The Red Terror and the civil war ended in the early 1920s, but after a brief easing, repression continued—and worsened. When Joseph Stalin took over the communist party after Lenin died, he focused on cementing his control of both party and country by any means necessary. The NKVD, which had replaced the Cheka in 1922, played a key role in supporting the dictator’s draconian toe-the-line-or-pay-the-price culture.
Whereas the Cheka had persecuted enemies of the Bolshevik party, the NKVD targeted well-positioned party members whom Stalin perceived as potential rivals, including government officials, army officers and the Soviet party’s older guard, such as Trotskyites. The secret police used torture and manufactured evidence to elicit “confessions.” Highly public show trials, whose verdicts were never in doubt, provoked widespread terror—as did Stalin’s decree allowing families of suspected traitors to be executed, including children as young as 12.
After the 1934 assassination of Sergei Kirov, a veteran Bolshevik and potential rival to Stalin, the Soviet dictator used the killing—which some historians say he himself ordered the NKVD to carry out—as an excuse to undertake purges, deportations and murders that became known as “The Great Purge.” In 1937 and 1938, according to a Moscow-based researcher, an estimated 40,000 NKVD agents oversaw the arrest of about 1.5 million Soviet citizens and the murders of nearly half of that number. Those not killed by the NKVD were sentenced to forced labor in one of the many brutal gulags proliferating around the USSR.
Wartime: Blocking Any Red Army Retreat
The terror of the 1930s decimated the Soviet military force, leaving it unprepared to push back a Nazi invasion in 1941. During World War II, the NKVD’s role was to fight not just the Germans but any signs of defeatism among Red Army troops.
When propaganda didn’t work, “blocking detachments” of NKVD troops used force to stop unauthorized Red Army retreats, often from certain-death battlefield scenarios. Suspected deserters were summarily shot, sent to prison camps or punishment battalions. A 1941 NKVD report listed more than 650,000 desertion arrests among Red Army personnel.
1960s to 1980s: Censorship, Exile and Hospital 'Treatment'