The Case of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite
Terrorist Centre
Heard Before the Military Collegium of the
Supreme Court of the U.S.S.R.
August 19-24, 1936 (Moscow)
The Trotskyite-Zinovievite United Terrorist Centre
The testimonies of Zinoviev, Kamenev, Evdokimov, Mrachkovsky,
Bakayev and a number of other accused in the present case, have
established beyond doubt that the only motive for organizing the
Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc was thier striving to seize power at all
costs, and that the sole and decisive means chosen for this purpose
was the organization of terroristic acts against the most prominent
leaders of the Party and the Government.
Lacking all support in the working class and the toiling masses of
the people of the U.S.S.R., having lost all their ideological
possessions, having no political program and imbued with bitter
hatred toward the Socialist victories of our country, the leaders of
the Trotskyite-Zinovievite counter-revolutionary bloc, Trotsky,
Zinoviev and Kamenev, sank definitively into the swamp of
whiteguardism, joined forces and merged with the most inverterate
enemies of the Soviet Power, and became the organizing force of the
last remnants of the exploiting classis which had been routed in the
U.S.S.R. In their desperation and hatred they resorted to the most
despicable means of fighting the Soviet Government and the leaders
of the C.P.S.U., namely, political assassinations.
At first, in the face of the first successes of Socialism in the
U.S.S.R., they held to their hopes that difficulties would arise,
with which, in their calculations, the Soviet Power would not be
able to cope. But later, seeing that these difficulties were being
successfully overcome and that our country was emerging victorious
from these difficulties, they frankly banked on the complication of
international relations, on war and the defeat of the Soviet Power.
Seeing no favourable prospects for themselves, they resorted to the
gun; they organized underground terroristic groups and made use of
the most detestable method of fighting, namely terrorism.
At present the Trotskyite-Zinovievite conspirators, as a reason for
their fight against the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet Government, no
longer advance the claim that the Party and the Soviet Government
are pursuing an allegedly wrong policy, or that the C.P.S.U. and the
Soviet Government are leading the country to its doom, as they
lyingly and slanderously asserted in the past. As their principal
motive for resorting to terrorism they now advance the successes of
the building of Socialism in the U.S.S.R., the successes in the
cultural and economic growth of the country, which successes,
demonstrating the ideological and political bankruptcy of the
Trotskyites-Zinovievites, fan their hatred of the Soviet Government
still more and intensify their desire to avenge themselves on the
Soviet Government for their political failure by resorting to
terrorism.
In spite of obdurate denials, the accused Zinoviev was compelled by
the weight of evidence which was laid before him by the
investigating authorities to admit that:
". . . The main object which the Trotskyite-Zinovievite centre
pursued was the assassination of the leaders of the C.P.S.U., and in
the first place the assassination of Stalin andKirov. " (Vol. XII,
p. 16.)
Another member of this centre, accused Reingold, during examination
on July 3, 1936, testifield:
". . . The main thing on which all the members of the bloc agreed
was... the recognition of the necessity of consolidating all forces
to capture the Party leadership. I must admit that the fundamental
aim of the Trotskyite-Zinovievitebloc was to remove by violence the
leadership of the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet Government, and Stalin in
the first place. At the end of 1932 the centre adopted a decision to
organize the fight against the leadership of the C.P.S.U. and the
Government by terroristic means. I know that the Trotskyite section
of the bloc received instructions from L. D. Trotsky to adopt the
path of terrorism and to prepare attempts on the life of Stalin."
(Vol. XXVII, p. 52)
Exhaustive evidence on the same point was also given during the
examination on July 23, 1936 by the accused Kamenev. The accused
Kamenev stated:
".. . . The emergence from the difficulties, the victory of the
policy of the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U. caused in us a new
wave of animosity and hatred towards the leadership of the Party,
and primarily towards Stalin."
