This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (February 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Chronology of Soviet security agencies | ||
| ||
1917–22 | Cheka of the Sovnarkom of the RSFSR (All-Russian Extraordinary Commission) | |
1922–23 | GPU of the NKVD of the RSFSR (State Political Directorate) | |
1923–34 | OGPU of the Sovnarkom of the USSR (Joint State Political Directorate) | |
1934–41 1941–43 |
NKVD of the USSR (People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs)
| |
1941 1943–46 |
NKGB of the USSR (People's Commissariat for State Security) | |
1946–53 | MGB of the USSR (Ministry of State Security) | |
1953–54 | MVD of the USSR (Ministry of Internal Affairs) | |
1954–91 | KGB of the Council of Ministers of the USSR (Committee for State Security) | |
The Main Directorate of State Security (Russian: Glavnoe upravlenie gosudarstvennoy bezopasnosti, Главное управление государственной безопасности, ГУГБ, GUGB) was the name of the Soviet Union's most important security body within the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD) USSR. At the time of its existence, which was from July 10, 1934 to February 3, 1941, the GUGB reflected exactly the Secret Operational Directorate within OGPU under the Council of People's Commissars, which operated within OGPU structure from 1923 to 1931/32. An intelligence service and secret police from July 1934 to February 1941, it was run under the auspices of the Peoples Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD). Its first head was first deputy of People's Commissar of Internal Affairs (then Genrikh Yagoda), Commissioner 1st rank of State Security Yakov Agranov.
History
The Main Directorate of State Security evolved from the Joint State Political Directorate (or OGPU). On February 3, 1941, the Special Sections (or OO) of the GUGB-NKVD (responsible for counter-intelligence in the military) became part of the Army and Navy (RKKA and RKKF, respectively). The GUGB was disbanded as an organization within NKVD USSR. The units that operated in GUGB were reorganized and made the core of the newly made People's Commissariat of State Security or NKGB.
Following the outbreak of World War II, the NKVD and NKGB were reunited, not as GUGB but as totally separate directorates. On July 20, 1941, Army and Airforce counter-intelligence was returned to the NKVD as Directorate of Special Departments under Viktor Abakumov; in January 1942, Navy CI followed. In April 1943, it was again transferred to the Narkomat of Defence and Narkomat of the Navy, becoming SMERSH (from Smert' Shpionam or "Death to Spies"); at the same time, the GUGB was again separated from the NKVD as NKGB.
GUGB heads
By the end of 1937, the GUGB was the most powerful and influential organ in the NKVD structure. GUGB departments (or Sections) dealt with - intelligence, internal security, counter-intelligence, protection of government and secret communications.
The first chief of the GUGB was Yakov Agranov, Commissioner 1st rank of State Security and first deputy of People's Commissar of Internal Affairs. The next chief of the GUGB from April 15, 1937, to September 8, 1938, was komkor Mikhail Frinovsky, who was succeeded by Lavrenty Beria, then just promoted to Commissioner 1st rank of State Security. When Beria became People's Commissar of Internal Affairs (head of NKVD), Commissioner 3rd rank of State Security Vsevolod Merkulov became his first deputy and the new and final head of GUGB.
Organization
Between 1934 and 1941, the Main Directorate of State Security went through several organizational changes. In January 1935, there were nine departments in the GUGB structure:
- (head of GUGB) – Commissioner 1st rank of State Security Yakov Agranov
- Operational Department (headed by) – Karl Pauker
- Special Department – Gleb Bokii
- Department of Economics – (ЭКО/EKO) – Lev Mironov
- Special Department – (OO) – Mark Gai
- Secret Political Department – (СПО/SPO) – Georgy Molchanov
- Foreign Department – (ИНО/INO) – Artur Artuzov
- Department of Transport – (ТО) – Vladimir Kichkin
- Department of Information and Statistic – (УСО/USO) – Yakov Genkin
- Staff Department – (OK) – Yakov Weynschtok
By the end of 1937 the People's Commissar of Internal Affairs Nikolai Yezhov, in his order #00362 had changed the number of departments from five to twelve.
