Who is Vlasov traitor biography. Exemplary traitor

10.10.2019

In June, under the auspices of the Federal Archival Agency, a two-volume collection of documents "General Vlasov: a history of betrayal" was published. It contains over 700 documents from 14 Russian and foreign archives. The compiler of the collection, Tatyana Tsarevskaya-Dyakina, told the Historian magazine about how Vlasov's movement appears in the light of new archival publications. The interview was conducted by Oleg NAZAROV.

What myths are refuted by the documents you published?

- First of all, they refute the myths about the Russian Liberation Army (ROA). In fact, ROA is a kind of generalized name for dotted Russian collaborationist formations, which was used exclusively for propaganda purposes. As a kind of unified structure, as an army, it began to form only at the end of 1944.

- But after all, the battalions of Russian collaborators appeared much earlier?

- Certainly. In the occupied territory of the USSR, until the autumn of 1943, they were mainly involved in punitive operations against partisans. After the Battle of Kursk, mass escapes began from them, and the Germans transferred the remnants of the Russian battalions to the Western Front. They fought in Italy against the partisans and in Normandy against the Allies. And only at the end of 1944, it was decided to form two divisions of the ROA. The order to appoint General Vlasov as commander of the Armed Forces of the Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia (KONR) was signed at the end of January 1945.

At the same time, it is important to understand that everything that was called the ROA was a German propaganda action. The Germans began to play the ROA card from the end of 1942, from the moment the famous “Smolensk Appeal” of the Russian Committee was published, signed, by the way, by Andrei Vlasov and Vasily Malyshkin not in Smolensk, but in Berlin.

We publish documents that show Vlasov's trip to the north-west of the country - Pskov, Luga, Vitebsk, Mogilev, etc. It was started to demonstrate Vlasov's independence to the population of the occupied territories. He called himself the commander of the ROA. But in reality, all the Russian battalions that fought on the side of Germany were commanded not by Vlasov, but by Wehrmacht officers. Vlasov did not command them for a single minute.

- How did Vlasov's voyage to the cities of the USSR end?

- Vlasov, who dreamed of creating a real ROA, turned out to be not completely manageable. In speeches, he said not only what the Germans wanted, and in connection with this, the propaganda campaign was quickly curtailed. The general was sent to live in a dacha on the outskirts of Berlin. Thus, he was taken for a short time through the cities of the USSR, and then they were assigned to the backyards as unnecessary. There he spent a year and a half, complaining to the German officer assigned to him that he, the commander of the Russian Liberation Army, had only one pair of underwear and torn underpants.

- But he really wanted to fight the Red Army?

- That's exactly what he wanted. But let's separate the desired from the real deeds. Russian battalions fought. And what did Vlasov personally do? I sat out my pants in a country house in Germany. He had his headquarters there. But he had no real business until July 1944.

In July 1944, after the second front was opened, and the Red Army entered the territory of European states, the situation of Nazi Germany became very complicated. Then, surrounded by the Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, there were people such as Günther d'Alken, who decided that all means were good for victory. They began to prepare the ground for a meeting between Himmler and Vlasov. Unfortunately for Vlasov, she was scheduled for July 21, as it turned out later, exactly the day after the assassination attempt on Hitler. Naturally, under the circumstances, the meeting was cancelled.

- And why did Vlasov not have a real case for so long?

- Adolf Hitler was skeptical about the idea with Vlasov. In their circle, the Germans spoke quite frankly about who Vlasov really was for them. And Heinrich Himmler in October 1943, speaking at a meeting in Poznan in front of the Reichleiters and Gauleiters, named the price for which the general was bought. Vlasov was told approximately the following: “The fact that you cannot go back now is, of course, clear to you. But you are a very prominent person, and we guarantee you that when the war ends, you will receive the pension of a Russian lieutenant general, and from now on and for the near future - schnapps, cigarettes and women.

I repeat, only at the end of 1944, Himmler decided to create KONR. The Germans put Vlasov at the head. A new stage has begun in the life of the general. Although Vlasov, as he was, remained until the end a puppet in the hands of the Nazis. The question of Vlasov's political independence was not raised even in November 1944. Even the famous manifesto on the creation of KONR was edited by the Germans.

- An extremely interesting fact. Especially when you consider that some "friends" of Russia assure us that Vlasov fought for freedom of speech, conscience, religion, for the availability of education, medicine and social security. And how did they manage to do this under the watchful eye of the Nazis?

- The Vlasovites even began to write the constitution of Russia. In the Boris Nikolaevsky Foundation, in the archives of the Hoover Institute for War, I saw a draft of it. Several hundred points. Some Russian emigrants of the first wave then managed to express their comments and at the same time, by the way, accused the Vlasovites of having taken many provisions from them.

- Did the Germans rule and edit this constitution?

- No. It was already 1945. The Nazis now had no time for editing such texts. Although in one of the German documents I came across a mention of the Vlasov constitution of Russia.

- What did the Vlasovites actually fight for? Why did they take up arms and use them against their fellow citizens? What were the motives for embarking on the path of betrayal?

- This can be judged by the protocols of interrogations, which are in the investigation file of Vlasov and his supporters. Many of those who went over to the side of the enemy simply chickened out. It seemed to someone at the beginning of the war that the German colossus would crush any resistance, and there was no point in resisting. Sergei Bunyachenko, who had already been arrested once, was afraid of being arrested again. Fear of arrest pushed Major General Vasily Malyshkin onto the path of betrayal.

Some traitors to the Motherland explained their choice by ideological and political reasons, rejection of Stalinism. So, Fyodor Trukhin, in June 1941, deputy chief of staff of the North-Western Front, after being captured - first in the fall of 1941, and then in the spring of 1942 - wrote several memos with proposals for ideological and subversive (including sabotage) work in Soviet rear. Former colonel of the Red Army Air Force Viktor Maltsev voluntarily surrendered in occupied Yalta and went to serve in the German commandant's office. Vladimir Boyarsky, Georgy Zhilenkov, Pavel Bogdanov were imbued with an anti-Soviet spirit.

If we talk about the rank and file, then we must bear in mind that the Red Army soldiers who were captured in the first year of the war were in German camps in appalling conditions. The number of those who died from hunger, cold, wounds and bullying went into the millions! It is not surprising that among the prisoners there were those who were ready to save their lives at any cost, just to get away from the nightmare that surrounded them. This fact is indicative. At the end of the war, the most difficult conditions of imprisonment were in the camps in Norway. The harsh climate and unbearably difficult working conditions resulted in a high mortality rate. So, it was in Norway in the winter of 1944-1945 that Grigory Zverev went to gather those who wanted to join the 2nd division of the ROA. And he brought people from there - not only privates, but also senior officers.

At the very end of the war, the desire to remain as a combat-ready and armed army was dictated by the hope that this would help to go over to the side of the Americans if they wanted to use the Vlasovites against the Bolsheviks. They hoped that the Americans would give them the opportunity to escape, provide them with work. Hopes were not justified. The Americans behaved very cautiously towards the Vlasovites. In principle, they were not averse to using Russian collaborators for their own purposes. But they perfectly understood that a person who betrayed once is able to betray again. In the documents, they frankly wrote about their uncertainty that among the Vlasovites there were no agents of the Soviet special services. Therefore, fearing to get into a mess, they preferred not to spoil relations with the allies in the Anti-Hitler coalition and handed over the Vlasovites who were captured by them to the Soviet Union.

- And how did the Red Army men treat the Vlasovites?

- One of the published documents gives an example of the behavior of the Vlasovites at the front. They shouted in Russian: “Don't shoot! We are ours." And when the Red Army approached, the Vlasovites shot them at close range. Our soldiers, who at least once encountered such vile tricks, had one reaction to the Vlasovites until the end of the war: “If you see a Vlasovite, kill him!”.

- Do the documents published for the first time allow us to learn something new about the relationship between Vlasov and Stalin?

- Stalin knew Vlasov, appreciated him as a military leader. For military operations during the battle for Moscow, Vlasov, then commander of the 20th Army, at the beginning of 1942, on the proposal of Georgy Zhukov, was awarded the Order of the Red Banner. Upon learning that Vlasov was surrounded, Stalin ordered to immediately find him and take him to the "mainland", if necessary, "putting the entire aviation of the front to carry out this task." We publish documents reflecting Moscow's efforts to save the general. Having received unconfirmed information about the presence of Vlasov in one of the partisan detachments, Stalin sent several planes to search for him. Not all of them came back: the pilots who tried to pull Vlasov out of the Volkhov swamps died. Moreover, attempts to find Vlasov were not left even when, as it turned out later, he was already in captivity. Contrary to the claims of Vlasov's admirers and the statements of the general himself that he was taken prisoner in battle, in fact he surrendered to the Germans without firing a shot or any resistance.

In 1943, the Germans launched a huge propaganda campaign around Vlasov, in modern terms, a PR campaign, the purpose of which was to lure the Red Army soldiers to the side of the enemy and create military formations from them, which received the generalized name ROA. As a retaliatory measure aimed at exposing Vlasov, the Main Political Directorate of the Red Army prepared a leaflet "Who is Vlasov." Stalin personally made changes to the draft document with a red pencil. He replaced the original wording with harsher ones, made the text more rude, harsh and offensive. In this form, a leaflet with a circulation of several thousand copies was published and distributed among the Red Army. It was translated into many languages, making it available to Soviet soldiers of different nationalities. So Stalin expressed his personal attitude to the betrayal of the general.

Vlasov's defenders say he had no choice. In the appendix to the first volume, we gave the protocols of interrogations of other Soviet generals who were taken prisoner. They answered questions fairly frankly. However, most of them did not cooperate with the Nazis. A typical example is the former army commander, Lieutenant General Mikhail Lukin. During interrogations, he scolded collectivization, the Bolsheviks and their policies, but categorically refused to cooperate with the Germans. This is to the question of whether Vlasov had a choice. Even after he surrendered, he had a choice - to cooperate with the Germans or not. And Vlasov made his choice.

- How did he behave during the investigation and trial?

- Vlasov was broken. He gave himself an account of what awaited him. Many things he said quite openly. The revelation of the truth was facilitated by the testimony of other defendants, confrontations, etc. We also present these materials in the book.

- Some publicists assure us that the defendants were tortured...

- Allegations that they were tortured, knocking out the testimony necessary for the investigation, are made without evidence. According to the protocols, it can be seen that those interrogated, especially towards the end of the investigation, were completely frank.

- In the preface to the two-volume book, it is noted that "all post-war memoirs and literature created by former collaborators are predominantly exculpatory in nature." Are you aware of exceptions to this rule?

- Yes. We publish the memoirs of Nikolai von Erzdorf, in which a certain negative attitude towards Vlasov and the ROA can be traced. They have not been published before. The author, a former White Guard officer, accused Vlasov and his entourage of instilling Soviet management principles in the ROA and paying little attention to the needs of the soldiers. And this is quite understandable. When at the end of 1944 they began to form divisions of the ROA, former Soviet officers were appointed to command and staff positions. They commanded as best they could and as they were taught.

- How does modern historiography evaluate the phenomenon of the Vlasovites and attempts to justify them?

- Many Western authors see in Vlasov, first of all, fighters against Stalinism. The authors who describe Soviet collaborationism in rosy tones are united by a common methodological flaw: they recognize the fight against Bolshevism (USSR, communism) as the most important strategic task, a “liberation mission”, which in itself justifies any methods and means, including an alliance with the Nazis. Their interpretation of collaborationism during the Second World War is a typical example of assessments from the standpoint of a “double standard”: to refuse the oath to France and serve the Nazis (Marshal Henri Philippe Pétain) is treason, but to refuse the oath to the Soviet Union and serve the same Nazis (General Vlasov) - this is, if not a feat, then a “liberation movement”.

Post-Vlasov structures in the West began to emerge immediately after the end of World War II. We have not yet had time to hang Vlasov, and in the West they have already begun to glorify the general and his supporters, to represent the victim of two regimes. The people who remained after the war in the West needed their own hero...

- Vlasov's story continues to this day. Last November, a conference was held in the capital of the Czech Republic, timed to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the creation of the KONR and the promulgation of the Prague Manifesto. On it, both Europeans and individual citizens of Russia sympathetically recalled Vlasov. According to one of Vlasov's apologists, the main idea-call of that "manifesto is an irreconcilable and resolute struggle against totalitarianism, against the communist dictatorship." And what considerations are guided by Russian historians - such as Kirill Alexandrov - whitewashing Vlasov?

- Today there is an opportunity to go to work in foreign archives. The field of activity is extensive. Alexandrov collected a huge archival and bibliographic material, as evidenced by his book “Officer Corps of the Army of Lieutenant General A.A. Vlasov, 1944 - 1945", published in 2009. It is a detailed reference book of people around the general. However, the collected information can be analyzed in different ways. The researcher can reconstruct the outline of events by strictly following the documents. Or maybe, having your own concept, select documents to confirm it. The latter is exactly what Alexandrov does. His work leaves no doubt on whose side the author's sympathies are. It is no coincidence that he avoids the term "collaborationism", knowing that since the time of the international Nuremberg Tribunal, this phenomenon has been condemned.

- Are there any unsolved mysteries around the case and personality of General Vlasov?

