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Author Topic: Crimea  (Read 156913 times)
galdur
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January 25, 2016, 05:25:35 PM
 #1241

I wonder how that will go. There´s probably an inconvenient precedent in Kosovo.

The Serbian claim to Kosovo is much stronger than the Ukrainian claims to Crimea. Kosovo has been historic Serbian homeland since time immemorial.  The Muslims became a majority there only during the late 19th century. On the other hand, Crimea always had an ethnic Russian majority. The proportion of ethnic Ukrainians never exceeded 20% of the total population.

Yes, but my point is that if taking Kosovo from Serbia is supposed to be according to international law it seems difficult to judge Crimea differently.

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January 25, 2016, 09:15:12 PM
 #1242

Crimea was part of Russia until 1954, when the communist party decided to transfer it to Ukraine. But at that time both were part of the USSR, so the change was only theoretical.

It has had a Russian ethnic majority since about 1900, which continued after the dissolution of the USSR. The Russians resented being part of Ukraine, presently forming about 70% of the population, and naturally wanted to be part of their Motherland. In 1992 constitutional independence was declared, but the government in Kiev refused a referendum to confirm this
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January 25, 2016, 09:59:44 PM
 #1243

Within the next two weeks, Ukraine will submit lawsuits to international courts in connection with the annexation of Crimea by Russia, Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has said.

I wonder how that will go. There´s probably an inconvenient precedent in Kosovo.

Galdur, I noted that in the last post of the previous page:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=494128.msg13665129#msg13665129
Looks like as soon as the new page is started, the previous messages disappear from the radar. Smiley

Interesting to note that you mentioned LenFilm and DiCaprio in another thread, while I mention Yalta Film Studio here. Both are some of the oldest in Russia.

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January 25, 2016, 10:10:46 PM
 #1244

Hmmm... Just learnt that the Ukrainian MP, the "defender of all Tatars from Crimea", the organiser of the blockade and the armed thug groups in Kherson - Dzhemilev - started his career as "window-climer" break-in thief... As they say, no further comment needed.

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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January 26, 2016, 07:21:08 AM
 #1245

It has had a Russian ethnic majority since about 1900, which continued after the dissolution of the USSR. The Russians resented being part of Ukraine, presently forming about 70% of the population, and naturally wanted to be part of their Motherland. In 1992 constitutional independence was declared, but the government in Kiev refused a referendum to confirm this

WRONG.

Crimea always had an ethnic Russian majority for the past 2,000 years. Even when the Muslims conquered Crimea in the 15th century, the Russians were a majority there. The Crimean Tatars at no point of time numbered more than 35% of the population. The ethnic Ukrainians first arrived in Crimea during the 19th century, and made up 10% to 20% of the population during the 20th century.
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January 26, 2016, 02:45:10 PM
 #1246

It has had a Russian ethnic majority since about 1900, which continued after the dissolution of the USSR. The Russians resented being part of Ukraine, presently forming about 70% of the population, and naturally wanted to be part of their Motherland. In 1992 constitutional independence was declared, but the government in Kiev refused a referendum to confirm this

WRONG.

Crimea always had an ethnic Russian majority for the past 2,000 years. Even when the Muslims conquered Crimea in the 15th century, the Russians were a majority there. The Crimean Tatars at no point of time numbered more than 35% of the population. The ethnic Ukrainians first arrived in Crimea during the 19th century, and made up 10% to 20% of the population during the 20th century.

A welcome correction Bryant.
It is also largely proven that Scythians is just one of the names that the Russians were called through the times.

http://stanislavs.org/yes-scythians-are-us/

Quote

RTR Planet has recently aired a very thorough documentary, titled “Yes, Scythians Are Us”.

The documentary looks back through time, investigating who where Scythians, why they abruptly disappeared and Sarmatians turned in their stead, followed by Slavs. They come to the conclusion that both Scythians, Sarmatians (Samaritans?) and Slavs are one and the same people, called by different names at different periods in history.

I will at a later point write a complete translation of this documentary, but for now, here are some of the highlights of the arguments for this theory:

    Greek and Western European chronicles list people from the same period interchangeably referring to the people living between Dnieper and Urals as both Scythians and Rus.
    There are linguistic connection between the surviving Scythian names (in geographic name) and Old Russian.
    Scythian burial customs are exactly the same as Slavic/Russian pre-Christian burial customs.
    Scythians lead a semi-settle way of life, which allowed then to develop crafts like gold forging and iron forging of high quality. Scythians used the same types of weapons and armour as Rus vitjas (warrior).
    “Scythians” seems to refer to a collection of tribes living between Dnieper and Urals, where each tribe was specialised in a certain craft and added to the value of the whole nation. This collection of tribes in their organisation seems to resemble a modern federation.
    Depictions of Scythians on their own items of art, as well as the Greek artefacts, shows people with distinct Slavic facial features and body complexion, and nothing of the Asian look.
    And the most significant argument comes from genetics. Scythians share the same Y-chromosome marker as majority of people living now on the territory of Russia, Belarus and Ukraine – the marker, which classifies them in the Slavic Rus group.

