Genrikh Lyushkov
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Genrikh Samoilovich Lyushkov (Генрих Самойлович Люшков) (1900 – August 19, 1945) was an officer in the Soviet secret police and its highest-ranking defector.
He was born in Odessa, the son of a tailor. Beginning in November 1920 he joined the Cheka and GPU in Odessa. He served in what eventually became the NKVD in various parts of the Soviet Union, and also carried out an industrial espionage assignment in Germany in the 1930s involving the Junkers aviation company, which brought him Stalin's favor. His final posting was as NKVD boss of the Russian Far East on July 31, 1937. By then he had been awarded the Order of Lenin and was a deputy of the Supreme Soviet and a member of the Central Committee.
At this time the Great Purge was near its peak and NKVD boss Nikolai Yezhov was gradually losing power. Lyushkov received a summons to return to Moscow, but strongly suspected that this would mean his own arrest. His own two predecessors in his post, Deribas and Balitsky, had both been purged. On June 13, 1938 he defected by crossing the border into Japan-occupied Manchuria with valuable secret documents about Soviet military strength in the region, which was much higher than the Japanese had realized. As a "third-rank commissar of state security" (комиссар госбезопасности 3-го ранга), he was the highest ranking secret-police official to succeed in defecting, with the most inside knowledge about the purges due to his own participation in carrying them out.
Before defecting, he had previously arranged for his wife Inna and 11 year old daughter to leave the Soviet Union in order for his daughter to receive medical treatment abroad. After receiving a pre-arranged code-phrase telegram from his wife, he defected a few days later believing that his family was safe, but in fact they had vanished without a trace. It was later reported that his wife had been tortured and shot at Lubyanka prison, and his parents and all his relatives were sent to Siberia. His mother and brother died, however, his sister survived the Siberian camp. The daughter's fate remains unknown.
A month after his defection, he gave a press conference at a Tokyo hotel. He published a number of articles and interviews about the Soviet purges, and served as an intelligence advisor to the Japanese. He proposed and planned a detailed assassination plot to be carried out against Stalin in Sochi in January 1939, and the Japanese attempted to smuggle six Russian emigrant agents across the Soviet-Turkish border to carry out this suicide mission. However the group had been infiltrated by a Soviet agent and the attempt to cross the border failed. Lyushkov also served as a military advisor and warned the Japanese not to underestimate Soviet military strength, estimating that at least 4000 tanks would be needed for an attack on the Soviet Union. This was an impossible figure for the Japanese army to achieve.
He worked for the Japanese in Manchuria until he disappeared in August 1945, near the very end of World War II. His fate is uncertain, but according to one version he was killed at the Japanese military mission in Dairen (Dalian, China) by the head of the mission, a Japanese counterintelligence officer named Takeoka. The Soviet Army was expected to occupy Dalian soon, and the Japanese discussed what to do about Lyushkov. Takeoka invited him to commit suicide in view of the hopeless situation and when Lyushkov refused, Takeoka shot him to prevent him falling into the hands of the Soviets and ordered his body secretly cremated.
[edit] External links
- http://www.hrono.ru/biograf/lyushko.html (in Russian)
- http://nvo.ng.ru/printed/history/2004-11-19/5_blukher.html (in Russian)
- http://www.vestnik.com/issues/1999/0817/win/kuksin.htm (in Russian)
- http://www.memo.ru/history/NKVD/kto/biogr/gb299.htm (in Russian)
- http://www.hrono.ru/slovo/2003_03/hly03_03.html (in Russian)