- The questions that are waiting for their researchers remain. The same Alexandrov periodically mentions documents, without giving a link to where they are located, in what archive and in what fund. Searching for some documents, I had the opportunity to follow Alexandrov's trail more than once. As a result, it came to a standstill. The question inevitably arose: do these documents actually exist in nature?

I have been a publisher for 25 years now. During this time, I have not published a single document that I would not have seen. I must get either the original or a copy of the original. Until I see them, I cannot say whether such a document actually existed. Now many copies of copies that are actively used by researchers are traveling around the world and on the Internet. Not all of them are reliable.

In addition, there are unexamined documents. For example, not all materials on Vlasov's investigative case were provided to us. There is another source that no one has yet reached. In New York, in the Bakhmetiev Archive of Columbia University, all funds are available, except for the Mikhail Shatov Fund.

- Who was he?

- The real name of Shatov is Kashtanov. He was an officer in the ROA, then hiding in the French zone of occupation under a false name. In 1950, he emigrated to the United States, where he had to become a house painter, a bricklayer, and a taxi driver. In 1955 - 1971, when Shatov was already working in the library of Columbia University, he collected the ROA archive: memoirs, leaflets, information of any nature. He knew many, corresponded with many. Shatov created and published a bibliography of publications on the ROA. He was denied access to researchers to use the documents in his fund. His heir (son) has so far ordered to keep his father's fund in closed storage. It cannot be excluded that when these documents are finally opened, we will find something interesting in them. There are other mysteries as well. Archivists and historians still have work to do.

But even if some new documents are found or someone's letters or memoirs are found, they will not change the overall picture. The main conclusion will remain unchanged: Vlasov was a traitor and a puppet in the hands of enemies, with whom not only the Soviet Union, but also other countries of the Anti-Hitler coalition fought.

Magazine "Historian". 2015. No. 7 - 8. P. 90 - 95.

A tall man in round glasses has not been able to sleep for several days now. The main traitor, General of the Red Army Andrei Vlasov, is interrogated by several NKVD investigators, replacing each other day and night for ten days. They are trying to understand how they could miss the traitor in their orderly ranks, devoted to the cause of Lenin and Stalin.

He had no children, he never had a spiritual attachment to women, his parents died. All he had was his life. And he loved to live. His father, a church elder, was proud of his son.

Parental traitorous roots

Andrei Vlasov never dreamed of being a military man, but, as a literate person who graduated from a religious school, he was drafted into the ranks of Soviet commanders. He often came to his father and saw how the new government was destroying his family strong nest.

He used to betray

Parsing archival documents, traces of Vlasov's military operations on the fronts of the Civil War cannot be found. He was a typical staff "rat", which, by the will of fate, ended up at the top of the country's command podium. One fact speaks about how he moved up the career ladder. Arriving with an inspection at the 99th Infantry Division and learning that the commander was carefully studying the methods of action of the German troops, he immediately wrote a denunciation of him. The commander of the 99th Rifle Division, which was one of the best in the Red Army, was arrested and shot. Vlasov was appointed to his place. This behavior has become the norm for him. No remorse of conscience of this man was tormented.

First environment

In the early days of the Great Patriotic War, Vlasov's army was surrounded near Kiev. The general leaves the encirclement not in the ranks of his units, but together with his fighting girlfriend.

But Stalin forgave him this offense. Vlasov received a new appointment - to lead the main attack near Moscow. But he is in no hurry to go to the troops, referring to pneumonia and poor health. According to one version, the entire preparation of the operation near Moscow fell on the shoulders of the most experienced staff officer Leonid Sandalov.

"Star disease" - the second reason for betrayal

Stalin appoints Vlasov as the main winner of the battle near Moscow.

The general begins "star fever". According to the reviews of his colleagues, he becomes rude, arrogant, mercilessly curses his subordinates. Constantly trumps his proximity to the leader. Does not obey the orders of Georgy Zhukov, who is his immediate superior. The transcript of the conversation between the two generals shows a fundamentally different attitude to the conduct of hostilities. During the offensive near Moscow, Vlasov's units attacked the Germans along the road, where the enemy's defense was extremely strong. Zhukov, in a telephone conversation, orders Vlasov to counterattack, off-road, as Suvorov did. Vlasov refuses, citing high snow - about 60 centimeters. This argument infuriates Zhukov. He orders a new attack. Vlasov disagrees again. These disputes last for more than one hour. And in the end, Vlasov still gives up and gives the order Zhukov needs.

How Vlasov surrendered

The second shock army under the command of General Vlasov was surrounded in the Volkhov swamps and gradually lost its soldiers under the pressure of superior enemy forces. Along a narrow corridor, shot through from all sides, scattered units of Soviet soldiers tried to break through to their own.

But General Vlasov did not go along this corridor of death. Through unknown ways, on July 11, 1942, Vlasov deliberately surrendered to the Germans in the village of Tukhovezhi, Leningrad Region, where the Old Believers lived.

For some time he lived in Riga, food was brought by a local policeman. He told the new owners about the strange guest. A car drove up to Riga. Vlasov came out to meet them. He said something to them. The Germans saluted him and left.

The Germans could not accurately determine the position of a man dressed in a worn jacket. But the fact that he was dressed in riding breeches with the stripes of a general said that this bird was very important.

From the first minutes, he begins to lie to the German investigators: he introduced himself as a certain Zuev.

When the German investigators began to interrogate him, he confessed almost immediately who he was. Vlasov stated that in 1937 he became one of the participants in the anti-Stalinist movement. However, at that time Vlasov was a member of the military tribunal of two districts. He always signed the execution lists of Soviet soldiers and officers convicted under various articles.

Women betrayed countless times

The general always surrounded himself with women. Officially, he had one wife. Anna Voronina from her native village led her weak-willed husband mercilessly. They had no children due to an unsuccessful abortion. The young military doctor Agnes Podmazenko, his second common-law wife, left the encirclement near Kiev with him. The third, nurse Maria Voronina, was captured by the Germans when she was hiding with him in the village of Tukhovezhi.

All three women ended up in prison, suffered the brunt of torture and humiliation. But General Vlasov was no longer worried. Agenheld Biedenberg, the widow of an influential SS man, became the general's last wife. She was the sister of Himmler's adjutant and helped her new husband in every possible way. Adolf Hitler attended their wedding on April 13, 1945.

General Vlasov

What was this man, whose name is synonymous with betrayal, what events in his life made possible his cooperation with the Wehrmacht? Who is General A. A. Vlasov - an ideological opponent of Stalinism or a victim of circumstances?

Vlasov Andrey Andreevich was born in 1901, on September 14 (1) in the village. Lomakino, near Nizhny Novgorod, in the family of a middle peasant. He was the youngest son in a large family. After studying at a rural school, the boy was sent to study at a theological seminary in Nizhny Novgorod. But what happened in 1917 changed all plans, and 17-year-old Andrei Vlasov goes to study as an agronomist. 1919 became a fateful year, Vlasov was drafted into the ranks of the Red Army and he would never become an agronomist. Vlasov's life will be closely connected with the army.

His military career began in 1919 at the end of command courses, then - fighting on the fronts of the Civil War, after 1922 - command and staff positions, teaching, higher command courses in 1929, joining the ranks of the Bolshevik Communists, since 1935 A A. Vlasov is studying at the Military Academy. Frunze. Rapid career growth! The high military command of the USSR trust Vlasov so much that they send him to China in the fall of 1938 as a military adviser. And in six months, Vlasov will become Chiang Kai-shek's chief military consultant, and part-time - a spiritual friend of his wife, as well as the owner of 4 teenage girls, bought by him on the market cheaply, for less than half a month's salary. The Chinese generalissimo highly appreciated Vlasov as a military specialist, and presented him with the Order of the Golden Dragon, and his wife gave him a watch, while Vlasov himself brought three more suitcases of all sorts to his homeland. Chinese awards, gifts and acquired goods were taken away from a military adviser in the USSR, about which Vlasov was very lamented.
After returning from a business trip to China, Major General Vlasov was sent to the 99th Infantry Division with a check, later he was appointed commander. Head of the 4th mech. corps, located in Western Ukraine, Vlasov was appointed in the winter of 1940-41. Here, for General Vlasov, the Great War began. For skillful and competent actions, Vlasov receives positive reviews from Timoshenko and Khrushchev and is sent as commander to the 37th Army, to the Southwestern Front to organize the defense of Kyiv. The army was surrounded through no fault of the new commander, but Kyiv had to surrender to the enemy and leave the encirclement. Only by the end of November 1941 did the remnants of the army unite with the Soviet troops. I.V. called Vlasov and gave the order to form the 20th Army in order to ensure the defense of Moscow. The battles for Moscow were fierce, but the army under the command of Vlasov managed to push the Germans back from Volokolamsk and Solnechnogorsk. For the successful defense of Moscow, Vlasov was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general and awarded the Order of the Red Banner. Chief of the General Staff G.K. spoke of General Vlasov as a quite skillful and competent commander, and CAM treated Vlasov very well, appreciated him.

Fatal for Vlasov was his appointment as commander of the 2nd shock army. They were appointed to command the encircled army, whose fighters barely survived the terrible frosty and hungry winter, staggering from fatigue and exhaustion. Futile attempts were made four times to break through the encirclement. The remnants of the army were selected from the encirclement in small groups. General Vlasov and his small companions, after three weeks of wandering through forests and swamps, on July 12, 1942, went to the village, asked for food, while they ate, the headman reported to the Germans, who soon arrived in the village. General Vlasov, apparently, then decided to surrender. Subsequently, he was transferred to Vinnitsa, to a camp for senior officers of the Red Army, where he was interrogated, at which the general described in detail the state of affairs on the fronts, what strategic plans were being made at Headquarters. Vlasov became interested in the Minister of Propaganda of the III Reich, Goebbels, and he suggested using the general for agitation among those dissatisfied with the Stalinist regime and prisoners of war. Vlasov was asked to form the Russian Liberation Army (ROA). A full-fledged army did not work out, only two divisions, somehow completed. The ROA never ended up on the Eastern Front, performing escort and punitive functions, the Russians, after all, were not trusted by the Germans. Engaged in agitation, the general managed to resolve personal issues by marrying a millionaire widow. But the war was ending, and it was already obvious that the Nazis would not see victory, the allies would have to surrender and ask for asylum. But the allies, fulfilling the Yalta agreement, gave the traitor general to the SMERSH detachment, Vlasov was taken to Moscow. The investigation was conducted for almost a year, although the verdict on Vlasov and his 11 accomplices was passed by the Politburo of the Central Committee back in 1943. The court session was closed, without a prosecutor and a lawyer. The verdict was read out on August 1, 1946, the convicts were deprived of titles, awards, personal property and were sentenced to death by hanging.

Place of birth: Lomakino village, Nizhny Novgorod province
Place of death: Moscow
Rank: Lieutenant General of the Red Army
Commanded: 4th Mechanized Corps, 20th Army, 37th Army, 2nd Shock Army (1941-1942),
Russian Liberation Army (1942-1945)
Battles/wars: Civil War in Russia, Great Patriotic War, Battle of Dubno - Lutsk - Brody (1941), Kiev operation (1941), Moscow battle (1941-1942), Luban operation
Awards: Order of the Golden Dragon, Order of Lenin, Order of the Red Banner, Jubilee medal "XX Years of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army". Subsequently, he was deprived of all awards and titles.

Vlasov Andrey Andreevich- Soviet lieutenant general (since 1942; stripped of his rank by a court verdict). On April 20, 1942, he was appointed commander of the 2nd shock army, remaining part-time deputy commander of the Volkhov Front. During the war, he was captured and went to cooperate with the Nazis against the USSR, becoming the head of the military organization of collaborators from Soviet prisoners of war - the Russian Liberation Army (ROA).

Andrei Vlasov was born on September 14, 1901 in the village of Lomakino, now in the Gaginsky district of the Nizhny Novgorod region, in the family of a simple Nizhny Novgorod peasant. At the end of a rural school, he, as a very capable child, was sent to study further, but since the family was rather poor, they chose the cheapest educational institution for him - a religious school. But the funds were still not enough, and the teenager had to engage in tutoring.

In 1915, Vlasov graduated from college and enters the seminary, and after 1917 it passes into a unified labor school of the second degree. In 1919, he was already a student at the Faculty of Agronomy at the University of Nizhny Novgorod. But there was a civil war, and A.A. Vlasov went to the Red Army. The first front for him was the South, where he fought with other Red Army soldiers against Baron Wrangel. Then he participated in the battles of Makhno, Kamenyuk and Popov.

After the end of the civil war, the former student did not return to study at the University of Nizhny Novgorod. He remained to serve in the Red Army. First he commanded a platoon, then a company. After - he taught tactics at a military school in Leningrad. In the late 1930s, his promotion went especially fast. Vlasov was appointed division commander. A few months later he was sent on a secret government mission: he became a military attache in China under Chiang Kai-shek. In 1939, Vlasov received the post of division commander - in the Kiev Special Military District.

Excerpts from the army characteristics of Vlasov:

"Very intelligent growing commander"
“In the division, the general order has been tightened up in a few months”
“The level of tactical training in his division is very high”

According to the results of military exercises that took place in September 1940, Vlasov's division was awarded the Red Banner. It is worth noting that the exercises were held in the presence of the People's Commissar of Defense S.K. Timoshenko himself.

