Моргенштерн » 29 сен 2013 05:09
7. Peaceful Co-existence
In May 1958, at the meeting of the Political Consultative Committee of the Warsaw Pact in Moscow, which I attended, Khrushchev made the principal speech. He analyzed the political and military situation throughout the world and outlined the tactics he believed the Socialist bloc should pursue. I say 'tactics' advisedly, because the basic purpose of Communist strategy remained the same - the domination of the world by Communism, as represented by the U.S.S.R. This purpose remains, and will remain, constant through every change of leadership; only the tactics vary.
One of the main themes of Khrushchev's speech was the need to develop a coherent policy towards N.A.T.O. The Kremlin was therefore looking for Western European leaders who would respond to the new Soviet line of peaceful co-existence. In the British Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, Khrushchev believed he had found a natural ally.
'He is a realistic politician,' he told us, 'who has come to understand that the post-war decline of the United Kingdom can only be arrested by taking new initiatives, not only in the under-developed world, but also in Europe.'
He was impressed by Macmillan's policy of 'decolonization', and by signs he detected that the British Prime Minister wanted to take a major part in improving relations between East and West. The Kremlin believed that Macmillan feared the resurgence of West Germany and that he had concluded that German revival owed much to the continuance of the Cold War. Khrushchev also thought Macmillan could be influenced by the possibility of economic benefits accruing from a rapprochement with the Soviet bloc.
Finally, he calculated that Macmillan might well respond to the suggestion that a friendly relationship with the U.S.S.R. would smooth the path of his colonial policy and make it easier for Britain to establish a good relationship with her former colonial territories.
In short, Khrushchev saw Macmillan as the kind of leader who would at least be willing to bring the West to the negotiating table; and he thought there were few others of his stature in Europe similarly disposed. Khrushchev despaired of the Labour Party.
'Compared to Gaitskell,' - he pronounced the name with disgust, 'Macmillan is a progressive politician. The British Labour Party claim to be a working-class party. But Macmillan, the leader of the bourgeoisie, has a better understanding of the changes taking place in the world than the Labour leaders - they're still living in the nineteenth century! If Communism were to triumph in Britain tomorrow, Gaitskell would be the first to be shot outside the Houses of Parliament, as a traitor to the working class.'
After the 21st Soviet Party Congress at the beginning of 1959, Khrushchev again briefed the leadership of the East European Parties. He told us the Soviet bloc must change its thinking about Charles de Gaulle. Since he had come to power, Soviet intelligence about his private discussions indicated a more flexible attitude towards the Soviet bloc. At the same time, the Russian conclusion was that de Gaulle was obsessed above all else with the idea of reestablishing the glory of France. Khrushchev's hunch was that this would lead him to seek a distinct role for France, which would involve differences with the United States and de Gaulle's allies in Europe.
For the moment, though, said Khrushchev, there could be no public change in the Soviet attitude towards him, because it would be counter-productive to express approval of a leader generally regarded as a reactionary. Moreover, the French Communist Party, still violently opposed to de Gaulle, must give their consent to any volte-lace. Lastly, some of his policies, such as his development of a special relationship with Adenauer, were against our interests and should not be encouraged by any blessing from us for the new leader.
Novotny disagreed with Khrushchev's appreciation, and told him gloomily that he had no faith in de Gaulle and would not be surprised if his rise to power took France further along the road to Fascism. Still, he accepted Khrushchev's instructions for Czechoslovakia to develop all possible contacts with France at both political and unofficial levels. It was essential, explained Khrushchev, to have good inside intelligence on de Gaulle's policies. Moreover, added Khrushchev, we could not exploit de Gaulle without a thorough knowledge of the attitudes towards him of the other Western powers. This was to be a high priority for our intelligence services.
Eighteen months later, at a meeting in Moscow of the Defence Ministers and Chief of Staff of the Warsaw Pact, which I attended, Khrushchev congratulated himself on the accuracy of his forecast that de Gaulle's chauvinism would lead him to weaken the unity of the West in pursuit of his conception of France's glorious destiny. Khrushchev evidently appreciated de Gaulle's single-minded egoism.
'It is apparent,' he told us, 'that he will not play second string to the United States. He has destroyed Fascism in Algeria and in France; now he believes he can deal with the Communist Party in the same way. It's up to our French comrades to see that he fails.
'I see every advantage,' continued Khrushchev, 'in supporting de Gaulle's attempt to build up France as a competitor to the United States. Of course, there is the danger that this may lead to an undesirable degree of power and influence in the world for the French, especially in the developing countries; on the other hand, the damage de Gaulle can do to N.A.T.O. and the solidarity of the Western allies will be well worth it.'
He told us Macmillan was meeting difficulties, notably strong opposition in Parliament and the City, in his attempts to reach an understanding with us. Although he would continue to cultivate Macmillan, Khrushchev now thought the French leader looked a better long-term proposition.
De Gaulle entered seriously into his assumed role as world leader; he made efforts to detach both Poland and Rumania from the Warsaw Pact. He was more effective in Rumania, but did not do badly in Poland. On his visit to Warsaw, he persuaded the Polish Party to let him give a speech on television in which he praised the achievements of the Poles and made a blatant appeal to their national feelings. Gomulka sent the Soviet Politburo a report on de Gaulle's visit, detailing the General's efforts to detach the Poles from the Soviet Union. They included the proposal to establish a non-military zone in Europe which would include Poland, and de Gaulle had offered to endorse the Oder-Neisse boundary with Germany to gain Polish support.
The Rumanians gave the Kremlin no information on de Gaulle's visit, but the Russians had all they needed from their own intelligence sources. We ourselves received a comprehensive report on the visit of the Rumanian Prime Minister, Ion Maurer, to Paris for political and economic discussions with de Gaulle. Maurer argued that Rumania wanted to pursue its own national course, but could not at present leave Comecon because her economy was too closely tied to it. In the meantime, she was determined to diversify her economy and forge closer links with the West.
