Chapter 448: The Trotskyists
Fujita, of course, is not hard, as the head of a company's representative office in the Soviet Union, this kind of thing is very fair, and how much money is earned by doing as much work as he does, in a sense, is more motivated than the Soviet Union's administrative means to forcibly pull all kinds of work into a class. The world is always so contradictory, to be equal is to limit the individual abilities of some people, and the full embodiment of individual abilities will lead to the lack of contact between people, and in some cases only one can be chosen among them.
Everywhere there is a hierarchy of people, although the Soviet Union has always been committed to the elimination of hierarchy in the administration and system, but it is still different from the treatment of a high-ranking cadre and an ordinary person, the social status and influence are the same, and the cadres of the sixties are not as arrogant as twenty years later. The current honesty of Soviet cadres is not how highly conscious the Soviets are, but another reason: in the environment of the Great Purge and the emphasis on class, the KGB closed the entire Soviet Union's channels of communication with the outside world, and the Soviet cadres after the Great Purge were still relatively simple and did not learn how to use semi-legal means to seek benefits, plus the cadre class during the Stalin and Khrushchev periods has been unstable, and there is no time to think about these problems.
The Brezhnev period was different, the stability of the cadre class allowed cadres everywhere to have plenty of time to figure out how to bypass the rules and regulations and so on to plan for their own lives, anyway, they had time to plan, and they did not have to worry about Moscow ordering them to be removed.
But this difference will still be evident in the contacts, and it is still beyond the ability of the Japanese to ask Fujita, the head of an office, to negotiate with the chairman of the Soviet State Security Council. After coming out of the building of the local party committee in Primorye, Fujita sent a telegram to Tokyo, and unexpectedly received a reply starting with Baga, strictly ordering Fujita to solve the problem and ignore the proposal to lower prices, which was originally very approved by the Tokyo headquarters.
While Fujita was preparing to go to Moscow under the plywood, Serov, after completing this year's dormitory expansion plan, very efficiently and strictly ordered that the foundation must be completed by September, and that the housing problem of all his subordinate comrades must be solved next year. It will be solved next year, because the rest of this year is only enough to lay the foundation, and in the Soviet Union, because of the latitude, a bungalow must be laid with a foundation less than one meter deep, and if you want to build a collective dormitory building, you must investigate the local conditions and dig out the foundation with a depth of ten to twenty meters, this process is indispensable and completely common sense.
If this step is omitted, it is likely to be the first year of the new home and the second year of the dilapidated house, and the general belief that the Soviet Union is cold all year round, although the Soviet summer is short but still exists, the temperature is enough to allow the permafrost to civilize, if the step of laying the foundation is omitted, the basic principle of thermal expansion and cold contraction is not a joke. If the Americans were to learn from the planks to build houses, it is estimated that the Soviets in Siberia would need the KGB troops to collect the corpses the next year.
If Serov, who became chairman of the KGB, learned from Khrushchev's theory of will, it is estimated that it will be another corn movement, and the fact that the first secretary can bear it does not mean that he can also bear it.
In the office of the chairman of the KGB on Lubyanka Square 11, which is a sacred place for the cadres of the headquarters, at least for now, after many years of dismantling of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the chairman of the KGB has finally become his own man in the usual sense, and Serov will not take office as a layman leading an insider, so that all the cadres of the security system are satisfied, and after the housing order is issued, it becomes even more satisfied.
Serov had to provide everything he had experienced before Brezhnev completely consolidated his position, and it was certainly difficult for the entire Soviet Union to carry it out, but it was not so difficult to implement it in one department alone. The cadres of the provincial security system were co-opted by others, and they stabilized their basic disk and thought about something else.
Of course, the work still has to be done, the head of the intelligence department still has to carry out intelligence work, and the welfare of the comrades in the department is only extra work, if Britain and the United States are strong opponents of the KGB of the Soviet Union, then the opposite camp is not without weak points, and the location of this weak point is the proud French.
One of the KGB's most successful operations in France during the Cold War was to attack the French foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies. A group codenamed "Sapphire" was active in the KGB's foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agency. Alexander the leader of the First Directorate? Sakhatowsky had at hand a complete plan of the Foreign Intelligence and Reconnaissance Agency, which was led by the head of the Foreign Intelligence and Reconnaissance Agency, Pole? Formulated by General Groling.