The Great Patriotic War

The war for Andrei Vlasov began near Lvov, where he served as commander of the 4th mechanized corps. He received gratitude for his skillful actions and, on the recommendation of N. S. Khrushchev, was appointed commander of the 37th Army, which defended Kyiv. After fierce battles, scattered formations of this army managed to break through to the east, and Vlasov himself was wounded and ended up in the hospital.

In November 1941, Stalin summoned Vlasov and ordered him to form the 20th Army, which would be part of the Western Front and defend the capital.

On December 5, near the village of Krasnaya Polyana (located 27 km from the Moscow Kremlin), the Soviet The 20th Army under the command of General Vlasov stopped parts of the German 4th Panzer Army, making a significant contribution to the victory near Moscow. In Soviet times, a version appeared that Vlasov himself was in the hospital at that time, and either the commander of the operational group A. I. Lizyukov or the chief of staff L. M. Sandalov led the fighting.

Overcoming the stubborn resistance of the enemy, the 20th Army drove the Germans out of Solnechnogorsk and Volokolamsk. On January 24, 1942, for the battles on the Lama River, he received the rank of lieutenant general and was awarded the second Order of the Red Banner. Near Vlasov, the armies of Rokossovsky and Govorov acted. Rokossovsky and Govorov subsequently became Marshals of the Soviet Union.

Zhukov assessed Vlasov's actions as follows:

“Personally, Lieutenant General Vlasov is operationally well prepared, he has organizational skills. He copes with the management of the troops quite well. After the successes near Moscow, Andrei Andreyevich Vlasov, along with other generals of the Red Army, is called the "saviors of the capital." On the instructions of the Main Political Directorate about Vlasov, a book is being written called "Stalin's commander"

On January 7, 1942, the troops of the 2nd Shock Army broke through the enemy defenses in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe settlement of Myasnoy Bor (on the left bank of the Volkhov River) and deeply wedged into its location (in the direction of Lyuban). But not having the strength to continue the offensive, the army was in a difficult position. The enemy cut her communications several times, creating a threat of encirclement. By March 26, the enemy managed to unite his Chudovskaya and Novgorod groupings, create an external front along the Polist River and an internal front along the Glushitsa River. Thus, the communications of the 2nd shock army and several formations of the 59th army were interrupted.

March 8, 1942 Lieutenant General A. A. Vlasov was appointed Deputy Commander of the Volkhov Front. On March 20, 1942, the commander of the Volkhov Front, K. A. Meretskov, sent his deputy A. A. Vlasov at the head of a special commission to the 2nd shock army (Lieutenant General N. K. Klykov). “For three days, members of the commission talked with commanders of all ranks, with political workers, with soldiers,” and on April 8, 1942, having drawn up an inspection report, the commission departed, but without General A. A. Vlasov. The dismissed (“seriously ill”) General Klykov was sent to the rear by plane on April 16.

The question naturally arose, to whom to entrust the leadership of the troops of the 2nd shock army? On the same day, a telephone conversation took place between A. A. Vlasov and the divisional commissar I. V. Zuev with Meretskov. Zuev proposed to appoint Vlasov to the post of commander, and Vlasov - the chief of staff of the army, Colonel P. S. Vinogradov. The Military Council of the Volkhov Front supported Zuev's idea. So ... Vlasov from April 20, 1942 (Monday) became the commander of the 2nd shock army, while remaining deputy commander of the Volkhov Front. He received troops that were practically no longer able to fight, he received an army that had to be saved ...

During May-June, the 2nd shock army under the command of A. A. Vlasov made desperate attempts to break out of the bag.

“We will strike from the Polist line at 20:00 on June 4. We don’t hear the actions of the troops of the 59th Army from the east, there is no long-range artillery fire ”- Vlasov. June 4, 1942. 00 hours 45 minutes.

The commander of the Volkhov operational group, Lieutenant-General M. S. Khozin, did not comply with the directive of the Headquarters (dated May 21) on the withdrawal of army troops. As a result, the 2nd shock army was surrounded, and Khozin himself was removed from his post on June 6. For a short time it was possible to break through the encirclement. Then a narrow corridor 300 - 400 meters wide was formed. Under the crossfire of the enemy, it turned into the "Valley of Death": German machine gunners sitting on both sides shot thousands of our soldiers. When a “hill” formed from the corpses, the machine gunners simply climbed onto it and fired from there. So senselessly our soldiers perished. Until mid-July, small groups of fighters and commanders of the 2nd Shock Force still seeped through the front line.

MILITARY COUNCIL OF THE VOLKHOV FRONT. Before put: arm troopsand for three weeks they have been conducting tense fierce battles with the enemy ... The personnel of the troops are exhausted to the limit, the number of deaths and morbidity from exhaustion increases every day. As a result of the cross-fire of the army area, the troops suffer heavy losses from artillery mortar fire and enemy aircraft ... The combat strength of the formations has sharply decreased. It is no longer possible to replenish it at the expense of rears and special units. Everything that was taken. On June 16, battalions, brigades, and rifle regiments had, on average, only a few dozen men left. All attempts by the eastern group of the army to break through the passage in the corridor from the west were unsuccessful ”- Vlasov, Zuev, Vinogradov.

JUNE 21, 1942. 8 HOURS 10 MINUTES. HEAD OF GSHKA. MILITARY COUNCIL OF THE FRONT. “Army troops receive fifty grams of crackers for three weeks. The last days there was absolutely no food. We eat the last horses. People are extremely exhausted. Group mortality from starvation is observed. There is no ammunition ... "- Vlasov, Zuev.

On June 25, the enemy liquidated the corridor. The testimonies of various witnesses do not answer the question of where Lieutenant General Andrei Andreevich Vlasov was hiding for the next three weeks - whether he wandered in the forest or whether there was some kind of reserve command post to which his group made its way. On July 11, 1942, in the village of Old Believers Tukhovezhi, Vlasov was extradited by local residents (according to another version, he surrendered himself) to a patrol of the 28th Infantry Regiment of the 18th Wehrmacht Army.

Versions of the capture of General Vlasov


  • A German officer, commander of a platoon of the 550th penal battalion, taken prisoner near Vitebsk in February 1944, testified during interrogation that Vlasov, dressed in civilian clothes, was hiding in a bathhouse near the village of Mostki south of Chudov. The village headman detained Vlasov and handed him over to the head of the intelligence department of the 38th Aviation Corps.
  • A Soviet officer, former deputy head of the political department of the 46th Infantry Division, Major A.I. Zubov named a slightly different place - Sennaya Kerest. On July 3, 1943, he reported that in search of food, Vlasov went into one of the houses. While he was eating, the house was surrounded. Seeing the German soldiers entering, he said: “Don't shoot! I am the commander of the second shock army Andrey Vlasov "Cook A. Vlasov Voronova M. tells:" Being surrounded, Vlasov, among thirty or forty staff workers, tried to connect with the Red Army, but nothing happened. Wandering through the forest, we connected with the leadership of one division, and there were about two hundred of us. Around July 1942, near Novgorod, the Germans discovered us in the forest and imposed a battle, after which I, Vlasov, the soldier Kotov and the driver Pogibko went to the villages. Pogiko with the wounded Kotov went to one village, and Vlasov and I went to another. When we entered the village, I don’t know its name, we went into one house, where we were mistaken for partisans, the local “samoohova” surrounded the house, and we were arrested.
  • According to the latest version: Vlasov, the cook Voronova M., the adjutant and chief of staff Vinogradov, badly wounded, went to the village, where Vlasov's adjutant remained with the exhausted and sick Vinogradov. Vinogradov was shivering, and Vlasov gave him his overcoat. He himself, together with the cook, went to another village, where they asked the first person they met (as it turned out, the headman of the village) to feed them. In return, Vlasov gave him his silver watch. The headman told them that the Germans were walking everywhere and offered to sit in the bathhouse while he was bringing food, and in order not to arouse unnecessary suspicion, he would ban them. Vinogradov and the adjutant had not had time to eat, as the locals had already called the Germans to hand over the partisans. When the Germans arrived, they saw Vlasov's overcoat and a man who, according to the description, was very similar to Vlasov (they really were very similar), they immediately arrested him. And then they called from the "Vlasov" village. The Germans really did not want to go there - what do they care about ordinary partisans when they are taking Vlasov himself. But, in the end, this village was on the way to the headquarters, and they stopped by. They were very surprised when another “Vlasov” came out of the bathhouse, who said: “Do not shoot! I am Commander Vlasov! They did not believe him, but he showed documents signed by Stalin himself.

Vlasov himself wrote in his appeals and leaflets that was captured in battle. But both German and Soviet sources claim otherwise. Major Zubov, a participant in the exit from the encirclement of a group of officers of the 2nd Shock Army, recalled that Vlasov, under all pretexts, tried to reduce the size of his group. Maybe because it would have been easier to get out, but maybe they just didn’t need extra witnesses.

An alternative version of Vlasov's transition to the enemy side:

In separate memoirs, you can find a version that Vlasov was captured even earlier - in the fall of 1941, surrounded near Kiev - where he was recruited and transferred across the front line. He is also credited with the order to destroy all the employees of his headquarters who did not want to surrender with him. So, the writer Ivan Stadnyuk claims that he heard this from General Saburov. This version is not confirmed by the published archival documents.

There is also a conspiracy theory but, according to which, in reality, instead of Vlasov, on August 1, 1946, another person was hanged, and Vlasov himself subsequently lived for many years under a different surname.

According to V. I. Filatov and a number of other authors, General A. A. Vlasov is a Soviet intelligence officer (an employee of the foreign intelligence of the NKVD or military intelligence - the Intelligence Directorate of the General Staff of the Red Army), who since 1938 worked in China under the pseudonym "Volkov", conducting intelligence activity against Japan and Germany, and then during the Great Patriotic War was successfully abandoned to the Germans. The execution of Vlasov in 1946 is associated with a "welter" of the special services - the MGB and the NKVD - as a result of which, by the personal decision of Stalin and Abakumov, Vlasov was eliminated as a dangerous and unnecessary witness. Later, a significant part of the materials of the investigation in the "case" of Vlasov, Bunyachenko and other leaders of the Armed Forces of the KONR was destroyed.

Being in the Vinnitsa military camp for captured senior officers, Vlasov agreed to cooperate with the Nazis and headed the "Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia" (KONR) and the "Russian Liberation Army" (ROA), made up of captured Soviet soldiers.

General Vlasov and other encircled:

Many of those who remained in the encirclement held out to the end, mostly fighters captured in the corridor and lightly wounded from large hospitals were captured. Many, under the threat of capture, shot themselves, such as, for example, a member of the Military Council of the Army, divisional commissar I. V. Zuev. Others were able to go out to their own people or make their way to the partisans, such as, for example, the commissar of the 23rd brigade N. D. Allahverdiev, who became the commander of the partisan detachment. Warriors of the 267th division also fought in partisan detachments, military doctor of the 3rd rank E.K. Gurinovich, nurse Zhuravleva, commissar Vdovenko, and others.

But there were few of them, most were captured. Basically, completely exhausted, exhausted people, often wounded, shell-shocked, in a semi-conscious state, were captured, such as, for example, the poet, senior political instructor M. M. Zalilov (Musa Jalil). Many did not even have time to shoot at the enemy, suddenly colliding with the Germans. However, once captured, the Soviet soldiers did not cooperate with the Germans. Several officers who went over to the side of the enemy are an exception to the general rule: in addition to General A. A. Vlasov, the commander of the 25th brigade, Colonel P. G. Sheludko, officers of the headquarters of the 2nd shock army, Major Verstkin, Colonel Goryunov and quartermaster 1 rank Zhukovsky.

For example, the commander of the 327th division, General I. M. Antyufeev, being wounded, was captured on July 5. Antyufeev refused to help the enemy, and the Germans sent him to a camp in Kaunas, then he worked in a mine. After the war, Antyufeev was reinstated in the rank of general, continued to serve in the Soviet Army and retired as a major general. The head of the medical and sanitary service of the 2nd shock army, military doctor of the 1st rank Boborykin, specially remained surrounded in order to save the wounded of the army hospital. On May 28, 1942, the command awarded him the Order of the Red Banner. While in captivity, he wore the uniform of the commander of the Red Army and continued to provide medical assistance to prisoners of war. After returning from captivity, he worked at the Military Medical Museum in Leningrad.

At the same time, numerous cases are known when prisoners of war and in captivity continued to fight the enemy. The feat of Musa Jalil and his "Moabit Notebooks" are widely known. There are other examples as well. The head of the sanitary service and brigade doctor of the 23rd rifle brigade, Major N. I. Kononenko, was captured on June 26, 1942, along with the staff of the brigade medical unit. After eight months of hard work in Amberg, on April 7, 1943, he was transferred as a doctor to the camp infirmary in the city of Ebelsbach (Lower Bavaria). There he became one of the organizers of the "Revolutionary Committee", turning his infirmary in the Mauthausen camp into the center of the patriotic underground. The Gestapo tracked down the "Committee" and on July 13, 1944 he was arrested, and on September 25, 1944 he was shot along with other 125 underground workers. The commander of the 844th regiment of the 267th division V.A. Pospelov and the chief of staff of the regiment B.G. Nazirov were wounded, where they continued to fight the enemy and in April 1945 led an uprising in the Buchenwald concentration camp.

