Nikita
Khrushchev,
the grandson of a serf and the son of a coal
miner, was born in Kalinovka, Ukraine on
5th April, 1894. After a brief formal education
Khrushchev found work as a pipe fitter in
Yuzovka.
During the First World War Khrushchev became
involved in trade union activities and after
the October Revolution joined the Bolsheviks.
In January, 1919, Khrushchev joined the
Red Army and fought against the Whites in
the Ukraine during the Civil War. After leaving
the army he returned to Yuzovka where he
returned to school to finish his education.
Khrushchev remained active in the Communist
Party and in 1925 was employed as party secretary
of the Petrovsko-Mariinsk. Lazar Kaganovich,
the general-secretary of the Ukrainian Communist
Party, was impressed with Khrushchev and
invited him to accompany him to the 14th
Party Congress in Moscow.
With the support of Kaganovich, Khrushchev
made steady progress in the party hierarchy.
In 1938 Khrushchev became secretary of the
Ukrainian Communist Party and was employed
by Joseph Stalin to carry out the Great Purge
in the Ukraine. The following year he became
a full member of the Politburo.
After the invasion of Poland in 1940 Khrushchev
was given the responsibility of suppressing
the Polish and Ukrainian nationalists. When
the German Army invaded the Soviet Union
in June, 1941, Khrushchev arranged the evacuation
of much of the region's industry. During
the Second World War Khrushchev granted the
rank lieutenant general, and was given the
task of organizing guerrilla warfare in the
Ukraine against the Germans.
When the German Army retreated in 1944 Khrushchev
was once again placed in control of the Ukraine
and the rebuilding of the region. Khrushchev
job was made more difficult by the famine
of 1946. This brought him into conflict with
Joseph Stalin who accused Khrushchev of concentrating
too much on feeding the people living of
the Ukraine rather than exporting food to
the rest of the Soviet Union.
Khrushchev was demoted in 1951 and replaced
as the minister responsible for agriculture.
On the death of Joseph Stalin in 1953, Gregory
Malenkov became both prime minister and head
of the Communist Party. He appeared to be
a reformer and called for a higher priority
to be given to consumer goods.
In September, 1953, Khrushchev became first
secretary of the Communist Party. He arranged
for the execution of Lavrenti Beria, head
of the Secret Police and gradually he gained
control of the party machinery. In 1955 he
joined with Nikolai Bulganin to oust Gregory
Malenkov from power.
During the 20th Party Congress in February,
1956, Khrushchev launched an attack on the
rule of Joseph Stalin. He condemned the Great
Purge and accused Stalin of abusing his power.
He announced a change in policy and gave
orders for the Soviet Union's political prisoners
to be released.
In the summer of 1956 Gregory Malenkov,
Nikolai Bulganin, Vyacheslav Molotov and
Lazar Kaganovich attempted to oust Khrushchev
This was unsuccessful and Khrushchev now
purged his opponents in the Communist Party.
Khrushchev's de-Stalinzation policy encouraged
people living in Eastern Europe to believe
that he was willing to give them more independence
from the Soviet Union. In Hungary the prime
minister Imre Nagy removed state control
of the mass media and encouraged public discussion
on political and economic reform. Nagy also
released anti-communists from prison and
talked about holding free elections and withdrawing
Hungary from the Warsaw Pact.
Khrushchev became increasingly concerned
about these developments and on 4th November
1956 he sent the Red Army into Hungary. During
the Hungarian Uprising an estimated 20,000
people were killed. Nagy was arrested and
replaced by the Soviet loyalist, Janos Kadar.
Imre Nagy was imprisoned and executed in
1958.
In 1958 Khrushchev replaced Gregory Malenkov
as prime minister and was now the undisputed
leader of both state and party. In the Soviet
Union he promoted reform of the Soviet system
and began to place an emphasis on the production
of consumer goods rather than on heavy industry.
Khrushchev eased censorship in the Soviet
Union and allowed One Day in the Life of
Ivan Denisovich, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
to be published. Some pointed out that this
was part of his de-Stalinization policy and
did not reflect a genuine increase in freedom.
His critics pointed out that books such as
Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak were still
banned.
In 1959 Khrushchev announced a change in
foreign policy. In 1959 visited the United
States and offered "the capitalist countries
peaceful competition". Khrushchev was
due to attend the Paris Summit Conference
in 1960 when a reconnaissance plane was shot
down over the Soviet Union. He cancelled
the meeting and later that year at the Union
Nations he attacked Western influence in
the Congo.
When John F. Kennedy replaced Dwight Eisenhower
as president of the United States he was
told about the CIA plan to invade Cuba. Kennedy
had doubts about the venture but he was afraid
he would be seen as soft on communism if
he refused permission for it to go ahead.
Kennedy's advisers convinced him that Castro
was an unpopular leader and that once the
invasion started the Cuban people would support
the ClA-trained forces.
