Stalin

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Stalin Page 1

by Simon Sebag Montefiore




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Praise

  Acknowledgments

  Illustrations

  List of Characters

  Prologue - The Holiday Dinner 8 NOVEMBER 1932

  PART ONE - That Wonderful Time: Stalin and Nadya 1878–1932

  1 - The Georgian and the Schoolgirl

  2 - The Kremlin Family

  3 - The Charmer

  4 - Famine and the Country Set: Stalin at the Weekend

  5 - Holidays and Hell: The Politburo at the Seaside

  6 - Trains Full of Corpses: Love, Death and Hysteria

  7 - Stalin the Intellectual

  PART TWO - The Jolly Fellows: Stalin and Kirov 1932–1934

  8 - The Funeral

  9 - The Omnipotent Widower and His Loving Family: Sergo the Bolshevik Prince

  10 - Spoiled Victory: Kirov, the Plot and the Seventeenth Congress

  11 - Assassination of the Favourite

  PART THREE - On the Brink 1934–1936

  12 - “I’m Orphaned”: The Connoisseur of Funerals

  13 - A Secret Friendship: The Rose of Novgorod

  14 - The Dwarf Rises; Casanova Falls

  15 - The Tsar Rides the Metro

  16 - Take Your Partners; Mount Your Prisoners: The Show Trial

  PART FOUR - Slaughter: Yezhov the Poison Dwarf 1937–1938

  17 - The Executioner: Beria’s Poison and Bukharin’s Dosage

  18 - Sergo: Death of a “Perfect Bolshevik”

  19 - The Massacre of Generals, Fall of Yagoda and Death of a Mother

  20 - Blood Bath by Numbers

  21 - The Blackberry at Work and Play

  22 - Bloody Shirtsleeves: The Intimate Circle of Murder

  23 - Social Life in the Terror: The Wives and Children of the Magnates

  PART FIVE - Slaughter: Beria Arrives 1938–1939

  24 - Stalin’s Jewesses and the Family in Danger

  25 - Beria and the Weariness of Hangmen

  26 - The Tragedy and Depravity of the Yezhovs

  27 - Death of the Stalin Family: A Strange Proposal and the Housekeeper

  PART SIX - The Great Game Hitler and Stalin 1939–1941

  28 - The Carve-Up of Europe: Molotov, Ribbentrop and Stalin’s Jewish Question

  29 - The Murder of the Wives

  30 - Molotov Cocktails: The Winter War and Kulik’s Wife

  31 - Molotov Meets Hitler: Brinkmanship and Delusion

  32 - The Countdown: 22 June 1941

  PART SEVEN - War: The Bungling Genius 1941–1942

  33 - Optimism and Breakdown

  34 - “Ferocious as a Dog”: Zhdanov and the Siege of Leningrad

  35 - “Can You Hold Moscow?”

  36 - Molotov in London, Mekhlis in the Crimea, Khrushchev in Collapse

  37 - Churchill Visits Stalin: Marlborough vs. Wellington

  38 - Stalingrad and the Caucasus: Beria and Kaganovich at War

  PART EIGHT - War: The Triumphant Genius 1942–1945

  39 - The Supremo of Stalingrad

  40 - Sons and Daughters: Stalin’s and the Politburo’s Children at War

  41 - Stalin’s Song Contest

  42 - Teheran: Roosevelt and Stalin

  43 - The Swaggering Conqueror: Yalta and Berlin

  PART NINE - The Dangerous Game of Succession 1945–1949

  44 - The Bomb

  45 - Beria: Potentate, Husband, Father, Lover, Killer, Rapist

  46 - A Night in the Nocturnal Life of Joseph Vissarionovich: Tyranny by Movies and Dinners

  47 - Molotov’s Chance: “You’ll Do Anything When You’re Drunk!”

  48 - Zhdanov the Heir and Abakumov’s Bloody Carpet

  49 - The Eclipse of Zhukov and the Looters of Europe: The Imperial Elite

  50 - “The Zionists Have Pulled One Over You!”

  51 - A Lonely Old Man on Holiday

  52 - Two Strange Deaths: The Yiddish Actor and the Heir Apparent

  PART TEN - The Lame Tiger 1949–1953

  53 - Mrs. Molotov’s Arrest

  54 - Murder and Marriage: The Leningrad Case

  55 - Mao, Stalin’s Birthday and the Korean War

  56 - The Midget and the Killer Doctors: Beat, Beat and Beat Again!

