD as the main culprit since the latter's attitude was deemed provocative toward the city authorities and financial organs and concerning the high party officials. Markeyev, the local NKVD head, ignored and rejected his subordination to both state and party decisions. He prohibited the NKVD party secretary, Kabluk – a Gogolian name – from summoning a meeting at the NKVD headquarters meant to discuss the transgressions revealed by the Gorispolkom and Gorkom. Given the situation, Salogor, the ad interim republican party first secretary, decided to dismiss Markeyev from his position. A number of his subordinates were fired and reprimanded, while others were expelled from the party. Markeyev probably enjoyed powerful protection in Moscow and thus would remain in office for more than a year. In March 1946, he was transferred to a less prestigious position, the same post in the Mari ASSR, where he stayed until 1949. Ultimately, demoted and appointed as deputy head of a GULAG camp meant a humiliation in his career.Footnote 36 Markeyev's fate might have signaled other quarrelsome local leaders about the power that the party chief enjoyed despite all odds. It might well have urged Mordovets, Soviet Moldavia's MGB chief, to gather kompromat Footnote 37 on Salogor, as one day the latter could ask for his demotion too.
In trying to reassess the leading role of the party, Salogor identified certain individuals in the republican government deemed responsible for the recent crisis linked to the mass confiscation of property. He mainly targeted Tikhon Constantinov, the chairman of the Soviet of People's Commissars, and the latter's deputy, Il'in. Salogor pointed to the government's decision, addressed to the People's Commissariats and republican-level agencies and organisations, instructing them to confiscate furniture and other goods from houses left behind by their evacuated owners (brosovye doma). According to Salogor, this decision triggered widespread looting and plundering of state, public and private property.Footnote 38 It was this criticism, among others, that triggered Constantinov's removal from the head of the Soviet Moldavia government in July 1945 and his replacement with Nicolae Coval.Footnote 39 Ironically, the latter would become Salogor's nemesis and substitute in the republican party leadership a year later, in mid-summer 1946.
Salogor informed Georgi Malenkov, Stalin's lieutenant at the all-Union party headquarters, responsible for coordinating republican and regional party organisations, about all these events in detail, including the institutions and officials involved. However, the Moldavian ad interim party leader remained silent about the republican NKGB transgressions, probably because he did not want to antagonise the republican political police's chief and because he needed the latter's support in enforcing the party's orders.Footnote 40 Besides, in contrast to Markeyev, Iosif Mordovets, the NKGB head, promised to look into the allegations concerning his subordinates and, in general, showed more understanding toward the party's concerns. Simultaneously, for very practical reasons, Mordovets was aware that, during the disorders and mayhem of the post-war period, solving crucial issues relating to the smooth functioning of his institution, such as securing electricity supply, needed the party's support.Footnote 41 The political police claimed hegemony over the party but did try to be co-operant since the party was officially the leading institution.
In fact, however, the MGB leadership maintained a peculiar attitude toward the party, at times imitating subordination while simultaneously challenging the party's authority. In April 1944–January 1945, the local party and the party's youth organisation (the Komsomol) recommended many individuals to be recruited by the NKGB, but only five of them were accepted.Footnote 42 Mordovets, NKGB local chief, himself a former SMERSH officer during the war, would prefer to hire the likes of him, or, in any case, officers with experience in the political police.Footnote 43 That was an affront to the republican party organisation and its leader.
