1.2.1

The Elimination of Opponents

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The NKVD (Secret Police)

In 1934, the OGPU was reorganized to create a new secret police force known as the NKVD. The job of the NKVD was to continue to stamp out any opposition to communist rule.

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Enemies of the people

  • A common crime pursued by the NKVD was being an ‘enemy of the people’.
  • Such crimes were tried by 3-person troikas of NKVD officers, often on the basis of minimal evidence.
    • People were tried for contact with foreigners, not cutting pictures of Trotsky from textbooks.
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Techniques

  • The NKVD used extreme techniques, including mass arrests, forced confessions, and informants. Many political prisoners were executed.
  • From 1935, the NKVD had quotas for how many arrests it needed to make.
    • This meant that citizens were often arrested for no crime at all.
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The GULAGS

  • A system of camps, known as ‘GULAGS’ were set up. They housed 8 million prisoners by 1941.
  • Many were political prisoners, but there were also peasants, workers convicted of wrecking (disrupting factory work) and those who had been arrested just to meet quotas.
  • The GULAGS provided huge amounts of slave labour for industry and the railroads. They were particularly prevalent in the east, particularly in Siberia.
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Historical assessment

  • Sheila Fitzpatrick (1999): The regime struggled to reconcile two desires. It wanted to avoid encouraging people to express their opinions about the regime in public, but it also wanted to know what people thought. This is where the NKVD came in useful.
    • The NKVD based their reports on information they heard whilst hanging around outside, perhaps in a shop queue for example.
    • The NKVD also relied heavily on reports from individuals to tell them what was said behind closed doors.
    • 'There were no "neutral" channels of communication' between citizens and state, so it is very difficult for historians to know what people "really" thought.

Jump to other topics

1Communist Government in the USSR, 1917-85

2Industrial & Agricultural Changes

3Control of the People, 1917-85

4Social Developments, 1917-35

5Historical Interpretations

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