Despite his record, Golikov was retained as head of the GRU until October 1941. He led a mission to London on 8–13 July, and to Washington on 26 July. In 1942, he commanded the
Bryansk Front, then at the start of the battle of Stalingrad, he was appointed deputy commander under General
Andrey Yeryomenko. When it was decided to move the command headquarters to comparative safety on the East bank of the Volga, Golikov was ordered to stay behind in the city. According to
Nikita Khrushchev, the front's political commissar: "A look of terror came over Golikov's face...I never saw anyone, soldier or civilian, in such a state during the whole war. He was white as a sheet and begged me not to abandon him. He kept saying over and over, 'Stalingrad is doomed'.". He was recalled to Moscow, where he complained to Stalin about the way Khrushchev and Yeryomenko had treated him. Stalin accepted his version, and appointed him commander of the
Voronezh Front in October 1942. He led the
counterattack that recaptured Voronezh on 26 January 1943, and
Kharkov on 16 February, but after
Kharkov was retaken by the Germans, in March 1943, Marshal Zhukov insisted that Golikov be dismissed. For the remainder of the war, until 1950, he was head of the Chief Personnel Directorate of the
Soviet Ministry of Defence. In October 1944, he was also appointed head of the council for the repatriation of
Soviet prisoners of war.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn mentions Golikov briefly in a footnote in part one of his
Gulag Archipelago, accused him of the mass incarceration in the
Gulag system of former Soviet
POWs who returned home after World War II. He writes, "One of the biggest war criminals, Colonel General Golikov, former chief of the Red Army's intelligence administration, was put in charge of coaxing the repatriates home and swallowing them up." The later release of Soviet archives showed that there was in fact no such mass incarceration. == Later career ==