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State Committee of Defense of the USSR - abstract. State Defense Committee and Headquarters of the Supreme High Command Formation of the State Defense Committee headed by Stalin

"The days of war are harsh.
We will fight until victory.
We are all ready, Comrade Stalin,
To defend the edge born by the breast.

S. Alymov

According to the Constitution of the USSR of 1936, the supreme body of state power in the USSR was the Supreme Soviet (SC) of the USSR, which was elected for 4 years. The Supreme Soviet of the USSR elected the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR - the highest authority of the Soviet Union in the period between sessions of the Supreme Council. Also, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR elected the government of the USSR - the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR (SNK). The Supreme Court was elected by the Supreme Soviet of the USSR for a term of five years. The USSR Armed Forces also appointed the Prosecutor (Procurator General) of the USSR. The Constitution of 1936, or the Stalinist Constitution, did not in any way provide for the procedure for the implementation of state and military administration of the country in wartime conditions. In the presented diagram, the leaders of the USSR power structures are indicated in 1941. The Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces was endowed with the right to declare a state of war, general or partial mobilization, martial law in the interests of the country's defense and state security. The Council of People's Commissars of the USSR - the highest executive body of state power - took measures to ensure public order, protect the interests of the state and protect the rights of the population, supervised the general construction of the Armed Forces of the USSR, determined the annual contingent of citizens to be called up for active military service.

The Defense Committee (KO) under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR supervised and coordinated issues of military development and direct preparation of the country for defense. Although before the war it was envisaged that with the outbreak of hostilities, the military command should be carried out by the Main Military Council headed by the People's Commissar of Defense, this did not happen. The general leadership of the armed struggle of the Soviet people against the Nazi troops was taken over by the CPSU (b), or rather its Central Committee (CC), headed by The situation on the fronts was very difficult, the Soviet troops retreated everywhere. It was necessary to reorganize the highest bodies of state and military administration.

On the second day of the war, June 23, 1941, by a decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR and the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, the Headquarters of the High Command of the Armed Forces of the USSR was created. It was headed by the People's Commissar of Defense Marshal of the Soviet Union, i.e. military administration bodies were reorganized. The reorganization of the state power system took place on June 30, 1941, when the decision of the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces, the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR created the State Defense Committee (GKO) - the emergency supreme state body of the USSR, which concentrated all power in the country. The State Defense Committee supervised all military and economic issues during the war, and the leadership of military operations was carried out through the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command.

“There was no bureaucracy in both the Headquarters and the State Defense Committee. They were exclusively operational bodies. , which should be exactly like this, but it happened so, "recalled the head of the Logistics, General of the Army Khrulev A.V. In the first months of the Great Patriotic War, there was a complete centralization of power in the country. Stalin I.V. concentrated immense power in his hands - while remaining General Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, he headed the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, the State Defense Committee, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command and the People's Commissariat of Defense.

State Defense Committee

The State Defense Committee, created during the Great Patriotic War, was an emergency governing body that had full power in the USSR. The General Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks became the chairman of the GKO, and the Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs became the chairman of the GKO. (Secretary, Head of the Personnel Department of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks). In February 1942, N.A. Voznesensky was introduced into the GKO. (1st Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars) and Mikoyan A.I. (Chairman of the Committee for Food and Clothing Supply of the Red Army), Kaganovich L.M. (Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars). In November 1944, Bulganin N.A. became a new member of the State Defense Committee. (Deputy Commissar of Defense of the USSR), and Voroshilov K.E. was withdrawn from the GKO.

The GKO was endowed with broad legislative, executive and administrative functions, it united the military, political and economic leadership of the country. The decrees and orders of the State Defense Committee had the force of wartime laws and were subject to unquestioning execution by all party, state, military, economic and trade union bodies. However, the USSR Armed Forces, the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces, the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, the people's commissariats also continued to operate, fulfilling the decrees and decisions of the State Defense Committee. During the Great Patriotic War, the State Defense Committee adopted 9971 resolutions, of which about two-thirds dealt with the problems of the military economy and the organization of military production: the evacuation of the population and industry; mobilization of industry, production of weapons and ammunition; handling captured weapons and ammunition; organization of hostilities, distribution of weapons; appointment of authorized GKOs; structural changes in the State Defense Committee itself, etc. The remaining decisions of the State Defense Committee concerned political, personnel, and other issues.

GKO functions:
1) directing the activities of state departments and institutions, directing their efforts to the full use of the material, spiritual and military capabilities of the country to achieve victory over the enemy;
2) mobilization of the country's human resources for the needs of the front and the national economy;
3) organization of uninterrupted work of the defense industry of the USSR;
4) resolving issues of restructuring the economy on a war footing;
5) evacuation of industrial facilities from threatened areas and transfer of enterprises to liberated areas;
6) training of reserves and personnel for the Armed Forces and industry;
7) restoration of the economy destroyed by the war;
8) determination of the volume and terms of deliveries of military products by the industry.

The GKO set military-political tasks for the military leadership, improved the structure of the Armed Forces, determined the general nature of their use in the war, and placed leading cadres. The working bodies of the GKO on military issues, as well as the direct organizers and executors of its decisions in this area, were the People's Commissariats of Defense (NPO of the USSR) and the Navy (NC of the USSR Navy).

From the jurisdiction of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR to the jurisdiction of the State Defense Committee, the people's commissariats of the defense industry were transferred: People's Commissariat of Aviation Industry, People's Commissariat of Tank Industry, People's Commissariat of Ammunition, People's Commissariat for Armaments, People's Commissariat for Armaments, People's Commissariat for Armaments, and others. GKO resolutions on the production of military products. The commissioners had mandates, signed by the chairman of the GKO - Stalin, which clearly defined the practical tasks that the GKO set for their commissioners. As a result of the efforts made, the output of military products in March 1942 only in the eastern regions of the country reached the pre-war level of its output throughout the entire territory of the Soviet Union.