An illustrative example is the political instructor of the company of the 1004th regiment of the 305th division D. G. Telnykh. Having been wounded (wounded in the leg) and shell-shocked in June 1942, he was sent to camps, finally ending up in a camp at the Schwarzberg mine. In June 1943, Telnykh fled from the camp, after which the Belgian peasants in the village of Waterloo helped contact partisan detachment No. 4 of Soviet prisoners of war (Red Army Lieutenant Colonel Kotovets). The detachment was part of the Russian partisan brigade "For the Motherland" (lieutenant colonel K. Shukshin). Telnykh participated in the battles, soon became a platoon commander, and from February 1944 - a company political instructor. In May 1945, the “For the Motherland” brigade captured the city of Mayzak and held it for eight hours until the British troops approached. After the war, Telnykh, along with other fellow partisans, returned to serve in the Red Army.

Two months earlier, in April 1942, during the withdrawal from the encirclement of the 33rd Army, its commander M. G. Efremov and officers of the army headquarters committed suicide. And if M. G. Efremov, with his death, “whitewashed even those faint-hearted ones who faltered in difficult times and left their commander to escape alone,” then they looked at the fighters of the 2nd shock through the prism of A. A. Vlasov’s betrayal.

Vlasov wrote an open letter "Why I took the path of fighting Bolshevism". In addition, he signed leaflets calling for the overthrow of the Stalinist regime, which were subsequently scattered by the Nazi army from aircraft at the fronts, and also distributed among prisoners of war.

Why did I take the path of fighting Bolshevism "(A. A. Vlasov)":

Calling on all Russian people to rise up to fight against Stalin and his clique, for the construction of a New Russia without Bolsheviks and capitalists, I consider it my duty to explain my actions.

I was not offended by the Soviet regime.

I am the son of a peasant, I was born in the Nizhny Novgorod province, I studied for pennies, I achieved a higher education. I accepted the people's revolution, joined the ranks of the Red Army to fight for land for the peasants, for a better life for the workers, for a brighter future for the Russian people. Since then, my life has been inextricably linked with the life of the Red Army. I served in its ranks continuously for 24 years. I went from an ordinary soldier to an army commander and a deputy front commander. I commanded a company, battalion, regiment, division, corps. I was awarded the Orders of Lenin, the Red Banner and the medal of the 20th Anniversary of the Red Army. Since 1930 I have been a member of the CPSU(b).

And now I am coming out to fight against Bolshevism and calling for me the whole people, whose son I am.

Why? This question arises for everyone who reads my appeal, and I must give an honest answer to it. During the years of the Civil War, I fought in the Red Army because I believed that the revolution would give the Russian people land, freedom and happiness.

Being the commander of the Red Army, I lived among the fighters and commanders - Russian workers, peasants, intellectuals, dressed in gray overcoats. I knew their thoughts, their thoughts, their worries and hardships. I did not break ties with my family, with my village, and I knew what and how a peasant lives.

And now I saw that nothing of what the Russian people fought for during the years of the civil war, they did not receive as a result of the victory of the Bolsheviks.

I saw how hard life was for the Russian worker, how the peasant was forcibly driven into collective farms, how millions of Russian people disappeared, arrested without trial or investigation. I saw that everything Russian was trampled underfoot, that sycophants were promoted to leading positions in the country, as well as to command posts in the Red Army, people who did not care about the interests of the Russian people.

The system of commissars was corrupting the Red Army. Irresponsibility, surveillance, espionage made the commander a toy in the hands of party officials in civilian clothes or military uniforms.

From 1938 to 1939 I was in China as a military adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. When I returned to the USSR, it turned out that during this time the highest command staff of the Red Army was destroyed without any reason on the orders of Stalin. Many, many thousands of the best commanders, including marshals, were arrested and shot, or imprisoned in concentration camps and disappeared forever. Terror spread not only to the army, but to the whole people. There was no family that somehow escaped this fate. The army was weakened, the frightened people looked into the future with horror, waiting for the war being prepared by Stalin.

Foreseeing the enormous sacrifices that the Russian people would inevitably have to bear in this war, I strove to do everything in my power to strengthen the Red Army. The 99th division, which I commanded, was recognized as the best in the Red Army. By work and constant concern for the military unit entrusted to me, I tried to drown out the feeling of indignation at the actions of Stalin and his clique.

And so the war broke out. She found me at the post of commander of the 4th mech. corps.

As a soldier and as a son of my country, I considered myself obliged to honestly fulfill my duty.

My corps in Przemysl and Lvov took the blow, withstood it and was ready to go on the offensive, but my proposals were rejected. The indecisive, perverted by the commissar's control and confused management of the front led the Red Army to a series of heavy defeats.

I withdrew troops to Kyiv. There I took command of the 37th Army and the difficult post of head of the Kyiv garrison.

I saw that the war was being lost for two reasons: because of the unwillingness of the Russian people to defend the Bolshevik government and the created system of violence, and because of the irresponsible leadership of the army, interference in its actions by large and small commissars.

In difficult conditions, my army coped with the defense of Kyiv and successfully defended the capital of Ukraine for two months. However, the incurable diseases of the Red Army did their job. The front was broken through in the sector of neighboring armies. Kyiv was surrounded. By order of the High Command, I had to leave the fortified area.

After leaving the encirclement, I was appointed Deputy Commander of the South-Western Direction and then Commander of the 20th Army. It was necessary to form the 20th Army in the most difficult conditions, when the fate of Moscow was being decided. I did everything in my power to defend the capital of the country. The 20th Army stopped the advance on Moscow and then went on the offensive itself. She broke through the front of the German army, took Solnechnogorsk, Volokolamsk, Shakhovskaya, Sereda, and others, ensured the transition to the offensive along the entire Moscow sector of the front, and approached Gzhatsk.

During the decisive battles for Moscow, I saw that the rear helped the front, but, like a fighter at the front, every worker, every resident in the rear did this only because he believed that he was defending his homeland. For the sake of the Motherland, he endured incalculable suffering, sacrificed everything. And more than once I drove away from myself the constantly arising question:

Yes, full. Am I defending my homeland, am I sending people to death for my homeland? Is it not for Bolshevism, masquerading as the holy name of the Motherland, that the Russian people shed their blood?

I was appointed deputy commander of the Volkhov Front and commander of the 2nd shock army. Perhaps nowhere was Stalin's disdain for the life of the Russian people so affected as in the practice of the 2nd shock army. The management of this army was centralized and concentrated in the hands of the General Staff. No one knew about her actual position and was not interested in him. One order of command contradicted another. The army was doomed to certain death.

Fighters and commanders received 100 and even 50 grams of crackers a day for weeks. They swelled from hunger, and many could no longer move through the swamps, where the army was led by the direct leadership of the High Command. But everyone continued to fight selflessly.

Russian people died heroes. But for what? What did they sacrifice their lives for? What did they have to die for?

I stayed with the fighters and army commanders until the last minute. There were only a handful of us left, and we did our duty as soldiers to the end. I made my way through the encirclement into the forest and hid in the forest and swamps for about a month. But now the question arose in its entirety: should the blood of the Russian people be shed further? Is it in the interests of the Russian people to continue the war? What is the Russian people fighting for? I clearly realized that the Russian people would be drawn by Bolshevism into a war for the alien interests of the Anglo-American capitalists.

England has always been the enemy of the Russian people. It has always sought to weaken our Motherland, to harm it. But Stalin saw in serving the Anglo-American interests an opportunity to realize his plans for world domination, and for the sake of implementing these plans, he connected the fate of the Russian people with the fate of England, he plunged the Russian people into war, brought incalculable disasters on his head, and these disasters of war are the crown all those misfortunes that the peoples of our country suffered under the rule of the Bolsheviks for 25 years.

Is it not the first and sacred duty of every honest Russian person to take up arms against Stalin and his clique?

There, in the swamps, I finally came to the conclusion that my duty is to call on the Russian people to fight to overthrow the power of the Bolsheviks, to fight for peace for the Russian people, to stop the bloody, unnecessary war for the Russian people, for the interests of others, to the struggle for the creation of a new Russia, in which every Russian person could be happy.

I have come to the firm conviction that the tasks facing the Russian people can be solved in alliance and cooperation with the German people. The interests of the Russian people have always been combined with the interests of the German people, with the interests of all the peoples of Europe.

The highest achievements of the Russian people are inextricably linked with those periods of its history when it linked its fate with the fate of Europe, when it built its culture, its economy, its way of life in close unity with the peoples of Europe. Bolshevism fenced off the Russian people with an impenetrable wall from Europe. He sought to isolate our Motherland from the advanced European countries. In the name of ideas utopian and alien to the Russian people, he prepared for war, opposing himself to the peoples of Europe.

In alliance with the German people, the Russian people must destroy this wall of hatred and mistrust. In alliance and cooperation with Germany, he must build a new happy Motherland within the framework of a family of equal and free peoples of Europe.

With these thoughts, with this decision in the last battle, along with a handful of friends loyal to me, I was taken prisoner.

I was in captivity for over six months. In the conditions of the prisoner-of-war camp, behind its bars, I not only did not change my mind, but strengthened my convictions.

On an honest basis, on the basis of sincere conviction, with full awareness of responsibility to the Motherland, people and history for the actions taken, I call on the people to fight, setting myself the task of building a New Russia.

How do I imagine New Russia? I will talk about this in due time.

History does not turn back. I do not call the people to return to the past. No! I call him to a brighter future, to the struggle for the completion of the National Revolution, to the struggle for the creation of New Russia - the Motherland of our great people. I call him to the path of brotherhood and unity with the peoples of Europe and, above all, to the path of cooperation and eternal friendship with the Great German people.

My call met with deep sympathy not only among the broadest sections of the prisoners of war, but also among the broad masses of the Russian people in areas where Bolshevism still reigns. This sympathetic response of the Russian people, who expressed their readiness to breastfeed under the banner of the Russian Liberation Army, gives me the right to say that I am on the right path, that the cause for which I am fighting is a just cause, the cause of the Russian people. In this struggle for our future, I openly and honestly take the path of an alliance with Germany.

This alliance, equally beneficial to both great nations, will lead us to victory over the dark forces of Bolshevism, will deliver us from the bondage of Anglo-American capital.

In recent months, Stalin, seeing that the Russian people did not want to fight for the international tasks of Bolshevism alien to him, outwardly changed his policy towards the Russians. He has destroyed the institution of commissars, he has tried to make an alliance with the corrupt leaders of the formerly persecuted church, he is trying to restore the traditions of the old army. To force the Russian people to shed blood for the interests of others, Stalin recalls the great names of Alexander Nevsky, Kutuzov, Suvorov, Minin and Pozharsky. He wants to assure that he is fighting for the Motherland, for the fatherland, for Russia.

This pitiful and vile deceit is necessary to him only in order to stay in power. Only the blind can believe that Stalin abandoned the principles of Bolshevism.

Pitiful hope! Bolshevism has not forgotten anything, has not retreated a single step, and will not retreat from its program. Today he talks about Rus' and Russians only in order to achieve victory with the help of the Russian people, and tomorrow he will enslave the Russian people with even greater force and force them to continue to serve alien interests.

Neither Stalin nor the Bolsheviks are fighting for Russia.

Only in the ranks of the anti-Bolshevik movement is our homeland really created. The business of the Russians, their duty is the struggle against Stalin, for peace, for New Russia. Russia is ours! The past of the Russian people is ours! The future of the Russian people is ours!

The Russian people of many millions throughout its history has always found the strength to fight for its future, for its national independence. So now the Russian people will not perish, so now they will find the strength in themselves to unite and overthrow the hated yoke, to unite and build a new state in which they will find their happiness.

In early May 1945, a conflict arose between Vlasov and Bunyachenko - Bunyachenko intended to support the Prague uprising, and Vlasov persuaded him not to do this and stay on the side of the Germans. At the negotiations in the North Bohemian Kozoedy, they did not agree and their paths diverged.

May 12, 1945 Vlasov was captured servicemen of the 25th Tank Corps of the 13th Army of the 1st Ukrainian Front near the city of Pilsen in Czechoslovakia while trying to escape to the western zone of occupation. The tankers of the corps pursued Vlasov's car at the direction of the Vlasov captain, who informed them that his commander was in this car. Vlasov was taken to the headquarters of Marshal Konev, from there to Moscow.

At first, the leadership of the USSR planned to hold a public trial of Andrei Vlasov and other leaders of the ROA in the October Hall of the House of the Unions, however, due to the fact that some of the accused could express views during the process that “objectively could coincide with the moods of a certain part of the population dissatisfied with the Soviet government”, it was decided to close the process. The decision on the death sentence against Vlasov and others was taken by the Politburo of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks on July 23, 1946. From July 30 to July 31, 1946, a closed trial took place in the case of Vlasov and a group of his followers. All of them were found guilty of high treason. By the verdict of the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR, they were stripped of their military ranks and hanged on August 1, 1946, and their property was confiscated.

From the criminal case of A. A. Vlasov:

Ulrich: Defendant Vlasov, what exactly do you plead guilty to?
Vlasov: I plead guilty to the fact that, being in difficult conditions, I was cowardly ...

