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Loyalty, Honor and Blood: The Secret History of the KGB – From the Cheka to the People's Commissariat of the Interior

author:History of the public number Monkey

The ultimate source of the recent global pandemic of the coronavirus (COV-19) has been an unsolved mystery, with reliable sources reporting that the virus has a distinctly synthetic component that contains a section of THE SARS ribonucleic acid and a section of HIV. While China and the United States and other countries are attacking each other for this reason, Russia is mysteriously silent and rarely appears, and during the period, there is also a "performance" of Saudi Arabia and Russia that are suspected of deliberate speculation to leverage crude oil prices. You know, many virus laboratories in the world have different degrees of management oversight, and the Russian military delegation has also come to Wuhan to participate in the World Military Games, and it coincides with the key sensitive period when the current president Putin, who is from the KGB class, wants to continue to be re-elected for 16 years. So, what kind of organization is the KGB that Putin once served, and today I will let Zhongjie gong lead everyone to deeply reveal the truth about the KGB.

KGB, full name "State Security Council of the USSR" (Russian: Комитет Государствено The Committee of State Security, along with the CIA, MI6 and the Israeli Mossad, is known as the "World's Four Intelligence Agencies", along with the CIA, MI6 and the Israeli Mossad. It was the core intelligence agency of the Soviet Union from March 13, 1954 to November 6, 1991, and was known for its ruthlessness, strength, and cleverness. Formerly known as the Cheka founded by Dzerzhinsky and the General Directorate of State Security under the Stalinist People's Commissariat of the Interior (NKVD), the early Soviet intelligence agency, the Cheka, would be headquartered at 2 Hovaya Street, Petrograd (St. Petersburg); In 1918 the Soviet government moved its capital to Moscow, and in 1920 the Cheka headquarters moved to 11 Lubyanka Square, near the Moscow Kremlin. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the KGB was reorganized into the Russian Federal Security Service; Its First General Directorate separately established the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service.

Of course, the Russians are much inferior to the major developed industrial countries in the West (constrained by the inland commune system and the primitive culture of mongolian Tatars), but they are familiar with secret police and intelligence espionage affairs, not only not inferior to the three major counterparts, but even in many aspects, they are much more powerful, and they have repeatedly made their peers feel frightened, scandalous, and even penetrated by the Russians very deeply, and comprehensive surveillance is completely unknown. It can be said that the KGB is not only a special product of the Soviet era, but also an inevitable product of the Russian nationality and culture. So, let's first look at what the KGB's predecessor, the Cheka, ---, and the NKVD did.

In 1914, Lenin was released from Switzerland by the Second German Empire and Emperor Wilhelm II for an opportunity to return to Russia. The Germans had thought that Lenin could be used as a puppet to dismantle Tsarist Russia from within and achieve their strategic goals, but they did not expect to open a new proletarian red century, which would have a very far-reaching impact on the world and themselves. As soon as Lenin returned to China, he considered the establishment of special intelligence and counter-espionage agencies to defend the core leadership of the Bolshevik Party and the victorious proletarian regime from aggression and infiltration by foreign forces to the greatest extent. The cheka's immediate founder and earliest leader was the famous Fedorke Kirzhinski, an idealistic Polish aristocrat who devoted himself to the revolution (similar to the background and experience of the famous military and marshal Tukhachevsky). Kirzhinsky had an extraordinary charisma, affectionate and ruthless, energetic and tender, and he was highly valued by all. During his lifetime, the Cheka contributed to the complete smashing of the White Russian rebel forces and the joint intervention of the West, and many important rebel leaders were assassinated, kidnapped and tried, and "disappeared". Until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, every office in the KGB headquarters building at 11 Lubiyan Square in Moscow hung with a deep and fascinating portrait of Dzerzhinsky, with sharp eyes monitoring and examining every member of it.

By the time of Stalin, the Cheka's successor, the People's Commissariat of the Interior, had been reorganized several times as Stalin's central instrument for consolidating his position within the party. As an important colleague in Lenin's day, Trotsky (also like Lenin, Bukharin, etc., was a Jewish faction in the Politburo, while Stalin vigorously supported the Caucasian faction) always had sharp contradictions and conflicts with Stalin. After Stalin came to power, he was forced to flee thousands of miles away to South America and Mexico to receive political asylum, and formed the so-called international Trotskyists, competed with Stalinism, and constantly attacked and criticized Stalin's actions, and published his own "Biography of Stalin". In response to this, Stalin was naturally furious, and he entrusted the task of assassinating Trotsky to Yezhov, then head of the People's Commissariat of internal affairs, who did not fail to live up to the expectations of the leadership and sent a young and handsome blonde boy, Yaslikov, who managed to sneak into Trotsky's residence first, rent a house, and lurk on standby. Later, Yaslikov sent a telegram to Yezhov and others that Trotsky's female secretaries were more mercurial and could use the "beautiful man plan", which was approved by the superiors after deliberation. Yaslikov slowly became a lover through an encounter with the female secretary, and was taken to see Trotsky by the woman's initiative. Yaslikov found Trotsky's guards extremely tight, and all the room entrances were heavily armed, highly guarded guards, making it difficult to get started. Therefore, after repeated consultations with his superiors, he decided to take the female secretary as a breakthrough point, gradually familiarize himself with the trust, cultivate "trust and feelings", and act opportunistically. After coming more than ten times, Tor felt that Yashilicev was still a relatively honest and lovely young man, and he did not see anything unusual, so he did not let down his vigilance, and even allowed Ya to approach himself within a meter to talk. After another month or so, while Tor was writing an anti-Stalin article, Yaslikov crept in again, and the guards, seeing that he had always had a good relationship with Tor and was the lover of his female secretary, did not interrogate him much. Tor was drowsy at this time, and suddenly saw this young man wearing a raincoat on a sunny day, which was very strange, but he did not ask much, nor did he subconsciously touch the revolver in his right hand as he did to others. Unexpectedly, the other party did not say a word, and suddenly took out a sharp axe from the inside of the wide raincoat and slashed at the tray. To a large number of years, where can withstand such a injury, all at once fainted. The guards were taken aback and opened fire, killing the killer indiscriminately, but it was too late, and by the time he was taken to the hospital, he had lost too much blood and the axe was coated with a fierce toxin, and soon he was killed, and Stalin used his intelligence apparatus to easily eliminate his political enemies thousands of miles away.

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