During the war, in order to achieve maximum efficiency of management and adaptation to current conditions, the structure of the GKO was repeatedly changed. One of the important divisions of the State Defense Committee was the Operations Bureau, established on December 8, 1942. The Operations Bureau included L.P. Beria, G.M. Malenkov, A.I. Mikoyan. and Molotov V.M. The tasks of this unit initially included the coordination and unification of the actions of all other units of the State Defense Committee. But in 1944 the bureau's functions were significantly expanded. It began to control the current work of all the people's commissariats of the defense industry, as well as the preparation and implementation of plans for the production and supply of industries and transport. The operational bureau became responsible for supplying the army, in addition, the duties of the previously abolished Transport Committee were assigned to it. "All members of the GKO were in charge of certain areas of work. So, Molotov was in charge of tanks, Mikoyan was in charge of quartermaster supply, fuel supply, lend-lease issues, sometimes he carried out individual orders from Stalin to deliver shells to the front. Malenkov was engaged in aviation, Beria - ammunition and weapons. Everyone came to Stalin with their own questions and said: I ask you to make such and such a decision on such and such an issue ... "- recalled the head of the Logistics, General of the Army Khrulev A.V.

To carry out the evacuation of industrial enterprises and the population from the front-line regions to the east, the Council for Evacuation Affairs was created under the State Defense Committee. In addition, in October 1941, the Committee for the Evacuation of Food Stocks, Industrial Goods and Industrial Enterprises was formed. However, in October 1941, these bodies were reorganized into the Directorate for Evacuation Affairs under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR. Other important divisions of the GKO were: the Trophy Commission, created in December 1941, and in April 1943 transformed into the Trophy Committee; the Special Committee, which dealt with the development of nuclear weapons; Special Committee - dealt with issues of reparations, etc.

The State Defense Committee became the main link in the mechanism of centralized management of the mobilization of the country's human and material resources for defense and armed struggle against the enemy. Having fulfilled its functions, the State Defense Committee was disbanded by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of September 4, 1945.

Headquarters of the Supreme High Command of the Armed Forces of the USSR

Initially, the supreme body of strategic leadership of the military operations of the Soviet Armed Forces was called the Headquarters of the High Command. It included members of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Stalin I.V., Molotov V.M., Marshal of the Soviet Union Voroshilov K.E., Deputy People's Commissar of Defense Marshal of the Soviet Union Budyonny S.M., People's Commissar of the Navy Admiral of the Fleet and Chief of the General Staff General of the Army, led by People's Commissar of Defense Marshal Timoshenko S.K. At the Headquarters, an institute of permanent advisers was formed, consisting of: Marshals of the Soviet Union and Kulik G.I.; generals, Zhigarev P.F., Vatutin N.F., Voronov N.N.; and also Mikoyan A.I., Kaganovich L.M., Beria L.P., Voznesensky N.A., Zhdanov A.A., Malenkov G.M., Mekhlis L.Z.

However, the dynamism of military operations, rapid and abrupt changes in the situation on a huge front required high efficiency in command and control of troops. Meanwhile, Marshal Timoshenko S.K. he could not independently, without agreement with, make any serious decisions on the leadership of the country's Armed Forces. He did not even have the right to make decisions on the preparation and use of strategic reserves. In order to ensure centralized and more efficient control of the actions of the troops, by the decree of the State Defense Committee of the USSR of July 10, 1941, the Headquarters of the High Command was transformed into the Headquarters of the High Command. It was headed by the chairman of the GKO, Stalin. By the same decree, Deputy People's Commissar of Defense Marshal B.M. Shaposhnikov was introduced to the Headquarters. August 8, 1941 Stalin I.V. was appointed Supreme Commander. Since that time, the Headquarters of the Supreme Command was renamed the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command (SHC). It included: Stalin I., Molotov V., Timoshenko S., Budyonny S., Voroshilov K., Kuznetsov N., Shaposhnikov B. and Zhukov G.

At the final stage of the Great Patriotic War, the composition of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command was changed for the last time. By the Decree of the State Defense Committee of the USSR of February 17, 1945, the following composition of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command was determined: Marshals of the Soviet Union Stalin I.V. (Chairman - Supreme Commander), (Deputy People's Commissar of Defense) and (Deputy People's Commissar of Defense), army generals Bulganin N.A. (member of the State Defense Committee and Deputy People's Commissar of Defense) and Antonov A.I. (Chief of the General Staff), Admiral Kuznetsov N.G. (People's Commissar of the Navy of the USSR).

The headquarters of the Supreme High Command carried out the strategic leadership of the Red Army, the USSR Navy, the border and internal troops,. The activities of the Headquarters consisted in assessing the military-political and military-strategic situation, making strategic and operational-strategic decisions, organizing strategic regroupings and creating groupings of troops, organizing interaction and coordinating actions during operations between groups of fronts, fronts, individual armies, as well as between active army and partisan detachments. In addition, the Stavka supervised the formation and training of strategic reserves, the material and technical support of the Armed Forces, supervised the study and generalization of war experience, exercised control over the fulfillment of assigned tasks, and resolved issues related to military operations.

The Headquarters of the Supreme Command led the fronts, fleets and long-range aviation, assigned them tasks, approved plans of operations, provided them with the necessary forces and means, and led the partisans through the Central Headquarters of the partisan movement. An important role in directing the combat activities of the fronts and fleets was played by the directives of the Headquarters, which usually indicated the goals and tasks of the troops in operations, the main directions where it was necessary to concentrate the main efforts, the necessary density of artillery and tanks in breakthrough areas, etc.

In the first days of the war, in a rapidly changing situation, in the absence of a stable connection with the fronts and reliable information about the situation of the troops, the military leadership was systematically late in making decisions, so it became necessary to create an intermediate command authority between the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command and the fronts. For these purposes, it was decided to send leading employees of the People's Commissariat of Defense to the front, but these measures at the initial stage of the war did not produce results.

Therefore, on July 10, 1941, by a decree of the GKO, three Main Commands of the Troops were created in strategic directions: the North-Western direction, headed by Marshal Voroshilov K.E. - coordination of the actions of the Northern and North-Western fronts, as well as the fleets; Western direction, headed by Marshal Timoshenko S.K. - coordination of the actions of the Western Front and the Pinsk military flotilla, and later - the Western Front, the Front of Reserve Armies and the Central Front; South-Western direction, headed by Marshal Budyonny S.M. - coordination of the actions of the South-Western, Southern, and later the Bryansk fronts, with operational subordination.

The task of the High Commands included studying and analyzing the operational-strategic situation in the direction zone, coordinating the actions of troops in the strategic direction, informing the Headquarters about the situation on the fronts, directing the preparation of operations in accordance with the plans of the Headquarters, and directing the partisan struggle behind enemy lines. In the initial period of the war, the High Commands were able to quickly respond to enemy actions, ensuring more reliable and accurate command and control of troops, as well as organizing interaction between the fronts. Unfortunately, the commanders-in-chief of the strategic directions not only did not have sufficiently broad powers, but also did not have the necessary military reserves and material resources to actively influence the course of hostilities. The headquarters did not clearly define the range of their functions and tasks. Often their activities were reduced to the transfer of information from the fronts to the Headquarters and, conversely, the orders of the Headquarters to the fronts.

