In 1947 he secured passage to the United States through the good offices of the
Tolstoy Foundation, an organization that helped numerous Russians reach the US. After a stint as a factory-worker, he became an academic and taught, first as a lecturer at
Yale University, then as tenured professor in the Institute for Sino-Soviet Studies at the
George Washington University. In 1955 and 1956 Petrov worked at Radio Liberty in Munich. Prof. Petrov's academic works included the books 'Money and Conquest', 'A Study in Diplomacy', 'What China Policy?', 'June 22, 1941' and numerous academic monographs. His later work in
Sino-Soviet affairs led him to study the controversial relationship between
Joseph Stalin and
Mao Zedong, and to openly question American foreign policy regarding what he considered to be an absurd non-recognition of mainland China. True to his early passion for history, he was averse to all forms of politically inspired re-writing of history. His academic approach could be described as journalistic, as he much preferred primary sources such as eyewitness interviews and documents to second-hand accounts. In the 1950s Petrov participated in anti-Communist emigre politics and was a regular contributor to the New York newspaper
Novoye Russkoye Slovo, under a pseudonym. His connections included people as diverse as
Alexander Kerensky and
Max Eastman. In 1947, he and
Henry A. Wallace met, and Wallace publicly apologized for having misrepresented reality when he had visited
Magadan in 1944. During the
McCarthy trials Petrov was called upon to describe the conditions in the
Soviet concentration camps. Petrov published the first volume of his memoirs,
Soviet Gold, in 1949, and
My Retreat from Russia in 1950.
Soviet Gold was the first published memoir of a Gulag prisoner in the West, and received a favorable review from
Winston Churchill. In the early 1950s Petrov was published by William I Nichols, editor of the then-popular
This Week syndicated magazine. Nichols published excerpts of Petrov's memoirs and encouraged the publication of his humorous short stories, fondly calling Petrov "a poor-man's
Tchekov". Vladimir Petrov died March 17, 1999, at age 83 at his home in
Kensington, Maryland, after a brief illness. He was survived by his wife, Jean MacNab, nine children—George, Susanna, Elizabeth, Vladimir, Alexander, Jane, Anne, Andrew and Carol—and seven grandchildren, many of whom work in science, technology, medicine, and the arts. "Live for today, never mind tomorrow", was one of his favorite sayings. ==See also==