Aleksandr Sakharovsky
Aleksandr Mikhailovich Sakharovsky was a Soviet general who was head of the First Chief Directorate of the KGB from 1955 to 1971. Sakharovsky oversaw the KGB foreign intelligence division during some of the key events of the Cold War, including the Hungarian uprising, the Cuban Missile Crisis and the height of the Vietnam War.
Highly respected by both KGB staff and allied services such as those of East Germany, Sakharovsky had experience himself in performing intelligence missions.
Early life and career
Sakharovsky was born to a working-class family in Kostroma Oblast, on 3 September 1909. His family moved to Leningrad when he was a child, and he began his career as a welder at the Baltic Shipyard. He joined the Communist Youth League in 1926, and was accepted as a full member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1930. In 1931 he was drafted into the Red Army for military service, and initially he was assigned to the 2nd Signals Regiment of Leningrad, but soon, recommended by the Komsomol, he was sent to study at the Lenin Military-Political Academy, graduating in October 1933. By decision of the Political Directorate of the Red Army, he was then sent to the post of secretary of the Komsomol bureau of the 63rd Construction Battalion, which performed public works in Sovetskaya Gavan of the Far Eastern Territory.Demobilized in December 1934, Sakharovsky returned to Leningrad, initially working in political propaganda at the Northern Shipyard. In 1935, he was elected secretary of the Komsomol committee of the "Kanonersky" ship repair plant in Leningrad. In July of the same year, he was assigned to the Baltic Sea Shipping Company, as an instructor in the political department for the Marxist–Leninist education of the company's personnel. In February 1938, he was elected secretary of the shipping company's party committee.
World War II
In February 1939, Sakharovsky was transferred to work in the state security bodies on the recommendation of the party. Taking advantage of his official position at the Baltic Sea Shipping Company, he was dispatched abroad for reconnaissance purposes for more than seven months, under the cover of being the assistant captain of the "Svaneti" passenger ship. He visited several countries of the Mediterranean Sea, including Greece and Italy. In August 1941, the First Department was created in the NKVD Directorate for the Leningrad Region, in which Sakharovsky became deputy head. He rose to the rank of Major. The duties of Sakharovsky included the preparation of special groups to be sent behind enemy lines for sabotage and assassinations, as well as conducting defensive operations against German attempts at infiltration. In total, more than 40 reconnaissance and sabotage groups were created and sent behind German lines to perform sabotage and assassinations.Postwar Stalin Years
In 1945 Sakarovsky was transferred to the central office of the MGB, the precursor organization to the KGB, in Moscow. There he acted in support to Andrey Vyshinsky, a deputy Soviet People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs, during the incorporation of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania into the Soviet Union during the late 1940s.He was later chief of the second Information committee department, then MGB adviser during the establishment of the Securitate, the secret police agency of Communist Romania. During his time in Romania he was responsible for the interrogation of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, a communist leader critical of Stalin.
Apart from his work in building up the Romanian secret services, Sakharovsky was sent to perform intelligence missions in Finland, Greece and Turkey. As head of Section 7-A, he was responsible for foreign intelligence in Scandinavia, and then worked at 1-A Directorate, responsible for foreign "illegal" agents in the First Chief Directorate of the MGB USSR.