Markeyev, the local NKVD head, in his turn was at times more overtly antagonistic, even though his institution was, in many respects, closer to the position of the party. Many of the skirmishes involving the latter stemmed from the division of confiscated property. Tensions were compounded by Markeyev's extravagant taste. Like most of his contemporaries placed in high positions (Zhukov and others included), he enriched himself from trophies of war. He came to Chișinău in late August 1944 from Soroca (Soviet Moldavia's temporary capital since March) with several trucks loaded with various goods.Footnote 44 Initially a chekist (since 1929) and placed in charge of the NKVD in the Moldavian SSR since April 1944, Markeyev was seemingly a proponent of softer methods fighting kulaks (rich peasants)Footnote 45 and all kinds of internal enemies. After reading the reports sent by his subordinates in the provinces, he left comments on the margins that do not resemble the ‘iron’ Bolshevik determination required of a Stalinist. For instance, in August 1945, an NKVD report from Orhei county criticised the local party and state authorities for not exerting enough pressure on the peasantry in fulfilling the grain collection plan. Bad weather reduced the harvest for cereals to only 2–5 quintals per hectare. Kulaks and other anti-Soviet elements allegedly embarked on sabotage of the state plan and, thus, had to be punished. Markeyev, however, disagreed with his subordinate, commenting that the latter was wrong and, given the circumstances, ‘even a great patriot could do nothing’ to improve the situation regarding the grain collection.Footnote 46 In a report to the ad interim first secretary of the CC of the Communist Party of Moldavia that Nikita Salogor sent a few weeks later, Markeyev assumed the attitude of a ‘true’ Bolshevik regarding the crimes committed by the party-state elites. Markeyev left the final decision as to the measures to be taken in this regard to the Central Committee.Footnote 47 In this and many other instances, the militia head perceived the party as the hegemonic institution. During the famine years, this relationship would undergo some changes and variations.
The 1946–7 Famine and Its Impact on Institutional Hierarchies
The post-war Soviet famine has received little attention in post-Soviet and Western historiography alike. Triggered by several factors, such as the consequences of the war, a severe drought and state policies, it took the life of at least 1.2 million people. The famine hit Soviet Moldavia the hardest, registering the highest death toll, proportionally, among the Soviet republics (4.5 per cent, while Ukraine and Russia had lost 1 per cent and, respectively, 0.6 per cent of their population).Footnote 48 One of the reasons for the high rate of excess deaths was indifference to early signs of the coming mass human catastrophe. A clear-cut example of the state's failure during the pre-famine months was how the authorities dealt with hunger riots. In the spring of 1946, twenty-three documented cases of starving mobs attacking local state granaries were registered. The protesters aimed at getting grain by employing mostly non-violent means. They acted during daylight, with women dominating the protests. The phenomenon was similar to those recorded in the early 1930s in the context of collectivisation and conceptualised by Lynne Viola as bab'y bunty (women's riots). Footnote 49 While it is clear that the authorities, as a whole, failed to address the crisis adequately, the attitude of various institutions and officials inside these institutions toward the food riots varied substantially. In the end, the view of MGB and party hard-liners prevailed.Footnote 50
The MVD, under the new interior minister appointed in March 1946,Footnote 51 Fyodor Tutushkin, like his predecessor Markeyev, continued to perceive the situation through a less ideological lens. In reports sent to Salogor, Tutushkin urged the party leadership to address the causes of the food riots, not the effects. In other words, he was insisting that one should not look exclusively for class enemies as the instigators of these incidents, but rather understand the underlying reasons and solve them – not identifying scapegoats. To be sure, Tutushkin stressed the fact that kulaks and other anti-Soviet elements participated as instigators in some cases, but by no means in all hunger riots. Tutushkin reported some incidents to his direct boss in Moscow, Sergei Kruglov. Still, the first and second-trimester reports on the dynamics of crime in Soviet Moldavia, sent to the MVD of the Soviet Union, do not mention anything at all about open non-violent attacks on grain storehouses.Footnote 52 Thus, the militia seemed to convey the idea that hunger riots were illegal, but not outright criminal actions and hence did not have to be included in an overview of criminal activities. By emphasising this specific position concerning the food riots, Tutushkin predicted the transformation of open, non-violent protests into the underground, violent and criminal actions that would cause a lot of trouble for him and his subordinates on the ground. Both his approach and institutional agency explain his softer attitude toward the rioters. Tutushkin's premonitions came true later in the summer and fall of 1946 when he reported that 96.8 per cent of the ‘new criminals’ were not recidivists, which meant that these people resorted to crime and violence because of food shortages.Footnote 53
