Chapter 52: The New Division KGB

"If this thing is done, Lao Tzu will almost be able to become a revolutionary mentor!" Serov continued to revise his plan, this time he came to Italy, although he was not welcomed by the Italian Prime Minister, Serov did not complain at all, he did not blame others, he himself came with full malice, "Friends of the Italian government, if the Ministry of the Interior investigates that you are corrupt, don't blame Lao Tzu for being polite in the next election......

Deep down, Serov absolutely did not believe that there was no ** situation in the society of the fifties, that the power of social supervision in this era had not been effectively established, and that with the scale of Italy's state-owned enterprises, it was difficult to imagine that the Catholic Democrats above them were moral saints, and that there would be Berlusconi a few decades later. Besides, with such a thing as the mafia, Italy has already been labeled a criminal suspect by Serov.

If the Ministry of the Interior can't even investigate anything in Italy, which is so powerful. This is too disappointing for Serov, if there is a department in the Soviet Union that is out of the nest and outside, Serov will definitely choose the Ministry of Internal Affairs.

After a long stretch and a well-deserved taste of imperialist coffee, Serov signed his name at the end of the document, picked up the phone and said, "Let Mendelev come to my office......

"Encrypt the documents and send them to Moscow, and destroy the original documents as soon as they are finished!" Serov turned his head, unsurprisingly heard the sound of his neck, and said tiredly, "I hope Moscow can give us support!" ”

"I hope so!" Mendelev also said with deep agreement, "I just don't know if we can get the support we want!" ”

"I don't know that either!" Serov did not answer in the affirmative, in his opinion, it is up to man to succeed, and doing things itself is to have success and failure, and there is no need to be annoyed by temporary success or failure. If he didn't do anything and waited for pie to fall from the sky, Serov would rather find a place to eat and die. The most important thing is that this pie is going to hit Serov.

A series of difficult and incomprehensible signals flew along the long-wave radio station to distant Moscow, and the US military base in Italy detected this signal and found that it was the signal of the Soviet ambassador. But it didn't attract attention, it was normal to send messages from the embassy to China, and the US embassy across the street was not vegetarian, and the two sides were engaged in a silent battle every day.

At this time in Moscow, a reorganization of departments was being brewed, and never before was a reorganization of a single department capable of touching the nerves of so many people. The Ministry of Internal Affairs, the successive appearance of Yagoda, Yezhov, and Beria, especially the appearance of Beria, made the entire Soviet top brass almost tremble during the three months of Stalin's death. No one wanted to come a second time, and Beria's monstrous power had already alerted the entire Soviet leadership, whether it was Khrushchev, Malenkov or Molotov, to know that it was necessary to completely reshuffle the Ministry of Internal Affairs, so that there would be no more strong ministers in the Ministry of Internal Affairs who threatened them.

At this time, in the Soviet Union, there was basically a model of two giants, namely Malenkov and Khrushchev, nominally when Stalin had just died, Malenkov wanted to occupy a certain advantage, but Khrushchev successfully added points to himself in the matter of killing Beria. After Beria died and the Big Three became two, Khrushchev quietly completed the overtaking of Malenkov. If it weren't for Molotov's wandering between Malenkov and Khrushchev, the rivalry would have ended long ago.

Even now, Khrushchev still plays a greater role than Malenkov. In order to seize power, Khrushchev used the prestige of Stalin and Lenin in the hearts of the people at the beginning, and he instructed the press to praise Stalin in large quantities, and linked himself with Stalin, and in the Soviet Encyclopedia, he added a sentence to his biography as "Stalin's closest comrade-in-arms" to indicate that he was Stalin's legitimate heir, so as to belittle Malenkov.

He repeatedly portrayed Stalin as the rightful heir of Lenin, and then presented himself as the only person after Stalin's death who truly embraced Stalin's Leninist line.

In addition, organizationally, he used his position in the party to arrange his forces, and had to admit that there were many people who benefited, and it was at this time that Sherepin began to make his mark at the highest levels of the Soviet Union. After a series of deliberations, with the consent of Malenkov and others, Khrushchev was finally ready to take action against the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and the preliminary preparations had been going on for several months.

On 13 March, Khrushchev established a new organization, this body was the KGB, and Serov, Minister of Internal Affairs, was transferred to the post of chairman of the KGB.

The Minister of Internal Affairs was succeeded by Krugnov, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs still existed after the establishment of the KGB, but its functions and powers were only the internal affairs of the state, not the secret police, and Krugnov served as Minister of Internal Affairs until a few years later, when he was removed from office by Khrushchev and no longer appeared in public.

Nicholas, who succeeded him. Pavlovich. The choice of Daodorov is quite surprising, because Daodorov has always been a person engaged in construction, who can only deal with cement, steel pipes and glass, and is not a talent engaged in spies, and it can also be seen from this that the functions and powers of the Ministry of Internal Affairs have been greatly reduced, and there has been a change in nature, because the KGB has replaced many of the work of the original Ministry of Internal Affairs. Dodorov was the last Minister of Internal Affairs, until a few years later the Ministry of Internal Affairs was abolished. The KGB became an important pillar of the Khrushchev regime.

In April, Serov, who was in Italy, received a telegram from Moscow that he knew that the files of his Ministry of Internal Affairs had been transferred to the newly established KGB. Is it considered a spy boss now? When I retire, I'll be writing a novel about any flower agent, super agent in the city, or something, and maybe it's quite popular! ”

"The question is, did all the work of the Ministry of Internal Affairs be transferred to the KGB to continue?" This is a big problem, Serov waited for Moscow's reply, but he was unlucky enough to bump into the reorganization of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and I don't know if the bigwigs in Moscow now have time to pay attention to him.