Ivan Alexandrovich Serov was born on 13 August 1905 in
Afimskoe, a village in the
Vologda Governorate of the
Russian Empire, into a
Russian peasant family. In 1923, when he was 18 years old, Serov joined the
Red Army shortly after the end of the
Russian Civil War. In 1926, he became a member of the
All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), and in 1928 graduated from the
Artillery Officers' School of
Leningrad. A major step in his career as a Red Army officer was his attendance in the mid-1930s of Higher Academic Courses in the prestigious
Frunze Military Academy. He married during these years and had two children: a son, Vladimir, who became an engineering officer in the USSR Air Force followed by a daughter, Svetlana.
Commissar of Ukraine In 1939, Serov joined the
People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD), the main
security agency and
secret police of the Soviet Union. He was appointed to the high-ranking position of NKVD Commissar of the
Ukrainian SSR in 1940. As well as performing his duties in this post, Serov was also responsible for the co-ordination of deportation from the
Baltic States and
Poland. In 1956, an article in
Time magazine accused Serov of being responsible for the death of "hundreds of thousands of Ukrainian peasants" during this period. Serov was also a colleague in Ukraine of
Nikita Khrushchev, the local Head of State.
Deputy Commissar of the NKVD In 1941, Serov was promoted to Deputy Commissar of the NKVD as a whole, becoming one of the primary lieutenants of NKVD chief
Lavrentiy Beria. In this function, Serov was responsible for the mass deportation of a variety of
Caucasian peoples, including the
deportation of the Chechens. He issued the so-called
Serov Instructions, which detailed procedures for mass deportations from the Baltic States, which was for some time confused with the
NKVD Order No. 001223 by historians. He also coordinated the mass expulsion of
Crimean Tatars from the
Crimean ASSR at the end of World War II.
Viktor Suvorov claims that in 1946, Serov had oversight of the execution of
Andrey Vlasov and the rest of the command of the
Russian Liberation Army, an organisation that had co-operated with the
Nazis in World War II. Serov was also there to monitor and spy on Marshal
Georgy Zhukov (of whom Stalin was personally suspicious) while acting as his political advisor. ==Chairman of the KGB==