The attitude of the top party leader toward the food riots was also lenient. In at least one instance, Salogor empathised directly with the rioters. He commented on the margins of an MVD report that people did not have any other choice but to rebel in the face of an approaching famine. In this case, the ad interim republican party head spoke in an un-BolshevikFootnote 54 manner. In conjunction with other factors, this attitude contributed to his demotion in mid-July 1946. Salogor was never to return to a prominent party position, even at a district level. He received separate reports on the food riots from the political police, as well. These documents were returned to the MGB immediately and then sent to the institution's archive.Footnote 55 Unfortunately, however, these reports were destroyed in 1994, so it is impossible to recover Salogor's comments. Still, one can assume that he expressed the same position to the MGB as he did in the case of the MVD. If that was the case, the MGB and Mordovets personally could have been behind his demotion since the MGB's hard line on the food riots was radically different from Salogor's lenient approach. Besides, as noted above, Mordovets both loathed and feared Salogor as he might ask Moscow for his removal the way he asked earlier for Markeyev's. Another factor that might have triggered Salogor's demise was a memo sent to Stalin just three weeks before his demotion asking for territorial rearrangement with Ukraine, suggesting the local economy was disrupted by the November 1940 border settlement. Salogor argued, among others, that Soviet Moldavia lost the Black Sea shores and the Danube mouth areas delivering historically up to 40 per cent of the province's grain. This memo has been characterised as a manifestation of national communism. It was a symptom of the growing Soviet Moldavian nationalism acceptable to an extent if directed against the Romanian nationalism, but not the Ukrainian one. It seemed that Salogor was not very aware of those sensibilities to be raised in both Kiev and Moscow.Footnote 56 He also neglected the fact that Mordovets was Ukrainian and could sympathise with the Ukrainian cause rather than the Moldavian one.
Salogor's deviation from ‘Bolshevik speak’, and his border rearrangement issue with both Ukraine and Romania, was rather a good occasion for Mordovets to compromise him and trigger his removal. In a report sent in late April 1946 to Nikolai Golubev, the Moscow MGB-MVD representative, Mordovets criticised Salogor's passive approach to the food riots. He asked Golubev to exert some pressure on Salogor and the party leadership as a whole, via the Orgburo of the all-Union CC.Footnote 57 This instance unveils another mode of pressure exerted by the republican political police on its rival, the local party, involving the all-Union party institution. At the same time, no charge of nationalism was made against Salogor. In January 1947, half a year after his demotion, he still insistently asked his Moscow bosses to tell him why he was fired and so harshly downgraded in his status. The answer never came.Footnote 58
The MVD itself had a different view on the food riots. Tutushkin, Markeyev's replacement at the MVD, insisted that criminality would increase if neglect of the food shortage issue continued. Indeed, criminal activity grew, not only among the destitute but also among the local party-state representatives.Footnote 59 According to some explicit evidence, arrests by the MVD of party members, including of those who stole in significant quantities, could not be enforced without the prior permission from the republican Party Central Committee and, usually, from the first secretary himself. It was a standard informal practice introduced in 1938 after the Great Terror and survived until at least the mid-1960s.Footnote 60 However, an exception to this rule applied for most of 1946 and 1947, at least on the local level. During these two years, the MVD made the fight against pilfering and stealing essential foodstuffs a top priority. Usually, reports sent to the first secretary of the party in this period are more informative and less reverent than during ‘normal’ years. In these dire straits, the chief of the civil police simply informed the party leadership about what was happening on the ground, without the usual questions or recommendations to the party regarding the arrest of a given offender, especially when somebody with a party card was involved. The MVD reports sent to the republican CC in 