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Armenian Mark in the Intelligence Services

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  • Armenian Mark in the Intelligence Services

    Armenian Mark in the Foreign Intelligence Service of USSR

    The star of KGB shined the brightest in the foreign intelligence field where it was recognized as the best in the world even by its enemies. Significant contribution to KGB’s success in the foreign intelligence field was made also by the Armenian citizens of USSR. In fact, out of 15 major ethnic groups of former USSR no other ethnic group (apart from Russians) has contributed to the foreign intelligence as much as the Armenians have. They were there from the very beginning and they are there today as well, now making the star of SVR and GRU to shine all over the world.

    Below are only a handful of names and very short bios. There are many, many more Armenians who have served and are serving in the Foreign Intelligence Services of Russia and of course of Armenia but for obvious reasons no other details are available.

    Their contributions are enormous and can not be summed up in a few sentences. We are very proud of our grand fathers, fathers and brothers who choose to serve their country be it USSR, Russian Federation or the Republic of Armenia.


    Davtyan Hakob Kristapori
    Born in 1888 in Nakhichevan.
    In 1920 he began working in the NKVD (predecessor of KGB). In the same year he became the first head of the newly created Foreign Intelligence Service of USSR (predecessor of SVR). He held that position for two years and then established and headed Soviet spy networks in a number of countries, including Poland, France and China. In 1938 he became a victim of Stalin’s purges and was murdered.

    Katanyan Ruben Paveli
    Born in 1881 in Tbilisi.
    In 1921 he became the head of the Foreign Intelligence Service of USSR (FIS). He was the second head of the service and second Armenian to head that service. In 1922 became the Council General of USSR in Berlin, Germany. A few years later he was back in Russia where he became the head of a top secret agency coordinating all other intelligence agencies. In 1938 he became a victim of Stalin’s purges and spent 17 years in Siberian Gulags. In 1955 he was rehabilitated and freed. Until his death in 1966 he was a university professor.

    Agayantz Hovhaness Hovhanessi
    Born in 1911 in Gandzak.
    In 1930 he joined NKVD. Apart from Russian and Armenian he was fluent in 6 (six) other languages: French, Farsi, Turkish, Spanish, English and Italian.
    From 1936 onwards he worked in the Foreign Intelligence Service (FIS). In 1937 he was in charge of the French network then in 1941 he was sent to Iran as the head of the Iranian network. In that capacity he was personally responsible in preventing the terrorist act against Churchill and Roosevelt in Teheran. In 1967 he was the second in charge of the Foreign Intelligence Service. He died in 1968.

    Hovakimyan Hayk Badali
    Born in 1898 in Nakhichevan.
    In 1931 he became the first head of the newly formed Scientific and Technical Espionage Department by the USSR Foreign Intelligence Service (FIS). Between 1934 and 1938 he was in USA in charge of all the agents of the FIS in that country. Between 1941 and 1947 he held a number of very senior positions within the FIS. He died in 1967.

    Gurgenyan Vyacheslav Hovhanessi
    Born in 1935 in Grozny.
    In 1963 he joined the Foreign Intelligence Service (FIS). From 1965 until 1983 (for 18 years) he was in charge of the entire intelligence network first in India then in Pakistan. From 1983 to 1989 he was in Moscow at FIS HQ as the third highest officer in charge of the agency. From 1991 he was the vice director of the FIS, second highest officer in charge of the agency. He died from natural causes in 1994.


    SVR


    GRU
    Last edited by HayotzAmrotz; 06-02-2008, 01:42 AM.

