Nikita Khrushchev
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev
Никита Сергеевич Хрущёв |
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| In office 7 September 1953 – 14 October 1964 |
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| Preceded by | Georgy Malenkov |
| Succeeded by | Leonid Brezhnev |
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| In office 27 March 1958 – 14 October 1964 |
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| Preceded by | Nikolai Bulganin |
| Succeeded by | Alexey Kosygin |
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| Born | 17 April 1894 Kalinovka, Russian Empire |
| Died | 11 September 1971 (aged 77) Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
| Nationality | Russian |
| Political party | Communist Party of the Soviet Union |
| Spouse | Yefrosinia Khrushcheva (desc.) Marusia Khrushcheva (div.) Nina Khrushcheva |
| Religion | None (Atheist) |
Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev (English pronunciation: /nɪˈkiːtə sɜrˈɡeɪ.əvɪtʃ ˈkrʊʃtʃɛv/; Russian: Никита Сергеевич Хрущёв, Nikita Serɡeyevich Khrushchyov, pronounced [nʲɪˈkʲitə sʲɪrˈɡʲejəvʲɪtʃ xruˈɕːof]) (17 April 1894 – 11 September 1971) was a leader of the Soviet Union, serving as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1964, following the death of Joseph Stalin, and Chairman of the Council of Ministers from 1958 to 1964. Khrushchev was responsible for the partial de-Stalinization of the Soviet Union, for backing the progress of the world's early space program, as well as for several relatively liberal reforms ranging from agriculture to foreign policy. Khrushchev's party colleagues removed him from power in 1964, replacing him with Leonid Brezhnev.
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[edit] Early years
Khrushchev was born in Kalinovka, a town in what is now Russia's Kursk Oblast,[1] to parents of Russian origin.[2] His father was the peasant Sergey Nikanorovich Khrushchev (who died in 1938 of tuberculosis); his mother was Aksiniya Ivanovna Khrushcheva. He had a sister two years his junior, Irina. In 1908, his family moved to Yuzovka. He was also the grandson of a serf and son of a coal miner.
Khrushchev trained and worked as a fitter in the iron works and factories. He became involved in trade union activities in World War I and, after the Russian Revolution of 1917, became a Bolshevik party member. Following the German occupation of Ukraine, Khrushchev joined the Red Army and served as a junior commissar in the Southern Front of the Russian Civil War. In 1921, Khrushchev was with the invading Red troops in Georgia.[3] After the civil war, he worked at various management and Party positions in Donbass and Kiev.
In the post-Lenin power struggles, Khrushchev allied himself with the Stalin faction of the Communist Party, especially with Lazar Kaganovich, a close associate of Stalin. In 1929, Khrushchev moved to Moscow and enrolled into a school for party functionaries where he became acquainted with Stalin's wife Nadezhda Alliluyeva. With her help, Khrushchev was brought to Stalin's attention and became the 1st Secretary of the Moscow City Committee (Moscow Gorkom) of VKP(b) in 1935.[4] The Moscow city secretaryship was a traditional proving ground for rising stars in the party (cf Boris Yeltsin) and Khrushchev apparently impressed with his leadership of the Moscow Metro works.[citation needed] In 1938, he became the 1st Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine, one of the most senior regional party positions and was diligent in carrying out Stalin's orders. Khrushchev became a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in Moscow in 1934 and the Politburo in 1939.[5]
[edit] Great Patriotic War
During the Great Patriotic War (i.e., the Eastern Front of World War II), Khrushchev served as a political commissar (Member of the Military Council) with the equivalent rank of Lieutenant General. He served as the Political Commissar of the Stalingrad Front at the Battle of Stalingrad and oversaw the military actions there[6].
