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  1. Há 3 dias · Viktor Semyonovich Abakumov (24 April 1908, Moscow – 19 December 1954, Moscow; Colonel General), was a high level Soviet security organs official, from 1943 to 1946 the head of SMERSH in the USSR People's Commissariat of Defense, and from 1946 to 1951 Minister of State Security or MGB (ex-NKGB).

  2. Há 3 dias · In 1951, Ministry for State Security (MGB) investigator Mikhail Ryumin reported to his superior, Viktor Abakumov, Minister of the MGB, that Professor Yakov Etinger, who was arrested as a "bourgeois nationalist" with connections to the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee, had committed malpractice in treating Andrei Zhdanov (died 1948) and ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Great_PurgeGreat Purge - Wikipedia

    Há 1 dia · Great Purge. Great Purge. Part of the purges of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. People of Vinnytsia searching through the exhumed victims of the Vinnytsia massacre, 1943. Location. Soviet Union, East Turkestan, Mongolian People's Republic. Date. 1936–1938.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Erich_MielkeErich Mielke - Wikipedia

    Há 1 dia · In Moscow, Soviet Interior Minister Viktor Abakumov argued that a new secret police force would be demonized by Western governments and the media, which would paint the K-5 as a "new Gestapo." Furthermore, Abakumov, like Stalin, intensely distrusted German Communists and alleged that there "were not enough German cadres who have been ...

  5. 3 de mai. de 2024 · Ostensibly a military counterintelligence organization dedicated to fighting Nazis, SMERSH spent considerable time and effort terrifying its own. Its head, Viktor Abakumov, a shadowy and powerful figure whose biography is revealed here for the first time.

    • Nason Library
    • 2015
  6. 8 de mai. de 2024 · Виктор Семёнович Абакумов — советский государственный и военный деятель, генерал-полковник, заместитель наркома обороны и начальник Главного управления контрразведки («СМЕРШ ...

  7. Há 6 dias · Viktor Abakumov (1908-1954) Soviet Union; Aleksandar Ranković (1909-1983), Yugoslavia; Anatol Fejgin (1909-2002) Poland; Dido Kvaternik (1910-1962) Croatia; Nikolai Shchelokov (1910-1984) Soviet Union; Erich Honecker (1912-1994) East Germany; Gustáv Husák (1913-1991) Czechoslovakia; Mehmet Shehu (1913-1981) Albania; Vjekoslav ...