". . . We, i.e., the Zinovievite centre of the counter-revolutionary
organization, the members of which I have enumerated above, and the
Trotskyite counter-revolutionary organiztion in the persons of
Smirnov, Mrachkovsky and Ter-Vaganyan, negotiated in 1932 to unite
both the Zinovievite and Trotskyite counter-revolutionary
organizations for joint preparation of terroristic acts against the
leaders of the Central Committee and in the first place against
Stalin and Kirov. "
".. . . The main thing is that in 1932 both Zinoviev and we, namely,
myself (Kamenev), Evdokimov, Bakayev and the Trotskyite leaders,
Smirnov, Mrachkovsky and Ter-Vaganyan, decided that the only means
by which we could hope to come to power was to organize terroristic
acts against the leaders of the C.P.S.U., and primarily against
Stalin. It was precisely on this basis of a terroristic struggle
against the leaders of the C.P.S.U. that negotiations for the union
were conducted between ourselves and the Trotskyites." (Vol. XV, pp.
10, 12, 13.)
The accused Kamenev further stated that:
".. . . However, our banking on the insuperability of the
difficulties which the country was experiencing, on the state of
crisis of its economy, on the collapse of the economic policy of the
Party leadership had obviously failed by the second half of 1932.
"Overcoming the difficulties, the contry, under the leadership of
the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U., was successfully advancing
along the road of economic growth. We could not help seeing this.
"One would have thought that we should have stopped fighting. But
the logic of the counter-revolutionary struggle, the nakedly
unprincipled striving to scize power led us in the other direction.
The emergence from the difficulties, the victory of the policy of
the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U., caused in us a new wave of
animosity and hatred towards the leaders of the Party, and primarily
towards Stalin." (Vol. XV, p. 27.)
This was confirmed also by the accused Evdokimov who, on Aug. 10
this year, gave detailed evidence on the organization of the united
centre and the terroristic position adopted by it. In reply to the
question put to him by the investigating authorities on what basis
the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc arose, the accused Evdokimov stated:
".. . . Mrachkovsky said: 'The hopes we have placed on the collapse
of the Party's policy must be considered doomed. The methods of
struggle used up to now have not produced any positive results.
There remains only one path of struggle, and that is the removal of
the leadership of the Party and the Government by violence ... '
Seeing that I agreed with him, Mrachkovsky, no longer having any
fear that I would not support him, went on to say: 'Stalin and the
other leaders of the Party and the Government must be removed. This
is the principal task.'
"Right there, Mrachkovsky informed me that the Trotskyites had
received instruktions from Trotsky on the necessity of organizing
terroristic attempts on the lives of the leaders of the Party and
the Government, that Trotsky, being outside the Soviet Union,
correctly defined the tasks of the fight against the leadership of
the C.P.S.U. At the same time, by the logic of the struggle,
Mrachkovsky himself and other Trotskyites had come to the conclusion
that terrorism was the only road of struggle remaining.. . .
..Smirnov expressed the same views as Mrachkovsky . . . . In
conclusion Mrachkovsky and Smirnov proposed to unite the forces of
the Trotskyites and Zinovievites and to proceed to create secret
terrorist groups for the purpose of committing terroristic acts
against the leadeers of the Party and the Government. (Vol. XXXVI,
p. 10.)
Similar evidence was also given by a member of the Moscow terrorist
centre, I.I. Reingold, who testified as follows:
". . . I met Kamenev in the second half of 1933 and also in 1934 in
his apartment in Karmanitsky pereulok, in Moskow.
Kamenev appraised the situation in approximately the same way as
Zinoviev and backed his conclusions by an analysis of the economic
and political situation in the country. Kamenev arrived at the
conclusion that after all, things were not moving toward catastrophe
but were on upgrade; therefore, all expectations of an automatic
collapse were groundless, and the leadership that had grown up was
made of too hard a granite to expect that it would split of itself.
From this Kamenev drew the conclusion that the 'leadership will have
to be split.'
"Kamenev repestedly quoted Trotsky as saying: 'the whole matter is
in the top, therefore the top must be removed.'
"Kamenev advocated the necessity of a terrorist struggle and
primarily the necessity of killing Stalin, pointing out that this
was the only way of coming to power. I particularly remember his
cynical remark that 'heads are peculiar in that they do not grow on
again.'