[edit] Rise to power
After Joseph Stalin's death on March 5, 1953 there was a power struggle between different factions within the party. Initially Lavrenty Beria controlled much of the political realm by merging the Ministry of Internal Affairs and State security. Fearing that Beria would eventually kill them, Georgy Malenkov, Lazar Kaganovich, Vyacheslav Molotov, Nikolai Bulganin and others united under Khrushchev to denounce Beria and remove him from power. With Beria imprisoned awaiting execution (which followed in December), Malenkov was the heir apparent. Khrushchev was not nearly as powerful as he would eventually become even after his promotion. Becoming party leader on September 7 of that year, and eventually rising above his rivals, Khrushchev's leadership marked a crucial transition for the Soviet Union. He pursued a course of reform and shocked delegates to the 20th Party Congress on 25 February 1956 by making his famous Secret Speech denouncing the "cult of personality" that surrounded Stalin, though he himself played no small part in cultivating it, and accusing Stalin of crimes committed during the Great Purges. This effectively alienated Khrushchev from the more conservative elements of the Party, but he managed to defeat what he termed the Anti-Party Group after they failed in a bid to oust him from the party leadership in 1957.
In 1958, Khrushchev replaced Bulganin as prime minister and established himself as the undisputed dictator of both state and party. He became Premier of the Soviet Union on 27 March 1958. Khrushchev promoted reform of the Soviet system and began to place an emphasis on the production of consumer goods rather than on heavy industry. Khrushchev also cracked down on religious groups and had many churches closed or destroyed.
He sought to lower the burden of defense spending on the Soviet economy by placing a new emphasis on rocket based defense. The Soviet lead in this technology was emphasized by the success of Sputnik 1 and subsequently Yuri Gagarin's Vostok flight and Valentina Vladimirovna Tereshkova's Vostok 6 flight. However, real Soviet missile forces remained small and the price that Khrushchev paid inside the Soviet system — hostility from the armed forces — was a major contribution to his eventual removal from office.[7] He was intelligent enough to realize that the weapons and tactics of the previous war had become obsolete with the advent of missiles and submarines and had severe disagreements with Mao Zedong over this issue.
At the same time the fear of Soviet missile forces was real enough in the West — prompting then US Senator John F. Kennedy to attack then-Vice President Richard Nixon over the missile gap in the 1960 U.S. presidential election and culminating in the stand off of the Cuban missile crisis Khrushchev was also aware of the far superior ability of the U.S. to produce and deliver its thermonuclear arsenal. Thus Khrushchev looked for a way to close the gap between the U.S.and the Soviet Unon. He did this by clandestinely providing Cuba's new Communist regime with nuclear missile bases in an attempt to complete a number of important objectives. The first was to restore the balance of nuclear-ballistic power in a “quick fix ” designed to increase the Soviet credibility of nuclear threats and thereby to facilitate more effective bargaining with the United States in other areas of the world, and 2. To show Latin Americas that the USSR and a Soviet-supported country can overawe the “colossus of the north” in its own hemisphere, and to prove to the entire world that the tide of history and the “correlation of forces” are flowing decisively and irrevocably in favor of world communism”.
Domestically, Khrushchev did not seek to somewhat roll back the collectivization of agriculture. Instead he promoted the Virgin Lands Campaign program, saying the Soviet Union could meet and surpass Western agricultural production through the application of modern techniques and the use of new crops. However, initial successes rapidly turned sour. Indeed, the Virgin Lands program was a fiasco, which involved the forceable removal of nearly half a million "volunteers" to Kazakhstan and resulted in turning the area into a dust bowl.
In 1959, during Richard Nixon's visit to the Soviet Union, Khrushchev took part in what later became known as the Kitchen Debate. Khrushchev was invited to visit the United States, and did so that September, spending thirteen days in the United States, resulting in an extended media circus, as the peripatetic premier visited Los Angeles, San Francisco (visiting a supermarket), Iowa, Pittsburgh, and Washington, concluding with a summit with U.S. President Eisenhower at Camp David. On his visit Khrushchev had two requests: to visit Disneyland and to meet John Wayne, Hollywood's top box-office draw. Due to security concerns, he was denied an excursion to Disneyland, much to his disgruntlement. He did, however, visit a supermarket near San Francisco, and expressed delight at the self-service cafeteria (which the portly premier took full advantage of) at Thomas J. Watson, Jr's IBM headquarters.
The Kremlin boss' new attitude towards the West as a rival, instead of as an evil entity, alienated Mao Zedong's People's Republic of China.[citation needed] The Soviet Union and the PRC, too, would later be involved in a similar "cold war" triggered by the Sino-Soviet Split in 1960.
