Manfred Stern
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Manfred Stern (aka Emilio Kléber, Lazar Stern, Moishe Stern, Mark Zilbert) (1896–1954) was a member of Soviet Military Intelligence (GRU). He served as an spy in the United States, as a military advisor in China, and gained fame as General Kléber, leader of the International Brigade during the Spanish Civil War.
He was born into a Jewish family in Bukovina, a province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire on the border between Romania and Ukraine. He studied medicine at the University of Vienna. Drafted into the Austro-Hungarian army at the beginning of World War I, he was captured by the Tsarist army and taken to a POW camp in Siberia. Freed by the October Revolution, he became a Bolshevik and joined the Red Army. He led a partisan unit in Siberia against the White Army of Admiral Kolchak and fought in Mongolia against the warlord "bloody" Baron Ungern von Sternberg and his ally, the religious leader Bogd Khan. In 1921 he was elected to the Constituent Assembly of the short-lived Far Eastern Republic.
After the Civil War, he returned to Moscow and enrolled in the Frunze Military Academy. Upon graduation, in 1924, he joined Walter Krivitsky in the Intelligence Department (Fourth) of the Red Army General Staff. He was assigned to the Comintern and acted as an instructor in its military schools.
In 1929 Stern became the GRU's chief illegal resident in the United States. Based in New York and operating under the cover name of Mark Zilbert, he managed a network of sources and agents involved in the theft of military secrets. In one operation they stole the plans for a new American tank. Another operation was foiled by a source who went to U.S. Naval Intelligence and continued to deliver faked documents to the Soviets. The apparatus kept a safe apartment on West 57th Street, owned by Paula Levine, later part of a Soviet spy ring in Paris, and kept a photographic studio on Gay Street in Greenwich Village, where "Charlie," in actuality Leon Minster the brother-in-law of Vyacheslav Molotov, microfilmed the stolen documents. German sailors acted as couriers to the GRU in Europe.
From New York, Stern traveled in 1932 to Shanghai where he served as the Comintern's military advisor to the newly created Jiangxi Soviet. Stern's activities in China remain veiled in mystery. In a report to the Moscow Comintern, he claimed that he tried to forge an alliance between the Chinese Red Army and a rebel Nationalist army whose officers had seized control of nearby Fukien province. However, this alliance failed and the National Revolutionary Army, under the command of Chiang Kai-shek, encircled the Chinese Red Army, forcing them to abandon their base in Jiangxi and to begin the Long March. Stern returned to Moscow in 1935 and worked briefly for Otto Kuusinen in the secretariat of the Executive Committee of the Comintern (ECCI).
Stern arrived in Spain on a hot day in September 1936, disguised inappropriately as a "furrier." He adopted the name of one of Napoleon's generals, Jean-Baptiste Kléber, and posed as an Austrian born Canadian citizen. He served as a military advisor to the Comintern's army--the International Brigades. During the Battle of Madrid, November 1936, he led the 3,000 member International Brigade against Franco's Nationalist army. At a time when it appeared all was lost—the Republican government of Largo Caballero had already abandoned the capitol—the arrival of Kléber and the International Brigade boosted the morale of Madrid's Republican defenders. The Brigades fought from street to street and held the line at Casa de Campo, repulsing the Nationalists. The foreign press broadcast the victory over Fascism throughout the world and heralded General Kléber as the "Savior of Madrid."
The The New York Times correspondent Herbert Matthews, interviewed Stern shortly after the battle. "Listening to General Kléber," he wrote, "one gets the impression of great dynamic force. He is a character possibly destined to play a great part in the troubled years which face the world...In thinking about him it is hard not to ponder on the ironical fact that Hitler is not the only native of Austria who is playing a great part in the Spanish civil war." Ironically, this renown was Stern's undoing. He was quietly removed to the rear, then recalled.
The NKVD chief in Spain, Alexander Orlov, knew that Stern's recall meant certain imprisonment and death because in Moscow Stalin and Yezhov were busy purging the Red Army. He offered to employ Stern as a member of the NKVD. While awaiting orders, Stern spent his final months in Spain relaxing at a small orange plantation and entertaining his young Spanish mistress. Voroshilov denied his transfer and ordered his return to Moscow.
In May 1939 a Military Collegium condemned Stern to fifteen years of hard labor. He became a non-person. His name was deliberately withheld from official Soviet histories of the Spanish Civil War. The remaining years of his life were spent in the Gulag and he died of exhaustion at a labor camp in Sosnovka on February 18, 1954.
[edit] Sources
- Walerij Brun-Zechowoj, Manfred Stern - General Kleber. Die tragische Biographie eines Berufsrevolutionärs (1896-1954). Wolfgang Weist, Berlin 2000, ISBN 3-89626-175-4.
- David Dallin, Soviet Espionage, Yale University Press, 1955.
- Lloyd Eastman, The Abortive Revolution: China under Nationalist Rule, 1927-1937, Harvard University Press, 1990.
- Walter Krivitsky, In Stalin's Secret Service, Enigma Books, 2000.
- Herbert L. Matthews, "Canadian Leader Praises Spaniards," in New York Times, December 12, 1936.
- Alexander Orlov, March of Time, St. Ermin's Press, 2004.
- Ronald Radosh, Mary R. Habeck, and Grigory Sevostianov, Spain Betrayed: The Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War, Yale University Press, 2001.