- (head of GUGB) – komkor Mikhail Frinovsky
- Department 1 – Israel Dagin
- Department 2 – Ans Zalpeter
- Department 3 (КРО/KRO) – Aleksandr Minayev-Cikanovich
- Department 4 (СПО/SPO) – Mikhail Litvin
- Department 5 (OO) – Nikolai Nikolaev-Zhuryd
- Department 6 (TO) – Mikhail Volkov
- Department 7 (ИНО/INO) – Abram Slutsky
- Department 8 (УСО/USO) – Vladimir Cesarsky
- Department 9 (OO) – Isaak Shapiro
- Department 10 – Yakov Weynschtok
- Department 11 (ВО/WO) – Victor Yrcev
- Department 12 (OOT) – Semyen Zhukovsky
After Lavrenty Beria took over Frinovsky place as a GUGB head, in 29 of September 1938, GUGB underwent another organizational change -
- (head of GUGB) – Commissioner 1st rank of State Security Lavrenty Beria
- Department 1 – – Israel Dagin
- Department 2 – – Bogdan Kobulov
- Department 3 – – Nikolai Nikolaev-Zhuryd
- Department 4 – — Pyotr Fedotov
- Department 5 – – Zelman Passov
- Department 6 – – Alexander Balamutov
- GUGB Investigating Section
- (head of GUGB) – Commissioner 3rd rank of State Security Vsevolod Merkulov
- Department 1 –
- Department 2 – –
- Division 1
- Division 2
- Division 3
- Division 4
- Division 5
- Division 6
- Division 7
- Division 8
- Division 9
- Division 10
- Division 11
- Division 12
- Department 3 –
- Division 1
- Division 2
- Division 3
- Division 4
- Division 5
- Division 6
- Division 7
- Division 8
- Division 9
- Division 10
- Division 11
- Division 12
- Division 13 ECCI, MOPR]
- Division 14 Foreign Trade, trade offices]
- Division 15 Intourist and VOKS]
- Diplomat security section
- Diplomat security political department
- Divisions 16, 17, 18, 19 Diplomat security
- Department 4 – —
- Division 1
- Division 2
- Division 3
- Division 4
- Division 5
- Division 6
- Division 7
- Division 8 politruk
- Division 9
- Division 10
- Division 11
- Division 12
- investigative section
- Department 5 –
- Division 1
- Division 2
- Division 3
- Division 4
- Division 5
- Division 6
- Division 7
- Division 8
- Division 9
- Division 10
- Division 11
- Division 12
- Division 12
- Division 12
- Division 12
- Division 12
- Division 12
- Department 6 –
- Division 1, 2, 3
- Division 4
- Division 5
- Division 6
- Division 7
- Division 8
- GUGB Investigating Section —
GUGB Ranks
The GUGB had a unique system of ranks, a blend of the position-rank system used in the Red Army and personal ranks used in the Militsiya; the rank insignia was also very distinct. Even though insignia introduced in 1937 followed the Red Army collar patch patterns, it assigned them to very different ranks for GUGB and Internal Troops/political/specialist branches, with GUGB rank placed at least one grade higher than a similar army equivalent.
When GUGB and Militsiya ranks were replaced with military ranks and insignia in February 1943, Major to Sergeant ranks were aligned with Colonel to Junior Lieutenant, and Senior Major and up were replaced with various degrees of Commissioner. In 1945, General Commissioner Lavrentiy Beria received the rank of the Marshal of the Soviet Union, and other GUGB Commissioners received ranks from Generals of the Army to Major General.
- Ranks of GUGB 1935–1943
- генеральный комиссар ГБ – Commissioner General of State Security
- комиссар ГБ 1-го ранга – Commissioner 1st rank of State Security
- комиссар ГБ 2-го ранга – Commissioner 2nd rank of State Security
- комиссар ГБ 3-го ранга – Commissioner 3rd rank of State Security
- старший майор ГБ – Senior Major of State Security
- майор ГБ – Major of State Security
- капитан ГБ – Captain of State Security
- старший лейтенант ГБ – Senior Lieutenant of State Security
- лейтенант ГБ – Lieutenant of State Security
- младший лейтенант ГБ – Junior Lieutenant of State Security
- сержант ГБ – Sergeant of State Security
- Rank insignia 1935-1937
- Rank insignia 1937-1943
Captain of State Security | Senior Lieutenant of State Security | Lieutenant of State Security | Junior Lieutenant of State Security | Sergeant of State Security | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Source: |
See also
- Bibliography of Stalinism and the Soviet Union § Terror, famine and the Gulag
- Chronology of Soviet secret police agencies
- Eastern Bloc politics
References
- Larecki, Jan. (2007). pl. Wielki Leksykon Służb Specjalnych Świata (eng. Great lexicon of world special services). Książka i Wiedza. p. 783. ISBN 978-83-05-13484-2.
- Structure and functions of NKVD USSR at the end of 1939 (Структура и функции НКВД СССР на конец 1939 года). Aleksandr Yakovlev Foundation.
- "Парковочная страница R01".
- "PIPNI.cz - Moderní hosting".
- "PIPNI.cz - Moderní hosting".
- "PIPNI.cz - Moderní hosting".
- Звания и знаки различия органов госбезопасности (1935 – 1943 г.) Retrieved 2017-08-28.
- ^ Форма и знаки различия в органах госбезопасности 1922- 1945 гг. Retrieved 2017-08-28.
- Piotr Kołakowski - NKWD i GRU na ziemiach Polskich 1939-1945 - (Kulisy wywiadu i kontrwywiadu) - Dom Wydawniczy Bellona Warszawa 2002 - (NKVD and GRU on Polish soil 1939-1945 Warsaw, 2002)
People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs (NKVD) | |
---|---|
Ministers | |
NKVD Collegium | |
NKVD Secretaries | |
Main Directorates |
|
Territorial agencies |
|
- Law enforcement agencies of the Soviet Union
- Soviet intelligence agencies
- NKVD
- Defunct intelligence agencies
- Defunct law enforcement agencies of Russia
- Russian intelligence agencies
- Secret police
- 1934 establishments in Russia
- 1934 establishments in the Soviet Union
- 1943 disestablishments in the Soviet Union
- Government agencies established in 1934
- Government agencies disestablished in 1943