意味 | 共起表現 |
「nkvd」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 172件
he Polish intelligentsia, was rounded up by the | NKVD after the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939. |
s Flat 7 was occupied by Dr Arnold Deutsch, the | NKVD agent who recruited the Cambridge Five. |
subsequent to information provided by defecting | NKVD agent Boris Morros. |
A front organization was created by a | NKVD agent in 1928 for the infiltration and placemen |
NKVD agents sent to Spain were therefore keener on a | |
However, due to the high presence of | NKVD agents in the partisan movement, as well as the |
The decision was made in December 1943, when | NKVD agents entered the homes of Kalmyks, or registe |
November 9, 1922, he was murdered, allegedly by | NKVD agents, in Kyustendil, Bulgaria. |
e charges was that Gorky was killed by Yagoda's | NKVD agents. |
Since 1943 he was surveyor of forming with | NKVD aid Szamodzielny Batalion Szturmowy |
The | NKVD also targeted the members of the National Commi |
were handled by GUPVI, a special department of | NKVD, analogous to GULAG, which was established in S |
's Commissar for Internal Affairs (chief of the | NKVD) and the Prosecutor of the USSR, and instituted |
He was arrested by the | NKVD and executed in 1939. |
Bessarab was later arrested by the | NKVD and executed. |
executed in 1953, Fitin was discharged from the | NKVD and denied his pension. |
The | NKVD and UB used brute force and deception to elimin |
The GUGB was removed from the | NKVD and renamed Peoples Commissariat of State Secur |
ter Polish defeat, Machalla was captured by the | NKVD and sent to Siberia. |
ere arrested by the domestic secret police, the | NKVD and she was expelled from the Komsomol. |
the Soviet Union Boris Khariton was arrested by | NKVD and died in GULAG. |
NCOs and ordinary soldiers were arrested by the | NKVD and were interred in GuLags. |
ter the meeting the guests were arrested by the | NKVD and forced to cooperate in the funkspiel. |
the war, Rabe was arrested first by the Soviet | NKVD and then by the British Army. |
Much of its senior cadre also came from the | NKVD, and among its missions was to keep order in th |
In March 1940, representatives of the Soviet | NKVD and German Gestapo met for one week in Zakopane |
he Stalinist repressions of the late 1930s, the | NKVD and state science apparatus accused the late (e |
In March 1945 he was arrested by the | NKVD and taken to Moscow, where he was put on trial |
ng Jankowski, were arrested on 27 March 1945 by | NKVD and sentenced in the Trial of the Sixteen. |
ch 1918 on she was a member of the board of the | NKVD and worked in the Moscow Cheka, the Moscow secr |
He evaded the Soviet | NKVD and its Polish counterpart, the Ministry of Pub |
e of Poles who had been in the captivity of the | NKVD and subsequently massacred. |
erms of the capitulation he was arrested by the | NKVD and held in various prisons in the city. |
Afterwards, he was arrested by the Soviet | NKVD, and in a drastic conversion from his previous |
ge, he was arrested at his home in Tomsk by the | NKVD and sentenced to a 25-year imprisonment for bei |
tody of the Military Counterintelligence to the | NKVD, and continued uninterrupted into well after th |
On 26 June 1941, the | NKVD arrested him. |
hands of Japanese forces and been decimated by | NKVD arrests. |
ping, and that Skoblin had been murdered by the | NKVD as well. |
men and children were handed over to the Soviet | NKVD at Judenburg. |
nch Government had become enraged by near-daily | NKVD attempts to kidnap and murder Russian political |
risoners, but the project was supervised by the | NKVD because of its great importance and the corresp |
According to the testimony of his | NKVD bodyguards-Colonels Sarkisov and Nadaraia-Beria |
In April and May 1945 | NKVD brought to the camp hundreds of Home Army and N |
sacred during the Katyn massacre in the Kharkiv | NKVD building, later buried in Pyatykhatky forest. |
Deaths of POW were 450,600 including 356,700 in | NKVD camps and 93,900 in transit. |
the Buzuluk area, and recruitment began in the | NKVD camps for Polish POWs. |
the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs ( | NKVD) chief Lavrentii Beria. |
Molotov intervened on behalf of Pauker, whereas | NKVD chief Lavrentiy Beria defended Georgescu-their |
The Russian Alsos teams were headed by | NKVD Colonel General A. P. Zavenyagin and staffed wi |
eous part of Chechnya, by Soviet forces under a | NKVD colonel Mikhail Gveshiani. |
As a part of this policy, | NKVD committed prisoner massacres where thousands of |
herited the “secret police” function of the old | NKVD, conducting espionage and counterespionage, as |
After World War II, the | NKVD coordinated work on Soviet nuclear weaponry, un |
death is unknown, but he was on the list of the | NKVD dated April 3, 1940. |
Soviet Union and was appointed the head of the | NKVD department of Norillag, a GULAG labor camp in N |