In 1961, Khrushchev approved plans proposed by East German leader Walter Ulbricht to build the Berlin Wall, thereby reinforcing the Cold War division of Germany and Europe as a whole.
[edit] Personality
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Most Russian leaders have been known for their formal, calm, aloof personalities.[citation needed] Khrushchev was different. During his administration he became world famous for his outlandish behavior and attention-grabbing antics that both alarmed and amused his audiences, friend and foe alike.
Khrushchev was regarded by his political enemies in and out of the Soviet Union as boorish. He had a reputation for interrupting speakers to insult them. The Politburo accused him once of 'hare-brained scheming—referring to his erratic policies. He regularly humiliated the Soviet nomenklatura, or ruling elite, with his gaffes. He once branded Mao, who was at odds with Khrushchev ever since the denunciation of Stalin at the 1956 Congress, an "old galosh", which was translated as "old boot".[citation needed]
Khrushchev's blunders were partially the result of his limited formal education. Although intelligent, as even his political enemies admitted after he had defeated them, and certainly cunning, he lacked knowledge and understanding of the world outside of his direct experience and often proved easy to manipulate by hucksters who knew how to appeal to his vanity and prejudices. For example, he was a supporter of Trofim Lysenko even after the Stalin years and became convinced that the Soviet Union's agricultural crises could be solved through the planting of maize on the same scale as the United States, failing to realize that the differences in climate and soil made this inadvisable.
Khrushchev repeatedly disrupted the proceedings in the United Nations General Assembly in September-October 1960 by pounding his fists on the desk and shouting in Russian. On September 29, 1960, Khrushchev twice interrupted a speech by British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. The unflappable Macmillan famously commented over his shoulder to Assembly President Frederick Boland of Ireland that if Khrushchev wished to continue, he would like a translation.[8][9]
The notorious shoe-banging incident occurred during a debate, on 12 October over a Russian resolution decrying colonialism. Infuriated by a statement of the Filipino delegate Lorenzo Sumulong which charged the Soviets with employing a double standard, Khrushchev accused Sumulong of being "a jerk, a stooge and a lackey of imperialism". Later Khrushchev appeared to have pulled off his right shoe and started banging it on his desk. On another occasion, Khrushchev said in reference to capitalism, "Мы вас похороним!" (My vas pokhoronim!), translated to "We will bury you". This phrase, ambiguous both in the English language and in the Russian language, was interpreted in several ways. Later, he would refer back to the comment and state, "I once got in trouble for saying, 'We will bury you'. Of course, we will not bury you with a shovel. Your own working class will bury you".[cite this quote]
[edit] Removal
Khrushchev’s enemies learned the lesson from his defeating of the neo–Stalinist ‘Anti-Party Group’ — where Khrushchev successfully appealed to the Central Committee over the Politburo. To remove their leader, his enemies must secure the widest-possible support in the Party’s upper echelons, not just among the core of the Party. Khrushchev’s down-fall was a conspiracy among the Party bosses, irritated by his erratic policies and cantankerous behaviour, which the Party viewed as an international embarrassment. Thus, the Communist Party accused Khrushchev of making political mistakes in mis-handling the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, the Cold War with China, and disorganizing the Soviet economy, especially agriculture. [10] [11] [12]
The conspirators, led by Leonid Brezhnev, Aleksandr Shelepin, and KGB Chairman Vladimir Semichastny, struck in October 1964, while Khrushchev was on holiday at Pitsunda, Abkhazia. They called a special meeting of the Presidium of the Central Committee, and Alexey Inauri, Chairman of the Georgian KGB, escorted Khrushchev to Moscow. On 13 October the Presidium voted to remove him from his Party and Government offices. The Central Committee then hastily convened the next day, 14 October, and unanimously approved the Presidium’s decision, undebated. On 15 October 1964, the Presidium of the USSR Supreme Soviet accepted Comrade Nikita Khrushchev’s resignation from the office of Premier of the Soviet Union. [13]
[edit] Life in retirement
Unlike Georgy Malenkov, Vyacheslav Molotov, and Lazar Kaganovich, who were removed from the Party and forced to live as ordinary citizens, Khrushchev remained a member of the Central Committee until 1966 and Party member until his death. He received a special pension and security detail and was allowed to live in a state-owned residence. However, Khrushchev remained under close watch by the KGB (whose officers formed the security detail) until his death[14].