  • WHO ARE YOU, GENERAL VLASOV? So - autumn 1941. The Germans attack Kyiv. However, they cannot take the city. The defense has been heavily fortified. And it is headed by the forty-year-old Major General of the Red Army, the commander of the 37th Army, Andrei Vlasov. The personality in the army is legendary. Passed all the way - from private to general. Passed the civil war, graduated from the Nizhny Novgorod Theological Seminary, studied at the Academy of the General Staff of the Red Army. Friend of Mikhail Blucher. Just before the war, Andrei Vlasov, then still a colonel, was sent to China as military advisers to Chai-kan-shi. He was awarded the Order of the Golden Dragon and a gold watch, which caused the envy of the entire generals of the Red Army. However, Vlasov did not rejoice for long. Upon returning home, at the Alma-Ata customs, the order itself, as well as other generous gifts from Generalissimo Chai-kan-shi, were confiscated by the NKVD ... Returning home, Vlasov quickly received general stars and was assigned to the 99th rifle division, famous for its backwardness. A year later, in 1940, the division was recognized as the best in the Red Army and was the first among the units to be awarded the Order of the Red Banner of War. Immediately after this, Vlasov, on the orders of the People's Commissar of Defense, took command of one of the four mech corps created. Headed by a general, it was stationed in Lvov, and practically one of the very first units of the Red Army entered into hostilities. Even Soviet historians were forced to admit that the Germans "got hit in the face for the first time", precisely from the mechanized corps of General Vlasov. However, the forces were unequal, and the Red Army retreated to Kyiv. It was here that Joseph Stalin, shocked by the courage and ability of Vlasov to fight, ordered the general to gather the retreating units in Kyiv, form the 37th army and defend Kyiv. So, Kyiv, September-August 1941. Fierce battles are going on near Kyiv. German troops suffer enormous losses. Trams run in Kyiv itself. Nevertheless, the notorious Georgy Zhukov insists on surrendering Kyiv to the attacking Germans. After a small intra-army "dismantling", Joseph Stalin gives the order - "Kyiv to leave." It is not known why Vlasov's headquarters received this order last. History is silent on this. However, according to some data that has not yet been confirmed, this was revenge on the obstinate general. Revenge is none other than General of the Army Georgy Zhukov. After all, just recently, a few weeks ago, Zhukov, inspecting the positions of the 37th Army, came to Vlasov and wanted to stay the night. Vlasov - knowing Zhukov's character, he decided to joke, and offered Zhukov the best dugout, warning about night shelling. According to eyewitnesses, the army general, who changed his face after these words, hurried to retreat from the positions. Of course, said the officers present at the same time - who wants to turn their heads ... On the night of September 19, the practically undestroyed Kiev was abandoned by the Soviet troops. Later, we all learned that 600,000 military personnel fell into the "Kiev cauldron" through the efforts of Zhukov. The only one who with minimal losses withdrew his army from the encirclement was "Andrey Vlasov, who did not receive an order to withdraw." Vlasov, who had been leaving the Kiev encirclement for almost a month, caught a cold and ended up in the hospital with a diagnosis of inflammation of the middle ear. However, after a telephone conversation with Stalin, the general immediately left for Moscow. The role of General Vlasov in the defense of the capital is mentioned in the article “The failure of the German plan to encircle and capture Moscow” in the newspapers “Komsomolskaya Pravda”, “Izvestia” and “Pravda” dated 12/13/1941. Moreover, in the army, the general is called nothing more than “the savior of Moscow.” And in the “Reference to the commander of the army comrade. Vlasov A.A.”, dated February 24, 1942 and signed by Deputy. Head The personnel department of the NPO of the Personnel Department of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Zhukov and Head. By the sector of the Personnel Administration of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Frolov we read: “For work as a regiment commander from 1937 to 1938 and for work as a rifle division commander from 1939 to 1941, Vlasov is certified as a comprehensively developed, well-trained in operational-tactical relation by the commander. ”(Military-historical magazine, 1993, N. 3, pp. 9-10.). This has never happened in the history of the Red Army, having only 15 tanks, General Vlasov stopped the tank army of Walter Model in the suburbs of Moscow - Solnechegorsk, and threw back the Germans, who were already preparing for a parade on Moscow's Red Square for 100 kilometers, while freeing three cities ... It was from which to get the nickname "savior of Moscow." After the battle near Moscow, the general was appointed deputy commander of the Volkhov Front.
  • WHAT IS LEFT BEHIND THE SUMMARY OF THE OWL INFORMBURO? And everything would be just great if, after the completely mediocre operational policy of the Headquarters and the General Staff, Leningrad ended up in a ring akin to Stalingrad. And the Second Shock Army, sent to the rescue of Leningrad, was hopelessly blocked in Myasnoy Bor. This is where the fun begins. Stalin demanded the punishment of the perpetrators of the situation. And the highest military officials sitting in the General Staff really did not want to "give" to Stalin their drinking companions, the commanders of the Second Shock. One of them wanted to command the front with absolute authority, without having any organizational abilities for this. The second, no less "skillful", wanted to take away this power from him. The third of these "friends", who drove the Red Army soldiers of the second Shock Army with a parade step under German fire, later became the Marshal of the USSR and the Minister of Defense of the USSR. The fourth, who did not give a single intelligible command to the troops, simulated a nervous attack and left ... to serve in the General Staff. Stalin was also informed that "the command of the group needs to strengthen the leadership." Here Stalin was reminded of General Vlasov, who was appointed commander of the Second Shock Army. Andrei Vlasov understood that he was flying to his death. As a man who went through the crucible of this war near Kiev and Moscow, he knew that the army was doomed, and no miracle would save it. Even if it’s a miracle he himself is General Andrei Vlasov, the savior of Moscow. One can only imagine that the military general in the Douglas, shuddering from the explosions of German anti-aircraft guns, changed his mind, and who knows, be the German anti-aircraft gunners happier, and shoot down this Douglas. What a grimace history would make. And we would not have the now heroically deceased Hero of the Soviet Union, Lieutenant General Andrei Andreevich Vlasov. According to the existing, I emphasize, information that has not yet been confirmed, Stalin had a presentation on Vlasov on the table. And the Supreme Commander even signed it...
    Further events are presented by official propaganda as follows: traitor general A. Vlasov voluntarily surrendered. With all the ensuing consequences ... But to this day, few people know that when the fate of the Second Shock became obvious, Stalin sent a plane for Vlasov. Still, the general was his favorite. But Andrey Andreevich has already made his choice. And he refused to evacuate, sending the wounded on the plane. Eyewitnesses of this incident say that the general threw through his teeth "What kind of commander throws his army to death." There is evidence of eyewitnesses that Vlasov refused to abandon the soldiers of the 2nd Shock Army, who were actually dying of hunger due to the criminal mistakes of the High Command, and fly away for their lives. And not the Germans, but the Russians, who went through the horrors of the German, and then the Stalinist camps and, despite this, did not accuse Vlasov of treason. General Vlasov with a handful of fighters decided to break through to his ...
  • CAPTIVITY On the night of July 12, 1942, Vlasov and a handful of soldiers accompanying him went to the Old Believer village of Tukhovezhi and took refuge in a barn. And at night, the barn, where the encircled people found shelter, broke into ... no, not the Germans. To this day, it is not known who these people really were. According to one version, they were amateur partisans. According to another, armed local residents, led by a church warden, decided to buy themselves the location of the Germans at the cost of generals' stars. On the same night, General Andrei Vlasov and the fighters accompanying him were handed over to regular German troops. They say that before that the general was severely beaten. Note - our own ... One of the Red Army soldiers who accompanied Vlasov then testified to the SMERSHA investigators - “When we were handed over to the Germans, they wanted to shoot everyone without talking. The general stepped forward and said, “Don't shoot! I am General Vlasov. My people are unarmed!” That's the whole story of "voluntary capture." By the way, in June-December 1941, 3.8 million Soviet military personnel fell into German captivity, in 1942 more than a million, in total about 5.2 million people during the war. And then there was a concentration camp near Vinnitsa, where senior officers of interest to Germans - prominent commissars and generals. A lot was written in the Soviet press that Vlasov, they say, got scared, lost control of himself, saved his life. The documents state the opposite: Here are excerpts from official German and personal documents that ended up in SMERSH after the war. They also characterize Vlasov from the point of view of the other side. These are documentary evidence of Nazi leaders, who by no means can be suspected of sympathy for the Soviet general, whose efforts killed thousands of German soldiers near Kiev and Moscow. So, adviser to the German embassy in Moscow, Hilger, in the protocol of interrogation Captured General Vlasov on August 8, 1942 briefly described him: “It gives the impression of a strong and direct personality. His judgments are calm and balanced” (Archive of the Institute of Military History of the Moscow Region, d. 43, l. 57..). And here is the opinion of General Goebbels. Having met with Vlasov on March 1, 1945, he wrote in his diary: “General Vlasov is an extremely intelligent and energetic Russian military leader; he made a very deep impression on me ”(Goebbels J. Recent Recordings. Smolensk, 1993, p-57). With regard to Vlasov, it seems to be clear. Maybe the people who surrounded him in the ROA were the last scum and loafers who were just waiting for the start of the war to go over to the side of the Germans. But no, and here the documents give no reason to doubt.
  • .... AND OFFICERS JOINING HIM The closest associates of General Vlasov were highly professional military commanders, who at various times received high awards from the Soviet government for their professional activities. So, Major General V.F. Malyshkin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and the medal "XX Years of the Red Army"; Major General F.I. Trukhin - the Order of the Red Banner and the medal "XX Years of the Red Army"; Zhilenkov G.N., Secretary of the Rostokinsk District Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, Moscow. - Order of the Red Banner of Labor (Military History Journal, 1993, N. 2, pp. 9, 12.). Colonel Maltsev M.A. (Major General of the ROA) - Commander of the Air Force of the KONR, was at one time an instructor pilot of the legendary Valery Chkalov ("Voice of Crimea", 1944, N. 27. Afterword of the editorial board.). And the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the KONR, Colonel Aldan A. G. (Neryanin) received high praise upon graduation from the Academy of the General Staff in 1939. The then Chief of the General Staff, General of the Army Shaposhnikov called him one of the brilliant officers of the course, the only one who graduated from the Academy with excellent marks. It is hard to imagine that they were all cowards who went into the service of the Germans in order to save their own lives. Generals F.I. Trukhin, G.N. Zhilenkov, A.A. Vlasov, V.F. Malyshkin and D.E. Zakupny during the signing ceremony of the KONR manifesto. Prague, November 14, 1944
  • IF VLASOV IS INNOCENT - WHO THEN? By the way, if we are talking about documents, then we can recall another one. When General Vlasov was with the Germans, the NKVD and SMERSH, on behalf of Stalin, conducted a thorough investigation of the situation with the Second Shock Army. The results were put on the table to Stalin, who came to the conclusion - to recognize the inconsistency of the accusations leveled against General Vlasov in the death of the 2nd Shock Army and in his military unpreparedness. And what kind of unpreparedness can there be if the artillery did not have ammunition even for one salvo ... A certain Viktor Abakumov (remember this name) headed the investigation from SMERSH. It wasn't until 1993, decades later, that Soviet propaganda reported this through gritted teeth. (Military History Journal, 1993, N. 5, pp. 31-34.).
  • GENERAL VLASOV - HITLER KAPUTS?! Let's go back to Andrei Vlasov. So the military general calmed down in German captivity? The facts speak otherwise. It was possible, of course, to provoke the guard to fire at point-blank range, it was possible to raise an uprising in the camp, kill a couple of dozen guards, run to your own and ... get into other camps - this time Stalin's. It was possible to show unshakable convictions and ... turn into an ice block. But Vlasov did not feel much fear of the Germans either. Once, the concentration camp guards, who “took on their chests”, decided to arrange a “parade” of captured Red Army soldiers and decided to put Vlasov at the head of the column. The general refused such an honor, and several "organizers" of the parade were sent by the general into a deep knockout. Well, here the camp commandant arrived in time for the noise. The general, who has always been distinguished by originality and non-standard decisions, decided to act differently. For a whole year (!) he convinced the Germans of his loyalty. And then in March and April 1943, Vlasov makes two trips to the Smolensk and Pskov regions, and criticizes ... German politics in front of large audiences, he is convinced that the liberation movement resonates with the people. But for "shameless" speeches, the frightened Nazis send him arrest. The first attempt ended in complete failure. The general was eager to fight, sometimes committing reckless acts.
  • THE ALL-SEEING EYE OF THE NKVD? And then something happened. Soviet intelligence came to the general. A certain Milenty Zykov appeared in his entourage - he held the position of divisional commissar in the Red Army. The personality is bright and ... mysterious. He edited two newspapers for the general .... And it is still not known for certain whether this person was who he claimed to be. Only a year ago, circumstances “surfaced” that could turn all ideas about the “case of General Vlasov” upside down. Zykov was born in Dnepropetrovsk, a journalist, worked in Central Asia, then in Izvestia with Bukharin. He was married to the daughter of Lenin's comrade-in-arms, People's Commissar of Education Andrei Bubnov, after him he was arrested in 1937. Shortly before the war, he was released (!) and drafted into the army as a battalion commissar (!). He was captured near Bataysk in the summer of 1942, being a commissar, in a rifle division, whose number he never named. They met Vlasov in the Vinnitsa camp, where they kept Soviet officers of particular interest to the Wehrmacht. From there, Zykov was brought to Berlin by order of Goebbels himself. On the tunic of Zykov, who was delivered to the military propaganda department, the stars and commissar insignia remained unspoiled. Milenty Zykov became the general's closest adviser, although he received only the rank of captain in the ROA. There is reason to believe that it was Zykov who was a Soviet intelligence officer. And the reasons are very strong. Milenty Zykov was in very active contact with senior German officers, who, as it turned out, were preparing an assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler. For this he paid the price. It remains a mystery what happened on a June day in 1944, when he was called to the telephone in the village of Rasndorf. The captain of the ROA Zykov left the house, got into the car and ... disappeared. According to one version, Zykov was kidnapped by the Gestapo, who uncovered the attempt on Hitler, and then shot in Sachsenhausen. A strange circumstance, Vlasov himself was not very worried about the disappearance of Zykov, which suggests the existence of a plan for Zykov to go underground, that is, return home. In addition, in 1945-46. - after the arrest of Vlasov, SMERSH was very actively looking for traces of Zykov. Yes, so actively that there was an impression of a deliberate covering up of traces. When in the mid-nineties they tried to find the criminal case of Milenty Zykov in 1937 in the archives of the FSB, the attempt was unsuccessful. Strange, right? After all, at the same time, all the other documents of Zykov, including the reader's form in the library, and the registration card in the military archive, were in place.
  • GENERAL'S FAMILY And one more significant circumstance, indirectly confirming Vlasov's cooperation with Soviet intelligence. Usually relatives of “traitors to the Motherland”, especially people occupying the social position of the level of General Vlasov, were subjected to the most severe repressions. As a rule, they were destroyed in the Gulag. In this situation, everything was exactly the opposite. In recent decades, neither Soviet nor Western journalists have been able to obtain information that sheds light on the fate of the general's family. Only recently it turned out that Vlasov's first wife, Anna Mikhailovna, who was arrested in 1942 after serving 5 years in the Nizhny Novgorod prison, lived and lived in Balakhna a few years ago. The second wife, Agnessa Pavlovna, with whom the general married in 1941, lived and worked as a doctor in the Brest Regional Dermatovenerologic Dispensary. She died two years ago, and her son, who has achieved a lot in this life, lives and works in Samara. The second son is illegitimate, lives and works in St. Petersburg. At the same time, he denies any relationship with the general. He has a son who is very similar to his grandfather ... His illegitimate daughter, grandchildren and great-grandchildren also live there. One of the grandchildren, a promising officer in the Russian Navy, has no idea who his grandfather was. So decide after that whether General Vlasov was a “traitor to the Motherland”.
  • OPEN SPEECH AGAINST STALIN Six months after the “disappearance” of Zykov, on November 14, 1944, Vlasov proclaims in Prague the manifesto of the Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia. Its main provisions are: the overthrow of the Stalinist regime and the return to the peoples of the rights they won in the revolution of 1917, the conclusion of an honorable peace with Germany, the creation of a new free statehood in Russia, the "assertion of the national labor system", "the all-round development of international cooperation", "the elimination of forced labor", "liquidation of collective farms", "granting the intelligentsia the right to create freely". Aren't these very familiar demands proclaimed by the political leaders of the last two decades? From Soviet citizens in Germany, the KONR receives hundreds of thousands of applications to join its armed forces.
  • STAR…. On January 28, 1945, General Vlasov takes command of the Armed Forces of the KONR, which the Germans allowed at the level of three divisions, one reserve brigade, two aviation squadrons and an officer school, about 50 thousand people in total. At that time, these military formations were not yet sufficiently armed. Lieutenant General A.A. Vlasov and representatives of the German command inspect one of the Russian battalions as part of Army Group North. May 1943. In the foreground is a Russian non-commissioned officer (deputy platoon commander) with epaulettes and buttonholes of the Eastern troops, entered in August 1942. The war was ending. The Germans were no longer up to General Vlasov - they were saving their own skin. February 9 and April 14, 1945, the only cases forced by the Germans, cases of participation of Vlasovites in battles on the eastern front. In the first battle, several hundred Red Army soldiers go over to the side of Vlasov. The second one radically changes some ideas about the end of the war. On May 6, 1945, an anti-Hitler uprising broke out in Prague ... At the call of the rebel Czechs, Prague enters ... The first division of the army of General Vlasov. She enters into battle with heavily armed SS and Wehrmacht units, captures the airport, where fresh German units arrive and liberates the city. The Czechs rejoice. And the very eminent commanders of the already Soviet army are beside themselves with rage and anger. Still, again this is the upstart Vlasov. And then strange and terrible events began. Vlasov is visited by those who only yesterday begged for help and ask the general... to leave Prague, because Russian friends are unhappy. And Vlasov gives the command to withdraw. However, this did not save the walkers, they were shot ... by the Czechs themselves. By the way, it was not a group of impostors who asked for help from Vlasov, but people who carried out the decision of the supreme body of the Czechoslovak Republic.
  • ... AND THE DEATH OF GENERAL VLASOV But this did not save the general, Colonel General. Victor Abakumov - the head of SMERSH gave the command - to detain Vlasov. Smershevtsy took under the visor. May 12, 1945 the troops of General Vlasov in a vise between the American and Soviet troops in the southwestern Czech Republic. Vlasovites who fell into the hands of the Red Army are shot on the spot ... According to the official version, the general himself was captured and arrested by a special reconnaissance group that stopped the convoy of the first division of the ROA and SMERSH. However, there are at least four versions of how Vlasov ended up in the rear of the Soviet troops. We already know about the first one, and here is another one, compiled on the basis of eyewitness accounts. Indeed, General Vlasov was in the same column of the ROA. Only he didn’t hide in the carpet on the floor of the Willis, as Captain Yakushov allegedly took part in that operation. The general sat quietly in the car. And the car was not a Willis at all. Moreover, this same car was of such dimensions that a two-meter-tall general simply would not fit in it wrapped in a carpet ... And there was no lightning attack of scouts on the column. They (the scouts), dressed in full dress with orders, calmly waited on the side of the road when Vlasov's car caught up with them. When the car slowed down, the leader of the group saluted the general and invited him to get out of the car. Is this how they meet traitors? And then the fun began. There is evidence from the military prosecutor of the tank division, to which Andrey Vlasov was taken. This man was the first who met the general after his arrival at the location of the Soviet troops. He claims that the general was dressed in ... the general's uniform of the Red Army (old model), with insignia and orders. The stunned lawyer did not find anything better than to ask the general to present documents. Which he did, showing the prosecutor the paybook of the commanding staff of the Red Army, the identity card of the Red Army general No. 431 dated February 13, 1941, and the party card of a member of the CPSU (b) No. 2123998 - all in the name of Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov ... Moreover, the prosecutor claims, that the day before the arrival of Vlasov, an unimaginable number of army authorities came to the division, which did not even think of showing any hostility or hostility to the general. Moreover, a joint dinner was organized. On the same day, the general was transported to Moscow on a transport plane. Interesting - this is how traitors are met? Further, very little is known. Vlasov is located in Lefortovo. "Prisoner No. 32" was the name of the general in prison. This prison belongs to SMERSH, and no one, not even Beria and Stalin, has the right to enter it. And they did not enter - Viktor Abakumov knew his business well. For which he later paid the price, but more on that later. The investigation went on for over a year. Stalin, or maybe not Stalin at all, thought what to do with the disgraced general. Elevate to the rank of a national hero? It is impossible - the military general did not sit quietly - he spoke a lot. Retired employees of the NKVD claim that they bargained with Andrei Vlasov for a long time - repent, they say, before the people and the leader. Admit mistakes. And forgive. Maybe ... They say that it was then that Vlasov met Melenty Zykov again ...