"Kamenev proposed that terrorist gunmen be trained. He said that the
distinguishing feature of the new bloc compared with the previous
opposition bloc was the adoption of energetic terroristic action."
(Vol. XXVII, p. 61.)
He further said:
". . . I have already stated above that the Trotskyite-Zinovievite
united bloc had no new political program.It based itself upon the
old threadbare platform, and none of the leaders of the bloc
occupied themseles with, or were interested in the question of
drawing up any kind of political program that was to any degree
complete and consistent. The only thing that united this
heterogeneous bloc was the idea of a terrorist flight against the
leaders of the Party and the Government.
"As a matter of fact the bloc was a counter-revolutionary terrorist
gang of assassins who strove to seize power in the country by any
means whatever." (Vol. XXVII, pp. 72-73.)
The accused I N Smirnov, during examination on Aug. 5, 1936, also
admitted that he had met Sedov, L. Trotsky's son, while he was in
Berlin as far back as 1931.
I .N .Smirnov stated:
".. . . In the course of our conversation, L. Sedov, analysing the
situation in the Soviet Union, expressed the opinion that under the
present conditions only the removal by violence of the leading
persons in the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet Government could bring about
a change in general situation in the country...."
". . . I admit that the attitude which regarded terrorism as the
only way of changing the situation in the Soviet Union was known to
me from a conversation with Sedov in Berlin in 1931 as his own
personal position. I admit that this line on terrorism was confirmed
by L. Trotsky in 1932 in his personal instructions conveyed to me
through Y. Gaven.
"I admit that Ter-Vaganyan, who with my knowledge conducted
negotiations with the Leftists and the Zinovievites in the name of
the Trotskyite group, formed in 1932 a bloc with Kamenev, Zinoviev
and the Lominadze group for joint struggle against the C.P.S.U. and
the Soviet Government, and that L. Trotsky's instructions regarding
terror against the leaders of the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet state werw
made the basis of this bloc. " (Vol. XXIX, pp. 93, 104.)
The accused V. A. Ter-Vaganyan confirmed this evidence of the
accused Smirnov, admitting his participation in the united centre,
as well as the participation in this centre of the accused I. N.
Smirnov, Mrachkovsky, Zinoviev and Kamenev.
The accused V. A. Ter-Vaganyan confirmed this evidence of the
accused Smirnov, admitting his participation in the united centre,
as well as the participation in this centre of the accused I. N.
Smirnov, Mrachkovsky, Zinoviev and Kamenev.
The accused Ter-Vaganyan admitted that:
"The Trotskyite organization headed by I. N. Smirnov, in its
counter-revolutionary activities, particularly fostered hatred and
animosity against the leaders of the C.P.S.U. . . . It was on this
hatred that the bloc was founded. . . " (Vol. XXXVIII; p. 11.)
The accused Ter-Vaganyan also admitted that as far back as 1931 -
"Sedov received from Trotsky special instructions for I. N. Smirnov
and the underground Trotskyites in the U.S.S.R. to adopt the most
active and sharp methods of struggle against the Party and its
leadership." (Vol. XXXVIII, p. 27.)
Confirming the evidence of the accused Mrachkovsky on this point,
the accused Ter-Vaganyan testified:
"Mrachkovsky is right when he says that the Trotskyite-Zinovievite
bloc itself was really organized on the basis of the recognition
that it was necessary to fight the leadership of the Party and the
Government by terroristic methods." (Vol. XXXVIII, p. 32.)
Thus, there is no doubt left that the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc
had turned into a group of unprincipled, political adventurers and
assassins striving at only one thing, namely, to make their way to
power even through terrorism.
Such is the sole and exhaustive "program" of this association of
political assassins.
Concerning terrorism as the sole basis on which the union of the
Trotskyites and Zinovievites took place in 1932, evidence was given
at the preliminary investigation also by the accused R. V. Pickel.
