THE PEOPLE vs. KHRUSHCHEV
Editor's Note: The following chronological dates of Khrushchev's criminal deeds against the Ukrainian and other peoples are extracted from Handbook for "Summit," compiled, documented and edited by SPX Research Associates in Washington for the Minute Women of the United States of America, Inc. on the basis of House Committee on Un-American Activities Reports, 1-6, entitled, The Crimes of Khrushchev:
Evidential Outline, Chronology of Criminal Record and Associations
1894 - Born, Kalinovka, Kursk, Russia, parents agricultural workers. Three years of grade school equivalence.
1912 - Conscript, Russian Imperial Army.
1917 (Summer) - Deserter; returns to Kursk (Autumn) - The Revolution.
1918 - Drafted in Red Army.
1920 (Oct.) - Khrushchev discharged from Red Army. A member of Cx party, goes to work in mines as laborer.
1920 (Nov.) - Ukraine seized by Moscow and Georgia follows.
1921 - Year of the first organized famine in Ukraine.
1923 - Sent to Rob Fak vocational school; becomes party secretary there.
1926 - Kv finishes vocational school; party work attracts attention of Lazar Kaganovich, the old Bolshevik.
1928 - In charge of organizational department of CP district committee in Kiev.
1929 - Beginning of the Kulak liquidation. Kv goes to Moscow as protege of Kaganovich. Becomes secretary of CP organization in Promyshlenaya Akademia, where Stalin's wife, Nadezhda Alliluyeva, (whose liquidation was later handled by Kv) also was a party secretary and chairman of the local party committee at the Academy.
1930, Jan 5. - Decree of liquidation for Ukraine's peasantry in which local Ukrainian party leaders and agents were made responsible for expropriation of the possessions of 500,000 families or 2,000,000 persons. Beginning of Ukrainian deportation, genocide and the man-made famine of the '30s.
1931-32 - While the Ukrainian famine is being fashioned in Moscow and Kiev for "population control and the suppression of unrest," Khrushchev, as the protege of Kaganovich, is first secretary of the Baumanovskii District and then of the Krasnopresnenskii District. When Kaganovich becomes Commissar of Railroads Kv succeeds as head of the Moscow City party and then of the Moscow Province party. In these offices he is responsible for the execution of Stalin's purges and does his work so well he is promoted to member of the Central Committee of CPSU.
1934 - Promoted to membership in CPSU Central Committee Khrushchev carries out Stalin's errands to the point - where -
1936 - Beginning of "The Yezhovshchina," purge of the Thirties, which includes liquidation of Chekist Yagoda, by his successor Yezhov; Bukharin, Kamenev, Rykov and others.
May-June - Thirteenth CP conference in Ukraine.
1938, Jan. 29 - Khrushchev becomes "general" secretary of a non-existent Ukrainian central committee, supported by his own 'apparatchiks' - Korotchenko, Sheberko, Bermichenko and other non-Ukrainians.
13 June - 18 June - Becomes First Secretary at the 14th Soviet Conference.
28 June - "Elected" to Supreme Soviet Government in Ukraine. On a midnight brawl with his apparatchiks, he finds a girl in one of the political prisons; sends the wife who taught him how to read and write to a concentration camp; divorces her and marries the former prisoner.
Summer - Wholesale arrests by Kv's NKVD in Vynnytsia; arrests and "disappearance" of thousands in all districts of Ukraine.
1943 - Ukrainian Commission to investigate the Vynnytsia Killings, organized with the permission of the German Military Government of occupation.
1944, Sept. - Red armies retake Ukraine. Khrushchev returns as First Secretary supported by General Riasnyv of NKVD and the SMERSH forces, carrying out Khrushchev's orders for mass deportation and liquidation of the Ukrainians in former German-occupied areas.
1945, Feb. - Yalta - with all that it was to imply in the CGC. Khrushchev promotes another and lesser famine of grain by "brigade action" and the "Children of Stalin" goon squads.