  • #2
    Re: Armenian Mark in the Intelligence Services

    I welcome you to post this list in the Russian thread.
    Մեր ժողովուրդն արանց հայրենասիրութեան այն է, ինչ որ մի մարմին' առանց հոգու:

    Նժդեհ


    Please visit me at my Heralding the Rise of Russia blog: http://theriseofrussia.blogspot.com/

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Armenian Mark in the Intelligence Services

      Davtyan Yakov - the Spy and the Ambassador


      Yakov Davtyan (1888 - 1938) was one of the prominent representatives of Soviet diplomacy and the intelligence community during the initial stages of the history of the USSR. Beginning in autumn 1927 up to the end of 1929 he served as the ambassador to Persia.
      Armenian by origin, Davtyan was born in the Nakhichevan area (today a part of Azerbaijan, that borders with Armenia and Iran).
      Yakov's father was a simple peasant. He died when his son was two years old. Later Yakov's mother sent him to live with his brother in Tiflis (Modern Tbilisi - the capital of Georgia). Yakov studied in the gymnasium there and joined the Bolshevik Party. Upon his graduation he moved to the then capital of the Russian empire - Saint Petersburg. In his new home Davtyan actively participated in the illegal propaganda activity of the Bolsheviks, especially among the military. At the end of 1907 the police arrested him for this activity. Some months later he was released and left for Belgium. There he acquired higher education in engineering, simultaneously participating in the activity of the Belgian Socialist Party. In Belgium Davtyan got acquainted with Inessa Armand - the mistress of the leader of the Bolsheviks, Vladimir Lenin. After the Bolshevik revolution of 1917 Armand promoted Davtyan's career.
      When WW I started and Belgium was occupied by the German armies (1915), Davtyan was arrested as a citizen of a hostile state (Russia was at war with Germany). He was imprisoned for almost three years, most of which he spent in a maximum-security camp and another eight months in solitary confinement. In August 1918 the Germans released Davtyan at the request of the Soviet authorities. By this time the civil war in Russia between supporters and opponents of communism was raging. For the next year and a half Davtyan carried out various special tasks of the Bolshevik leadership in the Ukraine and the Caucasus.

      In the Diplomatic Service

      In March 1920 Yakov Davtyan started working in the Foreign Policy Department. His first foreign business trip in his new position was to Estonia, where he was appointed to be the first secretary of the Soviet embassy. Later, Davtyan was the adviser and head of the diplomatic missions of Soviet Russia in Lithuania (02-09.1922), China (10.1922-04.1924), France (05.1925-09.1927), Persia (10.1927-12.1929), Greece (04.1932-02.1934), and Poland (04.1934-10.1937).
      In the early stages of his diplomatic career, Yakov Davtyan was under the patronage of his fellow tribesmen, Lion Karahanyan (Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1918-20), and Inessa Armand (she died in September 1920).

      The Founder of Intelligence

      Yakov Davtyan was the founder and the first head of the Soviet external intelligence - predecessor of the modern Service of External Intelligence of Russia (SVR).
      In December 1920, within the framework of the first secret service of the Soviet regime (the All-Russia extraordinary commission - VChK) the Department of External Intelligence was formed. It was named "The Foreign Department " (INO VChK). Following the recommendation of Inessa Armand, Yakov Davtyan was chosen as the head of this new division. He held this post for two periods of time: from December 1920 until January 1921 and again from April until August 1921. Davtyan prepared the first documents defining the rules and methods of the activity of the Soviet External Intelligence. He also defined its structure and hired the first employees.
      Consequently, when he came back to serve in the diplomatic department, Davtyan continued to cooperate closely with the intelligence services. Being in China as an adviser, and later as an ambassador he likewise supervised the Soviet intelligence's fixed-post spies in all of the Far Eastern countries.

      The Execution

      At the end of the 1930s a mass wave of state terror started in the Soviet Union, and millions of people became its victims. In particular, the best representatives of army command, heads of intelligence and leading diplomats were killed. In October 1937, Yakov Davtyan was recalled from Warsaw where he headed the Soviet embassy. The following month he was arrested. False charges were brought against Davtyan, claiming his connection with Polish intelligence and establishment of an "anti-soviet terrorist organization". On July 28, 1938 Yakov Davtyan was executed by shooting.

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