
.
.Konstantin
CHERNENKO
Konstantin Ustinovich Chernenko
(24 September 1911 – 10 March 1985) was a Soviet politician and
the sixth General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet
Union. He led the Soviet Union from 13 February 1984, until his
death just thirteen months later on 10 March 1985. Chernenko was
also Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet from 11 April
1984, until his death.
Early life
Chernenko was born to a poor family in the village of
Bolshaya Tes (now in Novosyolovo Rayon, Krasnoyarsk Krai). His
father, Ustin Demidovich (of Ukrainian origin), worked in copper
and gold mines while his mother took care of the farm work.
Chernenko joined the Komsomol (Communist Youth League) in 1929,
and became a full member of the Communist Party in 1931. From 1930
to 1933, he served in the Soviet frontier guards on the
Soviet-Chinese border. After completing his military service, he
returned to Krasnoyarsk as a propagandist. In 1933 he worked in
the Propaganda Department of the Novoselovo District Party
Committee. A few years later he was promoted head of the same
department in Uyarsk Raykom. Chernenko then steadily rose through the Party
ranks, becoming the Director of the Krasnoyarsk House of Party
Enlightenment then in 1939, the Deputy Head of the AgitProp
Department of Krasnoyarsk Territorial Committee and finally, in
1941 he was appointed Secretary of the Territorial Party Committee
for Propaganda. In 1945, he acquired a diploma from a party
training school in Moscow, and in 1953 he finished a
correspondence course for schoolteachers.
The turning point in Chernenko’s career was his assignment in
1948 to head the Communist Party’s propaganda department in the
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. There, he met and won the
confidence of Leonid Brezhnev, the first secretary of Moldova from 1950 to
1952 and future leader of the Soviet Union. Chernenko followed
Brezhnev in 1956 to fill a similar propaganda post in the CPSU
Central Committee in Moscow. In 1960, after Brezhnev was named
chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet (titular head of
state of the Soviet Union), Chernenko became his chief of staff.
Politburo career
In 1964 Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev was deposed, and succeeded by Leonid Brezhnev. During
Brezhnev's tenure as Party leader, Chernenko's career continued
successfully. He was nominated in 1965 as head of the General
Department of the Central Committee, and given the mandate to set
the Politburo agenda, and prepare drafts of numerous Central
Committee decrees and resolutions. He also monitored telephone and
wiretapping devices in various offices of the top Party members.
Another one of his jobs was to sign hundreds of Party documents
daily, a job he did for the next 20 years. Even after he became
General Secretary of the Party, he continued to sign papers
referring to the General Department (when he could no longer
physically sign documents, a facsimile was used instead).
In 1971 Chernenko was promoted to full membership in the
Central Committee: Overseeing Party work over the Letter Bureau,
dealing with correspondence. In 1976 he was elected secretary of
the Letter Bureau. 1977 he became Candidate, 1978 full member of
the Politburo, serving second to the General Secretary in terms of
Party hierarchy.
During Brezhnev's final years, Chernenko became fully immersed
in ideological Party work: Heading Soviet delegations abroad,
accompanying Brezhnev to important meetings and conferences, and
was a member of the commission that revised the
Soviet Constitution in 1977. In 1979 he took part in the
Vienna arms limitation talks.
After Brezhnev's death in November 1982, there was speculation
the position of General Secretary would fall to Chernenko, however
he was unable to rally enough popular support for his candidacy
within the Party, and the posting fell to former KGB
chief
Yuri Andropov.
Leader
of the Soviet Union
Yuri Andropov died in February 1984, after just 15 months in
office. Chernenko was then elected to replace Andropov, despite
concerns over his own ailing health, and against Andropov's wishes
(he stated he wanted
Gorbachev to succeed him).
Yegor Ligachev writes in his memoirs that Chernenko was
elected general secretary without a hitch. At the Central
Committee plenary session on 13 February 1984, four days after
Andropov's death, Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers and
Politburo member
Nikolai Tikhonov moved that Chernenko be elected general
secretary, and the Committee duly voted him in.
Arkady Volsky, an aide to Andropov and other general
secretaries, recounts an episode that occurred after a Politburo
meeting on the day following Andropov's demise: As Politburo
members filed out of the conference hall, either
Andrei Gromyko or (in later accounts)
Dmitriy Ustinov is said to have put his arm round Nikolai
Tikhonov's shoulders and said: "It's okay, Kostya is
an agreeable guy (pokladisty muzhik), one can do business
with him...." The Politburo failed to pass the decision for
Gorbachev, who was nominally Chernenko's second in command, to run
the meetings of the Politburo itself in the absence of Chernenko;
the latter due to his declining health, began to miss those
meetings with increasing frequency. As
Nikolai Ryzhkov describes it in his memoirs, "every Thursday
morning he (Mikhail
Gorbachev) would sit in his office like a little orphan - I
would often be present at this sad procedure - nervously awaiting
a telephone call from the sick Chernenko: Would he come to the
Politburo himself or would he ask Gorbachev to stand in for him
this time again?"
At Andropov's funeral, he could barely read the
eulogy. Those present strained to catch the meaning of what he was
trying to say in his eulogy. He spoke rapidly, swallowed his
words, kept coughing and stopped repeatedly to wipe his lips and
forehead. He ascended Lenin's Mausoleum by way of a newly
installed escalator and descended with the help of two bodyguards.
