Authors: David E. Murphy
reacted to it.
Matske said that he was overwhelmed by the speed and force with
which the German units had advanced in the Low Countries and France,
throwing the defenders off balance. He cited the use of parachute and air-
borne troops in the capture of the Rotterdam airport and the rapid cross-
ing of the Albert Canal, which prevented the demolition of the bridges.
RESIDENCIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
63
Matske and Hegendorf commented that the speedy capture of the Liège
fortresses was made possible by the German units’ opportunity to practice
their techniques and test their weaponry in advance. They had used their
flamethrower tanks, for example, on similar fortresses in the Czech fortifi-
cations in the Sudeten area, which had been given up by the Czechs after
the Munich agreement in September 1938. Other equipment included
dive bombers that carried 1,700-kilogram bombs, each fitted out with a
screeching siren that everywhere demoralized the defenders. Matske at-
tributed the Germans’ success to the intensive training their units had
received in preparation for the western campaign; the French, by contrast,
appeared to have slept through the winter.1
Two days after Proskurov sent the first report, he received the second, a
telegram from the Soviet military attaché in Sofia, Colonel Ivan F. Derga-
chev. It forwarded a report from a reliable source on future German plans
(by this time it was already clear that the Wehrmacht was near victory in
France). According to the report, ‘‘the Germans aspired to conclude an
armistice with France. Italy would then threaten France militarily and
peace would result. After a peace agreement, Germany would, within a
month’s time, put its army in order and together with Italy and Japan make
a sudden attack on the USSR. The purpose would be to destroy commu-
nism in the Soviet Union and to create a fascist regime there.’’ The source
vouched for the accuracy of this information and asked that it be sent to
the Soviet government; the report was forwarded to Stalin, Molotov, and
Timoshenko.2 Within four days after its receipt by Proskurov, Italy at-
tacked the French; on June 22 the French concluded an armistice with
Germany and on June 24 with Italy. From German archives we now know
that less than a month later Hitler gave orders to his staff to prepare for an
invasion of the USSR.
There is no archival record of Stalin’s reaction to this second report,
but it and the earlier one are but two examples of the fine military intel-
ligence he received. How did the residencies of Soviet military intelligence
function over the next year in reporting on German plans and actions?
Equally important, how did the RU handle reports when they arrived in
Moscow, how were they disseminated, and what were the reactions of their
recipients? Although normally reports were regularly distributed to Stalin
and other members of the civilian and military leadership, some were
withheld or altered, apparently to conform to Stalin’s conceptions. There
were also occasions when Stalin would react to a report by calling it ‘‘disin-
formation’’ or even by threatening the source. In this chapter and the two
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RESIDENCIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
that follow I will examine which of the RU’s legal and illegal residencies
abroad did the best job of alerting Stalin and the leadership to the German
menace.
First, though, a word about the RU source Gerhard Kegel, or KhVS,
the German commercial specialist in the German embassy in Moscow. In
addition to probably providing the first of Proskurov’s reports, he also
provided highly prized reports on the trade negotiations between Ger-
many and the USSR, which were always rushed to Stalin, Molotov, and
Mikoyan by the RU. On June 21, 1941, Kegel reported that Germany would
attack the USSR on June 22 between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. There is no indica-
tion that this report had any impact on Stalin, even though he must have
been aware that its source was the same agent who had provided such
detailed accounts of the German position in USSR-German trade negotia-
tions. During the spring of 1941, however, when concern over an impend-
ing invasion was growing, nothing had been heard from KhVS. It was not
until June 11 that he reported that German embassy personnel would be
ready to evacuate Moscow in seven days and that the burning of docu-
ments had already begun. Given his position and access, it does seem
strange that between October 10, 1940 (his last report on trade negotia-
tions), and June 11, 1941, there was no word from him on German prepa-
rations for war.3
Berlin
Of all the RU residencies whose reports are currently available for study,
Berlin had the largest number and was one of the most effective. The resi-
dency was headed by the military attaché, Major General Vasily I. Tupi-
kov (code name Arnold), assisted by the air attaché, Colonel Nikolai D.
Skorniakov (code name Meteor); their assistants were Vasily Ye. Khlopov,
Ivan G. Bazhanov, and Nikolai M. Zaitsev. Zaitsev was responsible for
maintaining contact with the illegal Alta (Ilse Stöbe), who handled source
Ariets.4
A great producer when in Warsaw, Ariets continued in Berlin when he
was assigned to the Information Section of the German Ministry of For-
eign Affairs. On September 29, 1940, he reported that relations between
the USSR and Germany were worsening and that Hitler intended to ‘‘re-
solve problems in the east in the spring of next year [1941].’’ He named as
his source Karl Schnurre, head of the Russian sector of the Foreign Minis-
try’s Economics Department.5
RESIDENCIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
65
It was Ariets who on December 29, 1940, reported that from ‘‘highly
placed circles’’ he had learned that Hitler had given orders to prepare for
war with the USSR. Specifically, the report said, ‘ War will be declared in
March 1941.’’ In the margin of this report, the new head of RU, Filipp I.
Golikov, wrote, ‘‘Give a copy to the Narkom (Defense Commissar Timo-
shenko) and the chief of the general staff.’’ He added a note to his staff:
‘‘Who are these highly placed military circles? One must elaborate. Con-
cretely, to whom was the order given?’’ He added, ‘‘Demand more intelligi-
ble light on this subject; then order them to check it. Get a telegraphic
response from Meteor in five days and give it to me.’’ The report was dis-
seminated to Stalin in two copies, to Molotov, Timoshenko, and Kiril A.