De Gaulle assured Maurer that France would help Rumania to develop her independence and would give economic and political support. He would even sponsor Rumania if she wished to apply for associate membership of the E.E.C., and France would stand by her if she was isolated by the Communist bloc. As 70 per cent of her trade was with that bloc - 40 per cent of it with the Soviet Union - de Gaulle was talking nonsense. Not even the West, let alone France by herself, could sustain Rumania against a Comecon boycott. But de Gaulle went further: he suggested France as an alternative source of arms for the Rumanians, and undertook to support them if Warsaw Pact troops invaded.
Marshal Malinovsky's reaction to this military commitment is un-printable. However much we respected the French armed forces, we could not imagine they would be any help to the Rumanians in resisting a blitzkrieg from the Warsaw Pact. Our Military Operational Plan, as it then existed, assured that in the event of full-scale hostilities with France, the war would be over in two days.
'If de Gaulle ever tries to carry out his pledge to the Rumanians,' commented Malinovsky significantly, 'we shall know about it before his orders reach the French Commander-in-Chief
Nevertheless, de Gaulle's initiative with Rumania caused some concern to the Russians. In August 1964, during his last visit to Czechoslovakia, Khrushchev told us that they could tolerate Rumanian attempts to become economically independent of Comecon. 'But if they're so deluded as to try and leave the Warsaw Pact, then our soldiers, not de Gaulle, will have the last word.'
'Surely we've had enough trouble from the Rumanians,' interposed Novotny. 'Perhaps it would be no bad thing if they were kicked out of the Warsaw Pact.'
Khrushchev was horrified.
'You are totally and disastrously wrong,' he growled at Novotny. 'That's exactly what the Rumanian leaders want. The whole Balkan situation would become untenable if Rumania followed Yugoslavia and Albania into the anti-Soviet camp. It's the responsibility of the Party to stop Rumania leaving the Pact and to re-unite Yugoslavia and Albania with our Socialist family.'
After the fall of Khrushchev, Brezhnev continued the policy of cultivating de Gaulle. One day in April 1965, I was sitting with some friends in the Slavia cafe in Prague, across the street from the National Theatre, when I saw four black chaikas pull up opposite. Out of them emerged Novotny and Brezhnev, who was making his first unannounced visit to Czechoslovakia since assuming power. Curious to discover the purpose of Brezhnev's visit and in no way satisfied by the non-committal bulletin published about it, I telephoned my friend Antonin Novotny. He invited me to lunch the following day at the Presidential Palace, where his father always turned up as regularly as clockwork at 1 p.m.
When I mentioned to our President that I had seen him with Brezhnev, he gave me an account of the visit, of which the most interesting part was the Soviet leader's remarks about de Gaulle. Brezhnev revealed that on assuming power he had sent the French President a letter expressing hopes for the continuation of friendship and co-operation. Brezhnev and the Soviet Party no longer thought of de Gaulle only as an instrument for weakening N.A.T.O. and the American presence in Europe. His veto of Britain's application to join the Common Market led Brezhnev to believe that he could use de Gaulle to weaken further the power of the E.E.C. At the same time, we should use every opportunity to promote anti-Gaullist feeling in Europe, and so drive a wedge between France and Germany.
At the meetings of the Military Committee of the Central Committee, the Minister of the Interior had been presenting us with excellent intelligence from the German Chancellor's office, ever since the early days of Adenauer's regime. We were therefore well placed to monitor German exchanges with de Gaulle. We had a complete record, for example, of the French President's confidential meeting with the Chancellor in 1962, when they discussed the probability of France supplying tactical nuclear weapons to the German Army, and agreed that Britain was not yet ready to enter the E.E.C. Brezhnev thought there was plenty of scope for manipulation and trouble-making, and that we could use de Gaulle's folie de grandeur to weaken both France and Europe. The Russians were proud of their informants and influential agents within de Gaulle's entourage. For example, General Aleksandr Kuschev, the senior Soviet military representative in Czechoslovakia, gave us in advance the precise date of de Gaulle's withdrawal from N.A.T.O.
But Brezhnev was worried by the growing opposition to de Gaulle inside France and by signs that the Gaullist era was coming to an end. The Russians knew that many Frenchmen were becoming disenchanted with the General's overtures to the Eastern bloc at the expense of good relations with his Western allies.
'Comrade Brezhnev told me,' said Novotny, 'that it is essential for us to penetrate these opposition circles in order to find out how influential they really are, and how we can best neutralize them. Our Soviet comrades are even thinking of bringing up that old scheme of a Treaty of Co-operation and Non-aggression with France, in order to boost de Gaulle's reputation as a statesman. This gesture, said Comrade Brezhnev, might also restrain de Gaulle's efforts to undermine Soviet ascendancy amongst our Warsaw Pact allies.
It seemed that Brezhnev was as concerned as Khrushchev to preserve the unity of Eastern Europe, especially the status within it of Poland and Rumania.
8. The Fall of Khrushchev
Among Khrushchev's more endearing traits was his habit of self-criticism. At a meeting in Prague after his victory over the 'anti-Party' group he was not ashamed to admit to us that those who accused him of having been as much a Stalinist as Malenkov and Molotov were absolutely right.
'I cringed before Stalin like the rest of them,' he declared. 'The alternative was execution.'
But he went on to explain. 'The difference between the anti-Party group and me is that they wanted to bury the past, let it be forgotten. But I was determined to expose the wounds of Stalinism to the air, so that they might heal. There is no alternative if we are to avoid a repetition of Stalinism.'
The danger of a return to personal dictatorship still existed, he told us. Indeed, the behaviour of the delegates to the Soviet Party's 21st Congress showed that attitudes fostered by Stalin's personality cult still existed in the Party's ranks. One delegate after another had flattered Khrushchev, praising his leadership and placing him on the same pedestal as Stalin, until Khrushchev could stand it no longer. He cut short one speaker, and damned the whole Congress for a crowd of toadies who were treating him just as they had treated Stalin. Had they learned nothing? he angrily demanded.