    But the general was consistent in his actions, as when he did not leave the fighters of the Second Shock to die, as when he did not leave his ROA in the Czech Republic. Lieutenant General of the Red Army, holder of the Orders of Lenin and the Red Banner of War made his last choice ...

    August 2, 1946 official TASS report, published in all central newspapers - August 1, 1946, Lieutenant General of the Red Army Vlasov A. A. and his 11 associates were hanged. Stalin was cruel to the end. After all, there is no death more shameful for officers than the gallows. Here are their names: Major General of the Red Army Malyshkin V.F., Zhilenkov G.N., Major General of the Red Army Trukhin F.I, Major General of the Red Army Zakutny D.E, Major General of the Red Army Blagoveshchensky I. A, Colonel of the Red Army Meandrov M A, Colonel of the USSR Air Force Maltsev M.A., Colonel of the Red Army Bunyachenko S.K., Colonel of the Red Army Zverev G.A, Major General of the Red Army Korbukov V.D. and Lieutenant Colonel of the Red Army Shatov N.S. Where the bodies of officers are buried is unknown. SMERSH knew how to keep his secrets.

  • ... AND LIEUTENANT GENERAL VLASOV SOVIET ... SCOUT OFFICER?! Was Andrei Vlasov a Soviet intelligence officer. There is no direct evidence for this. Moreover, there is no document proving this. But there are facts with which it is very difficult to argue. Chief among them is this. It is no longer a big secret that in 1942, Joseph Stalin, despite all the successes of the Red Army near Moscow, wanted to conclude a separate peace with Germany and stop the war. At the same time, he gave up Ukraine, Moldova, Crimea .... There is even evidence that Lavrenty Beria "ventilated the situation" on this issue. And Vlasov was an excellent candidate to conduct these negotiations. Why? To do this, you need to look at the pre-war career of Andrei Vlasov. You can come to startling conclusions. Back in 1937, Colonel Vlasov was appointed head of the second department of the headquarters of the Leningrad Military District. Translated into civilian language, this means that the gallant Colonel Vlasov was responsible for all the KGB work of the district. And then the repressions broke out. And Colonel Vlasov, who received the first pseudonym "Volkov", was ... safely sent as an adviser to the already mentioned Chai-kan-shee ... And then, if you read between the lines the memoirs of the participants in those events, you come to the conclusion that none other worked in China , like ... Soviet Colonel Volkov ... scout. It was he, and no one else, who made friends with German diplomats, took them to restaurants, gave them vodka to drink until they fainted, and talked for a long, long time. It is not known what, but how can an ordinary Russian colonel behave like this, knowing what is happening in his country, that people were arrested only for explaining to foreigners on the street how to get to the Alexander Garden. Where is that Sorge with his attempts at undercover work in Japan. All female agents of Sorge could not supply information comparable to the data of Chai-kan-shi's wife, with whom the Russian colonel was in very close relations ... The seriousness of the work of Colonel Vlasov is evidenced by his personal translator in China, who claims that Volkov ordered him, at the slightest danger, shoot him. And another argument. I saw a document marked "Top Secret. Ex.. No. 1 "dated 1942, in which Vsevolod Merkulov reports to Joseph Stalin on the work to destroy the traitor general A. Vlasov. So, more than 42 reconnaissance and sabotage groups with a total number of 1,600 people hunted Vlasov. Do you believe that in 1942 such a powerful organization as SMERSH could not "get" one general, even if he was well guarded. I don't believe. The conclusion is more than simple, Stalin, knowing full well the strength of the German special services, tried to convince the Germans in every possible way of the betrayal of the general. But not so simple, were the Germans. Hitler did not accept Vlasov. But the anti-Hitler opposition Andrey Vlasov fell into the “suit”. Now it is not known what prevented Stalin from bringing the matter to an end, either the situation at the front, or the too late and, moreover, unsuccessful attempt on the Fuhrer. And Stalin had to choose between the destruction of Vlasov or his abduction. Apparently, they stopped at the latter. But ... This is the most Russian "but". The thing is that at the time of the "transition" of the general to the Germans, there were already three intelligence services in the USSR: the NKGB, SMERSH and the GRU of the General Staff of the Red Army. And these organizations competed fiercely with each other (remember this). And Vlasov, apparently, worked for the GRU. How else can one explain the fact that the general was brought to the Second Shock by Lavrenty Beria and Kliment Voroshilov. Interesting, right?

    Further, the trial against Vlasov was decided by SMERSH and did not let anyone into this case. Even the trial was closed, although logically, the trial of a traitor should be public and open. And you need to see photos of Vlasov in court - eyes that are waiting for something, as if asking, "Well, for a long time, stop clowning." But, Vlasov did not know about the swarm of special services. And he was executed ... People present at the same time claim that the general behaved with dignity.

    The scandal began the day after the execution, when Joseph Stalin saw fresh newspapers.

    It turns out that SMERSH had to ask the Military Prosecutor's Office and the GRU for written permission for the execution. He asked, and they answered him - “The execution should be postponed until further notice”, this letter is still in the archives to this day.

    But Abakumov “did not see” the answer. For which he paid. In 1946, on the personal instructions of Stalin, Viktor Abakumov was arrested. It is said that Stalin visited him in prison and reminded him of General Vlasov. However, these are just rumors...

    By the way, there is no article incriminating “Treason to the Motherland” in the indictment of Andrei Vlasov. Only terrorism and counter-revolutionary activities.