  57 - Blind Kittens and Hippopotamuses: The Destruction of the Old Guard

  58 - “I Did Him In!”: The Patient and His Trembling Doctors

  Postscript

  Endnotes

  Source Notes

  Select Bibliography

  About the Author

  ALSO BY SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE

  Copyright Page

  To

  Lily Bathsheba

  Praise for Simon Sebag Montefiore’s STALIN

  “A marvelously well-researched book. . . . Montefiore has written a supremely important book about Joseph Stalin, a biography that other scholars will find hard to equal. This is sure to be one of the outstanding books of the year.”

  —St. Louis Post-Dispatch

  “Ultra reader-friendly, lively, gossipy and packaged with revelations about the intimacies and intrigues of Stalin the man and his courtiers. Brilliant.”

  —Evening Standard Book Page

  “A book that had to be written. . . . Montefiore’s biography is far different from anything in this genre. A superb piece of research and frighteningly lucid.”

  —The Washington Times

  “Gripping and timely. . . . Montefiore has illuminated wider aspects of the history of the USSR. This is one of the few recent books on Stalinism that will be read in years to come.”

  —Robert Service, The Guardian (London)

  “Montefiore combines his research among the primary sources and the fruits of his interviews into a focused, gripping story about a man, who, along with Mao, Hitler and Genghis Khan, has to be in the running for history’s greatest mass murderer.”

  —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

  “[A] masterful and terrifying account of Stalin as seen within his close entourage. . . . Seldom has the picture been put in finer focus than by Montefiore.”

  —Alistair Horne, The Times (London)

  “Horrific, revelatory and sobering. . . . A triumph of research.”

  —John le Carré, The Observer

  “I loved the totalitarian high baroque sleaze of Simon Sebag Montefiore’s Stalin. . . . One of the 2004 Guardian Books of the Year.”

  —Simon Schama, The Guardian (London)

  “A grim masterpiece shot through with lashes of black humor. . . . The personal details are riveting.”

  —Antonia Fraser, Mail on Sunday

  “A well-researched and insightful book. . . . The narrative adroitly catches the atmosphere of the time.”

  —Los Angeles Times Book Review

  “I did not think I could learn anything new about Stalin, but I was wrong. A stunning performance.”

  —Henry Kissinger

  “An extraordinary book and Simon Sebag Montefiore might well be one of the very few people who could possibly have written it. . . . For anyone fascinated by the nature of evil—and by the effects of absolute power on human relationships—this book will provide insights on every page.”

  —Anne Applebaum, Evening Standard

  “Montefiore’s deft combination of biography and history brings Stalin alive, so that he becomes as complex and contradictory as any of the great characters in fiction.”

  —The New York Sun

  “If you plan (wisely) to read only one book about Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin, let it be Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar. Simon Sebag Montefiore, writing with the skill of a novelist . . . has based his highly readable biographical thriller solidly and factually not only on all of the preceding scholarly studies o
f the Soviet dictator but also upon newly available archival materials.”

  —The Seattle Times

  “A large and ambitious overview—and under-view—of the Soviet leader’s life and epoch, drawn from an impressively wide array of Russian sources.”

  —The Atlantic Monthly

  “Spectacular. . . . An impressive and compelling work, using important new documents.”

  —The Spectator

  “Sebag Montefiore has done a valuable service in drawing our attention to a hitherto little-studied aspect of Stalinism. As his Stalin demonstrates, the personal relationships of those who ran the Kremlin provided an essential dynamic for the development of the Stalinist system. Isolated from the masses, these members of the privileged elite depended on one another for emotional sustenance to an extraordinary degree.”

  —The Times Literary Supplement (London)

  Introduction and Acknowledgements

  I have been helped generously by many people in this enterprise from Moscow and St. Petersburg to Sukhumi, from Tbilisi to Buenos Aires and Rostov-on-Don. My aim here was simply to write a portrait of Stalin, his top twenty potentates, and their families, to show how they ruled and how they lived in the unique culture of his years of supreme power. This does not pretend to be a history of his foreign and domestic policies, his military campaigns, his youth or the struggle with Trotsky. This is a chronicle of his court from his acclamation as “the leader” in 1929 to his death. It is a biography of his courtiers, a study of high politics and informal power and customs. In a way, this is a biography of Stalin himself through his relationships with his magnates: he is never off-stage.