Sakhatowski also regularly receives copies of this report from the agency. Golitsyn also offered some favors for the arrest of the rebel George? Parker's material, which makes his testimony sound more credible. He also revealed that the KGB was already aware of the plans of the foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies to create a branch to collect scientific intelligence in the United States. The ministry began operations in 1962. But Golitsyn had only some intermittent information about the KGB's actions in France, and most of the intelligence did not deal with specific issues. Even the news that led to Parker's arrest actually narrowed the initial circle of suspicion to seven, and it was only after the seven men that he was later identified after the seven people were spied on.
Golitsyn's candor was well known in the foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies, so it was impossible to conduct long-term covert surveillance of him as he did with Parker. After Golitsyn's statement, a conspiracy theory was propagated, further hampering the investigation. Similar theories in the United States make James? Engelton began to suspect the leader of the CIA's "Socialist State" department, David? Melf.
In England it led to Peter? White and others to MI5 Chief Roger? Sir Hollis's suspicions. Like Britain and the United States, the inventors of the "conspiracy" theory in France have misjudged in many cases. The literature of the Foreign Intelligence and Reconnaissance Agency indicates that although the "Sapphire" team was eventually identified, "the big fish slipped away", so the Tribunal did not investigate further.
The fact that France did not publicly expose a single Soviet spy during the war does not mean that the activities of Soviet spies in France were not active, but rather that the French counterintelligence agencies were weak and powerless. Part of the reason for the failure of counterintelligence was that France failed to decipher the Venona code that marked the end of the era of the "Five Masters" and atomic espionage. In the mid-sixties after the Parker case, the United States and Britain re-analysed all the French material that had appeared in the "Venona" contact, and the results of the analysis were forwarded to the French Homeland Security Agency (the French counterintelligence agency).
These materials indicate that before the war there was a Soviet spy cell operating in the French Ministry of Aviation, the members of which were recruited in the thirties. In the years before the fall of France, their spy in the General Directorate of Intelligence, Henry? Robinson worked under control. As one of the members of the group, the scholar Andrei? Rabat, began to preside over several national research laboratories. He was one of the first members to join the "Free France" association founded in London under the leadership of General de Gaulle. For a few months he was head of General de Gaulle's weapons reserves, but because of a feud with De Gaulle's close ministers, he withdrew from the "Free France" association and founded the monthly "Free France" in London. Later, he was also in charge of the BBC's broadcasting to France. He had sent political-military intelligence to a Soviet man in London under the pseudonym Albert. Rabat was appointed Minister of Information for the Provisional Government of the "Free France" in Algiers. Parker was leading the political journalism of Radio Free France. After the war, Barthes earned his living mainly by working in journalism.
The Venona code had already been replaced by Serov, and all the spies recruited by the Soviet Union in the thirties were in dormant, partly because these spies had already made great achievements, and Serov did not want these people to leak out, and partly because these people were very old, and the KGB needed a new batch of spies.
France was very rebellious in its national character, as can be seen in the Paris Commune and the various movements. It was never difficult for the Soviet Union to recruit spies in France, and it was far less difficult to block it than in Britain and the United States.
This kind of work is to prepare for another well-known event in history, France a few years later in the May storm, Serov's greatest desire is, of course, for a socialist party to come to power, of course, this is unlikely, then it is feasible to stuff in a couple of Trojan horses.
On the Internet of China in later generations, some people believe that it was the Chinese factor that influenced the occurrence of the May Storm in France, but in fact, according to the documents of the Soviet Union, the biggest force of the May Storm in France was actually Trotsky's Fourth International, and the Fourth International was only not openly suppressed during the Khrushchev period, not to mention that Brezhnev had already come to power at the time of the May Storm, so one can imagine what attitude to the May Storm in France.
During the entire French May Storm, the Soviet Union did not do anything at all, on the one hand, because the main force of the May Storm was Trotsky's Fourth International, Serov summoned the head of the French department, and awarded medals to three high-ranking French spies, and after lunch, he said softly, "The development of the socialist movement has brought fairness to the world, our ideas are far from perfect, but they are not completely unrealistic, and we take a cooperative attitude towards the other revolutionary forces. When the time comes, we must unite and work together to defeat the enemy of capitalism first, and our internal contradictions can be postponed! (To be continued.) )