Khrushchev once observed in my hearing: 'Stalin controlled my body, but never my mind.' What distinguished him from his competitors in the power struggle was that their constant prostration before Stalin had sapped their intellects.
On Stalin's death the Central Committee appointed Georgiy Malenkov as Party First Secretary and Prime Minister. But whereas Malenkov, Beria, and Molotov all delivered eulogies of Stalin in Red Square and committed themselves to continuing his policies, Khrushchev significantly remained silent. Three months later, in July 1953, Beria was arrested, as is now well known, by officers of the General Staff while on his way to a Politburo meeting; they took him to a military barracks for trial on charges of spying for the West (patently absurd), plotting against the leadership, the murder of thousands of his fellow citizens (undeniably true), and a host of other crimes. Marshal Konev presided over the court martial and sentenced Beria to death; the sentence was carried out with appropriate ceremony by a military firing squad.
Although it was Malenkov who explained the case against Beria to the Central Committee, Khrushchev was the architect of his execution. He succeeded in convincing the other potential heirs of Stalin that Beria was plotting to achieve supreme power and liquidate them all. However great the danger from Beria - and his personal ambition and control of state security made him a serious threat - his death deprived Malenkov and his supporters of their most powerful ally in the coming straggle with Khrushchev. It removed the first barrier on the road to de-Stalinization, and gave Khrushchev a chance to start a purge of all Beria's supporters in the K.G.B. and to appoint a new man, General Ivan Serov, as its chief. Serov, although new to this post, had plenty of experience in the business. In 1940, after the Soviet occupation of the Baltic states, he had been in charge of the deportation to Siberia of a large number of the inhabitants; many died on the way.
In March 1953, Malenkov was 'released' from the key position of First Secretary of the Central Committee. The Politburo circulated a letter explaining that Malenkov was fully occupied by his duties as Prime Minister and, more ominously, that he had 'made mistakes' Over Beria. Khrushchev became First Secretary and began to consolidate his hold on the Party apparatus. The other Party leaders began to wake up to the threat he posed, but he was too subtle for them all.
In February 1955, Bulganin replaced Malenkov as Prime Minister. This was the result of a carefully organized campaign by Khrushchev, accusing Malenkov of having been involved in the criminal activities of the Secret Police under Beria, of having abused his personal power in the name of Stalin, and of stifling 'inner-Party democracy'. In fact, Malenkov's behaviour had alienated many of the senior Party leaders, and so the appointment of Bulganin in his place quietened the fears of most of them.
Khrushchev's strategy was to play off his opponents against each other. He tackled Molotov in July 1955 by initiating a week's debate in the Central Committee on 'The Errors Made in Soviet Foreign Policy: Proposals for the Future'. The word 'errors' rang uncomfortably in Molotov's ears, since he was, and had been under Stalin, the Soviet Foreign Secretary. In the Communist system there is no such thing as an honest academic mistake; if there had been 'errors', someone - presumably he - would suffer for them.
Khrushchev used the debate to test reactions to his own ideas on a rapprochement with the West. He attacked Stalin's 'dogmatic' foreign policy, which had isolated the Soviet Union and caused the Capitalists to close ranks behind the United States, and had also driven Tito out of the Communist bloc. Khrushchev ended by calling for a sweeping reappraisal of foreign policy. The Central Committee endorsed his resume and approved his suggestions. For Molotov the writing was on the wall.
Molotov and his friends were now afraid that Khrushchev would use the 20th Party Congress, due in 1956, to appoint his own supporters to high positions in the Party and have his policies endorsed. In the autumn of 1955, I learnt of a plot to eliminate Khrushchev. I first heard of this conspiracy from Novotny when he returned to Prague from the 20th Party Congress. He warned me that Khrushchev needed support to carry out the decisions of that Congress and would face determined opposition from those who were behind the attempt on his life in 1955.
It seems that when Khrushchev visited Finland that autumn, the K.G.B., inspired by Molotov and Lazar Kaganovich, planned to arrest him at the border on his way back. They were going to take him off the train, charge him with anti-Party crimes in the service of Capitalism, and return him to Moscow for trial. Khrushchev himself doubted whether he would have got there alive. The plot was discovered in time by Marshal Georgiy Zhukov, then Minister of Defence, who immediately telephoned Molotov, warning him that he knew of the conspiracy, that his forces had complete control of Moscow, and that if anything happened to Khrushchev all those implicated would be shot. Molotov stridently protested that he knew nothing about it, but significantly the plot never materialized. When Khrushchev returned to Moscow, he immediately launched an investigation into the K.G.B., for which, as First Secretary, he was responsible. He arrested the people directly involved, and dismissed hundreds of others.
Khrushchev mentioned this affair to us when he visited Prague in 1957, after the purge of the 'anti-Party group'. He ridiculed Molotov's denial of his own involvement, and told us that investigations had revealed a link between the K.G.B. officers concerned and the anti-Party group. After interrogating some of the conspirators himself, he had decided to keep the K.G.B. under his personal supervision.
'Even a doorman at K.G.B. headquarters,' he scoffed, 'believes he is superior to the Party First Secretary. They've been assured so often that they're the favoured sons of the Party that now they think they know better than the Fathers of the Revolution!'
As a result of the 20th Congress, the Soviet Party set up a 'Committee for the Investigation of the Mistakes made by the K.G.B. and the Judicial System'. Its duty, on the instructions of the Congress, was to apportion responsibility, and to rehabilitate victims. Among the causes celebres which it explored were the Moscow trials of the 1930s and the Leningrad Jewish doctor's case.
