Authors: David E. Murphy
mately twenty-five kilometers from the border. The troops were drawn up
in formation to meet him.’’ The remainder of the report described arrivals
of new troop trains and the construction of antiaircraft installations,
narrow-gauge railroads, and station facilities with platforms.11 A Janu-
ary 24, 1941, report from Lieutenant General Ivan A. Bogdanov, com-
mander of the border troops of the Belorussian NKVD, summed up the
German troop presence in the Warsaw area as follows: ‘‘An army headquar-
ters in districts along the frontier, headquarters of eight infantry divisions,
a cavalry division (in the Ternopol area), twenty-eight infantry regiments,
seven artillery regiments, three cavalry regiments, a tank regiment, and
two pilot training schools.’’ Bogdanov devoted much attention to the cre-
ation of the new convention for resolving border incidents.12
While learning more about the German forces opposite them, the bor-
der troops continued to apprehend agents dispatched from Abwehr opera-
tions bases in Königsberg, Warsaw, and Cracow. Through careful inter-
rogation of these agents, it was relatively simple to learn their missions.
More important, it was possible to distinguish between those that were
routine peacetime intelligence collection on Soviet defenses and those that
were obviously intended to pave the way for German offensive operations
within the Soviet Union. An excellent example of the latter can be found in
a January 18, 1941, memorandum from Lieutenant General Maslennikov
to State Security Commissar Merkulov. ‘‘Recently a number of incidents
have been noted in which German intelligence organs located in the Gov-
ernment General have given orders to agents sent by them into the USSR
to bring to Germany samples of oil, motor vehicle and aviation gasoline,
and lubricants,’’ the memorandum opened, going on to describe four cases
during December 1940 and January 1941. Two were in the area of the
Ninety-first Border Detachment in Rava-Russkay, Ukrainian SSR, and two
in the area of the Seventeenth Detachment in Brest-Litovsk, Belorussian
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THE BORDER TROOPS KNEW
SSR. The agents captured by the Ninety-first Detachment stated that they
were told ‘‘to acquire samples of the fuels and lubricants in use in Soviet
industry and transport facilities.’’ The agents who figured in an arrest on
December 22 were told that ‘‘their samples must be large enough to permit
analysis.’’ Maslennikov commented that ‘‘three of the agents were already
in Moscow, where they had been transferred on orders of Bogdan Z. Kobu-
lov, deputy state security commissar, because of the large amounts of So-
viet currency in their possession.’’ The memorandum ended: ‘‘Claiming
lack of knowledge, the arrested persons were unable to give the reason for
German intelligence interest in our petroleum products and why they were
needed.’’ Merkulov responded with this instruction in the margin: ‘ We
must clarify the reason for these tasks.’’13 Clarify? It must have been ob-
vious to both Maslennikov and Merkulov that the collection of samples
permitted the Germans to determine whether the fuels available in the
USSR would be suitable for use in their vehicles and, if not, what modifica-
tions or additives would be necessary. The use of multiple agent missions
to obtain this information strongly suggested that the Germans planned to
be operating on Soviet territory in the near future. In the atmosphere of
Moscow, however, neither man wished to suggest this in writing, even as a
possibility. They were well aware that Stalin was convinced that the Ger-
mans would not attack the Soviet Union in 1941. Nevertheless, we know
from German accounts of their operations in the first few days of the
invasion that German motorized units prized the Soviet fuel dumps they
captured. The First Panzer Division, low on fuel as a result of its rapid
advance into the Baltic States, must have been overjoyed when it came on
a large, intact fuel depot.14
Maslennikov continued to forward border troops reports on German
troop movements. Perhaps to subtly underscore the threat, he now added
parenthetically the distance from the border of each locality cited in his
reports. On February 23, 1941, he reported ‘‘the departure of two motor-
ized divisions from Cracow (145 kilometers from the border) to the Car-
pathians. On February 4 60 tractor-drawn heavy guns and six field radio
stations arrived in Kholm (28 kilometers from the border). Three trains
arrived in Lublin (45 kilometers from the border), each with 30 platform
cars loaded with armored vehicles and heavy trucks. In the area opposite
the Seventeenth Border Troop Detachment at Brest-Litovsk, German au-
thorities have taken over school buildings to house troops.’’ The report was
disseminated to Beria, Merkulov, and Golikov, the new head of military
intelligence.15 By March, reporting from both border troop units and
THE BORDER TROOPS KNEW
131
NKGB agent sources began to be issued by the NKGBs of the respective
union republics. A March 27, 1941, report from the NKGB Belorussian
SSR covered troop movements, use of schools for troop housing, mobili-
zation of reservists in East Prussia, assignment of new recruits to spe-
cific infantry regiments, details on areas of concentration of German units
(many with unit designations and street numbers), and military construc-
tion, including road improvements, new roads, airfields, and fuel storage
dumps. The last section dealt with rumors prevalent in the border areas of
the Belorussian SSR, most of which predicted a German assault on the
USSR. The report was signed by the people’s commissar for state security,
L. F. Tsanava. Merkulov, the recipient, wrote these instructions in the mar-
gin: ‘ To Comrade Fitin: 1. Prepare a summary report of the military infor-
mation for the Defense Commissariat. 2. Inform the Central Committee
and the Council of People’s Commissars that the number of troops on
the border has increased and that this has been reported to Defense.