The commanders-in-chief of the troops of the strategic directions were not able to improve the leadership of the fronts. The main commands of the troops of strategic directions began to be abolished one by one. But finally the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command did not refuse them. In February 1942, the Headquarters assigned the commander of the Western Front, General of the Army Zhukov G.K. duties of the Commander-in-Chief of the Western Direction, to coordinate the military operations of the Western and Kalinin fronts in the course. Soon the High Command of the troops of the South-Western direction was restored. Marshal Timoshenko S.K., commander of the Southwestern Front, was appointed commander-in-chief to coordinate the actions of the Southwestern and neighboring Bryansk fronts. And in April 1942, on the southern wing of the Soviet-German front, the High Command of the troops of the North Caucasian direction was formed, headed by Marshal S.M. Azov military flotilla. Soon, such a control system, as ineffective as it was, had to be abandoned. In May 1942, the High Commands of the troops of the Western and North Caucasian directions were abolished, and in June - of the South-Western directions.

The institute of representatives of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, which became more widespread during the Great Patriotic War, appeared to replace it. The most trained military leaders were appointed as representatives of the Headquarters, who were endowed with broad powers and were usually sent to where, according to the plan of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, the main tasks at the moment were being solved. Representatives of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command on the fronts at different times were: Budyonny S.M., Zhukov G.K., Vasilevsky A.M., Voroshilov K.E., Antonov A.I., Timoshenko S.K., Kuznetsov N.G. ., Shtemenko S.M., and others. Supreme Commander - Stalin I.V. demanded from representatives of the Headquarters constant reports on the progress of the tasks, often calling them to the Headquarters during operations, especially when something went wrong.

Stalin personally set specific tasks for his representatives, sternly asking for omissions and miscalculations. The institute of representatives of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command significantly increased the effectiveness of strategic leadership, contributed to a more rational use of forces in operations carried out at the fronts, it was easier to coordinate efforts and maintain close interaction between the fronts, branches of the Armed Forces, military branches and partisan formations. Representatives of the Headquarters, having great powers, could influence the course of battles, correct the mistakes of the front and army command in time. The institution of Headquarters representatives lasted almost until the end of the war.

Campaign plans were adopted at joint meetings of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, the State Defense Committee and the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, although in the first months of the war the principle of collegiality was practically not respected. The commanders of the fronts, branches of the Armed Forces and combat arms took the most active part in further work on the preparation of operations. With the stabilization of the front, the reorganization of the system of strategic leadership, the command and control of troops was also improved. The planning of operations began to be characterized by more coordinated efforts of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, the General Staff and the headquarters of the fronts. The Supreme Command Headquarters developed the most expedient methods of strategic leadership gradually, with the accumulation of combat experience and the growth of military art among the highest echelons of command and staffs. In the course of the war, the methods of strategic leadership of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command were continuously developed and improved. The most important issues of strategic plans and plans of operations were discussed at its meetings, which in a number of cases were attended by commanders and members of the military councils of the fronts, commanders of the branches of the armed forces and military branches. The Supreme Commander-in-Chief personally formulated the final decision on the issues under discussion.

Throughout the war, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command was located in Moscow, which was of great moral importance. The members of the Headquarters of the Supreme Command gathered in the Kremlin office of IV Stalin, but with the beginning of the bombing, it was transferred from the Kremlin to a small mansion on Kirov Street with a reliable working room and communications. Headquarters from Moscow was not evacuated, and during the bombing, work was moved to the Kirovskaya metro station, where an underground strategic control center for the Armed Forces was prepared. The offices of Stalin I.V. were equipped there. and Shaposhnikov B.M., the operational group of the General Staff and the departments of the People's Commissariat of Defense was located.

In the office of Stalin I.V. At the same time, members of the Politburo, the GKO and the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command gathered, but the unifying body in the conditions of war was still the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, whose meetings could be held at any time of the day. Reports to the Supreme Commander-in-Chief were made, as a rule, three times a day. At 10-11 o'clock in the morning the chief of the Operational Directorate usually reported, at 16-17 o'clock - the chief of the General Staff, and at night the military leaders went to Stalin with a final report for the day.

The priority in resolving military issues belonged, of course, to the General Staff. Therefore, during the war, his superiors visited Stalin IV almost daily, becoming his main experts, consultants and advisers. Kuznetsov N.G., People's Commissar of the Navy, was a frequent visitor to the Supreme Command Headquarters. and the head of the Logistics of the Red Army Khrulev A.V. Repeatedly, the Supreme Commander-in-Chief met with the heads of the Main Directorates of NCOs, commanders and heads of military branches. On issues related to the adoption of military equipment or its supply to the troops, people's commissars of the aviation, tank industry, weapons, ammunition and others came with them. Often, leading designers of weapons and military equipment were invited to discuss these issues. Having fulfilled its functions, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command in October 1945 was abolished.

General Staff of the Red Army

The General Staff is the main body of planning and control of the Armed Forces in the system of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command. “Such a team,” according to Shaposhnikov B.M., “is required to streamline the gigantic work in preparation for war. Coordination, harmonization of training ... can only be done by the General Staff - a collection of people who forged and tested their military views in the same conditions under the same leadership, selected in the most careful way, bound themselves by mutual responsibility, friendly actions, who reached turning points in the military construction."

In the prewar period, the General Staff carried out large-scale work to prepare the country for defense. The General Staff developed the Plan for the Strategic Deployment of the Armed Forces of the Soviet Union in the West and East for 1940 and 1941, approved on October 5, 1940. On May 15, 1941, an updated draft of the Considerations on the Plan strategic deployment in case of war with Germany and its allies", but it was not approved. Zhukov G.K. wrote: "The decision of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Soviet government of March 8, 1941 clarified the distribution of duties in the People's Commissariat of Defense of the USSR. The leadership of the Red Army was carried out by the People's Commissar of Defense through the General Staff, his deputies and the system of main and central directorates ... carried out tremendous operational, organizational and mobilization work, being the main apparatus of the people's commissar of defense.