During the examination on July 23, Pickel testified:
". . . According to the information conveyed to us by Reingold in
the beginning of 1934, the all-Union united counter-revolutionary
centre of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc decided by the efforts of
the Trotskyites and Zinovievites to strike a crushing blow at the
C.P.S.U. by committing a number of terroristic acts with the aim of
beheading the leadership and seizing power.
"The all-Union centre of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc then
bluntly raised the question of the necessity of 'strugical
intervention' (meaning terrorism) in order to bring about a decisive
change in the situation in the country. For this purpose the centre
gave instructions to start selecting people who nursed particularly
bitter feelings against the Party leadership, who had very strong
will power and were capable of carrying out terroristic attempts on
the lives of the leaders of the C.P.S.U." (Vol. XXV, p. 65.)
In conformity with the course taken by the Trotskyite-Zinovievite
underground bloc of seizing power by any means, the members of this
bloc widely practised double-dealing as the special and main method
in their relations towards the Party and Government. They brought
this double-dealing to monstrous dimensions, and transformed it into
a system that might rouse the envy of any Axef and Malinovsky, of
any secret service with all its spies, provocateurs and agents for
diversive activities.
One of the principal aims of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc was in
every possible way to conceal and mask its counter-revolutionary
activities and the organization of terroristic acts.
On this point the accused Reingold testified:
". . . In 1933-34 Zinoviev told me when I was alone with him in his
apartment that: ' . . . The principal practical task is to organize
the terroristic work so secretly as to preclude our being
compromised in any way. . . . '
" ' . . . When under examination the main thing is persistently to
deny any connection with the organization. if accused of terroristic
activities, you must emphatically deny it and argue that terror is
incompatible with the views of Bolsheviks-Marxists.' " (Vol. XXVII,
pp. 110, 112)
Similar instructions were given by L. Trotsky, who rekommended that
when terroristic acts were committed they should be disavowed and "a
position should be taken up analogous to that taken up by the
Central Committee of the Socialist-Revolutionaries toward Madame
Kaplan" who shot at V. I. Lenin.
Another reason why the united centre resorted to profound secrecy
and carefully masked its terroristic activities was that one of its
aims was to betray the vigilance of the working class and the masses
of the toilers. While preparing the assassination of Comrade Stalin
and other leaders of the C.P.S.U., the united centre simultaneously
strove by all means in its power to give assurances of its loyalty
and even devotion to the Party and the Soviet Power, of its
repentance of past mistakes and of its readiness to serve the
Proletarian Revolution honestly. The leaders of the united centre
figured that having been "forgiven" they could, after killing
Comrade Stalin, utilize this "forgiveness" to come into power. On
this point the accused Reingold testified:
". . . They believed - I am speaking of the leaders of the
Trotskyite-Zinovievite centre - that the fact that we were forgiven
while Stalin was still alive, the fact that confidence was placed in
us, would ensure our coming nearer to the leadership and to power;
and following this, after Zinoviev, Kamenev and their supporters had
come into power, they would ensure the return also of Trotsky to the
leadership and to power." (Vol. XXVII, p. 168.)
This was also testified to during examination by the accused
Kamenev:
". . . We discussed this question more than once. We outlined and
decided on two possible ways for the leaders of
theTrotskyite-Zinovievite bloc to come to power.
"The first, and what seemed to us to be the most feasible way, was
that after a terroristic act had been committed against Stalin,
there would ensure confusion in the leadership of the Party and the
Government, and negotiations Would be opened with us, the leaders of
the Zinovievite bloc and in the first place with Zinoviev, Kamenev
and Trotsky.
"We assumed that in these negotiations, myself and Zinoviev would
occupy the leading positions in the Party and the country, for even
with Stalin we, by our policy of doubledealing, had obtained, after
all, forgiveness of our mistakes by the Party and had been taken
back into its ranks, while our participation, that is mine,
Zinoviev's and Trotsky's, in the terroristic acts would remain
secret from the Party and the country.
"The second way by which we could seize power, and which seemed to
us to be less reliable, was that after a terroristic act had been
committed against Stalin, the leadership of the Party and the
country would be thrown into a state of uncertainty and
disorganization.