Dated 28.03.’’ Sudoplatov noted: ‘‘Sent to Timoshenko under No. 809/m of
31.03.41.’’ The delay in forwarding the report demonstrates that no real
sense of urgency existed at the top levels of the organizations involved.16
April saw a great increase in reporting. The chief of border troops in
the Ukrainian SSR signed six individual reports. Lieutenant General Mas-
lennikov sent Beria five. Also, as evidence of increasing concern and ten-
sion, reports from subordinate border troops and NKGB offices were in-
corporated into special reporting by union republic and national NKGB
commissariats. On April 9 Pavel Ia. Meshik, head of the Ukrainian SSR
NKGB, signed a special report on German troop movements that began:
‘‘According to our information from various sources, from the beginning
of 1941 and particularly recently, the German command has been carrying
out a large-scale movement of troops from Germany to the territory of the
Government General and then to the borders of the USSR.’’17 On April 10
the Foreign Intelligence Directorate of the USSR NKGB sent a summary
report to the RU ‘‘on the concentration of German troops.’’ According to
the directorate, ‘‘information from agent sources and statements by border
crossers have established that the concentration of units of the German
army on the border of the Soviet Union is continuing. At the same time,
there is accelerated construction of defensive positions, airfields, strategic
branch rail lines, highways, and dirt roads.’’ This low-key statement could
be open to many interpretations.18
A somewhat more dramatic and revealing report came to Fitin on
April 12 from the NKGB Ukrainian SSR. It was based in large part on the
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THE BORDER TROOPS KNEW
debriefing of a former junior officer in the Polish army who had also served
abroad as a vice consul. According to him, ‘‘the transfer of large German
units, the movement of munitions, and the completion of airfield con-
struction on the Soviet frontier began in January 1941 and expanded in-
tensively in April. In the beginning of February 1941 the so-called French
Southern Army, which had been located in the southern part of Poland,
was moved by rail to the river San in the direction of Peremyshl and
deployed about forty kilometers from the USSR border. The tanks and
mobile river-crossing pontoon bridges of this army moved independently.
In the first half of March, the so-called Northeast Ninth Army, which had
been brought from France to the Cracow area, spent two days there and
was then sent by rail to Lublin. In the second half of March, fresh troops
from Germany, mostly Bavarians, arrived in Sanok and Krosno.’’ This
broader picture of German troop movements was followed by local detail
confirming much of the other reporting received in April.19
The tone sharpened a bit later in April. Meshik addressed a report to
the personal attention of Nikita S. Khrushchev, the first secretary of the
Ukrainian Communist Party, that said: ‘‘Agent reporting and debriefing of
border crossers establishes that the Germans are intensively preparing for
war with the USSR, for which purpose they are concentrating troops on
our borders, building roads and fortifications, and bringing in munitions.’’
Much of the rest of the report was a plea to Khrushchev to allow him to
take measures against Ukrainian nationalists to prevent them from be-
coming ‘‘a fifth column’’ in wartime. Using VCh, an encrypted speech sys-
tem, Meshik sent virtually this same message to Merkulov by telephone on
April 20.20
Despite the growing concern evident in the reports of the first months
of 1941, there was still no urgency in disseminating them at the top level of
the regime. A special report sent from the Ukrainian SSR NKGB to Mer-
kulov at NKGB USSR on April 16 bears the marginal notation: ‘‘Sent to
Golikov . . . on April 20, 1941.’’ The dilatory distribution of reports may well
have been the result of shoddy bureaucratic practices, but it may also have
reflected a reluctance on the part of all involved to be accused of provoking
a war.21 Still, even Lavrenty P. Beria could not continue to ignore the re-
ports flowing into his office. On April 23 he signed and sent a report to the
Central Committee VKP(b), the Council of People’s Commissars (SNK),
and the Defense Commissariat (NKO) summarizing German troop move-
ments between April 1 and April 19 in East Prussia and the Government
General. ‘‘In these areas,’’ the report said, ‘‘the arriving troops consisted
THE BORDER TROOPS KNEW
133
of a large headquarters, three motorized divisions, six infantry divisions,
up to twenty-one infantry regiments, two motorized regiments, nine to
ten artillery regiments, seven tank and four engineer battalions, a motor-
cycle battalion, two companies of bicyclists, and more than 500 motor
vehicles.’’22
Reporting by border troop units and summaries by their higher head-
quarters during May reflected the same patterns observed in April, albeit
in greater scope and intensity. Of the twenty reports examined for this
period, the majority were from the NKVD of the Ukrainian SSR. Most
dealt with activities opposite border troop detachments stationed in the
areas from Brest-Litovsk in the Belorussian SSR to Chernovitsy in the
Ukrainian SSR. Report after report described the constant arrival of new
German troops, munitions, and other supplies. Most of these movements
were conducted at night. There were also signs of greater boldness. Ger-
man officers now observed Soviet concentrations openly through field
glasses and photographed them from positions just hundreds of meters
away. The German authorities placed greater restrictions on civilians, pro-
hibiting them from using the railroads, for example. All schools were now
closed and occupied by German troops. In several areas, troops were re-
portedly confiscating cattle, grain, and other agricultural products and
shipping them to Germany. Maslennikov reported that for the first time
German authorities were stopping or delaying Soviet trains bound for
Germany. They even stopped some with exports, which were provided for
under Soviet-German trade agreements. Most of these incidents probably
occurred because there were military activities under way that the Ger-
mans did not want the Soviet train crews to see.23
On May 15 Major General Vasily A. Khomenko, chief of border troops,
Ukrainian SSR district, reported an increase in agents dispatched by hos-
tile services.24 Maslennikov reported that between May 10 and May 16
border troop detachments captured seven agents trained and dispatched
by an intelligence organ of the German high command in Berlin. On