However, according to the testimony of Marshal G.K. Zhukov, who was Chief of the General Staff before the war, "... I.V. Stalin on the eve and at the beginning of the war underestimated the role and importance of the General Staff ... he was very little interested in the activities of the General Staff. Neither my predecessors nor I did not have the opportunity to fully report to I.V. Stalin on the state of the country's defense, on our military capabilities and the capabilities of our potential enemy.

In other words, the political leadership of the country did not allow the General Staff to fully and timely implement the necessary measures on the eve of the war. For the USSR Armed Forces on the eve of the war, the only document prescribing that the troops of the border districts be put on alert was the directive sent to the troops a few hours before the start of the war (June 21, 1941 at 21.45 Moscow time). In the initial period of the war, under conditions of an unfavorable situation on the fronts, the volume and content of the work of the General Staff increased enormously. But only towards the end of the first period of the war did Stalin's relations with the General Staff normalize to a large extent. From the second half of 1942, IV Stalin, as a rule, did not make a single decision without first hearing the opinion of the General Staff.

The main governing bodies of the Armed Forces of the USSR during the Great Patriotic War were the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command and the General Staff. This command and control system operated throughout the war. In accordance with the requirements of wartime, the General Staff worked around the clock. The mode of operation of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command was practically also round-the-clock. The tone was set by the Supreme Commander himself, who worked 12-16 hours a day, and, as a rule, in the evening and at night. He paid the main attention to operational-strategic issues, problems of weapons, training of human and material resources.

The work of the General Staff during the war was complex and multifaceted. Functions of the General Staff:
1) collection and processing of operational-strategic information about the situation that developed on the fronts;
2) preparation of operational calculations, conclusions and proposals for the use of the Armed Forces, direct development of plans for military campaigns and strategic operations in theaters of military operations;
3) development of directives and orders of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command on the operational use of the Armed Forces and war plans in new possible theaters of military operations;
4) organization and management of all types of intelligence activities;
5) processing of data and information of lower headquarters and troops;
6) resolution of air defense issues;
7) management of the construction of fortified areas;
8) leadership of the military topographic service and supply of the army with topographic maps;
9) organization and organization of the operational rear of the army in the field;
development of regulations on army formations;
10) development of manuals and guidelines for staff service;
11) summarizing advanced combat experience of formations, formations and units;
12) coordination of combat operations of partisan formations with formations of the Red Army and much more.

The Chief of the General Staff was not just a member of the Stavka, he was its deputy chairman. In accordance with the instructions and decisions of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, the Chief of the General Staff united the activities of all departments of the People's Commissariat of Defense, as well as the People's Commissariat of the Navy. Moreover, the Chief of the General Staff was empowered to sign orders and directives of the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command, as well as to issue orders on behalf of the Headquarters. Throughout the war, the Chief of the General Staff reported the military-strategic situation in the theaters of operations and the proposals of the General Staff personally to the Supreme Commander-in-Chief. The Chief of the Operational Directorate of the General Staff (Vasilevsky A.M., Shtemenko S.M.) also reported to the Supreme Commander on the situation on the fronts. During the Great Patriotic War, the General Staff was successively headed by four military leaders - Marshals of the Soviet Union Zhukov G.K., Shaposhnikov B.M., Vasilevsky A.M. and General of the Army Antonov A.I.

The improvement of the organizational structure of the General Staff was carried out throughout the war, as a result of which the General Staff became a command and control body capable of promptly and adequately responding to changes in the situation on the fronts. During the Second World War, the necessary changes in the administrations took place. In particular, directions were created for each active front, consisting of the head of the direction, his deputy and 5-10 officer-operators. In addition, a corps of representative officers of the General Staff was created. It was intended to maintain continuous communication with the troops, verify the implementation of directives, orders and instructions from the highest authorities, provide the General Staff with prompt and accurate information about the situation, and also to provide timely assistance to headquarters and troops.

“Many things will not become known to everyone. Not because it cannot be told, but because it is not necessary to know about it” ... So, according to legend, G.M. Malenkov said shortly before his death.

There is such a book “Victory of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Great Patriotic War” published immediately after Stalin’s death in October 1953. Of course, during the Khrushchev period, they worked on it and some important chapters and quotes were removed.

However, in this book, neither in its original version, nor in the reworked version by the Khrushchevites, the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command of the USSR was ever mentioned.

But this book contains an interesting excerpt from a speech in 1952 at the 11th party congress of G.M. Malenkov. The Khrushchevites did not dare to remove it from the book, yet Malenkov was at that time the head of the Soviet government. This passage is very organically connected with the text of the 2nd chapter of this book in the subsection “Measures of the CPSU and the Soviet government to prepare the country for active defense.” Here is this excerpt:

“In our country, thanks to the vigilance of the party, the government and the entire Soviet people, the Trotskyist-Bukharin gang of spies, wreckers and murderers, who were in the service of foreign intelligence services of the capitalist states, set as their goal the destruction of the party and the Soviet state, undermining the defense of the country, facilitation of foreign intervention, the defeat of the Soviet Army (cunning, because at that time there was only the Red Army, it will become Soviet only from February 1946) and the transformation of the USSR into a colony of imperialists. This was a heavy blow to the plans of the imperialists, who were preparing to use the Trotskyist-Bukharinian degenerates as their "fifth column", just as it was in France and other Western European countries.

And here is a short excerpt from G. Malenkov's speech.

“Having defeated the Trotskyist-Bukharin underground, which was the center of attraction for all anti-Soviet forces in the country, having cleansed our party and Soviet organizations of the enemies of the people, the party thereby timely destroyed any possibility of the appearance of a “fifth column” in the USSR and politically prepared the country for active defense. It is not difficult to understand that if this had not been done in a timely manner, then during the days of the war we would have fallen into the position of people being fired on both from the front and from the rear, and could have lost the war.

In the 1st passage it is unequivocally stated that they were going to surrender the USSR in the same way as they surrendered France in 1940.

This text could also be left on the grounds that the “fifth column” is, as it were, about a fact that did not take place, i.e. this must be understood in such a way that during the war such a fact simply did not exist. In the future, starting from the time of N.S. Khrushchev, the mention of the “fifth column” was never and nowhere mentioned at all.

I emphasize once again that in the book “The Victories of the Soviet Armed Forces in the Great Patriotic War” and the Stalin biography of 1950 there is not a single word about the Headquarters and the role of Stalin in it ....... Instead, there are words about the leading role of the State Defense Committee and its chairman I. Stalin

The most high-ranking traitors from the Politburo and the People's Commissariat of Defense, however, remained unexposed.