And just as an off-topic reminder: Holland is still holding Scythian – Russian – gold from the Crimean museums hostage.

Ukeden, I also have a small correction to
Quote
Crimea was part of Russia until 1954, when the communist party decided to transfer it to Ukraine.

It was, in fact Khrushov's personal initiative, not the Communist Party in general; never approved by the Russian legislative organs, and violating constitutions of both USSR and RSFSR.

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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January 26, 2016, 03:11:02 PM
 #1247

I remember it coming up in history class way back and the teacher told us that it was mainly to reward the Ukrainians for diligence in exterminating nazi insurgents after WW2. And also for some administrative reasons within the U.S.S.R., probably regarding transports, energy et cetera. Mostly symbolic as such though within the state.

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January 26, 2016, 03:34:37 PM
 #1248

I remember it coming up in history class way back and the teacher told us that it was mainly to reward the Ukrainians for diligence in exterminating nazi insurgents after WW2. And also for some administrative reasons within the U.S.S.R., probably regarding transports, energy et cetera. Mostly symbolic as such though within the state.

There were many rationalisations presented post-factum. It's the first time I hear about the "reward" theory, though. The whole of the Soviet Union contributed to beating Nazis from Ukraine. My great-uncle from Siberia fought there.

The first rationalisation mentioned 300th anniversary of the Treaty of Pereyaslav in 1954 and sealing of the eternal friendship between Russian and Ukrainian people.

I did hear about energy and transports, but it's a bit far-fetched, especially when we see now, during a time of conflict,  how Ukrainian and Russian energy and transports networks are intertwined.

The reality seems to be more more prosaic - a bribe to the Ukrainian Communist Party, which was the most influential at the time, by Khrushov, to ensure that his wrongoings (read; repressions) in Ukraine were forgotten and that he got the needed support to be voted into the top post in the party hierarchy of USSR.

I discussed this in a post here, which was, incidentally, a reply to you   Wink
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=518645.msg10689764#msg10689764

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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January 26, 2016, 03:38:44 PM
 #1249

I remember it coming up in history class way back and the teacher told us that it was mainly to reward the Ukrainians for diligence in exterminating nazi insurgents after WW2. And also for some administrative reasons within the U.S.S.R., probably regarding transports, energy et cetera. Mostly symbolic as such though within the state.

In the end, it was the Soviet citizens of all ethnicities who defeated the Nazis. They achieved what the other super powers such as France and the United Kingdom could never achieve. Most of the soldiers (approx. 60%) were ethnic Russians, and there were good numbers of soldiers from other ethnicities such as Belorussians, Ukrainians, Mordvins, Udmurts, Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Tatars, Chuvashes, Armenians.etc. Also, most of the Soviet casualties (both military and civilians) were from the ethnic Russians. So if there was anyone who should be rewarded, then that should have been the Russians.
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January 26, 2016, 04:10:18 PM
 #1250

Yeah, but nazis were a problem in Ukraine long after WW2 ended and his idea seemed to be that the Crimea transfer was part of some reward for getting rid of that. Of course they never managed to fully uproot it as is evidenced today.

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January 26, 2016, 04:18:59 PM
 #1251

I don´t know; it´s just one of those things that stick in your head for some reason. In any event, this transfer seemed pretty much a non-event at the time, just some theoretical arrangement within the Soviet Union.

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January 26, 2016, 04:38:16 PM
 #1252

Yeah, but nazis were a problem in Ukraine long after WW2 ended and his idea seemed to be that the Crimea transfer was part of some reward for getting rid of that. Of course they never managed to fully uproot it as is evidenced today.

Yes, Banderite gangs were a real problem for decades after WWII. My grandmother told me how she was in Lvov around 1958, and was warned by the locals not to go out alone lest she falls prey to such gangs.

And, yes, I can see how the administrative transfer of Crimea into UkSSR would seem like a non-event from an international perspective, though Crimeans themselves were against it at the "kitchen talk" level.