Initially Khrushchev lived under house arrest, but later resumed a more active social life (particularly with the members of the Moscow intelligentsia), but never publicly commented on the policy of his successors, focusing instead on writing his memoirs, which, despite the efforts of the KGB, were smuggled to the West.[15][16]
Khrushchev died of a heart attack in a hospital near his home in Moscow on 11 September 1971, and is buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow, having been denied a state funeral and interment in the Kremlin Wall.
[edit] Key political actions
- In his Secret Speech, Khrushchev denounced Stalin for his personality cult and his regime for "violation of Leninist norms of legality", marking the onset of the Khrushchev Thaw.
- Dissolved the Cominform organization and reconciled with Josip Broz Tito, which ended the Informbiro period in the history of Yugoslavia.
- Established the Warsaw Pact in 1955 in response to the formation of NATO.
- Ordered the 1956 Soviet military intervention in Hungary (see Hungarian Revolution of 1956).
- He withdrew the Soviet troops from Romania (see Soviet occupation of Romania).
- Ceded Crimea from the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1955.
- Provided support for Egypt against the West during the 1956 Suez Crisis.
- Promoted the doctrine of "Peaceful co-existence" in the foreign policy, accompanied by the slogan "To catch up and overtake the West" in internal policy.
- Triggered the Sino-Soviet Split through talks with the U.S. and a refusal to support the Chinese nuclear program.
- Initiated the Soviet space program that launched Sputnik I and Yuri Gagarin, getting a head start in the space race. Participated in negotiations with U.S. President John F. Kennedy for a joint moon program, negotiations that ended when Kennedy was assassinated in 1963.[17]
- Canceled the 1960 Paris summit over the Gary Powers U-2 incident.
- Met with U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower at Camp David, Maryland in September 1959. He was the first Soviet leader to visit the United States in a diplomatic capacity.
- Initiated the deployment of nuclear missiles in Cuba, following the launch of Operation Mongoose, which led to the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
- Approved East Germany's construction of the Berlin Wall in 1961, after the West did not agree to his proposal to incorporate West Berlin into a neutral, demilitarized "free city."
[edit] Key economic actions
- Second wave of the reclamation of virgin and abandoned lands (see Virgin Lands Campaign).
- Introduction of sovnarkhozes (Councils of People's Economy), regional organizations, in an attempt to combat the centralization and departmentalism of the ministries
- Reorganization of agriculture, with preference given to sovkhozes (state farms), including conversion of kolkhozes into sovkhozes, introduction of maize (earning him the sobriquet kukuruznik, "the maize enthusiast").
- Coping with housing crisis by quickly building millions of apartments according to simplified floor plans, dubbed khrushchovkas.
- Created a minimum wage in 1956.
- Redenomination of the ruble 10:1 in 1961.
[edit] Legacy
[edit] Praise
Khrushchev was admired for his efficiency and for maintaining an economy which, during the 1950s and 1960s, had growth rates higher than most Western countries, contrasted with the stagnation beginning with his successors. He is renowned for his liberalisation policies, whose results began with the widespread exoneration of political sentences. With Khrushchev's amnesty program, former political prisoners and their surviving relatives could now live a normal life without the infamous "wolf ticket".
Khrushchev placed more emphasis on the production of consumer goods and housing instead of heavy industry, precipitating a rapid rise in living standards.
The arts benefited from this environment of liberalisation, where works like Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich created an attitude of dissent that would escalate during the subsequent Brezhnev-Kosygin era.
His de-Stalinization had a huge impact on young Communists of the day. Khrushchev encouraged more liberal communist leaders to replace hard-line Stalinists throughout the Eastern bloc. Alexander Dubček, who became the leader of Czechoslovakia in January 1968, accelerated the process of liberalisation in his own country with his Prague Spring program. Mikhail Gorbachev, who became the Soviet Union's leader in 1985, was inspired by it and it became evident with his policies of glasnost and perestroika. Khrushchev is sometimes known as "the last great reformer" among Soviet leaders before Gorbachev.