1946–7 also differ in other respects from the previous and following years. Besides, the local party chief, Nicolae Coval, who had been in office since mid-July 1946, was apparently never given timely updates on sensitive issues during the growing dearth and food shortages. For instance, only months after the fact was the republican party leadership informed by the military prokuratura (prosecutor) about the use of execution against people trying to cross into Romania during the height of the famine by border guards – under MVD authority.Footnote 61 Here one sees then that the famine empowered the MVD. Rather than asking the advice of the party, they simply acted. Such was also the case during the Soviet famine of the late 1920s–early 1930s.Footnote 62
If the power of police, both civil and political, rose during the famine years, the party's declined. Officially the most important institution, the party struggled mightily to prove and defend that claim not only in regard to the police, but also to other powerful ministries that had dual oversight, one at the republican level, the other all-Union. For instance, as the famine unfolded, more and more parents left their children on the streets, hoping that the state would take care of them. To tackle this issue, the bureau of the CC adopted a decision to increase the number of orphanages (detdoma) and ordered the Ministry of Trade to secure the necessary amounts of food and other goods. However, the latter did not react for months, explaining that the all-Union Ministry had established strict limits on consumption. These orders came directly from the Kremlin and Stalin personally.Footnote 63 This case reflects the new institutional hierarchy that came into being as a result of the mounting crisis. Moldavia's Ministry of Trade took on a central role in determining the distribution of food according to the available amounts approved by all-Union Ministry, while the will of the local bureau of the CC was visibly downgraded. Likewise at the all-Union level, the famine years led to the diminution of the Council of Ministries’ prerogatives, in favour of some of its constituents, like the Ministry of Food Reserves and the Ministry of Trade.Footnote 64
According to the number of rations each institution received, the famine also revealed the real hierarchy of institutions. Rations were not provided to the MVD. Tutushkin asked Moscow for an amount equivalent to the military. The MGB, in turn, had secured higher food rations for its employees before the famine started in the fall of 1946. As in the 1930s, the political police held a privileged position with regard to their civil police counterparts.Footnote 65 The party, for its part, did formally determine rations for state institutions and its nomenklatura. However, at the district level, these privileges were on paper alone. In reality, they too needed to fend for themselves in identifying provisions. Hence, the number of so-called excesses increased exponentially during the famine.Footnote 66
To make things more complicated, the republican MGB chief did not get along very well with the person appointed by Moscow to oversee the security issues in the all-Union Bureau for Moldavia. Indeed, relations between Mordovets and Golubev were far from harmonious and they clashed often. However, the disagreements were not related to policy but instead reflected personal animosities arising from the thorny question of who determined MVD-MGB policies in Soviet Moldavia. A case in point is the food riots, which Golubev blamed on the MGB's lack of preparedness and the sloppiness of its personnel, as well as on the machinations of class enemies, including kulaks, Moldo-Romanian nationalists and other anti-Soviet elements.Footnote 67 Yet, it was not Mordovets who was scapegoated for the food riots, but Salogor, the republican ad-interim party leader.
Collectivisation and the Mass Deportations of 1949
The collectivisation campaign and the mass deportations of 1949 are another critical instance where one can observe tensions between the party-state and the civil-political police, as well as their competing views, practices and their professional and institutional ethos.
The first document, implying that the kulaks of Soviet Moldavia would follow the same fate as their old Soviet counterparts two decades before, was adopted in mid-August 1947 by the Politburo in Moscow. Two weeks later, on 30 August 1947, it was copy-pasted by the Moldavian Council of Ministers and bureau of the CC. The decision decreed that peasants labelled as kulaks (according to purportedly objective and measurable criteria) were to pay increased taxes, aiming at destroying their economic independence and anticipating their subsequent liquidation as an inimical class.Footnote 68