"The leaders of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc would be able to
take advantage of the confusion to compel the remaining leaders of
the Party to admit us to power or else to yield to us their places.
"Trotsky's appearance and his active participation in the struggle
for power were taken as a matter of course." (Vol. XV, pp. 33-34.)
The united Trotskyite-Zinovievite centre took the path of terrorism
under the direct influence of L. D. Trotsky, who personally gave the
members of the united centre a number of verbal and written
instructions to this effect.
During examination on July 20, 1936 the accused S. V. Mrachkovsky
testifield:
". . . We Trotskyites adopted the policy of terrorism long before
the bloc with Zinoviev and Kamenev was formed. In 1931, when I. N.
Smirnov was in Berlin and established contact with L. Trotsky,
instructions were received from the latter to proceed to the
organization of action groups of Trotskyites." (Vol. XVIII, pp. 40.
41.)
This same Mrachkovsky stated:
". . . According to the instructions of L. Trotsky received in 1931
by I. N. Smirnov, we were to kill Stalin, Voroshilov and Kaganovich.
Stalin was to be killed first." (Vol. XVIII; p. 42.)
On Trotsky's attitude towards forming, a united
Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc and adopting terroristic methods of
struggle, the accused Mrachkovsky testified as follows:
". . . In the middle of 1932, I. N. Smirnov put before our leading
trio the question of the necessity of uniting our organization with
the Zinoviev-Kamenev and Shatskin-Lominadze groups . . . It was then
decided to consult L. Trotsky on this question and to obtain his
directions. L. Trotsky replied, agreeing to the formation of a bloc
on the condition that the groups uniting in the bloc would agree to
the necessity of removing by violence the leaders of the C.P.S.U.
and Stalin in the first place." (Vol. XVIII, pp. 44, 45.)
This evidence of Mrachkovsky was fully confirmed by the accused
Dreitzer who during examination testified:
". . . On the direct instructions of L. Trotsky, our all-Union
centre of the Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc was to prepare and carry
out the assassination of Stalin and Voroshilov for the purpose of
beheading the leadership of the C.P.S.U. and the Red Army." (Vol. X,
p. 99.)
In 1934, the accused Dreitzer personally received written
instructions from Trotsky, through L. Trotsky's son, Sedov, to
prepare and carry out terroristic act against Comrade Stalin. This
letter was written personally by Trotsky. According to Dreitzer's
testimony the contents of this letter were as follows:
"Dear friend. Convey that today we have the following main tasks
before us:
"1) To remove Stalin and Voroshilov.
"2) To unfold work for organizing nuclei in the army.
"3) In the event of war, to take advantage of every setback and
confusion to capture the leadership."
The accused Dreitzer stated that "the letter ended with instructions
to keep Trotsky informed of the progress of the work done in
fulfilment of the above instructions. I must add that these
instructions of Trotsky fully confirmed the instructions I received
from Mrachkovsky in May 1934." (Vol. X, pp. 102, 103.)
This letter was addressed by Trotsky to Dreitzer personally as to
one of the people most devoted to him, and who at one time was chief
of his personal bodyguard.
Dreitzer handed this letter to Mrachkovsky, who, according to the
testimony of Dreitzer and of Mrachkovsky himself, eventuelly
destroyed it for reasons of secrecy.
In addition to the above-mentioned letter, Trotsky sent to
theTrotskyite-Zinovievite centre a number of other verbal and
written instructions concerning terrorism. In particular, he handed
to the accused Holtzman instructions of this nature when he met him
personally. Holtzman, served as a Liaison man between L. Trotsky and
the Trotskyite-Zinovievite centre.
The investigation has established that after the smash-up of the
Trotskyite-Zinovievite centre in connection with the murder of
Comrade Kirov, L. Trotsky himself assumed the leadership of
terroristic activities in the U.S.S.R. and began stongly to press
forward the organization of the assassinations of Comrades Stalin
and Voroshilov. For this purpose he took steps to restorč the
terrorist groups in the U.S.S.R. and to stimulate their activity by
sending a number of his tried agants to the U.S.S.R. from abroad and
also by using for this purpose persons belonging to underground
Trotskyite organizations in the U.S.S.R. who went abroad ostensibly
on official business.
