Chapter 543: Meeting of the Ministry of Internal Affairs

Semychasny once issued a hunt order for Svetlana, but then he was replaced by Brezhnev, and this hunt order was gone, probably because of Brezhnev's relatively mild personality, and no one knows the specific reason. Pen? Interesting? Pavilion wWw. biquge。 But Serov must not allow such a thing to happen during his tenure. Just because she says that there is no difference between the KGB and the Gestapo, she deserves to die......

Some people are more valuable when they die than they are alive, and Svetlana's death falls into this category. She lived to fall in love with Indians, which in the eyes of the Soviet cadres was to disgrace Stalin and was completely unacceptable. But when she died, these unacceptable reasons would not disappear completely, but they would become tolerable.

Serov showed extraordinary concern about this matter, and kept asking whether to bring Svetlana's body back to China, or an autopsy to investigate the cause of death, whether to bring Svetlana's body back to China also caused a discussion in the Central Presidium, Suslov, Brezhnev, Kosygin, and Sherepin had different views, and finally Khrushchev made a decision, "Bury her in India, after all, she may prefer there, and she has been making a fuss about going abroad for so long, and we will fulfill her wishes!" ”

This answer made Serov smile a smile of satisfaction, which was exactly what he meant. Khrushchev's decision to make this decision, whether selfish or not, was definitely the most beneficial decision for the Soviet Union. It can be said that Svetlana did not die in vain, and that Svetlana's death became an excellent means of propaganda against India, who let Svetlana's identity be there, it was Stalin's daughter.

"Ilyich, Svetlana's death, could it be murdered?" After work in the evening, Kirilenko, who was returning home with Brezhnev, asked the answer that had been bothering him for a long time.

"You mean Serov ordered her to be killed? No reason! "Brezhnev was very good at supporting his judgment through clues, but he really couldn't think of a reason why this matter was linked to the KGB. In fact, there are also clues to Svetlana's death, which Serov once revealed when discussing with Kosygin. It's just that Kosygin didn't take it to heart, and the relationship between Brezhnev and Kosygin was far from the point where they could sit together and chat.

Because he couldn't find even a little reason, Brezhnev made a wrong judgment, this matter had nothing to do with the KGB, Svetlana was a normal death, it is completely reasonable to say that he was agitated or heartbroken, and died suddenly.

Serov didn't take this matter to heart, every year the operational execution department kills a lot of people, this person is just one of them, and he also receives the news of the disappearance of hundreds of Soviet hidden agents and informants every year, if one person dies, he thinks for a long time, and this year he doesn't want to do anything else.

First of all, the armed forces of the KGB, whether they are the internal guards or the border guards, are similar to the gendarmerie and the armed police. The KGB in the Soviet Union, of course, had a higher authority and wider coverage than the police department of any other country, but in reality it was still a police department, though not exactly.

The armed forces of the KGB are not incapable of fighting, and many subordinate combat units can trace history and see their ancestors in the Great Patriotic War, but the size of these units cannot be compared with the Red Army. Although the tanks of the border guards lagged behind a little, there was no problem at all in picking up the armies of other countries.

Serov, through the order of the Presidium of the KGB, ordered all the internal guard military districts in the Soviet Union to be reorganized into the General Directorate of the Internal Guard, and all commanders of the Internal Guard Army retained their military ranks, all of which were called chiefs. The reorganization of the Directorate into the General Directorate of the Internal Guard Army is more important to strengthen the responsibilities of some of the KGB's internal armed police. At the same time, it is also to avoid confusion with the major military districts of the Ministry of Defense, and the same title will make ordinary people unable to distinguish the difference between the police force and the military.

Downplaying the military color of the Internal Guard Army and strengthening the police color shows that the KGB and the Ministry of Defense are completely different powerful departments, which is also a kind of cutting, and at the same time abolishes the institutions of the Moscow Internal Guard Military District, and the subordinate armed forces, including the Dzerzhinsky division, are all placed directly under the KGB.

"The Taman division shouldn't be a problem, and if you look at speed near the capital, the biggest threat is the Tula division." Serov crossed his fingers and thought about the effect of the reshuffle. It's not that he doesn't take the combat effectiveness of the Taman division seriously, but even if he can't control the Taman division, Dzerzhinsky's division can withstand it. Serov believed that the unit, named after the founder of the Cheka, could not use the men of Dzerzhinsky's division as supermen.

