Andrey Vyshinsky

Andrey Vyshinsky
Андре́й Выши́нский
Vyshinsky standing in the centre next to Karl Radek (left)
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
4 March 1949 – 5 March 1953
Premier Joseph Stalin
Preceded by Vyacheslav Molotov
Succeeded by Vyacheslav Molotov
Procurator General of the Soviet Union
In office
3 March 1935 – 31 May 1939
Premier Vyacheslav Molotov
Preceded by Ivan Akulov
Succeeded by Mikhail Pankratov
Procurator General of the Russian SFSR
In office
11 May 1931 – 25 May 1934
Premier Vyacheslav Molotov
Preceded by Nikolai Krylenko
Succeeded by Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko
Personal details
Born 10 December 1883(1883-12-10)
Odessa, Russian Empire
Died 22 November 1954(1954-11-22) (aged 70)
New York City, New York, United States
Nationality Soviet
Political party Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Profession Lawyer, diplomat, civil servant

Andrey Januaryevich Vyshinsky (Russian: Андре́й Януа́рьевич Выши́нский, Andrej Januar'evič Vyšinskij) 10 December [O.S. 28 November] 1883 – 22 November 1954) was a Soviet politician, jurist and diplomat.

He is known as a state prosecutor of Joseph Stalin's Moscow trials and in the Nuremberg trials. He was the Soviet Foreign Minister from 1949 to 1953, after having served as Deputy Foreign Minister under Vyacheslav Molotov since 1940. He also headed the Institute of State and Law in the Soviet Academy of Sciences.

Contents

Biography

Vyshinsky was born into a Polish Catholic family in Odessa, who later moved to Baku. He became a Menshevik in 1903 and took an active part in the 1905 Russian Revolution at Baku, for which he was convicted and imprisoned in the Bailov prison. Here he first met Stalin: a fellow inmate with whom he engaged in ideological disputes.[1] After graduating in Law at Kiev University, Vyshinsky became a successful lawyer in Moscow.[2] In 1917 he undersigned an order to arrest Vladimir Lenin, according to the decision of the Russian Provisional Government.[3] In 1920, he joined the Bolsheviks.

He carried out administrative preparations for a "systematic" drive "against harvest-wreckers and grain-thieves."[4]

In 1935 he became Prosecutor General of the USSR, the legal mastermind of Joseph Stalin's Great Purge. He is widely (and wrongly) cited for the principle that "confession of the accused is the queen of evidence" despite his monograph Theory of Judicial Proofs in Soviet Justice (which was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1947) stating directly the opposite. He first became a nationally known public figure as a result of the Semenchuk case of 1936.[5] Konstantin Semenchuk was the head of the Glavsevmorput station on Wrangel Island; he was accused of oppressing and starving the local Eskimos and of ordering his subordinate, the sled driver Stepan Startsev, to murder Dr. Nikolai Vulfson, who had attempted to stand up to Semenchuk, on 27 December 1934 (though there were also rumors that Startsev had fallen in love with Vulfson's wife, Dr. Gita Feldman, and killed him out of jealousy).[6] The case came to trial before the Supreme Court of the RSFSR in May 1936; both defendants, attacked by Vyshinsky as "human waste," were found guilty and shot, and "the most publicized result of the trial was the joy of the liberated Eskimos."[7]

Three months later, Vyshinsky achieved international fame as the prosecutor at the Zinoviev-Kamenev trial, the first of the Moscow Trials during the Great Purge, lashing its defenseless victims with vituperative rhetoric:[8]

Shoot these rabid dogs. Death to this gang who hide their ferocious teeth, their eagle claws, from the people! Down with that vulture Trotsky, from whose mouth a bloody venom drips, putrefying the great ideals of Marxism!... Down with these abject animals! Let's put an end once and for all to these miserable hybrids of foxes and pigs, these stinking corpses! Let's exterminate the mad dogs of capitalism, who want to tear to pieces the flower of our new Soviet nation! Let's push the bestial hatred they bear our leaders back down their own throats!

During the trials, Vyshinsky misappropriated the house and money of Leonid Serebryakov, one of the defendants of the infamous Moscow Trials, who was later executed.[9]

In June, 1940, Vyshinsky was sent to the Republic of Latvia.[10] to supervise the establishment of a pro-Soviet government and incorporation of that country into the USSR, and later arranged for a communist regime to assume control of Romania in 1945.[11] In 1953 he was among the chief figures accused by the U.S. Congress Kersten Committee, during its investigation of the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states.[12]

He was responsible for the Soviet preparations for the trial of the major war criminals by the International Military Tribunal.

The positions he held included those of vice-premier (1939–1944), Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs (1940–1949), Minister for Foreign Affairs (1949–1953), Academician of the Soviet Academy of Sciences from 1939, and permanent representative of the Soviet Union to the United Nations.

He died in 1954 while in New York and was buried near Red Square.

Scholarship

Vyshinsky was the director of the Soviet Academy of Sciences' Institute of State and Law. Until the period of destalinization, the Institute of State and Law was named in his honor.

During his tenure as director of the ISL, Vyshinsky oversaw the publication of several important monographs on the general theory of state and law.

Family

Vyshinsky married Kapa Mikhailova and had a daughter named Zinaida Andreyevna Vyshinskaya (born 1909).[13]

References

  1. ^ Arkady Vaksberg, The Prosecutor and the Prey: Vyshinsky and the 1930's Moscow Show Trials (London: Weidenfield and Nicolson, 1990), pp. 15-21.
  2. ^ Vaksberg, Prosecutor and the Prey, pp. 22-3.
  3. ^ С весны 1917 работал в наркомтруде и прокуратуре, летом 1917 подписал ордер на арест В.Ленина,... (Starting in the spring of 1917 [he] worked in the Narkomtrud and the Prokuratura, in the summer of 1917 signed the order to arrest V. Lenin,...)
  4. ^ Soviet Crop Failure: New Campaign against "Wreckers", The Times August 10, 1933
  5. ^ John McCannon, Red Arctic: Polar Exploration and the Myth of the North in the Soviet Union, 1932-1939 (Oxford University Press US, 1998: ISBN 0195114361), p. 156.
  6. ^ McCannon, Red Arctic, p. 157.
  7. ^ Yuri Slezkine, Arctic Mirrors: Russia and the Small Peoples of the North (Cornell University Press, 1994: ISBN 0801481783), p. 288.
  8. ^ Nicolas Werth, Karel Bartošek, Jean-Louis Panné, Jean-Louis Margolin, Andrzej Paczkowski, Stéphane Courtois, The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression, Harvard University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-674-07608-7, page 750
  9. ^ Raider Vyshinsky by Novaya Gazeta
  10. ^ "Analytical list of documents, V. Friction in the Baltic States and Balkans, June 4-September 21, 1940". Telegram of German Ambassador in the Soviet Union (Schulenburg) to the German Foreign Office. http://www.ibiblio.org/pha/nsr/nsr-05.html#14. Retrieved 2007-03-03. 
  11. ^ "Vyshinsky, Andrey". Encyclopædia Britannica (Britannica Concise Encyclopedia ed.). 2007. http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9075802/Andrey-Yanuaryevich-Vyshinsky's. Retrieved 2007-03-03. 
  12. ^ The Iron Heel, TIME Magazine, December 14, 1953
  13. ^ Arkady Vaksberg (1990) The Prosecutor and the Prey: Vyshinsky and the 1930's Moscow Show Trials. London, Weidenfield and Nicolson: 14-15, 21

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Vyacheslav Molotov
Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union
1949–1953
Succeeded by
Vyacheslav Molotov