Let me explain that the Bukharin Trotskyists were a conventional designation of traitors as such. All stripes. The Bukharin Trotskyists themselves were in fact a minority there.

The surrender technology was simple. But it was necessary to eliminate Stalin and his associates.

If we do not take into account the implausible "memories" of Stalin's entourage about the period from June 19-30, 1941 and falsified entries in the visit log, this leads to a completely new chronology of events.

And now it is necessary to explain the GKO ..... We must finally understand Stalin and why he created the GKO. Indeed, why, if there was already a rate?! With the same functions and emergency powers ...

The outstanding memoirist A. Mikoyan, of course, cites his incredible version of the creation of the GKO. Molotova, Malenkov, Voroshilov, Beria, Voznesensky, Mikoyan gathered and agreed on the creation of the GKO.

After that, they decided to go to Stalin's dacha. Molotov said that Stalin had ... prostration. Anyway, let's go - Stalin was sitting and seemed to be waiting for ... arrest.

Molotov explained everything. Stalin said only one word - “good.” Beria ... .. named the members of the GKO, without discussing the composition with anyone ....

Here is a story from A. Mikoyan. Just as implausible as Stalin's visit on June 29 to the People's Commissariat of Defense ... ..

The creation of the State Defense Committee from beginning to end was Stalin's idea, and only he determined the composition.

"FORMATION OF THE STATE DEFENSE COMMITTEE

In view of the state of emergency and in order to quickly mobilize all the forces of the peoples of the USSR to repulse the enemy who treacherously attacked our Motherland, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR recognized it necessary:

1. Create a State Defense Committee consisting of:

comrade I. V. Stalin (chairman), comrade V. M. Molotov (deputy chairman), comrade K. E. Voroshilov, comrade G. M. Malenkov, comrade L. P. Beria

2. Concentrate all power in the state in the hands of the State Defense Committee

3. Oblige all citizens and all party, Soviet, Komsomol and military bodies to unquestioningly comply with the decisions and orders of the State Defense Committee.

Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR M.I.KALININ

Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR and Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks I.V. STALIN

An analysis of this document leaves no doubt about its authenticity. The positions are correctly indicated, without grammatical errors and tasks are set. Stalin, as expected, headed the State Defense Committee. The highest authority in wartime. Stalin began to lead the country's defense.

The document on the creation of the GKO can be compared with the document on the creation of the rate and understand what is a real document and what is a linden.

Such clumsily made fakes as a document about the creation of a bet or an entry in the Kremlin journal are made for all-believing idiots who will believe in any fake that the authorities plant on them.

The GKO was a unique body that had no analogues. The GKO played a decisive role in the defense of our country, more than any other body. The GKO became the real government of the USSR during the Second World War.

From the very beginning, the State Defense Committee intercepted all the emergency powers of the headquarters of the supreme command, depriving Tymoshenko and the headquarters of significant powers.

I wonder who was not in the GKO?

Timoshenko, Khrushchev, Zhdanov and Mikoyan were not in the GKO.

The composition of the GKO in the original version was Molotov, Voroshilov, a candidate for the Politburo (!) Malenkov and not even a candidate L. Beria .... perhaps all those whom Stalin completely trusted at that time.

The headquarters of the supreme command was originally created under S. Timoshenko to usurp power in the country. After Stalin's death, Timoshenko would receive unlimited powers, which quickly allowed him to become the Soviet "Marshal Paten."

The GKO was created under Stalin and to protect the interests of our country. As a counterweight to the rate headed by Timoshenko.

Without documentary evidence, nevertheless, putting all of the above together, it can be argued that the events unfolded something like this:

On June 18, Stalin, along with Molotov and Beria, visits the People's Commissariat of Defense of the USSR. There he has a conflict with the military. Going down to the courtyard of the People's Commissariat of Defense, he speaks with Beria. Beria warned Stalin about the threat of a military coup.

After that, Beria leaves for the NKVD, Stalin to a dacha in Kuntsevo. During the trip, Stalin's cortege is attacked, he himself is seriously wounded. He is transported to the Kremlin hospital (or to a dacha in Kuntsevo) where they are operated on.

On June 19, a private meeting of the Politburo of the Central Committee takes place. At it, a decision is made to create the headquarters of the Supreme High Command of the USSR, headed by S. Timoshenko, and transfer emergency powers to him. After the death of Stalin, of course.

Stalin's injury was severe. The traitors hoped that he would not survive the operation. The German leadership, which had already begun to celebrate the victory, also thought so ... ... But Stalin survived.

At the same time, the generals of the Western Front ignore the order on full combat readiness (PBG) given by Stalin.

High-ranking conspirators in the Politburo and the People's Commissariat of Defense acted smarter, giving orders about the PBG - knowing that the generals of the western front would sabotage them ... .. Tymoshenko provides himself with an alibi - he does not ignore the PBG, but the generals of the Red Army on the western front know that the People's Commissariat of Defense is behind them ….

On June 22, early in the morning, the Wehrmacht troops crossed the border of the USSR. The Great Patriotic War began. Molotov, in the absence of Stalin, addressed the people with a speech. A large-scale catastrophe on the western front began.

On September 23, Army General K. Meretskov was arrested on suspicion of organizing an assassination attempt on Stalin. The same Meretskov whom Stalin “appointed as a member of the headquarters of the supreme command” on June 23, 1945 ....

From September 22-30, the divisions of the Red Army, as a result of the betrayal of the generals, were defeated on the western border.

Stalin's comrades-in-arms really came to his dacha on June 30. They came to him because he still did not have enough strength to return to the Kremlin

Only everything was not as Mikoyan described it. Stalin himself called the members of the Politburo to him and said that a GKO was being created, a new supreme authority in the country. Stalin himself determined its composition and signed the document.

On July 1, 1953, Stalin returned to the Kremlin as chairman of the GKO. And he headed the country's defense.

I do not pretend to be the ultimate truth. But such a development of events explains everything.

This story of an attempt on the leader's life is perceived with hostility by almost everyone - Stalinists and anti-Stalinists.

Anti-Stalinists reject it because they do not even admit the idea that there was a conspiracy against Stalin ... this would mean to partly acknowledge the validity of his repressions.

Stalinists reject it because it simply affects Stalin personally - despite the fact that there is nothing anti-Stalinist in this .... Unfortunately, most Stalinists did not even read Stalin's biography and books about the victory in the Second World War - written during the reign of I. Stalin .... .there everything is set out differently. There is no VGK rate there.