Until the spring of 1949, on the eve of the deportations, the party and government focused on creating collective farms voluntarily. Formally, they were to avoid the use of coercive means. The peasants, however, did not rush to enter the kolkhozes. Some of them hoped a regime change was still possible;Footnote 69 others wanted to wait until the superior efficiency of the collective farm was proven rather than merely promised. Ad hoc squads on the district level, comprised of MVD, MGB, prokuratura and party representatives, similar to those previously employed during the grain collection campaigns, were sent to the villages to boost the rhythm of ‘voluntary’ collectivisation. Because forceful collectivisation was not on the agenda at the time, the central authorities did, in fact, react to the most outrageous incidents, often intervening on the victims’ side. The Council of Ministers sent inspectors to document cases and punish perpetrators.Footnote 70
The first institution to openly raise the issue of collectivisation was the MVD. Tutushkin first sent a letter to Viktor Ivanov, the chairman of the bureau of the all-Union C(b)P for Moldavia, in early September 1948. The ‘Moldo-Romanian kulak elements and speculators’, he stated, ‘intensified their violent activities against the party and government measures in the countryside during the recent period’. The MVD chief also stressed that attempts by authorities to kill such activists had increased during the voluntary collectivisation drive.Footnote 71 A month later, Tutushkin sent a letter with almost the same text to his boss in Moscow, Kruglov. He mentioned about 15,000 kulak families and recommended that a third of them be deported for the collectivisation to succeed.Footnote 72
Mordovets, the MGB head, in turn, sent a letter to his direct superior, Viktor Abakumov, informing him that there was an agreement between the Moldavian bureau of the CC and the Politburo in Moscow to deport 8,000 families of kulaks and anti-Soviet elements from Soviet Moldavia. According to his estimates, this figure should have been higher, amounting to 9,259 families, i.e. 33,640 individuals in total. In fact, this number is a bit higher than the figure put forward by the republican party organisation and almost double compared to that of the MVD. The local bureau and the Politburo in Moscow endorsed the latter figure. Ultimately, it was to increase to 11,253 deported families, amounting to a total of 35,796 individuals, out of which 14,033 were women and 11,899 were children. The great bulk of those forcefully removed to Siberia and Kazakhstan were the kulaks, perceived as an obstacle in the radical, socialist reconstruction of the rural space. Sometimes the same kulaks were charged with nationalism and/or war collaboration with the enemy, Germans or Romanians. By removing the pan-Romanian elements, the Soviet regime embarked on creating new elites for the new would-be nation, Moldavia, different from and antagonistic to Romanians and close to Russians.Footnote 73
The differences between the MVD and MGB approach to deportations did not stop there. The heads of both police institutions blamed each other for the failures in carrying out instructions related to preparing and implementing the campaign. Indeed, the organisation and the execution of the entire operation were matters of contention. Particular emphasis was placed on the strict adherence to secrecy (konspiratsiia) so as not tip anyone off to the coming operation, which would allow kulaks to evade forceful displacement.Footnote 74
All four leading institutions discussed in this article participated in the preparations and execution of the deportation campaigns. On paper, each institution had clearly defined responsibilities. In practice, however, things were more complicated. The identification, arrest, and transportation to railway stations of people to be deported on 6 July 1949 fell under the purview of the MGB. The MVD personnel were responsible for getting them onto railway cars, securing water barrels, collecting and gathering the axes and wood saws in the special luggage cars, transporting the deportees and feeding them until they reached their destination. These included the regions of Kurgan, Tyumen, Tomsk, Amur and Khabarovsk in Siberia and Djambul and Aktiubinsk in South Kazakhstan. The MGB coordinated the identification stage. The developing of deportees’ lists was a complicated process, involving the participation of other institutions. Financial organs determined one's property, which was crucial since the property was one of the main determining criteria of class; hence, one's eligibility for deportation (in most of the cases, albeit by no means in all). In the cities, both civil and political police enlisted the landlord's assistance in documenting their tenants’ identity and occupation. Finally, district executive committees delivered lists to be approved by Soviet Moldavia's government.Footnote 75