The investigation has established that at various times the
following accused persons were sent from Berlin to Moscow as such
agents: V. Olberg, Berman-Yurin, Fritz David (Kruglyansky), Moissei
Lurye, Nathan Lurye and several others who received directly from L.
D. Trotsky and his son Sedov (L. L .Trotsky) instructions to
organize at all costs the assassinations of Comrades Stalin,
Voroshilov, Kaganovich and other leaders of the Party.
One of these Trotskyite agents, V. Olberg, who arrived in the
U.S.S.R. with the passport of a citizen of the Republic of Honduras,
stated when arrested and examined:
". . . As I have already testified, I began active Trotskyite work
at the beginning of 1930. In addition to the persons I have
enumerated, I was personally connected with Trotsky and his son Lev
Sedov; I carried out a number of assignments given to me personally
by Trotsky in connection with the Trotskyite organization, and I was
his emissary in Germany. As Trotsky's emissary in Germany, I carried
on work in the Trotskyite organization in Berlin and also maintained
secret connections with the Soviet Union. I maintained connections
with the Soviet Union using addresses and places which Lev Sedov
indicated to me." (Vol. XXI, p. 24.)
V. Olberg admitted that he arrived in the U.S.S.R. illegally for the
purpose of carrying on Trotskyite counter-revolutionary workand of
organizing a terroristic act against Comrade Stalin.
During examination on February 21 of this year, V. Olberg testified
that during one of his meetings with L. Trotsky's son, Sedov, the
latter showed him a letter from Trotsky in wich Trotsky proposed
that Olberg be sent to the Soviet Union with a group of German
Trotskyites for the purpose of preparing and organizing the murder
of Stalin
". . . In this letter," V. Olberg goes on to say, "Trotsky wrote to
Sedov stating that he fully agreed with his proposal that I be sent
to the Soviet Union. Trotsky wrote that he considered me to be an
absolutely suitable person who could be fully relied upon in so
perilous a matter."
To this Olberg added:
"Sedov said to me that it was my duty to conceal by every possible
means Trotsky's role in the organization of a terroristic act
against Stalin, and that even if were arrested in circumstances in
which my role of a terrorist would be absolutely obvious, I was to
conceal the fact that I was a Trotskyite and was committing the
terroristic act on Trotsky's instructions." (Vol. XXI, pp. 77, 78)
As the investigation has established, V. Olberg arrived in the
U.S.S.R. with the passport of a citizen of the Republic of Honduras
obtained with the aid of the German Secret Police (Gestapo).
On this point V. Olberg, during examination in the office of the
State Attorney of the U.S.S.R., testified
". . . Sedov promised to help me to obtain a passport to returnto
the U.S.S.R. once more. But I succeeded in obtaining a passport with
the help of my younger brother, Paul Olberg. Thanks to my
connections with the German police and their agent in Prague, V. P.
Tukalevsky, I, by means of a bribe, obtained the passport of a
citizen of the Republic of Honduras. The mony for the passport -
13,000 Czechoslovakian kronen - I obtained from Sedov, or rather,
from the Trotskyite organization on Sedov's instructions." (Vol.
XXI, p. 262.)
Re-examined on the question of his connection with the Gestapo, V.
Olberg on July 31 of this year testified:
"Confirming also my testimony of May 9 of this year, I emphasize
that my connection with the Gestapo was not at all an exception, of
which one could speak as of the fall of an individual Trotskyite. It
was the line of the Trotskyites in conformity with the instructions
of L. Trotsky given through Sedov. The connection with the Gestapo
followed the line of organizing terrorism in the U.S.S.R. against
the leaders of the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet Government."