On April 14, 1961, B-26 planes began bombing
Cuba's airfields. After the raids Cuba was
left with only eight planes
and seven pilots. Two days later five merchant ships carrying 1,400 Cuban exiles
arrived at the Bay of Pigs. The attack was a total failure. Two of the ships
were sunk, including the ship that was carrying most of the supplies. Two of
the planes that were attempting to give air-cover were also shot down. Within
seventy-two hours all the invading troops had been killed, wounded or had surrendered.
At the beginning of September 1962, U-2
spy planes discovered that the Soviet Union
was building surface-to-air missile (SAM)
launch sites. There was also an increase
in the number of Soviet ships arriving in
Cuba which the United States government feared
were carrying new supplies of weapons. President
Kennedy complained to the Soviet Union about
these developments and warned them that the
United States would not accept offensive
weapons (SAMs were considered to be defensive)
in Cuba.
On September 27, a CIA agent in Cuba overheard
Castro's personal pilot tell another man
in a bar that Cuba now had nuclear weapons.
U-2 spy-plane photographs also showed that
unusual activity was taking place at San
Cristobal. However, it was not until October
15 that photographs were taken that revealed
that the Soviet Union was placing long range
missiles in Cuba.
President Kennedy's first reaction to the
information about the missiles in Cuba was
to call a meeting to discuss what should
be done. Fourteen men attended the meeting
and included military leaders, experts on
Latin America, representatives of the CIA,
cabinet ministers and personal friends whose
advice Kennedy valued. This group became
known as the Executive Committee of the National
Security Council. Over the next few days
they were to meet several times.
At the first meeting of the Executive Committee
of the National Security Council, the CIA
and other military advisers explained the
situation. After hearing what they had to
say, the general feeling of the meeting was
for an air-attack on the
missile sites. Remembering the poor advice the CIA had provided before the
Bay of Pigs invasion, John F. Kennedy decided to wait and instead called for
another meeting to take place that evening. By this time several of the men
were having doubts about the wisdom of a bombing raid, fearing that it would
lead to a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. The committee was now so divided
that a firm decision could not be made.
The Executive Committee of the National
Security Council argued amongst themselves
for the next two days. The CIA and the military
were still in favour of a bombing raid and/or
an invasion. However, the majority of the
committee gradually began to favour a naval
blockade of Cuba.
Kennedy accepted their decision and instructed
Theodore Sorensen, a member of the committee,
to write a speech in
which Kennedy would explain to the world why it was necessary to impose a naval
blockade of Cuba.
As well as imposing a naval blockade, Kennedy
also told the air-force to prepare for attacks
on Cuba and the Soviet Union. The army positioned
125,000 men in Florida and was told to wait
for orders to invade Cuba. If the Soviet
ships carrying weapons for Cuba did not turn
back or refused to be searched, a war was
likely to begin. Kennedy also promised his
military advisers that if one of the U-2
spy planes were fired upon he would give
orders for an attack on the Cuban SAM missile
sites.
The world waited anxiously. A public opinion
poll in the United States revealed that three
out of five people expected fighting to break
out between the two sides. There were angry
demonstrations outside the American Embassy
in London as people protested about the possibility
of nuclear war. Demonstrations also took
place in other cities in Europe. However,
in the United States, polls suggested that
the vast majority supported Kennedy's action.
On October 24, President John F. Kennedy
was informed that Soviet ships had stopped
just before they reached the United States
ships blockading Cuba. That evening Khrushchev
sent an angry note to Kennedy accusing him
of creating a crisis to help the Democratic
Party win the forthcoming election.
On October 26, Khrushchev sent Kennedy another
letter. In this he proposed that the Soviet
Union would be willing to
remove the missiles in Cuba in exchange for a promise by the United States
that they would not invade Cuba. The next day a second letter from Khrushchev
arrived demanding that the United States remove their nuclear bases in Turkey.
While the president and his advisers were
analysing Khrushchev's two letters, news
came through that a U-2 plane had been shot
down over Cuba. The leaders of the military,
reminding Kennedy of the promise he had made,
argued that he should now give orders for
the bombing of Cuba. Kennedy refused and
instead sent a letter to Khrushchev accepting
the terms of his first letter.
Khrushchev agreed and gave orders for the
missiles to be dismantled. Eight days later
the elections for Congress took place. The
Democrats increased their majority and it
was estimated that Kennedy would now have
an extra twelve supporters in Congress for
his policies.
The Cuban Missile Crisis was the first and
only nuclear confrontation between the United
States and the Soviet Union. The event appeared
to frighten both sides and it marked a change
in the development of the Cold War.
The Military and the leaders of the Communist
Party felt humiliated by Khrushchev climb
down over Cuba. His agricultural policy was
also a failure and the country was forced
to import increasing amounts of wheat from
Canada and the United States.
On 14th October, 1964, the Central Committee
forced Khrushchev to resign. He lived in
retirement in Moscow where he wrote his memoirs,
Khrushchev Remembers (1971). Nikita Khrushchev
died on 11th September 1971. |