ps were formally subordinated to OGPU later the | NKVD directorate of the Far Eastern Krai. |
groups could be of the special kind: «special» ( | NKVD), diversionist, recon and others. |
A | NKVD document issued sentencing Kucherenko to death |
earance of his aide Nikolai Skoblin, who was an | NKVD double agent posing as an Inner Line member. |
y of whom were either tried and executed by the | NKVD during Stalin's purges or died under suspicious |
He was murdered by agents of Stalin's | NKVD during the Spanish Civil War. |
i Chaim Yehoshua Halberstam was arrested by the | NKVD during World War II and died of starvation in t |
th a criminal background who were caught by the | NKVD during the Great Patriotic war, then trained as |
ttacked country offices of the PUBP, MO, UB and | NKVD employing numerous Jewish functionaries (up to |
Soviet | NKVD established a prison camp for German civilians |
ованных, ГУПВИ, transliterated as GUPVI) of the | NKVD, established in 1939 (initially as the "Directo |
From 1928 to 1938, he worked for the | NKVD, first as Deputy Department Chief for the North |
oviet liberation in 1944 it was utilized by the | NKVD forces for deportation of the local population |
, Zagnansk, Cacow and Marcinkowice), the Soviet | NKVD forces, the Polish communist partisans of the A |
o, the project used information obtained by the | NKVD from the United States. |
d District troops, which included artillery and | NKVD frontier units. |
ойка) for the period of Polish operation of the | NKVD, functioned for about two months. |
and in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev admitted that the | NKVD had executed the Poles and confirmed two other |
ees suspected of anti-Soviet activities and the | NKVD had to open dozens of ad-hoc prison sites in al |
hen in 1990 Mikhail Gorbachev admitted that the | NKVD had indeed executed the Poles and confirmed two |
he city hall, the Communist Party building, the | NKVD headquarters. |
the Second World War, he was imprisoned by the | NKVD, held at the Kozielsk camp and then murdered in |
After the war in 1945 he was again arrested by | NKVD; his wife would die in a communist prison in 19 |
The | NKVD, however, had already infiltrated these units, |
Lieutenant General of | NKVD I.A. Bogdanov [Front of Reserve Armies] (14 Jul |
Arrested by the | NKVD in Romania, he spent the rest of his life in So |
ands of Ukrainian Intellectuals murdered by the | NKVD in 1937-38 |
The monastery was closed by | NKVD in 1924, and reopened in 1994. |
He was arrested by | NKVD in 1944 and kept in a prison camp in the Soviet |
nn was one of the most valuable sources for the | NKVD in Germany. |
with other Polish POWs, he was murdered by the | NKVD in April 1940 near Kharkov, in the Katyn Massac |
Klyachkivsky was arrested by the Soviets ( | NKVD) in Lviv, and sentenced to death which was comm |
's ranks in 1929, Korzh went on to serve in the | NKVD in 1931. |
where about 550 prisoners were executed by the | NKVD in 1941. |
ion People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs ( | NKVD) in July 1934, becoming its Main Directorate of |
unist Party of the Soviet Union in 1933 and the | NKVD in 1938. |
Eduard Ellman-Eelma was arrested by | NKVD in Tallinn in summer 1941, sentenced to death a |
was written either by or at the request of the | NKVD in order to split the Turkic ethnic groups into |
hs of prolonged torture was finally shot by the | NKVD in 1937. |
e with the Soviets, he avoided execution by the | NKVD in the Katyn Massacre. |
tuals murdered by the Soviet secret police (the | NKVD) in 1937-38, and also several thousand Polish o |
In 1936 Dmitry Medvedev was sent as a | NKVD intelligence agent abroad. |
ore commando teams; according to Kleinjung, the | NKVD intercepted all three without arousing suspicio |
Typically, | NKVD Internal Troops were defensive in nature, altho |
Photographed in an | NKVD internment camp, 1940 |
son (1904 - September 12, 1997) was an Estonian | NKVD investigator of Jewish nationality. |
in from execution for providing the head of the | NKVD, Lavrenty Beria, with information General Secre |
March 1944 and finishing the following day, the | NKVD loaded 37,713 Balkars onto 14 train echelons bo |
In January 1941, | NKVD managed to crack into the organization and arre |
This execution was one of the many | NKVD massacres of prisoners committed in 1941. |
ike Kleinjung, were ethnic Germans, others were | NKVD men who did not speak the language. |
On 26 June, 1941 agents of the Soviet | NKVD mercilessly tortured and murdered him along wit |
On 26 June, 1941 agents of the Soviet | NKVD mercilessly tortured and murdered him along wit |
He was sentenced to death and executed by | NKVD near Moscow. |
Manayenkaw enumerates 11 special ( | NKVD of BSSR) groups operating on the BSSR territory |
January 1893 Lviv-14 August 1937 Moscow) was an | NKVD officer and head of Joseph Stalin's personal se |
but was released due to the intervention of an | NKVD officer who had been his pupil. |