I can understand the patriots who defended the leader with the call: “Hands off Stalin” and who do not want to pay attention to the absence of three days in the Journal and the falsification of records for another 8 days. But I would like to note that the absence in the Kremlin on June 22 and in the following days, Comrade Stalin, well, does not detract from the dignity of this great man.

Even, let's say, quite the opposite. His absence once again emphasizes the mortal danger he had to face in those first, difficult and tragic June days and show courage and stamina of unprecedented strength.

The State Defense Committee, created during the Great Patriotic War, was an emergency governing body that had full power in the USSR. The General Secretary of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Stalin I.V. became the Chairman of the GKO, and the Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs V.M. Molotov became his deputy. Beria L.P. became a member of the GKO. (People's Commissar of Internal Affairs of the USSR), Voroshilov K.E. (Chairman of the CO under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR), Malenkov G.M. (Secretary, Head of the Personnel Department of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks). In February 1942, N.A. Voznesensky was introduced into the GKO. (1st Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars) and Mikoyan A.I. (Chairman of the Committee for Food and Clothing Supply of the Red Army), Kaganovich L.M. (Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars). In November 1944, Bulganin N.A. became a new member of the State Defense Committee. (Deputy Commissar of Defense of the USSR), and Voroshilov K.E. was withdrawn from the GKO.

The GKO was endowed with broad legislative, executive and administrative functions, it united the military, political and economic leadership of the country. The decrees and orders of the State Defense Committee had the force of wartime laws and were subject to unquestioning execution by all party, state, military, economic and trade union bodies. However, the USSR Armed Forces, the Presidium of the USSR Armed Forces, the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, the people's commissariats also continued to operate, fulfilling the decrees and decisions of the State Defense Committee. During the Great Patriotic War, the State Defense Committee adopted 9971 resolutions, of which about two-thirds dealt with the problems of the military economy and the organization of military production: the evacuation of the population and industry; mobilization of industry, production of weapons and ammunition; handling captured weapons and ammunition; organization of hostilities, distribution of weapons; appointment of authorized GKOs; structural changes in the State Defense Committee itself, etc. The remaining decisions of the State Defense Committee concerned political, personnel, and other issues.

Functions of the GKO: 1) directing the activities of state departments and institutions, directing their efforts to the full use of the material, spiritual and military capabilities of the country to achieve victory over the enemy; 2) mobilization of the country's human resources for the needs of the front and the national economy; 3) organization of uninterrupted work of the defense industry of the USSR; 4) resolving issues of restructuring the economy on a war footing; 5) evacuation of industrial facilities from threatened areas and transfer of enterprises to liberated areas; 6) training of reserves and personnel for the Armed Forces and industry; 7) restoration of the economy destroyed by the war; 8) determination of the volume and terms of deliveries of military products by the industry.

The GKO set military-political tasks for the military leadership, improved the structure of the Armed Forces, determined the general nature of their use in the war, and placed leading cadres. The working bodies of the GKO on military issues, as well as the direct organizers and executors of its decisions in this area, were the People's Commissariats of Defense (NPO of the USSR) and the Navy (NC of the USSR Navy).

From the jurisdiction of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR to the jurisdiction of the State Defense Committee, the people's commissariats of the defense industry were transferred: People's Commissariat of Aviation Industry, People's Commissariat of Tank Industry, People's Commissariat of Ammunition, People's Commissariat for Armaments, People's Commissariat for Armaments, People's Commissariat for Armaments, and others. GKO resolutions on the production of military products. The commissioners had mandates, signed by the chairman of the GKO - Stalin, which clearly defined the practical tasks that the GKO set for their commissioners. As a result of the efforts made, the output of military products in March 1942 only in the eastern regions of the country reached the pre-war level of its output throughout the entire territory of the Soviet Union.

During the war, in order to achieve maximum efficiency of management and adaptation to current conditions, the structure of the GKO was repeatedly changed. One of the important divisions of the State Defense Committee was the Operations Bureau, established on December 8, 1942. The Operations Bureau included L.P. Beria, G.M. Malenkov, A.I. Mikoyan. and Molotov V.M. The tasks of this unit initially included the coordination and unification of the actions of all other units of the State Defense Committee. But in 1944 the bureau's functions were significantly expanded.

It began to control the current work of all the people's commissariats of the defense industry, as well as the preparation and implementation of plans for the production and supply of industries and transport. The operational bureau became responsible for supplying the army, in addition, the duties of the previously abolished Transport Committee were assigned to it. "All members of the GKO were in charge of certain areas of work. So, Molotov was in charge of tanks, Mikoyan was in charge of quartermaster supply, fuel supply, lend-lease issues, sometimes he carried out individual orders from Stalin to deliver shells to the front. Malenkov was engaged in aviation, Beria - ammunition and weapons. Everyone came to Stalin with their own questions and said: I ask you to make such and such a decision on such and such an issue ... "- recalled the head of the Logistics, General of the Army Khrulev A.V.

To carry out the evacuation of industrial enterprises and the population from the front-line regions to the east, the Council for Evacuation Affairs was created under the State Defense Committee. In addition, in October 1941, the Committee for the Evacuation of Food Stocks, Industrial Goods and Industrial Enterprises was formed. However, in October 1941, these bodies were reorganized into the Directorate for Evacuation Affairs under the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR. Other important divisions of the GKO were: the Trophy Commission, created in December 1941, and in April 1943 transformed into the Trophy Committee; the Special Committee, which dealt with the development of nuclear weapons; Special Committee - dealt with issues of reparations, etc.

The State Defense Committee became the main link in the mechanism of centralized management of the mobilization of the country's human and material resources for defense and armed struggle against the enemy. Having fulfilled its functions, the State Defense Committee was disbanded by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of September 4, 1945.

GKO formation

Composition of GKO

Initially (based on the joint Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Council of People's Commissars and the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks of June 30, see below), the composition of the GKO was as follows:

  • Chairman of the GKO - JV Stalin.
  • Deputy Chairman of the GKO - V. M. Molotov.

GKO resolutions

The first GKO decree (“On organizing the production of T-34 medium tanks at the Krasnoye Sormovo plant”) was issued on July 1, the last one (No. 9971 “On payment for the remnants of incomplete ammunition elements accepted from industry and located at the bases of the NPO of the USSR and the NKVMF” ) - 4 September . The numbering of decisions was kept through.

Of these nearly 10,000 resolutions, 98 documents and three more are partially classified at the present time.