One of the main themes in the history of the purges which recurs to this day is the tension between the K.G.B. and the Army. The K.G.B. has always known how to manipulate the fears of the Party leadership in order to keep power over the Army. An example was the trials and executions of the Soviet Marshals and Generals before the war, which greatly reduced the Red Army's efficiency against the Germans. Even after the war, when the Army's prestige was at its zenith, the K.G.B. were able to have Marshal Zhukov, the most brilliant of the Army's commanders, exiled to a country command east of the Urals, just by playing on Stalin's paranoia.
The circumstances of Khrushchev's rise to power had a distinct bearing on his eventual fall. The three pillars of the Soviet state are the Party apparatus -that is the Politburo, the Central Committee, and the entrenched bureaucracy -the K.G.B., and the Army. Without strong backing from at least one of them, nobody can rule in the Soviet Union. Khrushchev's main support in the early days came from the Army. When he lost their support his days were numbered.
The alliance between Khrushchev and the Army sprang from their joint antagonism towards the K.G.B. The Army had suffered much from the attentions of the K.G.B. in Stalin's day. A good example, one of thousands or even hundreds of thousands in the armed forces, was the case of General Aleksandr Alexandrovich Kuschev, the senior Soviet military representative in Czechoslovakia from 1957 to 1968. He was the most congenial and, to me, the most helpful of all the Soviet advisers in my country. He was an Army career officer who had reached the rank of General when he was arrested in 1933, with many other officers, as a Western spy. Every day the K.G.B. interrogators went to his cell to demand that he sign a confession. He always refused, and so every day they beat him insensible. He nearly lost his sight from their treatment, but steadfastly refused to sign; after two years of torture he was brought to trial and sentenced to twenty-five years' imprisonment in Siberia.
'If I had confessed,' he told me, 'I would have received the death sentence.'
As a result of the purges and Stalin's unreadiness, the Soviet Army lost thousands of officers in the first German onslaught, and in desperation Stalin turned to the prison camps. Party representatives visited the camps and announced that Stalin and the Fatherland - those were their words - needed the help of all former officers, and all who rejoined the Army would have their ranks restored.
'Nothing could be worse than Siberia,' Kuschev told me, 'and so we all joined up.'
Kuschev had a fine war record. In 1945 he was in Berlin, a hero of the Soviet Union, the bearer of fifty-two medals, and Chief-of-Staff of one of the Soviet armies, with the rank of Lieutenant-General. When the war was over he requested, and was granted, leave to visit his home. He took a train from Berlin, but instead of his family waiting to greet him at the other end, he found two K.G.B. officers.
'Comrade General,' they said to him, 'you have served eight years in prison and four years at war; you still owe us thirteen years.'
They stripped him of his medals and his General's insignia, and sent him back to Siberia to finish his sentence. He was not released until 1957 —twelve years later —when the committee Khrushchev-had set up reached his case and decided to rehabilitate him. One month later he was sent to Czechoslovakia.
Despite his experiences, Kuschev never faltered in his devotion to the Party. But he had a nicely developed sense of gallows humour. One of his favourite stories was about a new arrival in Siberia who complained bitterly to fellow prisoners that he had been sentenced to fifteen years' imprisonment for doing absolutely nothing. His companions seized him by his lapels and angrily accused him of lying.
'You must have committed some crime,' they insisted. 'For doing nothing you only get ten years!'
In the beginning the Army's support for Khrushchev was unequivocal. The Army detested and feared the K.G.B., and Khrushchev knew that he must neutralize it if he was to triumph over his adversaries in the Party and if he was to avoid a return to Stalinism. He knew the K.G.B. would set its face against de-Stalinization, as well as against his policy of peaceful co-existence. But to control the K.G.B., the Party apparatus, and the Army, he needed strong friends in the Politburo, and, as will become apparent, he was too naive to know who his best friends really were.
Meanwhile, his intolerance of the K.G.B. brought him allies in other quarters, notably among the ordinary people of Soviet Russia. In 1963, when I visited Uzbekistan, I was shown over a model collective farm in Tashkent, which grew cotton. The Kolkhoz chairman, a typical Uzbek in his mid-sixties with a straggly 'Genghis Khan' moustache, asked me to send his regards to Khrushchev. I did so when I returned to Moscow, and Khrushchev was delighted.
'That man,' he told me, 'makes the best shish kebab in Uzbekistan.'
The previous year the K.G.B. had asked Khrushchev's approval to arrest the chairman because he had fought for the White Russians during the Revolution. Khrushchev, who did not believe it, had the man flown to Moscow, where he interviewed him personally. He soon discovered that he had joined the Whites in order to spy for the Reds, and could name witnesses to prove it, with whom Khrushchev checked the story himself. 'Thereupon,' he told me, I ordered the immediate arrest of the K.G.B. officers concerned, and acquired myself a good friend and an excellent source of shish kebab.'
The K.G.B. never supported Khrushchev; they just bided their time. They had sized him up perfectly, and they played constantly on his naivety and fears. One of the best examples was his treatment of Marshal Zhukov. Barely a year after he had saved Khrushchev's life in the plot of 1955, Zhukov was dismissed.
Zhukov was not ambitious for political power, but he was determined to reduce the authority of the K.G.B. and the Party over the Army. He particularly detested the counter-intelligence cadres. He placed a high priority on the modernization of the Red Army and the improvement of the quality of its manpower, and this enthusiasm led him to make a mistake. In a speech at Leningrad in 1956, he declared, 'Red Army officers should strive to become the best examples of Soviet intelligentsia.' The K.G.B. and Party apparatus seized on these words and built up a dossier on Zhukov's 'Bonapartism', which they handed to Khrushchev after the purge of the anti-Party group.