  My mission was to go beyond the traditional explanations of Stalin as “enigma,” “madman” or “Satanic genius,” and that of his comrades as “men without biographies,” dreary moustachioed sycophants in black-and-white photographs. Deploying the arsenal of new archives and unpublished memoirs, my own interviews, and well-known materials, I hope Stalin becomes a more understandable and intimate character, if no less repellent. I believe the placing of Stalin and his oligarchs in their idiosyncratic Bolshevik context as members of a military-religious “order of sword-bearers” explains much of the inexplicable. Stalin was utterly unique but many of his views and features, such as dependence on death as a political tool, and his paranoia, were shared by his comrades. He was a man of his time, so were his magnates.

  Molotov and Beria are probably the most famous of them but many are not well known in the West. Yezhov and Zhdanov gave their names to epochs yet remain shadowy. Some, such as Mekhlis, have hardly been covered even by academics. Mikoyan was admired by many; Kaganovich widely despised. They may have presented a grey mask to the outside world but many were flamboyant, dynamic and larger-than-life. The new access to their correspondence and even their love letters will at least make them live.

  In telling their stories, this is inevitably a cautionary tale: of the many mass murderers chronicled here, only Beria and Yezhov were prosecuted (and not for their true crimes). The temptation has been to blame all the crimes on one man, Stalin. There is an obsession in the West today with the cult of villainy: a macabre but inane competition between Stalin and Hitler to find the “world’s most evil dictator” by counting their supposed victims. This is demonology not history. It has the effect of merely indicting one madman and offers us no lesson about either the danger of utopian ideas and systems, or the responsibility of individuals.

  Modern Russia has not yet faced up to its past: there has been no redemption, which perhaps still casts a shadow over its development of civil society. Many modern Russians will not thank me for the intimate frankness of a history they would prefer to forget or avoid. While this book certainly does not diminish Stalin’s paramount guilt, it may discourage the convenient fiction of his sole responsibility by revealing the killings of the whole leadership, as well as their own sufferings, sacrifices, vices and privileges. In this chronicle of villains, the only heroes are a few brave poets—and a multitude of forgotten ordinary people.

  I have been enormously fortunate in those who have helped me: this book was inspired by Robert Conquest, who has been the most patient, generous supporter and adviser throughout. I am superlatively grateful to Robert Service, Professor of Russian History, Oxford University, who has “supervised” my book with generous encouragement and outstanding knowledge, and whose detailed reading and editing of the text have been invaluable. In Russia, I have been “supervised” by the most distinguished scholar of Stalinist high politics, Oleg Khlevniuk, Senior Researcher at the State Archive of the Russian Federation (GARF) who has steered and helped me throughout. I am fortunate too that on matters of the NKVD/MGB, I have been helped by Nikita Petrov, Vice-Chairman of Moscow’s Memorial Scientific Research Centre, the finest scholar of the secret police working in Russia today. On military matters, I was guided and helped, in both interpretation and archival research, by Professor Oleg Rzheshevsky and his associates. On diplomatic questions, I have treasured the knowledge, checking and charming acquaintance of Hugh Lunghi, who attended Teheran, Yalta and Potsdam, and meetings with Stalin during the later 1940s. Sir Martin Gilbert has been generous with both his knowledge and contacts in Russia. On Georgian matters, my guides have been Zackro Megrelishvili, Professor (American Studies), Tbilisi Ilia Chavchavadze State University of Language and Culture; and Gela Charkviani. On Abkhazian affairs, I must thank the top scholar in Sukhumi, Professor Slava Lakoba. I am also grateful for the guidance and ideas of the following: Geoffrey Hosking, Professor of Russian History at the University of London; Isabel de Madariaga, Professor Emeritus of Slavonic Studies at the University of London; and Alexander Kamenskii, Professor of Early and Early-Modern Russian History at Moscow’s Russian State University for the Humanities. Roy Medvedev, Edvard Radzinsky, Arkady Vaksberg and Larissa Vasilieva also advised and helped me. I am most fortunate to be aided by such a towering cast and I can only humbly thank them; any wisdom is theirs; any mistakes my own.