[edit] Criticism
He was criticized for his ruthless crackdown of the 1956 revolution in Hungary, and even became known as the "Butcher of Budapest", even though he and Zhukov had wavered on October 28 and considered the possibility of allowing Imre Nagy's more liberal government to remain in power.[18][19]
He encouraged the East German authorities to set up the notorious Berlin Wall in August 1961, although this action halted East Germany's crippling "brain-drain". He had very poor diplomatic skills, giving him the reputation of being a rude, uncivilized peasant in the West and as an irresponsible clown in his own country. He renewed persecutions against the Russian Orthodox Church, publicly promising to show the "last priest" on Soviet television. Between 1960 and 1962, as many as 30 percent of churches were destroyed, with the number of monasteries falling by a quarter.[20]
His administration, although efficient, was also known to be erratic since he disbanded a large number of Stalinist-era agencies. He took a dangerous gamble in 1962 over Cuba, which took the Superpowers to the brink of a Third World War. Agriculture barely kept up with population growth, as bad harvests mixed with good ones, culminating in a disastrous harvest in 1963, due to weather. All this damaged his prestige after 1962 and was enough for the Central Committee, Khrushchev's critical base of support, to take action against him. His right-hand man, Leonid Brezhnev, led the bloodless coup.
The agricultural shortcomings were due to a very large extent on relying on Lysenko, who was originally singled out by Stalin as a genius. Among other things, Lysenko was of the belief that a plant's heredity was infinitely pliable.
Many dissidents tended to view the Khrushchev era with nostalgia as his successors began discrediting or backtracking on his liberal reforms.
[edit] Personal life
Khrushchev married Yefrosinia Pisareva (1896–1921) in 1914. A year later their daughter Yulia (d. 1918) was born, and they had a son, Leonid, three days after the October Revolution. Yefrosinia died in 1921 of hunger, exhaustion, and typhus during the famine following the Russian Civil War. In 1922 Khrushchev married a girl of 17 named Marusia but, as she attended to her young daughter and neglected her stepchildren, Khrushchev's mother soon persuaded him to leave her.[21] His third wife was Nina Petrovna Kukharchuk (1900–1984), with whom he began living soon afterward (though the marriage was not officially registered until the late 1960s);[21] besides Sergei, they had two daughters, Rada (born 1929) and Lena (1937–1972).
Khrushchev's eldest son Leonid was a fighter pilot who was shot down, and probably killed southwest of Moscow on March 11th, 1943. A persistent myth is that he defected to the Germans during the Great Patriotic War, but most historians do not take these allegations seriously.[22] His younger son Sergei emigrated to the United States and is now an American citizen and a Professor at Brown University's Watson Institute for International Studies. He often speaks to American audiences to share his memories of the "other" side of the Cold War.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Nikita Khrushchev, coldwar.org
- ^ Fursenko, Aleksandr and Timothy Naftali. Khrushchev's Cold War: The Inside Story of an American Adversary. New York: Norton, 2006, 8.
- ^ Khrushchev, Sergei N. (2007), Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev, pp. 173-174. Penn State Press, ISBN 0271023325
- ^ Cook, Bernard A. (2001), Europe Since 1945, p. 37. Taylor & Francis, ISBN 0815340583
- ^ Taubman, William; Sergeĭ Khrushchev and Abbott Gleason (2000). Nikita Khrushchev. pp. 16.
- ^ "Хрущев Никита Сергеевич" (in Russian). Chronos Encyclopedia. http://www.hrono.info/biograf/hrushev.html. Retrieved on 2009-04-12.