The greatest threat to the Tula division was not how formidable its combat might be. In the Soviet Airborne Army, the Tula Division is not the strongest unit in combat effectiveness and history, but as an airborne unit, it is very close to Moscow, and the Airborne Forces are close to the capital, which is very troublesome.

The reason why the Taman division was ignored by Serov was because his cheap big brother used to serve there, and how could he also have some trusted comrades-in-arms, these people were known by Serov, and by making archives to squeeze out competitors, they could have a faster rate of promotion. These people Serov had met on different occasions. Meeting is a must, and he is not Yuri, and he knows what others are thinking from a distance of ten kilometers.

The newly built building of the Ministry of Internal Affairs is not far from the Lubyanka, which is part of the construction of the KGB, and Serov is really not worried about letting Serokov out of his sight, since this person himself is stuffed in by Brezhnev, then everyone will face each other, and sooner or later Brezhnev will know who is the one who is losing by staring at each other.

Another important reason for this is that he, the chairman of the KGB, is lazy and far less willing than Sherepin and Semychasny to inspect the headquarters of the major directorates throughout Moscow. He's one of those people who would like to go farther, but don't want to spend their energy wandering around.

"There is an urgent need to curb crime, and while we have made great strides in recent years, it is not enough, and the reason is simple. There are blind spots in the scope of our enforcement. The intensity is far from enough, and this is still based on the annual campaign to crack down on crime, and before that, the crime rate cannot be seen. "In the position of Minister of Internal Affairs Serokov, at this time sat Serov, the General Political Commissar of State Security.

For so many years, Serov has not been sleeping with hairy girls and going abroad to be a-stirring stick. At least in this aspect of public order, he could well say that he was the conscience of the Soviets, the defender of the Soviet Union, the friend of the people, the embodiment of order. As soon as he took office as chairman of the KGB, he did not hesitate to use the rich painful experience of his previous life, recalling how he was educated by his police uncle when he was a little hooligan.

Write down this experience, write about the psychological activities of criminals who generally have little experience, and how to force them to confess. At the same time, a huge amount of money was spent on constantly updating the investigative equipment of the General Administration of Internal Affairs in various places, and finally began to establish a monitoring system. The crime rate in the Soviet Union has been declining for several years. If you don't talk about a hooligan as a law enforcer, it's simply terrible. Because this rogue has a lot of experience and knows how another rogue will respond, he will block all the roads in this area when he is a law enforcer......

But it's still not enough, it's not enough. In the 21 st century, if all the criminal offenses of theft and robbery are counted, not counting public security punishments, China's criminal offense rate is about one-twentieth that of the United States. However, China's criminal law is relatively severe, and the punishment in the United States is relatively light, and in this case, the number of prisoners held in American prisons has always been a little higher than that of China, which has a population of more than one billion.

What was the crime rate in the USSR? In terms of fatal cases, 11,000 people were killed in the Soviet Union last year, compared to 19,000 in the United States, and the crime rate in the Soviet Union was more than half that of the United States. In the year the Gulag was revoked, the Soviet Union and the United States were neck and neck, with 16,070 deaths in the Soviet Union and 17,070 deaths in the United States. Worthy of being a superpower neck and neck, the two countries are once again tied in this regard.

But the Soviet Union was far away from the United States, and Western Europe, America's lackey, was very close to the Soviet Union, which raised a problem. Just like the problems faced by the Soviet Union when it was developing, the Soviet Union had to invest huge sums of money in both of which were developing welfare in Western Europe, which was very close to itself, and the United States, which was far away from the Soviet Union, developing its military.

If the Soviet Union were not compared to the United States and Western Europe, the number of people killed was as high as four times. This figure is a very slap in the face of him, the chief political commissar of national security, and he can't say that the Americans are dying more than us, and he is pulling the United States to compare it badly.

Otherwise, one has to admit the inflated figures of crimes in the USSR, and it comes to the conclusion that under Soviet socialism it is impossible to reduce crime. This matter must be resolved, "Isn't there a way for the 1.1 million members of the Ministry of the Interior to make our society a little safer?" Serov asked with a deep glance at the cadres of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

"Comrade General Political Commissar, I am the director of the General Bureau of Criminal Investigation Management, and I have a piece of information for you to read first." Serov nodded. (To be continued.) )