By this time Khrushchev was worried by Zhukov's prestige and influence in the armed forces, and foolishly let himself be persuaded that the Marshal was a threat to his own power. He therefore sent him to Belgrade on an official visit to Tito. Zhukov departed from Moscow with the usual pomp and ceremony due to a Minister of his rank and importance; but when he returned, there was only an aide with a car waiting to take him home. From his flat he telephoned Khrushchev, who told him bluntly that he had replaced him with Marshal Malinovsky. Zhukov in a fury threatened to call the armed forces to his help.
'By all means try it,' invited Khrushchev, 'but I think it's only fair to let you know that your telephone is no longer connected to the military communications system.'
Khrushchev then offered him the post of Commander of the Academy of General Staff. 'Go to hell,' answered Zhukov, and went fishing.
Khrushchev naively thought that with Malinovsky as Minister of Defence he would be able to control the armed forces himself.
He took another step towards personal control of the Army when in July 1960 he dismissed Marshal Ivan Konev from his post as Commander-in-Chief of the Warsaw Pact, and replaced him with his own brother-in-law, Marshal Andrei Grechko. We were not at all sorry when Khrushchev dismissed Konev, for he was the most arrogant and offensive of the Soviet Marshals, a loud-voiced, foul-mouthed bully who, when in his cups - as he usually was - would insult junior officers and even Generals in public, and sometimes resorted to violence. I once saw him tear the tunic off an officer who he thought was incorrectly dressed. The only person who was not frightened of him seemed to be his batman, a much younger man, who spoke to him with the same arrogance as Konev used towards others. It was unbelievable to hear them talking together. The batman would answer back, as though to an equal, and I once overheard him rebuke his master for not taking his advice to go shopping in Prague by car instead of going for a walk.
'Shut up, you idiot!' shouted Konev.
'One of us certainly is an idiot,' retorted the batman as it began to rain, 'but it isn't me.'
No one could understand why this servant was so privileged. One theory was that he was having an affair with Konev's wife, who was very beautiful and thirty years younger than her husband, and that she protected him, but it was no more than a theory. It may be that Konev found sexual gratification not with his wife but through Western pornographic Alms, of which he was very fond.
Although we in the satellite countries were glad to see Konev go, we were not much better off under his successor. Marshal Grechko was a much quieter man, but just as arrogant and rude. I remember an occasion in 1964 when he decided to make a personal reconnaissance of the Czech-Austrian border. My Minister, Lomsky, escorted him there, and our border troops provided a boat, so that he could see it from the River Danube. We were together in the boat for two hours, during which time Grechko never uttered one word; he just sat there looking at the border and making notes. Finally Lomsky asked him if he had seen enough.
'When I am thinking,' answered Grechko, 'you be quiet.' And he said nothing more to us.
I had a disagreeable experience with him myself just before an important meeting in a village on the Polish frontier. Our military delegation, under Lomsky, were the first to arrive, followed by Grechko and a large party of senior Soviet officers, who were staying at the best hotel in the nearest town. Our Politburo delegation was arriving later by train, and we were all supposed to meet them at the railway station. In due course Lomsky sent me to the hotel to collect Grechko. Standing outside his door I found a Soviet General, who told me Grechko was asleep. When I explained my errand he entered the room, rather to my surprise, and woke him. I stepped inside, presented myself at attention, and addressed him.
'Comrade Marshal,' I began, 'in two hours' time our Politburo delegation will arrive at the station. My Minister has sent me to tell you he will be very happy to escort you there to welcome them.'
'Leave the room,' commanded the Marshal with quiet venom. 'I don't have to welcome your delegation. If the head of the delegation wants to see me, tell him I’m at this hotel.'
In truth, I cannot think of one Soviet Marshal or General, except Kuschev, who behaved towards us satellite nations with any courtesy or consideration.
Khrushchev's replacement of Konev by Grechko provoked bitter hostility between the two Marshals. It extended to their wives but not their daughters, who remained fast friends. On one occasion, I remember, Grechko was in Prague with his wife and twin daughters when Konev arrived with his family on their way to Karlsbad, where they took a holiday every year. Grechko's daughters asked for a car to take them to the airport to welcome Konev's children - they were by Konev's first wife - but Grechko and his wife refused; his wife was particularly adamant. However, her daughters were resolved to go, and so they borrowed a car from my Military Assistant, to whom they told the story.
Khrushchev thought he had secured his position with the Army with the appointments of Malinovsky and his own brother-in-law, Grechko. But he underestimated the consequences of his defence policies and the disenchantment they brought throughout the services. Konev was merely the most outspoken of his critics; opposition was widespread and increasing. His reduction of troop levels by three million men in only a few years, and his cutting of officers' pensions, were unpopular enough; but he also neglected the Air Force and reduced the Naval budget on the grounds that nuclear weapons and missiles had made both services largely obsolete. He also disbanded the conventional anti-aircraft brigades and sent their armament in aid to the Third World in the belief that the antiaircraft missiles had made them redundant. This left the Pact forces critically vulnerable, in the conditions of the time, to low-flying aircraft. His chickens came home to roost, first in 1958 during the Lebanon disturbances, when the Soviet Union could not face up to the U.S. Sixth Fleet; and later in the Cuban missile crisis, when Soviet naval weakness left him no choice but to either back down or resort to nuclear weapons, in which America still had superiority.
Khrushchev's authority in the Army suffered further erosion as a result of the Penkovsky affair, which enabled the K.G.B. to push him into a purge of the military hierarchy for their failure to detect a major Western spy among them. Penkovsky's easy familiarity with senior officers made things much simpler for the K.G.B. Khrushchev-dealt ruthlessly with the Army, and used the scandal to rid himself of his bitterest critics, such as Marshal Zakharov. The 'resignations', however, further reduced Khrushchev's popularity with the armed forces and contributed to the political power of the K.G.B.
The Party apparatus was also becoming disillusioned with Khrushchev's high-handed methods. For example, when he went to Egypt and made Nasser a Hero of the Soviet Union, the first anybody in the Soviet Politburo knew about it was when they heard the news on the radio. Nasser had locked up all the Egyptian Communists he could find and they were still rotting in gaol when Khrushchev flew to Aswan. Even Novotny smiled when he told me of the Politburo's reaction.
