From early in 1945, Colonel General
A. P. Zavenyagin, as head of the 9th Chief Directorate of the
NKVD (
MVD after 1946), was responsible for the acquisition of German scientists, equipment, materiel, and intellectual property, under the
Russian Alsos, to help Russia with the
Soviet atomic bomb project. The issue of Decree No. 9877 from the
Council of Ministers on 20 August 1945 created a special committee of which Zavenyagin was a member, Zavenyagin was responsible for establishing, building, managing, and providing security for facilities supporting the atomic bomb project. Zavenyagin's purview also included the resources of the
Gulag; some of the facilities to which the German scientists were assigned were run as a
sharashka. German scientists were available for recruitment from the
Soviet occupation zone in Germany. Also, immediately after
World War II and extending into 1949, the Russians also had a large pool of German
PoW scientists and highly skilled specialists from which to recruit; the main camp was at
Krasnogorsk. Facilities to which the German scientists were assigned were under the under authority of the 9th Chief Directorate and included the following (with annotations of prominent Germans at the facilities): • Laboratory 2 (later known as the
Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy and today as the Russian Scientific Center "Kurchatov Institute") in Moscow. –
Josef Schintlmeister. • Scientific Research Institute No. 9 (NII-9; today the Bochvar All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Inorganic Materials, Bochvar VNIINM) in Moscow –
Max Volmer and
Robert Döpel. •
Elektrostal' Plant No. 12 – A. Baroni (PoW),
Hans-Joachim Born (PoW),
Alexander Catsch (PoW), Werner Kirst, H. E. Ortmann, Przybilla,
Nikolaus Riehl, Herbert Schmitz (PoW), Herbert Thieme, Tobein,
Günter Wirths, and
Karl Zimmer (PoW). • Institutes A (in Sinop, a suburb of
Sukhumi) and G (in Agudzery) created for
Manfred von Ardenne and
Gustav Hertz, respectively. Institutes A and G were later used as the basis for the Sukhumi Physico-Technical Institute (SFTI); today it is the State Scientific Production Association "SFTI". Institute A – Ingrid Schilling, Fritz Schimohr, Fritz Schmidt, Gerhard Siewert,
Max Steenbeck (PoW),
Peter Adolf Thiessen, and Karl-Franz Zühlke. Institute G –
Heinz Barwich,
Werner Hartmann, and
Justus Mühlenpfordt. • Laboratory V was created for
Heinz Pose in
Obninsk, and it was run as a sharashka. Laboratory V was later renamed the
Physics and Power Engineering Institute (FEhI or IPPE); today the
"State Scientific Center of the Russian Federation - A.I. Leipunsky Physics and Power Engineering Institute" (JSC SSC RF - FEI) – Werner Czulius, Walter Hermann, Hans Jürgen von Oertzen,
Ernst Rexer,
Karl-Heinrich Riewe, and Carl Friedrich Weiss. • Laboratory B in Sungul' was established by a decree of the Council of Ministers in 1946, and it was run as a
Sharashka. In 1955, it was assimilated into a new, second nuclear weapons institute, Scientific Research Institute-1011 (NII-1011), today known as the Russian Federal Nuclear Center All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Technical Physics (RFYaTs–VNIITF). –
Hans-Joachim Born (PoW),
Alexander Catsch (PoW), Willi Lange,
Nikolaus Riehl, and
Karl Zimmer (PoW). ==Research conducted==