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Georgy MALENKOV

 

Georgy Maximilianovich Malenkov (Georgij Maksimilianovič Malenkov;
January 8, 1902 – January 14, 1988) was a Soviet politician, Communist Party leader and close collaborator of Joseph Stalin. He briefly became leader of the Soviet Union (from March to September 1953) after Stalin's death and was Premier of the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1955.

Early life

Malenkov was born at Orenburg, Russian Empire. His paternal ancestors were of noble Macedonian extraction, some of whom had served in the czar's army as officers. His mother was the daughter of a blacksmith and the granddaughter of an Orthodox priest. Malenkov graduated from high school during the revolution and was drafted into the Red Army in 1919. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) in 1920 and worked as a political commissar on a propaganda train in Turkestan during the Russian civil war.

Rise in the CPSU

After the war, Malenkov returned to his studies and received his engineering degree from the prestigious Moscow Highest Technical School in 1925. Post-graduation he worked in the staff of the Organizational Bureau (Orgburo) of the Central Committee of the CPSU. During the next ten years Malenkov became closely associated with Stalin and was deeply involved in implementing the purging of the CPSU. In 1938 he was one of the key figures in bringing forth the downfall of Yezhov, the head of the NKVD. In 1939 Malenkov became the head of the party's Cadres Directorate, which gave him control over personnel matters of party bureaucracy. During the same year he also became a member and a secretary of the Central Committee and rose from his previous staff position to become a full member of Orgburo. In February 1941 Malenkov became a candidate member of the Politburo.

After the German invasion of June 1941, Malenkov was promoted to the State Defense Committee (GKO), along with Beria, Voroshilov and Molotov with Stalin as the committee's head. This small group held immense power and Malenkov's membership thus made him one of the most powerful men of the Soviet Union. During 1941-1943 Malenkov's primary responsibility in the GKO was aircraft production. In 1943 he became a chairman of a committee that oversaw the economic rehabilitation of liberated areas.

Career

Named as a candidate for the Politburo, Malenkov joined in 1946. Although Malenkov fell out of favour in place of his rivals Andrei Zhdanov and Lavrentiy Beria, he soon came back into Stalin's favour, especially because of Zhdanov's death. Beria soon joined Malenkov, and both of them saw all of Zhdanov's allies purged from the Party and sent to labour camps. In 1952, Malenkov became a Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee. The death of Stalin, in 1953, briefly brought Malenkov to the highest position he would ever hold. With Beria's support, Malenkov became Premier of the Soviet Union, but he had to resign from the Secretariat on March 13 due to the opposition of other members of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee. Nikita Khrushchev assumed the position of General Secretary of the CPSU in September, ushering in a period of a Malenkov-Khrushchev duumvirate.

Malenkov retained the office of premier for two years. During these years, he was vocal about his opposition to nuclear armament, declaring "a nuclear war could lead to global destruction." He also advocated refocusing the economy on the production of consumer goods and away from heavy industry, something his successor Nikita Khrushchev (1955–1964) would escalate.

He was forced to resign, in February 1955, after he came under attack for his closeness to Beria (who was executed as a traitor in December 1953) and for the slow pace of reforms, particularly when it came to rehabilitating political prisoners. Malenkov remained in the Politburo's successor, the Presidium.

Together with Khrushchev, he flew to the island of Brioni (Yugoslavia) on the night of November 1-November 2, 1956 to inform Josip Broz Tito of the impending (second) Soviet invasion of Hungary scheduled for November 4.

However, in 1957, he was again forced to resign due to participation in a failed attempt together with Nikolai Bulganin, Vyacheslav Molotov, and Lazar Kaganovich (the so-called Anti-Party Group) to depose Khrushchev. In 1961, he was expelled from the Communist Party and exiled within the Soviet Union. He became a manager of a hydroelectric plant in Ust'-Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan.

Simon Sebag Montefiore reports in his 2003 Stalin: Court of the Red Tsar that Malenkov found this demotion actually a pleasant relief from the pressures of the Politburo. Furthermore, he reports, in his later years Malenkov converted to Christianity, as did his daughter, who has since spent part of her personal wealth building churches throughout the former USSR.

 

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