Soviet Government Purchasing Commission in the U.S.
The Soviet Government Procurement Commission in the United States, also known as the Soviet Commission for Procurement, was appointed on February 24, 1942 by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR, a Soviet government administration body to implement the provisions of the American Act of Supply during World War II of military equipment to 11 countries, including from the U.S. to the USSR based in Washington, D.C.
History
Until the commission was established, the delivery of American military equipment to the USSR was carried out via the Soviet Amtorg trading company based in New York. After the Commission was established in Washington, it organizationally consisted of 18 branch offices and a number of delegations, e.g. in New York at 210 Madison Ave., Portland at 233 Southwest Sixt Ave., Tacoma, Fairbanks, Philadelphia, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Baltimore, Miami, Vancouver and Montreal.Deliveries to the Soviet Arctic region were coordinated by the Arctic Group. A number of representatives of economic organizations functioned at the commission, including Dalstroy, Norilskstroy, the Chief Directorate of the Northern Sea Route, the Soviet Red Cross, and a number of ministries, including maritime transport and the fishing industry. In the second half of 1942, the Management Board of the Commission Plenipotentiaries for the West Coast of the US and Canada was appointed. It employed about 1,000 people, including citizens of U.S. Deliveries ended on September 20, 1945, the commission was liquidated on December 28, 1948.
Chairmans
- 1942-1943 - gen. Alexander Belyaev
- 1943-1946 - gen. Leonid Rudenko
- 1946-1948 - Ivan Eremin