The Party did not agree with Khrushchev's re-definition of Marxism to suit the purpose of peaceful co-existence, and they were worried by his overtures to the West, which exposed the Soviet bloc to ideological contamination. They considered his intemperate pursuit of de-Stalinization had brought about the crises in Poland and Hungary. Some cadres blamed him for being too lenient with China, believing military pressure might have been effective if he had applied it earlier. Many, of course, blamed him for his handling of the Cuban crisis. Finally, his internal policies came in for a great deal of criticism. His agricultural policy had been a disaster, in particular his ambitious scheme for the 'Virgin Lands', under which he wasted enormous sums of money and effort in trying to produce crops everywhere, even under the most unsuitable conditions. Once again he was a victim of his own naivety; he honestly believed, and stated, that in fifteen years he could make the U.S.S.R. equal to the United States and the West in the economic field, and he promised to give the Soviet people plenty to eat. Both, of course, were pipedreams.
Khrushchev threw away his assets like a profligate gambler, as the K.G.B. had always calculated, and often contrived, that he would. One of his strongest supporters in the struggle for power had been his former mistress, Madame Furtseva, the First Secretary of the Moscow Party District Committee and Secretary of the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U. The First Secretaries of the Moscow and Leningrad Committees hold two of the most powerful positions in the Party apparatus; where their committees go, the Party usually follows. During Khrushchev's confrontation with the anti-Party groups and the plot against his life, Furtseva demonstrated her loyalty by rallying all the members of the Central Committee who lived in Moscow, and calling them to the Kremlin to demand the resignations of the anti-Party groups. Yet, after the 21st Party Congress in 1959, Khrushchev effectively deserted her by transferring her to the Ministry of Culture, where she was officially appointed Minister in May 1960.
Not content with alienating his strongest supporters, Khrushchev embarked on reforms of the internal Party structure which antagonized the whole Party apparatus. Designed to make the Party more amenable to central control and remove those who were too entrenched, they prevented Party members from serving more than two terms - a total of eight years - on the Politburo. There were, of course, exceptions for members of outstanding merit, such as Khrushchev himself. He added insult to injury by introducing a 'Moral Code of Communism', which looked suspiciously like the Ten Commandments, to regulate the private conduct of Party members.
We realized Khrushchev was in trouble in February 1962, after the arrest of our Minister of the Interior, Rudolph Barak, for embezzling large sums in foreign currency. When Barak's private safe was opened we found, besides a large amount of foreign currency, some files on Khrushchev's conversations and behaviour during his visits to Czechoslovakia. It was quite obvious that Barak would never have dared, on his own initiative, to compile a dossier on Khrushchev, and no one in our Politburo had authorized it; the K.G.B. must have put Barak up to it. It would have been tactically unsound, not to say highly undiplomatic, for us to hand over the dossier to Khrushchev in person. But it was an excellent opportunity to embarrass the K.G.B., and so we gave it to Brezhnev, Khrushchev's deputy, when he next came to Prague. We felt certain he would inform Khrushchev. But we reckoned without the intrigues of senior Soviet politicians; Khrushchev heard nothing of the matter until after his fall from power in 1964. Brezhnev, who was having an affair with Barak's wife, was already plotting his benefactor's downfall in 1962. This was the man the naive Khrushchev trusted as his best friend -their wives were close friends too - whom he had made his First Deputy in the Party and Supreme Soviet, in place of such loyal supporters as Zhukov and Furtseva.
'He is not the smartest of men,' Marshal Grechko once said about Brezhnev in my hearing, before Khrushchev's fall. 'But Nikita Sergeyevich trusts him.'
Perhaps the most ominous sign for us that Khrushchev's power was on the wane came during his last visit to Prague, in August 1964. The Czech Politburo and senior Party officials, including myself, were waiting to greet him at the railway station, when Frantisek Pene, a Secretary of the Central Committee, remarked to us cheerfully: 'Now we shall have some fun again! Comrade Khrushchev is a great one for cracking jokes.'
The Soviet Ambassador, Mikhail Zimyanin, turned to him and said coldly, 'It is one thing to make jokes, quite another to run the Politburo. Do you think the First Secretary of our Party should be a clown? It is no laughing matter that Comrade Suslov accuses Nikita Sergeyevich of making anti-Marxist statements.'
This extraordinary outburst left no room for doubt: Khrushchev was in deep trouble if Zimyanin could allow himself such blatant criticism.
We read the signs, too, on Khrushchev's face when the train pulled in. He looked tired and despondent, and seemed to have lost his old vivacity. Even when he recovered a little there was a new bitterness in his sallies. Referring to his relationship with Kosygin, he remarked: 'Some people have said I have too much imagination. But I have told Kosygin that people without imagination evidently lack talent and should be sent to work on a co-operative farm.'
He cheered up a little during his official talks in the Hradcany Castle, where he described his foreign policy towards the United States as 'leading America to the grave with one arm around her shoulders.' He also gave us a shrewd and witty account of his first meeting with Mao Tse-tung.
'When I met him,' he said, 'I was scared, because I could see that one of his eyes was looking towards Washington, and the other towards our Siberia.'
Explaining the difference between Mao's attitude and his own, he launched into one of his typical peasant allegories. Mao believed Communism could only triumph by force, he told us. 'But I prefer to follow my mother's example. When she wanted little Nikita to do some chore, she always tried to persuade me with a cake, but I well knew she kept a big stick in the cupboard. The Soviet Union must act in the same way towards the West. Mao's militarism will lead him to be incinerated. The Warsaw Pact should pursue a more subtle course, and only reach for the big stick if other methods fail.'