April, 11. - 600 members Khrushchev's NKVD surround the palace of Metropolitan Joseph Slipy; arrested on the same day are all bishops and many priests of the Ukrainian Catholic Church. Only Metropolitan Slipy survives, to be retired in April-May, 1959, and sentenced to seven additional years to concentration camp. The others died in camps to which Khrushchev's NKVD sent them.
August. - "Peace."
1946-1949 - 1. Extermination campaign against the Ukrainian population, culture and religion. Of 4,400 Catholic Churches and 127 monasteries in Ukraine none remain. Pressures in Area II, IV, and V indicate five laws for the suppression of press and theater.
1949 - Khrushchev, returned to Moscow, resumes duties as Secretary of the Moscow province.
1953, Late Feb. - Maj. Kosynkin, in charge of operational arrangements for guarding Stalin, dies of "heart attack."
March. - Stalin liquidated. Poskrebyshev, head of the Guard Secretariat disappears. Ryumin arrested.
June, 17. - East German uprising crushed by Soviet troops.
June, 26. - Beria arrested by Voroshilov at the Kremlin on the eve of a planned coup; sent to Lefatovo Prison.
1954, March. - Khrushchev begins mass deportations from captive nations for "Virgin Lands" program, now a permanent policy of genocide.
1955, April - Khrushchev at Warsaw:
"We must realize that we cannot coexist eternally, for a long time.
One of us must go to his grave. We do not want to go to the grave. They
do not want to go to their grave either. So what can be done? We must push
them to their grave."
May 14 - Warsaw pact with heads of puppet slave states.
Soviet shoots down U.S. plane on eve of U.N. tenth anniversary meeting at
SF.
18 to 23 July - Khrushchev and Bulganin at Geneva "Summit." "Summit" marks new gains in CGC.
March to May - Soviet tanks quell uprisings in Georgia.
June - Uprising by Polish workers, farmers, crushed.
October, 4 - Sputnik - on theft, espionage, and paralysis of U.S. op'ns.
October, 23 - Replaces Kruglov with Dudrov as head of MVD.
1957, Jan. - Tito of Yugoslavia rejected by American Congress as official visitor to U.S. because of his close association with the objectives, policies and crimes of Nikita Khrushchev.
July, 3 - Khrushchev expels Melnykov, Molotov and his onetime sponsor, Lazar Kaganovich from Kremlin power, with the help of Marshal Georgi Zhukov.
Sept., 14 - U.N. condemns Soviet repression of Hungarian revolution.
Dec. 20 - Hails the Chekists on their "glorious jubilee."
1958 - Eliminates Zhukov.
April - Snubbed by miners in Tatu, Hungary, and by peasants at Szolnok.
June 17 - Execution of Imre Nagy and General Pal Maleter announced by MTI and Radio Moscow.
Nov. 27 - Ultimatum on Berlin.
Dec., 25 - Shelepin replaces Serov as head of State Security police for purge of anti-Khrushchev elements.
1959, Mar. - Five Ukrainian freedom fighters tried and executed in Czervonarmijsk in Volhynia oblast.
Apr. 12 - Steps up campaign against Russian Jews.
Apr. 17 - Promulgates law on Russian language in Ukrainian schools.
May - Continued liquidation of Tibetan monks and monasteries after escape of Dalai Lama; deportation of Tibetan children and desexing of their elders.
July - (After his "invitation" to The United States): Trial and execution of five more Ukrainian freedom fighters in Stanislaviv oblast.
1959, Sept. - While a guest of the White House, orders the summary execution of 45 juvenile Hungarian Freedom Fighters who have reached the age of 18.
Oct. 14 - Purge of Karaganda coal-mine strikers marked by dispatch of Konstantine F. Lunev, deputy chairman of Soviet State Security committee to Kazakhstan "to take charge of security operations."
Nov.-Dec. - Marks anniversary of bloody suppression of the Hungarian Revolution with "visit" to Budapest where he defies world standards of morality in public "justification" of the Hungarian massacres of 1956 and his continuing policy of repression through the puppet Kadar regime.
Copyright © The Ukrainian Weekly, September 17, 1960, No. 179, Vol. LXVII
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