  I was most fortunate in my timing, for the opening of a chunk of the Presidential Archive in the Russian State Archive of Social and Political History (RGASPI) in 1999 meant that I was able to use a large amount of new, fascinating papers and photographs, containing the letters of Stalin, his entourage and their families, which made this book possible. In addition, I was able to access new military material in the Russian State War Archives (RGVA) and the Central Archives of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation (TsAMO RF) in Podolsk. Oleg Khlevniuk was my original sponsor in both RGASPI and GARF. My greatest thanks go to Larisa A. Rogovaya, Head of Section at RGASPI, the expert on Stalin’s papers and the pre-eminent interpreter of his handwriting, who helped me every step of the way. Thanks also to Dr. Ludmilla Gatagova, Researcher in the Institute of Russian History. But above all, I owe thanks to the uniquely talented scholar of the History Department of the Russian State Humanities University, Galina Babkova, who helped me as much here as she did on Potemkin.

  I have been lucky to gain access to many witnesses of this time and often to their family papers, including their fathers’ unpublished memoirs. I am enormously grateful for this to Vladimir Grigoriev, Deputy Minister of Press, Television and Radio of the Russian Federation, proprietor of Vagrius publishing house; I owe special thanks to Mikhail Fridman and to Ingaborga Dapkunaite; to Galina Udenkova of RGASPI, who shared her unique contacts with me; Olga Adamishina, who arranged several of my interviews; and Rosamond Richardson, who generously gave me access to her Alliluyev family contacts and her tapes of her interviews with Svetlana Alliluyeva. Kitty Stidworthy allowed me to use Vera Trail’s unpublished reminiscence of Yezhov. My thanks to Dr. Luba Vinogradova for her efficiency, charm, empathy and patience in helping with many of my interviews. Special thanks to Alan Hirst and Louise Campbell for their introductions to the Molotovs. Lieut.-Gen. Stepan Mikoyan and his daughter Askhen were charming, hospitable, helpful and generous. The following also proffered their memories and their time:
Kira Alliluyeva, Vladimir Alliluyev (Redens), Natalya Andreyeva, Nikolai Baibakov, Nina Budyonny, Julia Khrushcheva, Tanya Litvinova, Igor Malenkov, Volya Malenkova, Sergo Mikoyan, Joseph Minervin (Kaganovich’s grandson), Stas Namin, Vyacheslav Nikonov (Molotov’s grandson), Eteri Ordzhonikidze, Martha Peshkova, Natalya Poskrebysheva, Leonid Redens, Natalya Rykova, Lieut.-Gen. Artyom Sergeev, Yury Soloviev, Oleg Troyanovsky, Yury Zhdanov, Nadezhda Vlasik. I am grateful to my researcher Galina Babkova for arranging the interviews with Tina Egnatashvili and Gulia Djugashvili. I must thank the admirable Mark Fielder of Granada Productions, with whom it was a pleasure to work on the BBC2 Stalin documentary. In St. Petersburg, thanks to the Director and staff of the SM Kirov Museum.

  In Tbilisi, Professor Megrelishvili arranged many interviews, recalled his memories of his stepfather Shalva Nutsibidze and introduced me to Maya Kavtaradze who shared her father’s unpublished memoirs with me. Gela Charkviani told me his memories of his youth and, above all, most generously gave me access to his father’s unpublished memoirs. I am also grateful to the following: Nadya Dekanozova, Alyosha Mirtskhulava, Eka Rapava, Nina Rukhadze. Thanks to Lika Basileia for accompanying me to the Likani Palace and Gori, and to Nino Gagoshidze and Irina Dmetradze for their energetic help; Nata Patiashvili for her help in translation and arranging interviews; Zurab Karumidze; Lila Aburshvili, Director of the Stalin Museum, Gori.

  For my trip to Abkhazia, I must thank HM Ambassador to Georgia, Deborah Barnes Jones; Thadeus Boyle, Field Service Administrator, UNOMIG; the Abkhazian Prime Minister, Anri Djirgonia. It would not have been possible without Victoria Ivleva-Yorke. Thanks to Saida Smir, Director of the Novy Afon dacha and staffs of Stalin’s other residences at Sukhumi, Kholodnaya Rechka, Lake Ritsa, Museri and Sochi. In Buenos Aires, thanks to Eva Soldati for interviewing Leopoldo Bravo and his family.

  Thanks for having me to stay during my visits to Moscow and elsewhere: Masha Slonim, who turned out to be Maxim Litvinov’s granddaughter; Marc and Rachel Polonsky who live in Marshal Koniev’s apartment on Granovsky where many events in the book happened; Ingaborga Dapkunaite, David Campbell, Tom Wilson in Moscow; the Hon. Olga Polizzi and Julietta Dexter in St. Petersburg.

 

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