On the last day of his week in Czechoslovakia, Khrushchev seemed to recover his old ebullience. At a picnic I organized for the Soviet delegation at a military hunting lodge outside Prague, he and Novotny were sitting round an open fire half tipsy, roasting sausages, when Khrushchev challenged our President to leap over the fire. When Khrushchev jumped, his straw hat fell off and was burnt before we could recover it.
'You jumped so high to show off your youth,' Novotny said to flatter him.
'If a girl had said that to me,' came the reply, 'I'd say to hell with the hat. But as it's only you, you can buy me a new one.'
Khrushchev had a nice appreciation of irony. He told us how, when his economists started to draw up plans for expanding lorry production, they sought advice from a firm of American engineering consultants, who asked how many vehicles they wanted to produce. The Russians said they were thinking in terms of one hundred thousand. 'We know you're a rich country,' answered the chief consultant, 'but can you afford to produce such a small quantity?'
Khrushchev was only too well aware of the poverty in his own country, and was always hoping to raise living standards. During this picnic he admired the dresses of our wives.
'I tell our cotton growers,' he boasted, 'that they must produce enough cotton for every woman in Russia to have a pretty new dress every day and still leave enough to provide every American with a handkerchief to weep for Capitalism.'
He worried perpetually about the burden of defence expenditure. He was dismayed that the standard of living in the satellite countries was so far above that of the Soviet Union, and was convinced we had achieved it at the expense of making a fair contribution to the armed strength of the Warsaw Pact. I remember him criticizing Lomsky in 1963 for our penny-pinching attitude to defence. By this time his Marshals, despite the setback in Cuba, had convinced themselves that the military balance between East and West was shifting progressively in their favour, and that the Warsaw Pact should be ready to use its military strength 'as the principal factor in the struggle for peace and socialism'. Khrushchev had been forced to go along with their plans for increased expenditure on armaments, but he knew we Czechs were dragging our feet.
'Some people,' he told Lomsky cuttingly, 'boast about how many cars they have in their country, while the Soviet Union bleeds to defend them. Russians prefer riding to walking too, you know.'
Nevertheless, he was concerned that defence was causing strains between the Soviet Union and the satellites. He was right, because the pressure on us to militarize our society, and the inflation it caused, had a lot to do with the birth of the liberalization movement in Czechoslovakia.
After his visit to Prague in August 1964, Khrushchev made a tour of the outlying republics of the Soviet Union, and returned to Moscow in late September. His travels had tired him, and he let his colleagues persuade him to take a holiday in the Crimea. They said he ought to rest, in order to appear fresh and fit before the people on the anniversary of the Revolution on 7 November; but in fact they wanted him out of the way while they prepared his downfall.
At very short notice, he was summoned back from his holiday to find the Politburo in session. Brezhnev, acting as Chairman, told him they had discussed his leadership and decided he should resign for the good of the Party. To make it easier for him, and to reassure the people - with whom Khrushchev was still a favourite — they proposed to inform the Party he had resigned for reasons of health; his Crimean holiday would lend substance to the story.
Khrushchev answered angrily that his health was excellent, he would not lie to the people, and he insisted on defending his position before the Central Committee. Brezhnev had been expecting this move and had been preparing for it during the last three months. At a Central Committee meeting convened the next day, both Khrushchev and Brezhnev explained their positions, Khrushchev fighting back with all his old pugnacity. But the leadership was united against him, and the final vote was unanimous to unseat him and nominate Brezhnev as First Secretary. Not even Khrushchev's brother-in-law, Grechko, voted for him. Khrushchev was the first speaker to congratulate Brezhnev formally; then he left the meeting and went home. He had had no idea of the strength and solidarity of the opposition he had aroused.
Brezhnev was not nearly clever enough to have organized such a coup by himself. He merely acted as the figurehead for the Army, Party, and the K.G.B. He telephoned the news to all the First Secretaries of the satellite parties. He told Novotny that Khrushchev had resigned because of ill health; Novotny did not believe him, and told him so. Khrushchev, he said, had been perfectly fit, if tired, only two months ago when he had been in Prague. Brezhnev finally admitted that Khrushchev had been dismissed because of his poor leadership and faults in his domestic and foreign policies. Novotny warned him that there would be very strong and adverse reactions from the peoples of Eastern Europe at the news, and he complained bitterly that the Soviet Communist Party had made fools of the Czechs in allowing Khrushchev's visit at a time when Brezhnev must have known he was on his way out. When Brezhnev suggested that he himself should come to Prague to discuss the matter, Novotny told him bluntly that it would be no use. Khrushchev's visit had been a great success and there was a strong possibility of public demonstrations against the new First Secretary.
Novotny told me about this discussion.
'Comrade Brezhnev will never forgive you for being so outspoken,' I warned him. 'Sooner or later he will get even with you.'
The events of 1967 showed I was right.
Our Politburo issued a short communiqué on Khrushchev's departure, adding that it had 'surprised' them - a clear indication of dissent to the Czech people. The only First Secretary to welcome Khrushchev's departure was Gomulka, who described it as overdue; Gomulka in 1964 had moved a long way from his liberalism of 1956.
As I have mentioned, Madame Khrushchev and Brezhnev's wife Viktoria had long been good friends; they frequently made trips together to Czechoslovakia. They were on holiday in Karlovy Vary, taking the waters, and were having dinner when they heard the news of Khrushchev's overthrow on the radio. Both of them burst into tears and Viktoria tried to comfort Nina Khrushchev. A minute or two later the Soviet Ambassador Zimyanin came through on the telephone with instructions for Viktoria to prepare to fly back to Moscow. When she asked what was to happen to Madame Khrushchev. Zimyanin said she should finish her holiday alone, because it was politically impossible for them to fly back to Moscow together.
'If I can't return with Nina, I won't return at all,' sobbed Viktoria, and banged down the telephone.