A kolkhoz chairman, | NKVD officer, and volunteer with the Spanish Republi |
ity in the Hammelburg POW camp, primarily by an | NKVD officer, Brigade Commander Ivan Bessonov, and a |
In 1938, Lavrenty Beria, a senior | NKVD official, created the Department of Special Des |
Few months later Medvedev was fired from | NKVD officially for "unjustified closures of crimina |
ently there were 328 political prisoners of the | NKVD on board, out of which 305 men were killed thro |
d because of these I. Neman was arrested by the | NKVD on December 11, 1938 under false accusation of |
NKVD Order № 00485 "On liquidation of Polish sabotag | |
NKVD Order no. | |
NKVD Order № 00485 | |
NKVD Order № 00689 partially recalled the NKVD Order | |
arbinites were to be processed according to the | NKVD Order № 00486. |
The documents, containing the | NKVD Order № 00485 which led to execution of 111,091 |
NKVD Order № 00593, also known as NKVD Order about H | |
Inside Stalin's Secret Police: | NKVD Politics, 1936-1939 (1985) |
After the war he held high-ranking | NKVD positions in Ukraine and in 1954 became one of |
He died in the | NKVD prison hospital of Odessa. |
Soviet Union started he was moved from a local | NKVD prison to the Kuybyshev prison, where he was sh |
Instead, the | NKVD promptly arrested all of the Americans, who wer |
d military were evacuated, and the Red Army and | NKVD quickly occupied the land. |
facturing complex at Tula defended by the 156th | NKVD regiment in 1941. |
mountain regiments, one of Red Army and one of | NKVD, reinforced by armoured vehicles, tank battalio |
ubject came from Soviet sources, especially the | NKVD reports in GARF (State Archive of the Russian F |
n are shown as suspected of being Kharlamov-the | NKVD seems to be conducting a criminal investigation |
Retreating | NKVD shot a number of local people in the streets in |
ibbentrop-Molotov Pact and then executed by the | NKVD some time in 1940 during the infamous Katyn mas |
The | NKVD soon focused attention on them and started repr |
together with his wife, Bella Joseph worked for | NKVD, Soviet intelligence, while also working for th |
NKVD special camp Nr. 2 in Buchenwald | |
NKVD special camp Nr. 6 in Jamlitz near Lieberose | |
udenko was also one of the chief commandants of | NKVD special camp Nr. 7, a former Nazi concentration |
ber 1944 reveals Elizabeth Bentley reporting to | NKVD that Emma Joseph was well suited for operationa |
ent was given the recently finished building of | NKVD, the Verkhovna Rada building became situated ac |
The woman was arrested by the | NKVD the next day. |
There were later speculation which accused the | NKVD, the secret service of the USSR, of responsibil |
On 19 June 1941, Lehmann reported to the | NKVD the exact date on which the Germans planned to |
ough forced confessions from colleagues led the | NKVD to many of Hasan's weapons and equipment, he el |
tion, 1940-1941, the Ninth Fort was used by the | NKVD to house political prisoners on their way to th |
of Magadan which Petrov charges was used by the | NKVD to perform summary executions. |
In June 1945, she was arrested by | NKVD together with her husband. |
vasion of Poland, he was arrested by the Soviet | NKVD, transported to Lubyanka Prison, and died in 19 |
ed to imprisonment without a formal trial by an | NKVD tribunal. |
to have been a member of troika (an analogue of | NKVD troikas) which sentenced to death Tuvan prime m |
The Maslenki incident, was an attack by Soviet | NKVD troops on 15 June 1940 against the Latvian bord |
They were dressed as fake | NKVD troops. |
erman lines he was captured and later killed by | NKVD troops. |
found (two killed, rest taken prisoner) by real | NKVD troops. |
It was established within | NKVD under the name "Administration for Affairs of P |
ittee of VKP(b) and the subsequent order of the | NKVD undersigned by Beria cancelled most of NKVD ord |
To expedite the process, regional | NKVD units were instructed to set up so called "Spec |
forces, including White Russians, Red Army and | NKVD units, heavily defeated Kichik Akhund's troops |
ypothesis about his post-war collaboration with | NKVD was never confirmed. |
Genrikh Yagoda, the third head of the | NKVD, was accused during his trial (besides espionag |
Mass operations of the | NKVD were carried out during the Great Purge and tar |
A number of mass operations of the | NKVD were related to the prosecution of whole ethnic |
er of Kirov, top functionaries of the Leningrad | NKVD were relieved of their duties and were given ve |
n (Counterintelligence) of the Byelorussian SSR | NKVD, where he served until 1936. |
the People's Commissariat of Internal Affairs ( | NKVD), while the government was supposed to be locat |
The latter two were quietly subdued by | NKVD, while the two SS men were cordially welcomed a |
Arrested by the | NKVD, Yegorova was suspected as a potential traitor |
意味 | 共起表現 |
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