Most of the GKO resolutions were signed by its chairman, Stalin, some also by deputy Molotov and members of the GKO, Mikoyan and Beria.

The State Defense Committee did not have its own apparatus, its decisions were prepared in the relevant people's commissariats and departments, and office work was carried out by the Special Sector of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks.

The vast majority of GKO resolutions were classified as “Secret”, “Top Secret” or “Top Secret / Special Importance” (the designation “s”, “ss” and “ss / s” after the number), but some resolutions were open and published in the press (an example of such a resolution is the Decree of the State Defense Committee No. 813 of 10/19/41 on the introduction of a state of siege in Moscow).

The vast majority of GKO resolutions dealt with topics related to the war:

  • evacuation of the population and industry (during the first period of the Great Patriotic War);
  • mobilization of industry, production of weapons and ammunition;
  • handling captured weapons and ammunition;
  • study and export to the USSR of captured samples of equipment, industrial equipment, reparations (at the final stage of the war);
  • organization of hostilities, distribution of weapons, etc.;
  • appointment of authorized GKOs;
  • about the beginning of "works on uranium" (the creation of nuclear weapons);
  • structural changes in the GKO itself.

GKO structure

The GKO included several structural divisions. Over the period of its existence, the structure of the Committee has changed several times, with the aim of maximizing management efficiency and adapting to current conditions.

The most important subdivision was the Operations Bureau, established on December 8 by GKO resolution No. 2615s. The bureau included L.P. Beria, G. M. Malenkov, A. I. Mikoyan and V. M. Molotov. The actual head of the Operational Bureau was Beria. The tasks of this unit initially included the coordination and unification of the actions of all other units. On May 19, Decree No. 5931 was adopted, by which the functions of the bureau were significantly expanded - now its tasks also included monitoring and controlling the work of the people's commissariats of the defense industry, transport, metallurgy, people's commissariats of the most important areas of industry and power plants; from that moment on, the Operations Bureau was also responsible for supplying the army, and finally, it was entrusted with the duties of the abolished by the decision of the Transport Committee.

Other important divisions of the GKO were:

  • Trophy Commission (established in December 1941, and on April 5, by Decree No. 3123ss, transformed into the Trophy Committee);
  • Special Committee (dealt with the development of nuclear weapons).
  • Special Committee (dealt with issues of reparations).
  • Evacuation Committee (created on June 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 834, disbanded on December 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 1066ss). On September 26, 1941, by GKO Decree No. 715s, the Administration for the Evacuation of the Population was organized under this committee.
  • The Committee for Unloading Railways - was formed on December 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 1066ss; its functions were transferred to the GKO Operational Bureau;
  • Evacuation Commission - (established on June 22, 1942 by GKO Decree No. 1922);
  • Radar Council - established on July 4, 1943 by GKO Decree No. 3686ss consisting of: Malenkov (predecessor), Arkhipov, Berg, Golovanov, Gorokhov, Danilov, Kabanov, Kobzarev, Stogov, Terentyev, Ucher, Shakhurin, Shchukin.
  • A group of permanent commissioners of the GKO and permanent commissions of the GKO at the fronts.

GKO functions

The State Defense Committee supervised all military and economic issues during the war. The leadership of the fighting was carried out through the Headquarters.

Dissolution of the GKO

The State Defense Committee was disbanded by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of 4 September.

Additional information in Wikisource

  • Decree of the State Defense Committee of May 30, 1942 No. 1837ss "Issues of the partisan movement"

see also

  • State Defense Committee of the DPRK

Notes

External links

  • Bulletin of Declassified Documents of the Federal State Archives Issue 6
  • List of documents of the USSR State Defense Committee (1941-1945)

Literature

Gorkov Yu.A. "The State Defense Committee decides (1941-1945)", M.: Olma-Press, 2002. - 575 p. ISBN 5-224-03313-6


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See what the "State Defense Committee of the USSR" is in other dictionaries:

    The GKO is an emergency supreme state body that concentrated all power during the Great Patriotic War. Formed on June 30, 1941. Composition: L. P. Beria, K. E. Voroshilov (until 1944), G. M. Malenkov, V. M. Molotov (deputy chairman), I. ... ... Political science. Vocabulary.

    This term has other meanings, see State Defense Committee (meanings). Not to be confused with the Headquarters of the Supreme High Command State Defense Committee of the USSR GKO, GKO USSR Emblem of the Armed Forces Years of existence ... Wikipedia

    The STATE DEFENSE COMMITTEE in the USSR (GKO) is an emergency supreme state body that concentrated all power during the Great Patriotic War. Formed 30/6/1941. Composition: L. P. Beria, K. E. Voroshilov (until 1944), G. M. Malenkov, ... ... Big Encyclopedic Dictionary

    GKO, USSR State Defense Committee,- from 06/30/1941 to 09/04/1945, the extraordinary supreme state body, which concentrated in its hands all the fullness of the legislative and executive power, in fact replacing the constitutional bodies of power and administration. Removed due to... ... Brief Dictionary of Historical and Legal Terms

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    - (GKO), the highest state emergency body during the Great Patriotic War. He had full power in the country. Formed on June 30, 1941. Composition: I. V. Stalin (chairman), V. M. Molotov (deputy chairman), ... ... encyclopedic Dictionary

    STATE DEFENSE COMMITTEE (GOKO)- - a committee created by the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Central Committee of the Party and the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR on June 30, 1941 in view of the current state of emergency in the country in order to quickly mobilize all the forces of the peoples of the USSR for ... ... Soviet legal dictionary

Introduction

State Defense Committee (abbreviated GKO) - an emergency governing body created during the Great Patriotic War, which had full power in the USSR. The need for creation was obvious, because. in wartime, it was required to concentrate all power in the country, both executive and legislative, in one governing body. Stalin and the Politburo actually headed the state and made all decisions. However, the adopted decisions formally came from the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, etc. In order to eliminate such a method of leadership, which is permissible in peacetime, but does not meet the requirements of the country's martial law, it was decided to create a State Defense Committee, which included some members of the Politburo, secretaries of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks and Stalin himself, as chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR.

1. Formation of GKO

The GKO was formed on June 30, 1941, by a joint resolution of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, and the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks. The need to create a State Defense Committee, as the highest governing body, was motivated by the difficult situation at the front, which required that the leadership of the country be centralized to the maximum extent. The aforementioned resolution states that all orders of the State Defense Committee must be unquestioningly carried out by citizens and any authorities.