Meretskov, chief of the general staff. It seemed clear that Golikov was
unaware of Ariets’s record or his access.6
On January 4, 1941, Ariets confirmed that ‘‘he had this information
from a friend in the military; moreover, it was based not on rumors but on
a special order of Hitler that was especially secret and known to only a few
people.’’ On February 28, 1941, Ariets followed up with a more detailed
report on preparations for war against the USSR: ‘‘People involved in the
project confirm that war with Russia has definitely been decided on for
this year [1941].’’ Three army groups had been formed under Marshals von
Bock, von Rundstedt, and von Leeb, prepared to advance on Leningrad,
Moscow, and Kiev. ‘‘The beginning of the attack is provisionally set for
May 20. To all appearances, an enveloping attack is planned in the Pinsk
area with a force of 120 German divisions. Preparatory measures have
resulted in the assignment of Russian-speaking officers and noncommis-
sioned officers to various headquarters. In addition, armored trains are
being constructed with wide gauges as in Russia.’’ From a person close to
Göring, Ariets heard that ‘‘Hitler intends to bring in around three million
slaves from Russia in order to improve his industrial capacity.’’7
Ariets’s information was reasonably accurate. Given his record, it
should have established a solid base within the RU Information Depart-
ment for evaluating reports from other sources on German preparations for
an invasion. Unfortunately for the Soviets, Golikov was new and the depart-
ment had a series of other new chiefs during the period of Ariets’s reporting.
The result was that it apparently never received adequate consideration.
Vasily I. Tupikov arrived in Berlin in December 1940 to serve as mili-
tary attaché and legal resident. At the end of April 1941, after observing
conditions in Berlin and reviewing reports from residency sources, includ-
ing Ariets, he addressed an unusual letter to Golikov. ‘‘If it turns out that in
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RESIDENCIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
this presentation of my conclusions I am forcing my way through an open
door, that will not discourage me,’’ he wrote. ‘‘If I am mistaken in them and
you correct me, I will be very grateful.’’ His initial conclusions were: ‘‘1. In
current German plans for waging war, the USSR figures as the next enemy.
2. The conflict will definitely take place this year.’’ Golikov disseminated
the letter to all addressees, including Chief of the General Staff Georgy K.
Zhukov, but omitted Tupikov’s conclusion.
In an attachment giving the deployment of the German army as of
April 25, 1941, Tupikov asserted that the strength of German forces in the
west was being reduced while that in the east along the border with the
USSR was increasing. These conclusions of the RU’s senior man in Berlin
reinforced the reporting of Ariets. Golikov did not respond to the letter
personally but directed Colonel A. M. Kuznetsov, chief of the First [West-
ern] Department: ‘‘In your next dispatch to Tupikov, it will be necessary to
answer this letter.’’8
Tupikov did not stop. On May 9 he sent a report to Zhukov and Defense
Commissar Timoshenko describing a plan for possible operations of the
German army against the USSR. ‘‘Defeat of the Red Army,’’ he said, ‘‘will be
completed in one or one and a half months with arrival of the German
army on the meridian of Moscow.’’9
Because GRU would not permit access to its archives, we cannot know
what other reports were produced by RU Berlin nor do we know the con-
tents of the correspondence between the RU in Moscow and its Berlin
group. Nevertheless, from Ariets’s reporting and the position taken by Tupi-
kov in April 1941, it seems clear that this residency had few doubts con-
cerning German intentions. As for Tupikov himself, he was made chief of
staff of the Southwest Front upon his return from Berlin and died in the
defense of Kiev in the summer of 1941.
Helsinki
The RU legal resident in Helsinki was Colonel Ivan V. Smirnov (code
name Ostvald); his assistant was Major M. D. Yermolov. We have only
two reports from this residency, dated June 15 and June 17, 1941. They
were both based on personal observation and made clear that German
troops were arriving in significant numbers. One, from RU source Brand,
stated that Finland had begun to mobilize and was evacuating women and
children from large cities.10 The reports were confirmed by a June 18 tele-
gram, found in Federal Security Service (FSB) archives, from the Japanese
RESIDENCIES IN WESTERN EUROPE
67
ambassador in Helsinki to the Japanese ambassador in Moscow informing
him of general mobilization that included the calling up of women for
work in medical units and food preparation. Defensive installations were
going up on the eastern borders, the telegram added, and antiaircraft artil-
lery was being deployed in Helsinki.11
London
For some reason, no intelligence reports from the RU residency in London
were ever included in the RU material given to academician Aleksandr N.
Yakovlev for inclusion in
1941 god.
Nor is there any reference to London in
the two-volume work on the GRU by A. Kolpakidi and D. Prokhorov,
Impe-
ria GRU.
This despite the fact that the London RU residency was one of
the largest and most productive of RU stations abroad before and during
World War II.12
The resident and military attaché up until August 1940 was Major
General Ivan I. Cherny, who was replaced by Colonel Ivan A. Skliarov
(code name Brion).13 An important moment for the residency came in
March 1939, when the Germans occupied Prague and the Czechoslovak
government ceased to exist. The British intelligence service, MI-6, orga-
nized the escape from Prague of Colonel Frantisek Moravec, head of Czech
military intelligence, along with some of his best people and his files.
Shortly after their arrival in London they met with the Soviet military
attaché, Major General Cherny, and arrangements were made for official
liaison. This was later taken up by Cherny’s successor, Skliarov. At some
point, Moravec was allegedly recruited by Semen D. Kremer and given