Semyon Tsvigun was born into a large family of
Ukrainian peasants, in Stratievka village, in the
Chechelnyk District of
Odesa Governorate, located near the
Vinnytsia region of Ukraine. After graduating, he worked as a history teacher in the region of west Ukraine then designated as the Moldavian Autonomous Region. In November 1939, he was recruited to the
NKVD. This was at a time when
Joseph Stalin and the new chief of police,
Lavrentiy Beria were preparing to seize the former Russian-ruled province of
Bessarabia from Romania, to create the
Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic, now (
Moldova). He escaped from Moldova after the German invasion in June 1941, and, according to his autobiography, he was sent into Odessa by boat when it was under siege, and remained in the city during the German occupation, hiding out in catacombs until he was ordered to break out, after which he joined partisans behind enemy lines in
Smolensk. In 1943, he worked for
SMERSH. However, Tsvigun's former colleague,
Filipp Bobkov claimed, after Tsvigun's death, that he faked his war record, and he was never near the front line, a claim angrily disputed by Tsvigun's family. Tsvigun returned to the Moldovan SSR in 1946, and by 1951 had risen to the post of Deputy Head of the MGB (from 1954, the KGB) in Moldavia. Crucially for his future career,
Leonid Brezhnev was head of the Moldovan communist party in 1950–52. Through this connection, he became an important member of the so-called
Dnipropetrovsk Mafia, who were the core of Brezhnev's political support during his time as
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. From August 1955, Tsvigun was deputy chairman, and from April 1957, chairman, of the KGB of the
Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic. In September 1963May 1967, he was Chairman of the KGB of the
Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, where his deputy was
Heydar Aliyev, later the post-communist leader of Azerbaijan. In May 1967, Tsvigun was transferred to Moscow as First Deputy Chairman of the KGB, making him the highest-ranking career KGB officer in the country, because the chairman,
Yuri Andropov, was a long-serving party official. Tsvigun was made head of the newly created Fifth Directorate, which was responsible for domestic security. It was his department which dealt with dissidents, such as
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn,
Andrei Sakharov, etc. He was notoriously hard line. In September 1981, he wrote an article in the magazine
Kommunist about his department's success in dealing with dissidents, whom he described as criminals.
Ties to Brezhnev According to
Moshe Lewin, Tsvigun had been "planted" by Brezhnev to spy and report on
Yuri Andropov when he (Tsvigun) served as the latter's first deputy. After the deaths of Tsvigun and
Suslov, Andropov started digging into the
corruption-related files that had been in Tsvigun's hands and which Suslov forbade him to show to anyone. Andropov had already been aware that Brezhnev and his family were personally implicated in corruption schemes. Lewin states that the files revealed to Andropov that Tsvigun himself was also involved in corrupt transactions. == Family ==