From the editor:

Every year on May 9, our country celebrates Victory Day and pays tribute to the valiant defenders of the Fatherland - the living and the dead. But it turns out that far from everyone who should be remembered with a kind word, we remember and know. The lies of the totalitarian ideology for many years gave rise to myths. Myths that became true for several generations of Soviet people. But sooner or later the truth becomes known. People, as a rule, are in no hurry to part with myths. It's more convenient and familiar... Here is one of the stories about how a national hero, a favorite of the authorities, "became a traitor." This story happened to the combat lieutenant general of the Red Army Andrei Vlasov.

Who are you, General Vlasov?

So, autumn 1941. The Germans attack Kyiv. However, they cannot take the city. The defense has been heavily fortified. And it is headed by the forty-year-old Major General of the Red Army, commander of the 37th Army Andrei Vlasov. The personality in the army is legendary. Who went all the way - from private to general. Passed the civil war, graduated from the Nizhny Novgorod Theological Seminary, studied at the Academy of the General Staff of the Red Army. Friend of Mikhail Blucher. Just before the war, Andrei Vlasov, then still a colonel, was sent to China as military advisers to Chiang Kai-shek. He received the Order of the Golden Dragon and a gold watch as a reward, which aroused the envy of the entire generals of the Red Army. However, Vlasov did not rejoice for long. Upon returning home, at the Alma-Ata customs, the order itself, as well as other generous gifts from Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, were confiscated by the NKVD ...

Returning home, Vlasov quickly received general stars and an assignment to the 99th Infantry Division, famous for its backwardness. A year later, in 1941, the division was recognized as the best in the Red Army and was the first among the units to be awarded the Order of the Red Banner of War. Immediately after that, Vlasov, on the orders of the People's Commissar of Defense, took command of one of the four created mechanized corps. Headed by a general, he was stationed in Lvov and practically one of the very first units of the Red Army entered into hostilities. Even Soviet historians were forced to admit that the Germans "got hit in the face for the first time", precisely from the mechanized corps of General Vlasov.

However, the forces were unequal, and the Red Army retreated to Kyiv. It was here that Joseph Stalin, shocked by the courage and ability of Vlasov to fight, ordered the general to gather the retreating units in Kyiv, form the 37th army and defend Kyiv.

So, Kyiv, September-August 1941. Fierce battles are going on near Kyiv. German troops suffer enormous losses. In Kyiv itself... there are trams.

Nevertheless, the notorious Georgy Zhukov insists on surrendering Kyiv to the attacking Germans. After a small intra-army "dismantling" Joseph Stalin gives the order: "Kyiv to leave." It is not known why Vlasov's headquarters received this order last. History is silent on this. However, according to some as yet unconfirmed reports, this was revenge on the obstinate general. Revenge is none other than General of the Army Georgy Zhukov. After all, just recently, a few weeks ago, Zhukov, inspecting the positions of the 37th army, came to Vlasov and wanted to stay the night. Vlasov, knowing the character of Zhukov, decided to joke and offered Zhukov the best dugout, warning him of night shelling. According to eyewitnesses, the army general changed his face after these words and hurried to retreat from his positions. Of course, the officers present at the same time said, who wants to turn their heads ... On the night of September 19, practically undestroyed Kyiv was abandoned by Soviet troops.

Later, we all learned that 600,000 servicemen got into the "Kiev cauldron" through the efforts of Zhukov. The only one who with minimal losses withdrew his army from the encirclement was "Andrey Vlasov, who did not receive an order to withdraw."

Vlasov, who had been leaving the Kyiv encirclement for almost a month, caught a cold and ended up in the hospital with a diagnosis of inflammation of the middle ear. However, after a telephone conversation with Stalin, the general immediately left for Moscow. The role of General Vlasov in the defense of the capital is mentioned in the article “The failure of the German plan to encircle and capture Moscow” in the newspapers Komsomolskaya Pravda, Izvestia and Pravda dated 12/13/1941. Moreover, in the army, the general is called nothing more than "the savior of Moscow." And in the "Reference to the commander of the army comrade. Vlasov A.A. ”, dated 24.2.1942 and signed by the deputy. head the personnel department of the NPO of the Personnel Department of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Zhukov and head. By the sector of the Personnel Administration of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks Frolov we read: “For work as a regiment commander from 1937 to 1938 and for work as a rifle division commander from 1939 to 1941, Vlasov is certified as a comprehensively developed, well-trained in operational and tactical terms commander."

(Military History Journal, 1993, N. 3, pp. 9-10.). This has never happened before in the history of the Red Army: having only 15 tanks, General Vlasov stopped the tank army of Walter Model in the Moscow suburb of Solnechegorsk and pushed back the Germans, who were already preparing for a parade on Moscow's Red Square for 100 kilometers, while freeing three cities ... It was from which to get the nickname "savior of Moscow." After the battle near Moscow, the general was appointed deputy commander of the Volkhov Front.

What is left behind the reports of the Sovinformburo?

And everything would be just great if, after the completely mediocre operational policy of the Headquarters and the General Staff, Leningrad ended up in a ring akin to Stalingrad. And the Second Shock Army, sent to the rescue of Leningrad, was hopelessly blocked in Myasnoy Bor. This is where the fun begins. Stalin demanded the punishment of the perpetrators of the situation. And the highest military officials, sitting in the General Staff, really did not want to hand over to Stalin their drinking buddies, the commanders of the Second Shock. One of them wanted to command the front with absolute authority, without having any organizational abilities for this. The second, no less "skillful", wanted to take away this power from him.

The third of these "friends", who drove the Red Army soldiers of the second Shock Army with a parade step under German fire, later became the Marshal of the USSR and the Minister of Defense of the USSR. The fourth, who did not give a single intelligible command to the troops, simulated a nervous attack and left ... to serve in the General Staff. Stalin was also informed that "the command of the group needs to strengthen the leadership." Here Stalin was reminded of General Vlasov, who was appointed commander of the Second Shock Army. Andrei Vlasov understood that he was flying to his death. As a man who went through the crucible of this war near Kiev and Moscow, he knew that the army was doomed, and no miracle would save it. Even if it's a miracle he himself - General Andrei Vlasov, savior of Moscow.

One can only imagine that the combat general changed his mind in « Douglas », shuddering from the explosions of German anti-aircraft guns, and who knows, be the German anti-aircraft gunners luckier and shoot down this « Douglas » .

What a grimace history would make... And we would not now have the heroically deceased Hero of the Soviet Union, Lieutenant General Andrei Andreevich Vlasov. According to the existing, I emphasize, information that has not yet been confirmed, Stalin had a presentation on Vlasov on the table. And the Supreme Commander even signed it...

Further events are presented by official propaganda as follows: traitor general A. Vlasov voluntarily surrendered. With all the ensuing consequences...

But few people to this day know that when the fate of the Second Shock became obvious, Stalin sent a plane for Vlasov. Still, the general was his favorite! But Andrey Andreevich has already made his choice. And he refused to evacuate, sending the wounded on the plane. Eyewitnesses of this incident say that the general threw through his teeth « What kind of commander throws his army to death? »

There is evidence of eyewitnesses that Vlasov refused to abandon the soldiers of the 2nd Shock Army, who were actually dying of hunger due to the criminal mistakes of the High Command, and fly away for their lives. And not the Germans, but the Russians, who went through the horrors of the German, and then the Stalinist camps, and despite this, did not accuse Vlasov of treason. General Vlasov with a handful of fighters decided to break through to his ...

Captivity

On the night of July 12, 1942, Vlasov and a handful of soldiers accompanying him went to the Old Believer village of Tukhovezhi and took refuge in a barn. And at night, the barn, where the encircled people found shelter, broke into ... no, not the Germans. To this day, it is not known who these people really were. According to one version, they were amateur partisans. According to another - armed local residents, led by a church warden, decided to buy the location of the Germans at the cost of generals' stars. On the same night, General Andrei Vlasov and the soldiers accompanying him were handed over to regular German troops. They say that before that the general was severely beaten. Note your...

One of the Red Army soldiers who accompanied Vlasov later testified to the SMERSHA investigators: “When we were handed over to the Germans, the technical hotels were to be shot without talking. The general stepped forward and said: “Don’t shoot! General Vlasov. My people are unarmed!“ ” Here is the whole story of “voluntary withdrawal of prisoners”. By the way, in June-December 1941, 3.8 million Soviet military personnel were taken prisoner by the Germans, in 1942 more than a million, in total about 5.2 million people were captured.

Apotom was a concentration camp near Vinnitsa, where senior officers of interest to the Germans were kept - prominent commissars and generals. Much was written in the Soviet press that Vlasov, they say, was scared, lost control of himself, saved his life. The docs say otherwise.

Here are excerpts from official German and personal documents that ended up in SMERSH after the war. They also characterize Vlasov from the point of view of the other side. These are documentary evidence of Nazi leaders, who by no means can be suspected of sympathy for the Soviet general, whose efforts killed thousands of German soldiers near Kiev and Moscow.

So, the adviser of the German embassy in Moscow, Hilger, in the protocol of interrogation of the captured General Vlasov dated August 8, 1942. briefly described him: “Gives the impression of a strong and direct personality. His judgments are calm and balanced ”(Archive of the Institute of Military History of the Moscow Region, d. 43, l. 57.).

Here is the opinion of Generale Goebbels. Having met with Vlasov on March 1, 1945, he wrote in his diary: “General Vlasov is a highly intelligent and energetic Russian military leader; he made a very deep impression on me ”(Goebbels J. Recent records. Smolensk, 1993, p-57).

Vlasov's attitude seems to be understandable. Maybe the people who surrounded him in the ROA were the last scum and idlers who were just waiting for the start of the war to go over to the side of the Germans. Annette, here the documents do not give rise to doubt.

... and the officers who joined him

The closest associates of General Vlasov were highly professional military leaders, who at various times received high awards from the Soviet government for their professional activities. So, Major General V.F. Malyshkin was awarded the Order of the Red Banner and the medal "XX Years of the Red Army"; Major General F. I. Trukhin - the Order of the Red Banner and the medal "XX Years of the Red Army"; Zhilenkov G.N., Secretary of the Rostokinsk District Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, Moscow. - Order of the Red Banner of Labor ( military historical magazine, 1993, N. 2, p. 9, 12.). Colonel Maltsev M. A. (Major General of the ROA) - Commander Air force by the forces of KONR, was at one time flight instructor the legendary Valery Chkalov ("Voice of the Crimea", 1944, N. 27. Afterword of the editorial board.).

Colonel A.G. Aldan (Neryanin), Chief of Staff of the All-Union Conservation Committee, received high praise when he graduated from the Academy of the General Staff in 1939. The then Chief of the General Staff, General of the Army Shaposhnikov called him one of the brilliant officers of the course, the only one who graduated from the Academy with excellent marks. It is hard to imagine that they were all cowards who left to serve the Germans in order to save their own lives. Generals F. I. Trukhin, G. N. Zhilenkov, A. A. Vlasov, V. F. Malyshkin and D. E. Zakupny during the signing ceremony of the KONR manifesto. Prague, 14 November 1944.

If Vlasov is innocent, then who?

By the way, if we are talking about documents, we can recall another one. When General Vlasov was with the Germans, the NKVD and SMERSH, on behalf of Stalin, conducted a thorough investigation of the situation with the Second Shock Army. The results were put on the table to Stalin, who came to the conclusion: to recognize the inconsistency of the accusations leveled against General Vlasov in the death of the 2nd Shock Army and in his military unpreparedness. And what kind of unpreparedness can there be if the artillery did not have ammunition even for one salvo ... A certain Viktor Abakumov (remember this name) headed the investigation from SMERSH. It wasn't until 1993, decades later, that Soviet propaganda reported this through gritted teeth. (Military History Journal, 1993, N. 5, pp. 31-34.).

General Vlasov - Hitler kaput ?!

Let's return to Andrey Vlasov. So did the military general calm down in German captivity? Facts speak differently. It was possible, of course, to provoke the guard into an automatic burst of outrage, it was possible to raise an uprising in the camp, kill a couple of dozen guards, run to your own people and ... get into other camps, this time Stalin's. It was possible to show unshakable convictions and ... turn into an ice block. But Vlasov did not experience any particular fear of the Germans. Once, the concentration camp guards who “took the breastplate” decided to arrange a “parade” of captured Red Army soldiers and decided to put Vlasov at the head of the column. The general refused such an honor, and several "organizers" of the parade were sent by the general into a deep knockout. Well, atut and the camp commandant, our noise arrived in time.

The general, who has always been distinguished by originality and non-standard decisions, decided to act differently. For a whole year (!) he convinced the Germans of his loyalty. Then, in March and April 1943, Vlasov made two trips to the Smolensk and Pskov regions, and criticized ... German policy in front of large audiences, making sure that the liberation movement resonated with the people.

Noza's "shameless" speech terrified Nazis sends him under house arrest. The first attempt ended in complete failure. The general was eager to fight, sometimes committing reckless acts.

The all-seeing eye of the NKVD?

Itut something happened. Soviet intelligence came out to the general. A certain Melenty Zykov appeared in his entourage, who held the position of divisional commissar in the Red Army. The personality is bright and ... mysterious. As a general, he edited two newspapers ... .

To this day, it is not known for certain whether this person was who he claimed to be. Only a year ago, circumstances “surfaced” that could turn all ideas about the “case of General Vlasov”. Zykov was born in Dnepropetrovsk, a journalist, worked in Central Asia, then in Izvestia with Bukharin. He was married to the daughter of Lenin's comrade-in-arms, People's Commissar of Education Andrei Bubnov, after whom he was arrested in 37. Shortly before the war, he was released (!) and called up to the army as a battalion commissar (!).