The MGB and the MVD each developed their own, divergent narratives on the 1949 deportation. These differing and contradictory views and assessments stemmed from personal and bureaucratic conflicts.Footnote 76 The MGB concluded that, notwithstanding some errors, the operation was successful. The MVD, in contrast, stated that the deportation campaign was a failure since several thousand people initially selected for forced displacement escaped deportation. At the same time, Tutushkin accused Mordovets’ institution of inhuman treatment of deportees by preventing them from getting bread and other goods that were allowed by the instructions.Footnote 77 In the short run, it seemed that the MGB had defeated the MVD. Tutushkin was severely criticised in 1950 and then removed from office in the next year. Like his predecessor, Markeyev, he was expelled from the party. Even more, he was utterly humiliated and ended up as deputy head of a GULAG camp, as was the case for Markeyev earlier.Footnote 78
The MGB was not omnipotent even though, as a whole, the republican political police and its seemingly invincible chief, Mordovets, had prevailed over party and MVD tensions. Partially it was because the political police factored more heavily in the Stalinist structure of power, being subordinated to the Politburo outside the standard legal framework, according to Khaustov.Footnote 79 Personal agency had also played a role. However, there were cases in which Mordovets was vulnerable and sought the protection of government institutions under his surveillance. Anonymous letters were a powerful tool to make high officials more pliable, mainly by instilling some fear of reprimands or harassment. In 1949, an anonymous letter reached Moscow, alleging that Mordovets illegally possessed a house in downtown Chișinău. The Gorispolkom had promised him to legalise his possession of the house, but, for some reason, did not. Under these circumstances, Mordovets appealed to Gherasim Rudi, the chairman of the Council of Ministers of Soviet Moldavia. He asked Rudi to give him an official confirmation that would prove that he possessed the house legally. Rudi helped him immediately.Footnote 80 This outcome was not accidental because Mordovets had kompromat on Rudi, regarding illegal dealings involving Rudi's brother-in-law, Shulim Garber. The latter used to sell large amounts of goods in Moscow, using Rudi's railway car during his business trips to the Soviet capital. These illegal trade operations spread as far as Estonia.Footnote 81 Indeed, as subsequent post-Stalin investigations revealed, Mordovets gathered kompromat on many local party and state leaders well beyond his prerogatives as republican MGB's chief.Footnote 82 This was a strong tool to strengthen his own interests and maintain his status as irreplaceable chief of the political police for more than a decade, both under Stalin and after his death. In this, Gorlizki and Khlevniuk are right, that ‘dictatorships consist not only of institutions but also of people and their lived experiences’.Footnote 83 Mordovets lived through the Great Terror, the Second World War and SMERSH and was shrewd enough to avoid being associated with Abakumov or Beria when both fell into disgrace and were executed.Footnote 84
Toward an Institutional Equilibrium: The Brezhnev Years, 1950–2
Indirectly, the political police had a grip on the party as well. In 1950 the first secretary of the Moldavian CC was demoted, and Leonid Brezhnev, the future General Secretary of the CC of the CPSU, was sent in as the new party leader. Nicolae Coval, an ethnic Moldavian/Romanian from the Moldavian ASSR (part of Ukraine, 1924–40), lost his position due to a report sent to Malenkov by Mikhail Turkin, the plenipotentiary of the CC of the C(b)PSU in the Moldavian SSR. Coval was charged with several errors and mistakes. He was accused, among other things, of tolerating ‘Moldavian-Romanian nationalists’, particularly in the higher education institutions based in Chișinău, the capital, and Bălți, the second-largest city, in the north.Footnote 85 Certain details included in the report, such as a thorough knowledge of personal conversations, suggest that the political police, and Mordovets in particular, played a role in these events even though one might admit that he was not personally interested in the appointment of a stronger party leader. It is also indirect proof that MGB agents and informant networks could effectively target at will different institutions.Footnote 86 Appointing Brezhnev, an outsider not connected to Moldavia either in terms of birth, ethnicity, or previous experience, as party head demonstrates that Moscow took seriously the alarmist reports sent from Chișinău. In the immediate context of the year 1950, nationalism was not out of the question considering the Estonian, Mingrelian and Leningrad affairs.Footnote 87 Nevertheless, neither Brezhnev nor his immediate successors initiated a purge based on the information presented in the report concerning the mistakes made by his predecessor.Footnote 88 One wonders why Coval was charged with nationalism but never punished as such, while Salogor, who was not incriminated officially, was downgraded, reminiscent of a harsh punishment. This issue also deserves further research.