The idea of ​​creating a State Defense Committee was put forward by L.P. Beria at a meeting in Molotov's office in the Kremlin, which was also attended by Malenkov, Voroshilov, Mikoyan and Voznesensky. need attribution It was decided to put Stalin at the head of the GKO, in view of his undeniable authority in the country. need attribution Having made this decision, the six in the afternoon (after 4 o’clock) went to the Middle Dacha, where they persuaded Stalin to again assume the functions of the head of state and distributed duties in the newly created committee need attribution. . (for details see: Stalin June 29-30, 1941).

2. Composition of GKO

Initially (on the basis of a joint Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, the Council of People's Commissars and the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks of June 30, 1941, see below), the composition of the GKO was as follows:

    Chairman of the GKO - I. V. Stalin.

    Deputy Chairman of the GKO - V. M. Molotov.

GKO members:

    K. E. Voroshilov.

      On February 3, 1942, N. A. Voznesensky (at that time Chairman of the State Planning Committee of the USSR) and A. I. Mikoyan became members of the GKO;

      On November 22, 1944, N. A. Bulganin became a new member of the GKO, and K. E. Voroshilov was removed from the GKO.

    3. GKO resolutions

    The first GKO decree (“On organizing the production of T-34 medium tanks at the Krasnoye Sormovo plant”) was issued on July 1, 1941, the last one (No. ”) - September 4, 1945. The numbering of the decisions was kept through.

    Of the 9,971 resolutions and orders adopted by the State Defense Committee during its work, 98 documents remain completely classified and three more partially (they relate mainly to the production of chemical weapons and the atomic problem).

    Most of the decisions of the GKO were signed by its chairman, Stalin, some also by deputy Molotov and GKO members Mikoyan and Beria.

    The State Defense Committee did not have its own apparatus, its decisions were prepared in the relevant people's commissariats and departments, and office work was carried out by the Special Sector of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks.

    The vast majority of GKO resolutions were classified as “Secret”, “Top Secret” or “Top Secret / Special Importance” (the designation “s”, “ss” and “ss / s” after the number), but some resolutions were open and published in the press (an example of such a resolution is the Decree of the State Defense Committee No. 813 of 10/19/41 on the introduction of a state of siege in Moscow).

    The vast majority of GKO resolutions dealt with topics related to the war:

      evacuation of the population and industry (during the first period of the Great Patriotic War);

      mobilization of industry, production of weapons and ammunition;

      handling captured weapons and ammunition;

      study and export to the USSR of captured samples of equipment, industrial equipment, reparations (at the final stage of the war);

      organization of hostilities, distribution of weapons, etc.;

      appointment of authorized GKOs;

      about the beginning of "works on uranium" (the creation of nuclear weapons);

      structural changes in the GKO itself.

    4. Structure of GKO

    The GKO included several structural divisions. Over the period of its existence, the structure of the Committee has changed several times, with the aim of maximizing management efficiency and adapting to current conditions.

    The most important subdivision was the Operations Bureau, created on December 8, 1942 by GKO resolution No. 2615s. The bureau included L.P. Beria, G. M. Malenkov, A. I. Mikoyan and V. M. Molotov. The actual head of the Operations Bureau was Beria. The tasks of this unit initially included monitoring and monitoring the current work of all the people's commissariats of the defense industry, the people's commissariats of communications, ferrous and non-ferrous metallurgy, power plants, the oil, coal and chemical industries, as well as the preparation and execution of plans for the production and supply of these industries and transport with everything you need. On May 19, 1944, Decree No. 5931 was adopted, by which the functions of the bureau were significantly expanded - now its tasks included monitoring and controlling the work of the people's commissariats of the defense industry, transport, metallurgy, people's commissariats of the most important areas of industry and power plants; from that moment on, the Operations Bureau was also responsible for supplying the army, and finally, it was entrusted with the duties of the abolished by the decision of the Transport Committee.

    Other important divisions of the GKO were:

      Trophy Commission (established in December 1941, and on April 5, 1943, by Decree No. 3123ss, it was transformed into the Trophy Committee);

      Special Committee - established on August 20, 1945 (GKO Decree No. 9887ss / op). Engaged in the development of nuclear weapons.

      Special Committee (dealt with issues of reparations).

      Evacuation Committee (created on June 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 834, disbanded on December 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 1066ss). On September 26, 1941, by GKO Decree No. 715s, the Administration for the Evacuation of the Population was organized under this committee.

      The Committee for Unloading Railways - was formed on December 25, 1941 by GKO Decree No. 1066ss, on September 14, 1942, by GKO Decree No. 1279, it was transformed into the Transport Committee under the State Defense Committee, which existed until May 19, 1944, after which, by GKO Decree No. 5931, the Transport Committee was abolished, and its functions were transferred to the GKO Operational Bureau;

      Radar Council - established on July 4, 1943 by GKO Decree No. 3686ss, consisting of: Malenkov (chairman), Arkhipov, Berg, Golovanov, Gorokhov, Danilov, Kabanov, Kobzarev, Stogov, Terentyev, Ucher, Shakhurin, Shchukin.

      A group of permanent commissioners of the GKO and permanent commissions of the GKO at the fronts.

    5. GKO functions

    The State Defense Committee supervised all military and economic issues during the war. The leadership of the fighting was carried out through the Headquarters.

    6. Dissolution of GKO

    The State Defense Committee was disbanded by the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of September 4, 1945.

    7. Additional information in Wikisource

    Bibliography:

      R. A. Medvedev. IV Stalin in the first days of the Great Patriotic War. New and Contemporary History, No. 2, 2002

      Konstantin Pleshakov. Stalin's mistake. The first 10 days of the war. Per. from English. A. K. Efremova. M., "Eksmo", 2006 ISBN 5-699-11788-1 pp. 293-304

      Guslyarov E. (ed.) Stalin in life. M., Olma-Press, 2003 ISBN 5-94850-034-9

      1941 Documentation. in 2 vols. M., Democracy, 1998 p.498 ISBN 5-89511-003-7

      Kumanev G. Next to Stalin. Smolensk, Rusich, 2001, pp. 31-34. ISBN 5-8138-0191-X

      Khrushchev N. S. Memoirs. Time, people, power. In 3 vols. M., Moscow news, 1999. T.1., p. 301

      Jover W. Secrets of the life and death of Stalin. - "Le Nouvel Observateur": 2006-06-28. (Interview with English historian Simon Seabeg Montefiore)

      Scientific conference "N.A.Voznesensky: his era and modernity". Archives of Russia