Mikhail Trilisser

Mikhail Trilisser
Born Meier Abramovich Trilisser
April 1, 1883
Astrakhan
Died February 2, 1940(1940-02-02) (aged 56)
Cause of death execution
Other names Mikhail Aleksandrovich Moskvin, Moskvin, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Moskvin
Occupation Intelligence officer
Years active 1901–1938
Agent Cheka, GPU, OGPU, NKVD
Known for role in the "Trust"
Political party Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, Bolshevik Party
Website svr.gov.ru/history/tr.html

Mikhail Abramovich Trilisser (Russian: Ме́ер Абра́мович Трили́ссер; Jewish, born Meier Abramovich Trilisser) (1 April 1883, Astrakhan – 2 February 1940), also known by the pseudonym Moskvin (Russian: Москви́н), was a Soviet chief of the Foreign Department of the Cheka and the OGPU. Later, he worked for the NKVD as a covert bureau chief and Comintern leader.[1]

Background

Trilisser was born Meier Abramovich Trilisser on April 1, 1883 in Astrakhan. His father was a shoemaker. He graduated from the Astrakhan city school.

Career

Pre-revolution

In 1901, Trilisser joined the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in Odessa and was arrested in the same year for revolutionary activities.[1]

During the revolution of 1905, he was a revolutionary propagandist in Kazan, Petrograd and Finland. In July 1907, the police arrested him, investigated him at length and sentenced him in 1909 to eight years of hard labor. In November 1914 during this sentence, the government sent him into permanent exile in Siberia.[1]

Revolution

After the February Revolution of 1917, Trilisser served first as editor of the Irkutsk newspaper Voice of the Social-Democrat and then in the military Irkutsk Committee of the Bolsheviks.[1]

Intelligence

In October 1917, Trilisser worked to foil counterrevolutionaries and bandits in Siberia. As the Bolsheviks regained territory in the Far East from the Japanese, Trilisser worked underground in the Russian-Chinese border town of Blagoveshchensk, north of Harbin. After helping form a buffer state, the Far Eastern Republic (FER) or Chita Republic (1920–1922), Trilisser was appointed commissioner of the Amur region.[1]

Cheka

By 1921, Trilisser was working under Felix Dzerzhinsky in the foreign intelligence department of the Soviet secret police or Cheka. In 1922, he became of the foreign department of the new State Political Directorate (GPU), (later OGPU).[1]

As such, Trilisser played a significant role in the "Trust" operation, among whose achievements were penetration of counter-Soviet and White Russian organizations and the capture and executions of Boris Savinkov and British super spy Sidney Reilly.[1]

OGPU

In 1926, Trilisser became Vice-Chairman of the OGPU.[1]

In October 1929, he was ousted from the foreign department of the OGPU, and was replaced by Artur Artuzov.[2] Trilisser was dismissed for attacking his boss, Genrikh Yagoda, behind his back at a Party meeting—a breach of protocol.[3]

In 1930, Stalin had him transferred to the Workers and Peasants Inspection of the RSFSR as deputy commissar.[1] In 1934–35, he was representative of the Soviet Control Commission in the Far East.

Comintern and NKVD

On 10 August 1935, he was appointed of the Executive Committee of the Comintern, and head of its Department of International Relations (OMS), which handled subsidies to foreign communist parties. He adopted the pseudonym, Mikhail Aleksandrovich Moskvin. When Stalin queried this, his deputy Lazar Kaganovich explained that it was "because his surname is known as that of an NKVD functionary"[1][4] His tasks as a Comintern appear to have been those of a policeman rather than a communist agitator, including the recruitment of NKVD agents overseas and the kidnapping or assassination of various Soviet emigres, Comintern members and other 'enemies of the people'. Another of Trilisser's tasks was to recruit Soviet covert couriers to supply funds, training, and political support to various overseas communist movements deemed sympathetic to the Soviet Union.[2] In January 1936, he was tasked with verifying the loyalty of all Comintern staff and emigre communists in the USSR. By August, he had identified 3,000 possible 'saboteurs, spies, agents provocateur etc." whose names were passed to the NKVD.[5]

USA

In the United States, Trilisser provided Soviet visas for couriers sent to supply funds to a number of American left-wing trade unions, African-American worker organizations, and communist movements, including the CPUSA.[2] In January 1938, at the specific request and recommendation of Earl Browder, head of the Communist Party of the United States, Trilisser gave Max Bedacht, an American Communist Party activist and former unsuccessful New York Senate candidate,[6] a Soviet visa and employment as a courier supplying funds to the CPUSA and other communist front organizations. Bedacht soon began traveling between the United States, Europe, and the Soviet Union as a courier, using his official cover as an international delegate for the American Communist Party.[2]

Purge and death

Trilisser evidently came into conflict with NKVD boss Genrikh Yagoda, which led to his dismissal in 1929, but that meant that he was trusted by Yagoda's successor Nikolai Yezhov and survived the mass arrests of NKVD officers that followed Yagoda's dismissal. He was arrested on 23 November 1938, as Lavrenti Beria was wresting control of the NKVD from Yezhov. His sudden disappearance shocked the head of Comintern, Georgi Dimitrov, who tried to intervene, but was warned by Yezhov that 'Moskvin' was suspected of having been 'entrapped' into becoming a spy.[7] He was executed on 2 February 1940.

Legacy

In 1956, Trilisser was posthumously rehabilitated during the period of Destalinization.[1]

In 1967, a Soviet adventure TV series Operation Trust (Операция "Трест") was created.[8]

In 1983, his character appears in the final episodes of Reilly, Ace of Spies, portrayed by English actor Anthony Higgins.

Photos

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "Mikhail Abramovich Trilisser". Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation (SVR). 2000. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Klehr, Harvey; John Earl Haynes; Kirill Mikhaĭlovich Anderson (1998). The Soviet World of American Communism. Yale University Press. pp. 20 (years 1929–1935), 139–140 (1938). ISBN 978-0-300-07150-4.
  3. Jonathan Haslam (2015). Near and Distant Neighbors: A New History of Soviet Intelligence. Macmillan. ISBN 0-374-71040-6., p. 43.
  4. Davies, R.W., Khlevniuk, Oleg V. and Rees E.A (editors) (2003). The Stalin-Kaganovich Correspondence. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 301. ISBN 0-300-09367-5.
  5. Jansen, Marc, and Petrov, Nikolai (2002). Stalin's Loyal Executioner: People's Commissar Nikolai Ezhov, 1895–1940. Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-8179-2902-2.
  6. Max Bedacht, the Communist Party candidate for the 1934 New York Senate election, lost the election with 1.23% of votes cast.
  7. Banac, Ivo (editor) (2003). The Diary of Georgi Dimitrov 1933–1949. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 90. ISBN 0-300-09794-8.
  8. IMDb:Operatsiya Trest (TV 1967)

External sources

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