Aleksey Kirichenko Explained

Aleksey Kirichenko
Native Name Lang:uk
Width:190px
Office:Second Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Term Start:17 December 1957
Term End:5 April 1960
Predecessor:Mikhail Suslov
Successor:Frol Kozlov
Office1:First Secretary of the Communist Party of Ukraine
Term Start1:12 June 1953
Term End1:26 December 1957
Predecessor1:Leonid Melnikov
Successor1:Nikolai Podgorny
Office2:Full member of the 19th, 20th Presidium
Term Start2:12 July 1955
Term End2:4 May 1960
Office3:Member of the 20th Secretariat
Term Start3:17 December 1957
Term End3:5 April 1960
Birth Date:26 February 1908
Birth Place:Chornobaivka, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire
(now Ukraine)
Death Place:Moscow, Soviet Union
(now Russia)
Profession:Mechanical engineer, civil servant
Party:Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1938-1962)

Aleksey Illarionovich Kirichenko (– 28 December 1975) was a Soviet Ukrainian politician, who was the first ethnic Ukrainian to head the republic's communist party during the Soviet era.[1] Between 1957 and 1960, he was a Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the second-highest-ranking official within the party after Nikita Khrushchev.

Early life and career

Kirichenko was born in the village of Chornobaivka in the Kherson region of south-eastern Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian Empire, into a family of Ukrainian factory workers.[2] From the age of 11, he started earning for living by working in the fields and then at railways. After graduating from a mechanical school he worked in Kazakhstan as an engineer in a sovkhoz (state farm). He then returned to Ukraine to receive a university degree and teach agricultural engineering, and graduated in 1936.

Political career

Under Stalin

In 1938, he became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine (CPU), soon after Nikita Khrushchev had been appointed as First Secretary. In 1941, he was appointed Secretary of the CPU during World War II, and served as a member of the military council.

Kirichenko was First Secretary of the Odessa Oblast party committee from 1945 to 1949, coinciding with the Soviet famine of 1946–1947. Ukraine in particular suffered from the effects of the famine, in part due to the devastating effects of World War II on Ukrainian territory. During this period, Kirichenko told Khrushchev that, while visiting the home of kolkhoz (collective farm) workers:

Kirichenko was a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1952 to 1961, and Second Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPU from 1949 to 1953.

Under Khrushchev

According to Khrushchev, Kirichenko's promotion to First Secretary the CPU in June 1953 was originally proposed by chief of the NKVD Lavrentiy Beria shortly before his downfall. However, Kirichenko was one of Khrushchev's most influential allies. In July 1955, he was promoted to the 11-member Politburo. In June 1957, he rushed to Moscow at short notice to take part in a Politburo meeting at which Khrushchev's rivals, led by Georgy Malenkov were seeking to remove him from office. He helped Khrushchev turn the tables and oust Malenkov and others.[3]

In December 1957, Kirichenko was transferred to Moscow as the Central Committee Secretary in charge of party appointments. This meant that he was officially ranked as one of the five most senior figures in the party, but because of his office and relative youth, he was the person most obviously placed to succeed Khrushchev. Khrushchev mentioned this to the U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, in June 1959, but added, "I am very jealous of my prerogatives, and while I live, I will run the party." He flew into a rage, banged the desk with his fist and shouted down the phone when Kirichenko tried to transfer a senior official from Moscow to Leningrad without consulting him.[4]

Downfall, later life, and death

On 13 January 1960, it was suddenly announced that Kirichenko had been appointed First Secretary of the Rostov Oblast party committee. In May, he was formally dismissed from the Politburo and the party secretariat, and on 15 June 1960, he was sacked from his post in Rostov, after just five months.[5]

He retired in 1962, died in 1975 and was buried at the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow.

According to Enver Hoxha, in the midst of the Soviet-Albanian split an Albanian military student studying in the Soviet Union had met Kirichenko during a train ride. The latter said to him, "Good for your Party, which exposed Khrushchev. Long live Enver Hoxha! Long live socialist Albania! ... Don't yield, give Enver my best wishes!"[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Plokhy . Serhii . The Gates of Europe, A History of Ukraine . 2016 . Penguin . London . 978-0-141-98061-4 . 297.
  2. Web site: Кириченко Алексей Илларионович 1908-1975 Биографический указатель . Khronos . 11 May 2022.
  3. Book: Taubman . William . Khrushchev . 2003 . Simon & Schuster . London . 0-7432-7564-0 . 317–18.
  4. Book: Taubman . Khrushchev . 413, 612–13.
  5. Book: Conquest . Robert . Power and Policy in the U.S.S.R. . 1961 . MacMillan . London . 387–88.
  6. Hoxha, Enver. The Khrushchevites. Tirana: 8 Nëntori Publishing House. 1984. pp. 202-203.