". . . Several times I met a prominent official of the Gestapo,
whose name was not mentioned to me, and I did not consider it
convenient to inquire. With this official I discussed my first
journey to Moscow and my plans concerning the preparation of a
terroristic act. This official knew my brother as an agent of the
Gestapo to whom he advised me to apply for help whenever necessary.
(Vol. XXI, pp. 263-264.)
This testimony of V. Olberg was fully confirmed by Paul Olberg, also
an agent of the German Secret Police, arrested in connection with
another case. It was Paul Olberg who put his brother V. Olberg, as
both of them testify, in touch with the Gestapo and helped V. Olberg
to obtain from the Gestapo the passport of a citizen of the Republic
of Honduras, which figures as an exhibit in the present case.
Paul Olberg also confirmed the fact that V. Olberg's journey to the
U.S.S.R. was organized with terroristic purposes. During examination
on May 16 this year, Paul Olberg testified:
". . . Valentine Olberg informed me that an official of the German
Secret Police told him that all persons taking part in preparing and
committing terroristic acts would be given refuge in Germany." (Vol.
XXIV, p. 231.)
Another Trotskyite agent, sent to the U.S.S.R. with terroristic
tasks, namely Berman-Yurin, testified:
". . . My own role was that I arrived in the U.S.S.R. as a person
particularly trusted by Lev Davidovich Trotsky with a special
mission and instructions from him." (Vol.IV, p. 30.)
As the investigation has established, this "special mission and
instructions" were to organize the assassination of Comrade Stalin.
This was admitted by the accused Berman-Yurin, who testified that,
on meeting L. Trotsky .in Copenhagen, he received from Trotsky
directions to kill Comrade Stalin.
". . . During this conversation," said the accused Berman-Yurin,
"Trotsky openly said to me that in the fight against Stalin, one
must not hesitate to resort to extreme measures, and that Stalin
must be physically destroyed." (Vol. IV, p. 36.)
". . . Trotsky emphasized that the attempt must be prepared very
carefully and circumspectly and should be timed with some big
political event of international importance. It would be most
preferable, if the opportunity arose, to make the attempt coincide
with some plenum or congress of the Comintern. Trotsky stated that
such a terroristic act committed at a congress or plenum would
immedeately assume the nature of an international political event;
it would rouse the masses far beyond the frontiers of the U.S.S.R.
and would give rise to powerful movement.
"Trotsky told me that this terroristic act against Stalin must not
be committed secretly, on the quiet, but that the assassination must
be committed publicly, before an international forum." (Vol. IV, pp.
38, 39.)
Simultaneously with Berman-Yurin, L. Trotsky sent also the accused
Fritz David (I. I. Kruglyansky) to the U.S.S.R. to prepare
terroristic act.
In the autumn of 1932, Fritz David (I. I. Kruglyansky) also had a
meeting with L. Trotsky, arranged for him by Sedov. In conversation
with him, Trotsky proposed that Fritz David (I. I. Kruglyansky)
undertake, as he expressed it, the "historic mission" of killing
Stalin.
Fritz David (I. I. Kruglyansky) testified:
". . . When proposing that I go to the U.S.S.R. to kill Stalin,
Trotsky advised me, for the sake of secrecy, not to maintain open
connections with the Trotskyites but outwardly to adhere to the
policy of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Germany.
"This conversation with Trotsky took place in November 1932 and I
accepted his proposal to kill Stalin." (Vol. VIII, p. 73.)
On arriving in the U.S.S.R. Berman-Yurin found Fritz David (I. I.
Kruglyansky) at an address given him by Sedov, Fritz David(I. I.
Kruglyansky) and Berman-Yurin decided to carry out the assassination
of Comrade Stalin at the Seventh Congress of the Comintern. This,
however, they failed to do owing to the fact that Berman-Yurin was
unable to get into the Congress, while Fritz David (I. I.
Kruglyansky), although he got into the Congress, could not carry out
his criminal intention because he sat far away from the presidium
and had no opportunity of getting near to Comrade Stalin.
As both of the accused admitted during the investigation, Fritz
David (I. I. Kruglyansky) was to have shot Comrade Stalin at the
Seventh Congress with a Browning pistol which he had received from
Berman-Yurin. (Vol. VIII, p. 77.)