Brezhnev introduced a new style of leadership in Soviet Moldavia. He was more informal with his subordinates than any other first secretary before or after him. During the bureau meetings, party plenary sessions and congresses, he was addressed with the more familiar Leonid Il'ich, rather than the more formal version, comrade Brezhnev. He pursued a soft line on cadres and seemed sympathetic toward the local peasants, with whom he spoke during his frequent visits to the countryside. Due to his authority and Moscow's trust, Brezhnev was the first leader in Soviet Moldavia to establish the party as an effectively quasi-hegemonic institution within the hierarchy of local power relations. Mordovets, the powerful MGB chief, remained in office, but his influence and the power associated with his position somewhat decreased. To that end, Brezhnev named one of his relatives, Semyon Tsvigun, deputy minister of the MGB. Tsvigun was later to become Andropov's deputy after 1967. No previous party boss could even consider such a move. Even Moscow's representative for the MGB and the MVD, Nikolai Golubev (1945–7), had failed to keep Mordovets’ authority under control. The same was true about Coval, Brezhnev's predecessor, but still he retained a great deal of influence as he did not have significant tensions with the Council of Ministers, led by Gherasim Rudi. Indeed, Rudi was part of Coval's patronage network. Brezhnev decided not to embark on radical personnel changes but rather to control the government's incumbent chairman by proxies, choosing to appoint one of his men, Nikolai Shchelokov, as Rudi's deputy.Footnote 89
Similarly, in Lithuania, Sniečkus succeeded in appointing one of his men, a Lithuanian, as deputy minister of the local MGB in 1947. The Lithuanian MGB chief, Dmitry Yefimov, informed Abakumov how it happened. During a bureau meeting of the Lithuanian CC, Sniečkus raised the issue for the first time, to the surprise of Yefimov, who had little choice but to accept it.Footnote 90 In Moldavia, one could imagine a similar move under Brezhnev's rule, i.e. a more assertive and more authoritative republican party leader. This shows that although political police had significant leverage on party institutions at the republican level, agency is essential in making the party rule preeminent if not hegemonic. The same phenomena were seen at this time with strong first secretaries in such places as Sverdlovsk, Pskov and Chelyabinsk in Russia, who subdued their political police chiefs. In this, Gorlizki and Khlevniuk are right. While evidence of a shift in initiative to regional and republican party leaders was unmistakable after Stalin's death, this process had in fact been long underway since the late 1940s.Footnote 91 Empowering republican/regional first secretaries contributed to extending the party's grip over the government agencies, including the political and civil police that for so long had acted as strongmen in power relations due to their structural advantages as well as their dual subordination, that is, their ability to go over the heads of local party leadership with a direct appeal to their all-Union boss.
The tendency toward minimising the political police's grasp on the republican party continued after Stalin's death with the downfall of Beria in June 1953. Mordovets would retain his position for a time as he succeeded in confuting the allegations that he was Beria's man in Soviet Moldavia. Finally, he was criticised by the Moldavian bureau in July 1954 for ‘breaching revolutionary legality’ before 1953,Footnote 92 which was a coded reference to the use of excessive violence and the exaggeration of the number of class enemies. The MGB chief was also charged with nepotism, the promotion of cadres according to personal loyalty rather than their professional credentials and illegal surveillance of the local party personnel. Mordovets was exonerated in 1973, three years before his death, by the then first secretary of the Moldavian party, Ivan Bodiul, a member of Brezhnev's team in the Moldavian SSR.Footnote 93 Bodiul could not do this without formal approval from his Moscow patron. Brezhnev's choice of Yuri AndropovFootnote 94 as KGB chief in 1967 illustrates that the General Secretary endorsed, to a certain extent, the role played by the political police under Stalin.Footnote 95 The ‘Moldavian Beria’, Mordovets, succeeded in evading consequences for his ‘breaches of revolutionary legality’, unlike his all-Union namesake. Not only that, but he succeeded in lobbying for his son to become KGB boss in 1967 of Tiraspol, the third most important city in Soviet Moldavia.Footnote 96 Iosif Mordovets was not the only high police official in post-war Soviet Moldavia to escape real punishment. So too did Colonel Vladimir Ashakhmanov, the chief of the twenty-second Moldavian Border Guard Detachment, who ordered the extra-legal executions at the Soviet-Romanian border at the height of the 1946–7 famine.Footnote 97 That proves that not only Mordovets but other high ranking police officials enjoyed preferential treatment for their contributions to the Soviet Fatherland in a contested Soviet-Romanian borderland during the Stalin years and beyond.