Captured near Bataysk in the summer of 1942, being the commissar of a rifle division, whose numbers he never named. They met SVlasov in the Vinnitsa camp, where they kept Soviet officers of particular interest to the Wehrmacht. From there, Zykov was brought to Berlin by order of Goebbels himself.

On the tunic of Zykov, who was delivered to the military propaganda department, the stars and commissar insignia remained unspoiled. Melenty Zykov became the general's closest adviser, although he received only the rank of captain in the ROA.

There is reason to believe that it was Zykov who was a Soviet intelligence officer. The reasons are very weighty. Melenty Zykov was very actively in contact with the highest German officers, who, as it turned out, were preparing an assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler. For this they paid. It remains a mystery what happened on a June day in 1944, when he was called to the telephone in the village of Rasndorf. The captain of the ROA Zykov left the house, got into the car and ... disappeared.

According to one version, Zykov was kidnapped by the Gestapo, who uncovered the attempt on Hitler, and then shot in Sachsenhausen. A strange circumstance, Vlasov himself was not very worried about the disappearance of Zykov, which suggests the existence of a plan for Zykov to go underground, that is, return home. In addition, in 1945-46, after the arrest of Vlasov, SMERSH was very actively looking for traces of Zykov.

Yes, so actively that there was an impression of a deliberate covering up of traces. When in the mid-nineties they tried to find the criminal case of Melenty Zykov in 1937 in the archives of the FSB, the attempt was unsuccessful. Strange, right? Indeed, at the same time, all the other documents of Zykov, including the reader's form in the library, and the registration card in the military archive, were in place.

General's family

There is another significant circumstance that indirectly confirms Vlasov's cooperation with Soviet intelligence. Usually relatives of "traitors to the Motherland", especially those occupying the social position of the level of General Vlasov, were subjected to the most severe repressions. As a rule, they were destroyed in the Gulag.

In this situation, everything was exactly the opposite. For the past decades, neither Soviet nor Western journalists have been able to obtain information that sheds light on the fate of the general's family. Only recently it turned out that the first wife of Vlasov, Anna Mikhailovna, who was arrested in 1942, after serving 5 years in the Nizhny Novgorod prison, lived in Balakhna a few years ago. The second wife, Agnessa Pavlovna, whose marriage the general entered into in 1941, lived and worked as a doctor in the Brest Regional dermatovenerologic dispensary, Died two years ago, asyn, who has achieved a lot in this life, lives and works in Samara.

The second son, illegitimate, lives and works in St. Petersburg. At the same time, he denies any relationship with the general. He has a son who is very similar to his hope... His illegitimate daughter, grandchildren and great-grandchildren live there. One of the grandchildren, a promising officer of the Russian Navy, has no idea who his grandfather was. Here you decide after that whether General Vlasov was a "traitor to the Motherland".

Open speech against Stalin

Six months after the disappearance of Zykov, on November 14, 1944, Vlasov proclaims in Prague the manifesto of the Committee for the Liberation of the Peoples of Russia. Its main provisions are: the overthrow of the Stalinist regime and the return to the peoples of the rights they won in the revolution of 1917, the conclusion of an honorable peace with Germany, the creation of a new free statehood in Russia, national labor system”, “all-round development of international cooperation”, “liquidation of forced labor”, “liquidation of collective farms”, “granting the intelligentsia the right to create freely”. False, the very familiar demands proclaimed by the political leaders of the past two decades.

Ivchem here treason? From Soviet citizens in Germany, the KONR receives hundreds of thousands of applications for joining its armed forces.

Star...

On January 28, 1945, General Vlasov takes command of the Armed Forces of the KONR, which the Germans allowed at the level of three divisions, one reserve brigade, two squadrons of aviation and an officer school, in total about 50 thousand people. At that moment, these military formations were not yet sufficiently armed.

Lieutenant General A. A. Vlasov and representatives of the German command inspect one of the Russian battalions as part of Army Group Sever, May 1943. In the foreground, a Russian non-commissioned officer (deputy platoon commander) with shoulder straps and buttonholes of the Eastern troops, introduced in August 1942.

The war was ending. The Germans were already undergeneral Vlasov, they were saving their own skin. On February 9 and April 14, 1945, the only cases forced by the Germans were the participation of the "Vlasovites" in the battles on the eastern front. In the first battle, several hundred Red Army soldiers go over to the side of Vlasov. The second one radically changes some of the ideas of the finale of the war.

On May 6, 1945, an anti-Hitler uprising broke out in Prague ... At the call of the rebel Czechs, Prague enters ... The first division of the army of General Vlasov. She enters the battle with the heavily armed units of the SSivermacht, captures the airport, where fresh German units arrive and liberates the city. The Czechs rejoice. And the eminent commanders of the already Soviet army are beside themselves with the fury of wickedness. Still, this is the upstart Vlasov again!

Then strange and terrible events began. KVlasov is visited by those who only yesterday begged for help, and they ask the general ... to leave Prague, because Russian friends are unhappy. IVlasov gives the command to retreat. However, this did not save the walkers, they were shot ... by the Czechs themselves. By the way, not a group of impostors, people who carried out the decision of the supreme body of the Czechoslovak Republic, asked for help from Vlasov.

... And the death of General Vlasov

But this did not save the general, colonel general Viktor Abakumov, the head of SMERSH, gave the command to detain Vlasov. Smershevtsy took under the visor. May 12, 1945 the troops of General Vlasov squeezed between the American and Soviet troops in the southwestern Czech Republic. "Vlasovites", who fell into the hands of the Red Army, are shot on the spot ... According to the official version, the general himself was captured and arrested by a special reconnaissance group that stopped the convoy of the first division of the ROA and SMERSH. However, there are at least four versions of how Vlasov ended up behind the rear of the Soviet troops. We already know the first one, but another one, compiled on the basis of eyewitness accounts. Indeed, General Vlasov was in the same column of the ROA.

Only now he was not hiding in the carpet on the floor of the Willis, as Captain Yakushov, who allegedly took part in that operation, claims. The general sat quietly in the car. And the car was not a Willis at all. Moreover, this very car was of such dimensions that the two-meter-high general simply could not fit in it, wrapped in a carpet ... And there was no lightning attack of scouts on the column. They (the scouts), dressed in parade uniforms with sordens, calmly waited on the side of the road when Vlasov's car caught up with them. When the car slowed down, the group leader saluted the general and invited him to get out of the car. Is this how traitors are treated?

And then the most interesting began. There is evidence from the military prosecutor of the tank division, to which Andrey Vlasov was taken. This man was the first who met the general after his arrival at the location of the Soviet troops. He claims that the general was dressed in ... the general's uniform of the Red Army (old model), with insignia and orders. The stunned lawyer did not find anything better than to ask the general to present documents. What he did, showing the prosecutor the paybook of the commanding staff of the Red Army, the identity card of the Red Army General No. 431 dated 13.02.41. and party card of a member of the CPSU (b) No. 2123998 - all in the name of Andrey Andreevich Vlasov ...

Moreover, the prosecutor claims that the day before Vlasov's arrival, an unimaginable number of army authorities came to the division, who did not even think of showing any hostility or hostility to the general. Moreover, a joint lunch was organized.

On the same day, the general was transferred to Moscow on a transport plane. I wonder how they meet traitors?

Little is known further. Vlasov is located in Lefortovo. "Prisoner No. 32" - that was the name of the general in prison. This prison belongs to SMERSH, and no one, even Beria and Stalin, has no right to enter there. Inevkholi- Viktor Abakumov knew his business well. Why did he pay later, but later. The investigation went on for over a year. Stalin, or maybe not Stalin at all, thought what to do as a sopal general. Raising the rank of a national hero? It is impossible: the military general did not sit quietly, he spoke a lot. Retired employees of the NKVD claim that Andrei Vlasov was bargained for a long time: repent, they say, before the people and the leader. Admit mistakes. And forgive. May be…

They say that it was then that Vlasov met again with Melenty Zykov ...

But the general was consistent in his actions, as when he did not leave the fighters of the Second Shock to die, as when he did not abandon his ROA in the Czech Republic. Lieutenant General of the Red Army, holder of the Orders of Lenin and the Red Banner of Battle made his last choice ...

August 2, 1946 TASS official announcement published in all central newspapers: August 1, 1946 lieutenant general Red Army Vlasov A. A. and his 11 associates were hanged. Stalin was cruel to the end. After all, there is no death more shameful for officers than the gallows. Here are their names: Major General of the Red Army Malyshkin V. F., Zhilenkov G. N., Major General of the Red Army Trukhin F. I, Major General of the Red Army Zakutny D. E, Major General of the Red Army Blagoveshchensky I. A, Colonel of the Red Army Meandrov M. A, Colonel of the USSR Air Force Maltsev M. A, Colonel of the Red Army Bunyachenko S. K, Colonel of the Red Army Zverev G. A, Major General of the Red Army Korbukov V. D. and Lieutenant Colonel of the Red Army Shatov N. S. Where the bodies of officers are buried is unknown. SMERSH knew how to keep his secrets.

Forgive us, Andrei Andreevich!

Was Andrey Vlasov a Soviet spy? There is no direct evidence for this. Moreover, there are no documents proving this. But there are facts with which it is very difficult to argue.

Chief among them is this. It is no longer a big secret that in 1942, Joseph Stalin, despite all the successes of the Red Army near Moscow, wanted to conclude a separate peace with Germany and stop the war. At the same time, giving Ukraine, Moldova, Crimea ....

There is even evidence that Lavrenty Beria "ventilated the situation" therefore the issue.

IVlasov was an excellent candidate to conduct these negotiations. Why? To do this, you need to look at the pre-war career of Andrei Vlasov. You can come to startling conclusions. Back in 1937, Colonel Vlasov was appointed head of the Second Department of the headquarters of the Leningrad Military District. Translated into a civilian language, this means that the gallant Colonel Vlasov was in charge of all the Chekist work of the district. Then the repressions broke out. Colonel Vlasov, who received the first pseudonym "Volkov", was ... safely sent as an adviser to the already mentioned Chiang Kai-shek ... Further, if you read between the lines of the memoirs of the participants in those events, you come to the conclusion that someone other than ... Colonel Volkov, a Soviet intelligence officer, worked in China.

It was he, someone else, who made friends with German diplomats, took them to restaurants, gave them vodka to the point of fainting, and talked for a long, long time. What is unknown, but how can an ordinary Russian colonel behave like this, knowing what is happening in his country, that people were arrested only because they explained to foreigners on the street how to get into the Alexander Garden. Where is that Sorge of this attempt at undercover work in Japan. All female agents of Sorge could not supply information comparable to the surrendered wife of Chiang Kai-shek, with whom the Russian colonel was in very close relations ... The seriousness of the work of Colonel Vlasov is evidenced by his personal translator in China, who claims that Volkov ordered him to shoot him at the slightest danger.

Yet another argument. I saw a document marked “Top Secret. Ex. No. 1 "dated 1942, in which Vsevolod Merkulov reports to Joseph Stalin on the work of destruction traitor general A. Vlasova. So, more than 42 reconnaissance and sabotage groups with a total number of 1600 people hunted for Vlasov. Check that in 1942 such a powerful organization as SMERSH could not "get" one general, even if he was well guarded. I don't believe. The conclusion is more than simple: Stalin, knowing full well the strength of the German special services, tried to convince the Germans in every possible way that the general was treachery.

But the Germans turned out to be simple. Hitler did not accept Vlasov like that. Novot of the anti-Hitler opposition Andrei Vlasov fell into the "suit". Now it is not known what prevented Stalin from bringing the matter to the end - either the situation at the front, or the too late and unsuccessful assassination of the Naführer. Stalin had to choose between the destruction of Vlasov or his abduction. Apparently, they stopped at the last. But ... This is the most Russian "but". The thing is that at the time of the general's "transition" to the Germans in the USSR, there were already three intelligence services: the NKGB, SMERSH and the GRU of the Red Army General Staff. These organizations competed fiercely with each other (remember this). IVlasov, apparently, worked for the GRU. How else can one explain the fact that Lavrenty Beria and Kliment Voroshilov brought the general to the Second Shock. Interesting, right?

Further, the court on Vlasov was administered by SMERSH and did not allow anyone to this case. Even the trial was closed, although the logic of things, the trial of a traitor should be public and open. It is necessary to see photographs of Vlasov in the future - eyes waiting for something, as if asking: "For a long time, stop clowning." Noneznal Vlasov osvara special services. I was executed ... The people present at the same time claim that the general behaved with dignity.

The scandal began the next day after the execution, when Joseph Stalin saw fresh newspapers.

It turns out that SMERSH had to ask for written permission to punish the Military Prosecutor's Office and the GRU. They asked, and they answered him: “The execution should be postponed until a special order.” This letter lies in the archives for the day.

But Abakumov did not see the answer. Why did you pay. In 1946: the year of Stalin's personal order, Viktor Abakumov was arrested. They say that Stalin visited him in prison and reminded him of General Vlasov. However, these are just rumors...

By the way, in the indictment of Andrei Vlasov there is no article incriminating treason. Only terrorism and counter-revolutionary activities.



Similar articles