- ^ The Soviet paradox: external expansion, internal decline. Seweryn Bialer Published 1986, I.B.Tauris,ISBN 1850430306
- ^ BBC News, 28 October 2002, When the diplomatic mask slips
- ^ Hamilton, Thomas J. (1960-09-30), "Macmillan in U.N. Appeal; Khrushchev Shouts Protest", New York Times, http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F20912FE3C551A7A93C2AA1782D85F448685F9
- ^ Edward Crankshaw: The New Cold War: Moscow vs. Pekin London (1963)
- ^ Harry Schwarz:- The Soviet Economy since Stalin London (1965)
- ^ Pravda 5 April 1963, speech by Voronov
- ^ Edward Crankshaw:- Khrushchev London: Collins; (1966)
- ^ Roy Medvedev, Chruszczow. Politiczeskaja biografija, Chalidze Publications, 1986
- ^ "Khrushchev Remembers" Little Brown & Company (January 1970)ISBN 0316831409 ISBN 978-0316831406
- ^ Roy Medvedev, Chruszczow. Politiczeskaja biografija, Chalidze Publications, 1986
- ^ Sietzen, Frank. Soviets Planned to Accept JFK’s Joint Lunar Mission Offer, SpaceDaily. October 2, 1997.
- ^ Johanna Granville "Soviet Documents on the Hungarian Revolution, 24 October - 4 November 1956", Cold War International History Project Bulletin, no. 5 (Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars, Washington, DC), Spring, 1995, pp. 22-23, 29-34.
- ^ Johanna Granville The First Domino: International Decision Making During the Hungarian Crisis of 1956, Texas A & M University Press, 2004. ISBN 1585442984.
- ^ Kulavig, Erik, Dissent in the years of Khrushchev, p. 39. Palgrave, London, 2003.
- ^ a b Taubman, William, Khrushchev: The Man and His Era, p. 58. W. W. Norton, New York, 2003.
- ^ USA Today, 2 August 2008, Khrushchev kin allege family honor slurred
[edit] References
- Tompson, William J. Khrushchev: A Political Life. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995
- Thomson, William (1995), Khrushchev: A Political Life, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0312123655
[edit] Further reading
- James A. Nathan Anatomy of the Cuban Missile Crisis (Greenwood Press 2001)
- Fursenko,Aleksandr and Timothy Naftali, Khrushchev's Cold War: The Inside Story of an American Adversary, New York: W.W. Norton, 2006.
- Granville, Johanna "The First Domino: International Decision Making During the Hungarian Crisis of 1956", Texas A & M University Press, 2004. ISBN 1585442984.
- Schecter, Jerrold L, ed. and trans., Khrushchev Remembers: The Glasnost Tapes, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1990
- Talbott, Strobe, ed., Khrushchev Remembers, 1970
- Khrushchev, Sergei N., Nikita Khrushchev and the Creation of a Superpower, Penn State Press, 2000.
- Khrushchev, Sergei N., translated by William Taubman, Khrushchev on Khrushchev, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1990.
- Rettie, John. "How Khrushchev Leaked his Secret Speech to the World", Hist Workshop J. 2006; 62: 187–193.
- Taubman, William Khrushchev: The Man and His Era, London: Free Press, 2004
[edit] External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Nikita Khrushchev |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Nikita Khrushchev |
- Obituary, The New York Times, September 12, 1971, Khrushchev's Human Dimensions Brought Him to Power and to His Downfall
- The Case of Khrushchev's Shoe, by Nina Khrushcheva (Nikita's great-granddaughter), New Statesman, Oct. 2, 2000
- Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev (Photo) (Nikita's grandson), 2007
- Modern History Sourcebook: Nikita S. Khrushchev: The Secret Speech — On the Cult of Personality, 1956
- A "Stalinist" rebuttal of Khrushchev's "Secret Speech" from the CPUSA, 1956
- Serye volki (1993), Film chronicles the plot to expel Nikita Khrushchev from his post of CPSU Secretary General
- "Tumultuous, prolonged applause ending in ovation. All rise." Khrushchev's "Secret Report" & Poland
- Thaw in the Cold War: Eisenhower and Khrushchev at Gettysburg, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
- Khruschev photo collection
| Party political offices | ||
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| Preceded by Joseph Stalin |
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 7 September 1953–14 October 1964 |
Succeeded by Leonid Brezhnev |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by Nikolai Bulganin |
Premier of the Soviet Union 27 March 1958–14 October 1964 |
Succeeded by Alexey Kosygin |
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