The investigation has also established that the terrorist group
headed by Trotsky's agent, Moissei Lurye, whom Trotsky sent into the
U.S.S.R. from abroad, was actually organized by the active German
fascist Franz Weitz, the representative of Himmler, at that time the
leader of the fascist SS Detachments and now the director of the
German Secret Police (Gestapo).
On this point M. Lurye, examined on July 21, stated:
"Nathan Lurye replied that he was still, as before, a convinced
Trotskyite, and he reported that a terrorist group, small in number,
but very reliable, had been organized here in Moscow in April 1932.
. . .
". . . When I asked on whose instructions and at whose initiative
this action group had been organized, N. Lurye answered that the
action group was created by a certain Franz Weitz. . ."
". . . When I asked who was Franz Weitz, N. Lurye, at first very
unvillinly, answered as follows: Franz Weitz is an active member of
the National-Socialist Party in Germany and a trusted man of Himmler
(the present director of the Gestapo in Germany). At that time
Himmler was the leader of the 'SS' - Blackshirt Guards. . ."
". . . The main task of the group, according to Weitz, was to
prepare terroristic acts against Stalin, Kaganovich, Voroshilov and
Orjonikidze . . . . " (Vol. XXXII, pp. 243, 244.)
The accused M. Lurye communicated to Zinoviev in detail N. Lurye's
report, desiring to ascertain Zinoviev's attitude towards
connections with the fascists and the German Secret Police.
After listening to M. Lurye's communication, Zinoviev replied:
"What is there in this to disturb you? You are a historian,Moissei
Ilyich, you know the case of Lassalle and Bismarck, when Lassalle
wanted to use Bismarck in the interests of the revolution."
". . . By means of this historical parallel," added M.
Lurye,"Zinoviev wanted to prove the possibility and the necessity of
utilizing an alliance with the National-Socialists in the fight
against the C.P.S.U. and the Soviet Government." (Vol. XXXII, p.
252.)
M. Lurye's testimony was fully confirmed by N. Lurye, who, during
examination on July 21 testified as follows:
"I must admit that from the autumn of 1932 to the end of 1933 the
terrorist action group of which I was the head, was actively
preparing a terroristic act against the People's Commissar of
Defence, Voroshilov . . . ."
". . . I was commissioned to do this by Franz Weitz, a German
engineer-architect, member of the National-Socialist Party of
Germany, representative of Himmler, now director of the Gestapo."
". . . In August 1932, leaving for Germany for his vacation, Franz
Weitz put me in charge of the terrorist action group and set before
me the task of preparing and carrying out terroristic acts against
Stalin, Kaganovich and Voroshilov." (Vol. XXXIII, pp. 141-142.)
Thus the accused M. Lurye and N. Lurye, by establishing direct
organizational contact with the German fascists and the German
Secret Police, betrayed the interests of the Soviet State and
committed treason against their country.
Finally, the circumstances established by the investigation show
that L. Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev and others, the leaders of the
Trotskyite-Zinovievite bloc, in their fight against the Soviet
Government sank so low that their morals proved to be more
contemptible than those of gangs of the most hardened criminals.
While organizing terroristic acts against the leaders of the
C.P.S.U. and the Soviet State, the leaders of the united centre
simultaneously were preparing to exterminate their own terrorist
agents, in order completely to wipe out all traces of their crimes.
On this point the accused Reingold testified as follows:
"Zinoviev and Kamenev did not exclude the possibility that the
O.G.P.U. was in possession of the threads of the conspiracy against
the State which was being prepared by them. Therefore they regarded
it as their most important task to destroy every possible trace of
the crimes committed. For this purpose it was proposed to appoint
Bakayev chairman of the O.G.P.U. He was to be charged with the
function of physically exterminating the persons who directly
carried out terroristic acts against Stalin and Kirov, as well as
those workers of the O.G.P.U. who might be in possession of the
threads of the crimes committed." (Vol. XXVII, pp. 163-164.)