Conclusion
During the interwar years, relations between local party leadership and the civil and political police closely tracked changes in power relations at the all-Union level. During the NEP, the OGPU and NKVD witnessed their prerogatives, budget and influence dramatically reduced. The influence of both the civil and political police ballooned as a result of Stalin's Great Turn (1929–33) at the expense of party structures and soviets (government). This demotion was mirrored on the local level. Between 1934 and early 1937, there was a relative institutional balance between the NKVD (civil and political police merging in 1934) and party and regional executives. In late 1938–early 1939, by signalling the Great Terror's end, Stalin ordered the political police's resubmission to party institutions at the central, republican and local levels. This shift was interrupted by the Second World War, which again saw the growing influence of the police. After the victory over Nazi Germany and its satellites, the post-1938 trend resumed slowly but firmly, aiming at establishing an institutional balance. There were, however, exceptions in areas like the Moldavian SSR, where feeble party leadership allowed for the more authoritative and well-connected MGB leader to exert a growing and disproportionate influence on local power relations. The local party tried to overturn this reality, but it failed for most of the period between 1944 and 1952. That was especially true from 1944 to 1950, due to several relatively weak party leaders. This situation only changed under Brezhnev, who was more experienced in high-level Soviet politics and better connected to the all-Union patronage system and thus succeeded in establishing some degree of institutional balance. We can understand Moscow's appointment of Brezhnev, an outsider, as their attempt to establish party hegemony at the republican level and signalling the end of a transitional period when the political police dominated the local power relation. We find it in Lithuania, but also in a series of Russian regions such as Sverdlovsk, Pskov and Chelyabinsk, where a more authoritative party leader during the immediate post-war years allowed the party-state institutions to play a more significant role in major policy decisions and policy-making earlier than in Soviet Moldavia. A particular case is represented by Bagirov in Azerbaidjan, who was supported at a specific moment by Stalin in a conflict with Mekhlis, the mighty and dreaded all-Union Minister of State Control. Bagirov's credentials as a chekist before becoming a party leader determined his preeminent role in republican power relations.Footnote 98
Both political and civil police and party-state institutions were involved in managing the food crisis, the Sovietisation of the countryside and the mass deportations in Soviet Moldavia. However, they displayed notable differences in policy implementation. During 1946–7, these differences concerned competing interpretations of the causes of, and dealing with, the famine. In turn, during the forced displacement of 1949, the most visible institutional differences involved calculating the total number of class enemies eligible for extraction (iz'yatie), i.e. the scale of the terror. These differences also affected the organisation and results of the deportations.
The civil police sided with the party (against the Red Army) in 1944 and in the wake of the famine of 1946–7. In contrast, the political police embarked on a more challenging position in the immediate post-war years and during the famine, labelling, for instance, the participants in the food riots of spring 1946 as class enemies while the civil police took a less antagonistic tone. However, during the mass deportation of 1949, it is the MVD's turn to become more challenging than the MGB by insisting on a larger scale of repression. Much of these variations in strategies and approaches stemmed from personal and bureaucratic conflicts. In other words, these tensions did not refer to the core communist policies and practices implemented in Soviet Moldavia in the aftermath of the Second World War.
The political police seemingly played a particular role in the demotion of two local Moldavian party leaders, in 1946 and 1950, both accused of displaying a lenient attitude toward anti-Soviet elements. NKGB-MGB's dual oversight from Moscow and the local party organisation, coupled with the astute actions of its shrewd, authoritative and well-connected chief, Iosif Mordovets, made him the most influential local official for most of the late Stalinist period. The Stalinist institutional design, in place since the late 1920s–early 1930s, gave the political police significant leverage over the republican and regional party and government institutions. The post-1938 and post-Second World War developments offered the local party, at least in principle, an opportunity to become the hegemonic institution in the power hierarchy at the regional and republican level. To come true, however, the claim of party supremacy in the Soviet peripheries was dependent on the agency of the party leader as well as of the local political police's chief. This article argues that it was the sensitivity of a recently-annexed borderland, Soviet Moldavia, a potentially irredentist region belonging historically, ethnically and linguistically to neighbouring Romania,Footnote 99 that allowed for the prerogatives of the political police to prevail over the party. Last but not least, the substate dictator in Soviet Moldavia for most of the late Stalinist period was the chief of the political police and not the republican party leader.
Acknowledgements
I thank for their comments on the earlier drafts of this paper as well as for their encouragement Lynne Viola, David Shearer, Alexandra Sukalo Lauren, William Prigge and Andrei Cușco. I also thank the two anonymous reviewers of Contemporary European History.