In the end, both Zimyanin and President Novotny had to hurry to Karlovy Vary to persuade Viktoria Brezhnev to return and to escort her to Prague. When she reached Moscow, she was greeted at Sheremetevo airport with all the ceremonial of a state occasion. Madame Khrushchev flew back on a scheduled commercial aircraft and had to queue for a taxi to take her home.
At the end of 1964 I witnessed an inept attempt by the Soviet Union to undermine Novotny's position. I was present, as Party First Secretary in the Ministry of Defence, at a session of the Central Committee. Vaclav David, our Foreign Minister - we knew him to be a Soviet agent - made a speech which began by attacking Khrushchev. He was immediately shouted down, but continued, unabashed, to sing the praises of Brezhnev. At the end he proposed that the Czech Party should follow the example of the Soviet Party, and separate the functions of President and First Secretary. Novotny naturally looked surprised -he held both positions himself— but he calmly put the proposal to a ballot, in which only David voted in favour.
A few days later, young Antonin Novotny received a visit from a friend in the StB, who brought him a tape of a conversation between David and Zimyanin, recorded in the office of the former. On the tape Antonin and I heard the Soviet Ambassador carefully coaching and rehearsing David in the speech I had just heard him make at the Central Committee. Antonin played it back to his father over lunch. The President, choking with anger, immediately telephoned Brezhnev for an explanation. Brezhnev denied knowing anything about it, but promised to recall Zimyanin and have him punished. He was indeed recalled, but the 'punishment' turned out to be promotion to Chief Editor of Pravda and membership of the Secretariat of the Central Committee.
'Some punishment!' I commented to the President. 'If anyone's been slapped in the face by Brezhnev, you have.'
There were, as Novotny had predicted, widespread and adverse reactions to Khrushchev's dismissal. I remember one bitter remark which circulated amongst colleagues in the Soviet armed forces: "Stalin was condemned as a murderer; Khrushchev has been thrown out as a naive blabbermouth and an anti-Marxist who would destroy collective leadership. What will they tell us about Brezhnev when his time comes?"
The dreaded General Yepishev told us in the spring of 1967 that the Politburo had ruled that there should be no more criticism of former leaders, because the manner in which de-Stalinization and Khrushchev's dismissal had been handled had created a lack of trust in the Party. In confidence he told us that the main objective of his Political Administration in 1967 must be to restore the Army's confidence in the Party leadership.
History will judge Khrushchev's period of leadership. But I know from my own travels in the U.S.S.R. what a depth of gratitude the Soviet people feel towards him for de-Stalinization and the end of the Terror. On the other side of the coin, de-Stalinization touched wells of shame in the Soviet psyche which rebounded adversely on Khrushchev. For him, de-Stalinization was not just a moral crusade, and a lever for power, though he did use it that way. It was intended to jerk Communism out of its defensive and stagnant attitudes, in order to enable the Soviet Union to take a new initiative in its dealings with the West. But his actions did temper the brutal quality of the political struggle in Russia and the satellites. It is worth remembering that if he had failed in his struggle for power in 1953 he would have faced a firing squad, like Beria. That the anti-Party group -and Khrushchev himself-suffered no more than political eclipse is one of his legacies, from which Brezhnev also could benefit if he is ousted.
I must point out, too, that the very existence of dissenters in the U.S.S.R. today, even if they are only a tiny elite, is a measure of the relaxation first introduced by Khrushchev; it was unthinkable under Stalin, and would have remained unthinkable under any other of his possible successors.
Khrushchev could be cold blooded and ruthless. He personally ordered the seizure -in each case by a despicable trick - of the Hungarian leaders Imre Nagy and Pal Maleter in 1956 and their subsequent execution. He did little actually to reduce the pervasive influence of the K.G.B., although he tried to bring it more closely under his control, and dealt personally with excesses that came to his attention. Perhaps, under Khrushchev, the K.G.B. impinged on the lives of fewer people; but the oilier institutional controls which exist under the tightly organized, monolithic system of Communism more than counter-balanced any relaxation in the security organs.
One of Khrushchev's principal ambitions was to make the Party more effective by turning it into a professional managerial elite. He insisted that it was not enough for the Party cadres to be skilled ideologists, they must be trained to supervise the enterprises they were responsible for.
He was very keen on delegating more power to the republics; he wanted their people to believe, as far as the system allowed, that their destiny was in their own hands. During my visit to Armenia in 1963, the local Party First Secretary told me delightedly that they were about to launch a hydro-electric project with Turkey on their common frontier. When they had gone to Moscow to get central Government approval, formerly a lengthy business, Khrushchev had agreed at once, in two words: 'Zdelajte eto' (get on with it).
Khrushchev's policy of peaceful co-existence, for which his opponents labelled him anti-Marxist, arose from his belief that ideology would only be decisive in the struggle with the West when the Communist system had achieved equality in the economic field. He was always telling us that when people are hungry, propaganda means nothing. Peaceful co-existence, he hoped, would bring an accommodation with the West whereby the Soviet Union could obtain the technological and trade benefits necessary for her to reach economic parity; of course, he was wildly optimistic in thinking the process would take a mere fifteen years. He was also much too sanguine about the readiness of the Western Europeans to come to terms with him at America's expense.
For all his good intentions, Khrushchev's personal style of direction eventually alienated the rest of the leadership. He committed the astonishing blunder of antagonizing all three pillars of the Communist system. His unorthodox ideas combined with his personal flamboyance and extravagant gestures to horrify the dim, dull men who occupied the seats of power; but the Soviet people loved him, as did many in the satellites, including myself.
He could speak for hours without notes and would shatter his opponents with his rough peasant humour. But when he made mistakes, such as the 'Virgin Lands' misadventure, they were on a monumental scale, and there was no one to share the odium. His final, and fatal, illusion was to assume that his protégé Brezhnev-would never betray him, and that with his own brother-in-law, Grechko, in charge of the Army he was invulnerable.