Chernenko represented a return to the policies of the late
Brezhnev era. Nevertheless, he supported a greater role for the
labour unions, and reform in education and propaganda. The one
major personnel change that Chernenko made was the firing of the
chief of the General Staff, Nikolay Ogarkov, who had advocated less spending on consumer
goods in favor of greater expenditures on weapons research and
development.
In foreign policy, he negotiated a trade pact with the
People's Republic of China. Despite calls for renewed détente,
Chernenko did little to prevent the escalation of the Cold War
with the United States. For example, in 1984, the Soviet Union
prevented a visit to West Germany by East German leader Erich
Honecker. However, in the late autumn of 1984, the U.S. and the
Soviet Union did agree to resume arms control talks in early 1985.
In November 1984 Chernenko met with Britain's Labour Party leader,
Neil Kinnock.
Because the U.S. had boycotted the
1980 Summer Olympics held in Moscow, the USSR, while under the
Administration of Chairman Chernenko, boycotted the 1984 Summer
Olympics in Los Angeles. It caused 14 Eastern Bloc countries and
allies including the Soviet Union, Cuba and East Germany (but not
Romania) to boycott these Olympics. The USSR announced its
intention not to participate on 8 May 1984, citing security
concerns and stating, that "chauvinistic sentiments and an
anti-Soviet hysteria being whipped up in the United States"[1],
but some saw it as revenge for the boycott of the Moscow Games.
Among those subscribing to the revenge hypothesis was Peter
Ueberroth, who was the chief organizer of the Games, in a press
conference after the boycott was announced. Iran was the only
country that was absent from both Moscow's and Los Angeles'
Olympics. The People's Republic of China competed in Los Angeles'
games after boycotting Moscow's. For differing reasons, Iran and
Libya also boycotted the 1984 event. The boycott was announced on
the same day that the Olympic Torch Relay through the United
States began in New York City.
The boycott influenced a large
number of Olympic events that were normally dominated by the
absent countries. Boycotting countries organized another major
event in July-August 1984, called the Friendship Games.
Death and legacy
In the spring of 1984, Chernenko was hospitalized for over a
month, but kept working by sending the Politburo notes and
letters. During the summer, his doctors sent him to Kislovodsk for
the mineral spas, but on the day of his arrival at the resort
Chernenko's health deteriorated, and he contracted pneumonia.
Chernenko did not return to the Kremlin until the late autumn of
1984. He awarded Orders to cosmonauts and writers in his office,
but was unable to walk through the corridors of his office and was
driven in a wheelchair.
By the end of 1984, Chernenko could hardly leave the
Central Clinical Hospital, a heavily guarded facility in west
Moscow, and the Politburo was affixing a facsimile of his
signature to all letters, as Chernenko had done with Andropov's
when he was dying. In what was almost universally regarded, even
by his opponents, as a cruel act against Chernenko, Politburo
member Viktor Grishin dragged the terminally ill Chernenko from his
hospital bed to a ballot box to vote in the elections in early
1985.
Emphysema and the associated lung and heart damage worsened
significantly for Chernenko in the last three weeks of February
1985. According to the Chief Kremlin physician, Dr. Yevgeny I.
Chazov, Chernenko had also developed both chronic hepatitis and
cirrhosis. On 10 March at 3:00 p.m. he fell into a coma, and at
7:20 p.m. he died as a result of heart failure. He became the third Soviet leader to die in
just two years' time, and, upon being informed in the middle of
the night of his death, US President
Ronald Reagan is reported to have remarked "how am I supposed
to get anyplace with the Russians if they keep dying on me?"
He was honored with a state
funeral and was buried in the Kremlin necropolis.
The impact of Chernenko—or the lack of it—was evident in the
way in which his death was reported in the Soviet press. Soviet
newspapers carried stories about Chernenko's death and Gorbachev's
selection on the same day. The papers had the same format: page 1
reported the party Central Committee session on 11 March that
elected Gorbachev and printed the new leader's biography and a
large photograph of him; page 2 announced the demise of Chernenko
and printed his obituary.
After the death of a Soviet leader it was customary for his
successors to open his safe and look in it. When Gorbachev had
Chernenko's safe opened, it was found to contain a small folder of
personal papers and several large bundles of money; money was also
found in his desk.
Chernenko was awarded the Order of
the Red Banner of Labour, 1976, in 1981 and in 1984 he was awarded
Hero of the Socialist Labor: on the latter occasion, Minister of
Defence Ustinov underlined his rule as an "outstanding political
figure, a loyal and unwavering continuer of the cause of the great
Lenin"; in 1981 he was awarded with the highest Bulgarian honour
and in 1982 he received the Lenin Prize for his "Human Rights in Soviet Society."
His first marriage produced a son,
Albert, who would become noted in the Soviet Union as a legal
theorist. His second wife, Anna Dmitrevna Lyubimova (b. 1913), who
married him in 1944, bore him two daughters, Yelena (who worked at
the Institute of Party History) and Vera (who worked at the Soviet
Embassy in Washington, DC), and a son, Vladimir, who was a Goskino editorialist.
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