Also, the head of Crimean regional Communist Party, Titov, lost his post for opposing the idea of transfer and for promoting the recreation of Tavrida Republic, saying in 1952 in a letter to Stalin that "it is time to restore to the Crimean oblast of RSFSR its own Rus, Russian name". Khrushov, during a visit to Crimea in 1953 started airing the idea of transferring of Crimea to UkraineSSR and of resettlement of Ukrainians into Crimea (according to memoirs of Khrushov's son-in-law)

From:
http://svom.info/entry/452-kak-meshok-s-kartoshkoj/
Quote
Пo нeпoдтвepждeнным дoкyмeнтaльнo дaнным, в oктябpe1952 г. пepвый ceкpeтapь (в 1949–1954 гг.) Кpымcкoгo oбкoмa пapтии П.И. Tитoв, бyдyчи дeлeгaтoм XIX cъeздa КПCC, oбpaтилcя личнo к Cтaлинy c пиcьмeнным пpeдлoжeниeм o пepeимeнoвaнии Кpымcкoй oблacти в Taвpичecкyю. Пo eгo мнeнию, этo пoлнocтью бы cooтвeтcтвoвaлo иcтopии coздaния oблacти, нaчинaя c XVIII вeкa. B чacтнocти, в кaчecтвe oднoгo из apгyмeнтoв, Tитoв aпeллиpoвaл и к зaбытoй Coвeтcкoй Pecпyбликe Taвpиды. Oн cчитaл, чтo Кpымcкoй oблacти PCФCP «пopa вoccтaнoвить cвoe pyccкoe, poccийcкoe нaзвaниe».
Пpeдлoжeниe Tитoвa нe oбcyждaлocь пpeдвapитeльнo в Кpымcкoм oбкoмe КПCC и нe былo yтвepждeнo им. Ho извecтнo, чтo пpoтив этoй инициaтивы вoзpaжaл втopoe лицo в peгиoнe – Д.C. Пoлянcкий (в 1952–1954 гг. – пpeдceдaтeль иcпoлкoмa Кpымcкoгo oблacтнoгo coвeтa). Зaтo oн пoддepжaл пepeдaчy Кpымa в cocтaв УCCP. Двaдцaть лeт cпycтя нoмeнклaтypный пapтиeц Г.B. Mяcникoв, в тo вpeмя втopoй ceкpeтapь Mocкoвcкoгo гopoдcкoгo кoмитeтa BЛКCM, вcпoминaл o Пoлянcкoм: «Я вcпoмнил, кaк oн пoшeл в гopy. Xpyщeв, Tитoв и oн вcтpeтилиcь в Кpымy. Boзниклa идeя пepeдaчи Кpымa Укpaинe. Tитoв идeю c xoдy oтвepг, a Пoлянcкий cкaзaл, чтo этo «гeниaльнo». Ha дpyгoй дeнь coбpaли плeнyм Кpымcкoгo oбкoмa, Tитoвa пpoгнaли, a Пoлянcкий cтaл пepвым ceкpeтapeм oбкoмa».
Ho вepoятнee вceгo, чтo этa «зaчиcткa» Tитoвa пpoиcxoдилa пocтeпeннo, пocлe тoгo, кaк  в oктябpe1953 г. пepвый ceкpeтapь ЦК КПCC H.C. Xpyщeв пoceтил Кpым. Зять Xpyщeвa Aлeкceй Aджyбeй, кoтopый coпpoвoждaл eгo в пoeздкax пo cтpaнe, вcпoминaл, чтo кoгдa Xpyщeв пpиexaл в тoт paз в Кpым, oн был пoтpяceн тeм, нacкoлькo кaтacтpoфичным былo пoлoжeниe в peгиoнe и нacкoлькo вeликo былo нeдoвoльcтвo этим y мecтныx житeлeй. Пpи этoм, oднaкo, Xpyщёв ocтaвaлcя caмим coбoй, и кoгдa oн нa мecтнoм aэpoдpoмe yвидeл кaкoй-тo caмoлeт, oн тyт жe пpикaзaл пepeпpaвить eгo в Киeв. A нecкoлькo чacoв cпycтя oн yжe paccyждaл зa yжинoм c мecтным пapтийным pyкoвoдcтвoм o пepeдaчe Кpымa и пepeceлeнии yкpaинцeв в Кpым. Cкopee вceгo, имeннo в этoт мoмeнт и зaвязaлcя oткpытый cпop мeждy ним и Tитoвым. Пo вocпoминaниям зaмecтитeля Tитoвa Л.Г. Meзeнцeвa глaвy Кpымa вызвaли в cepeдинe янвapя 1954 гoдy в Mocквy, чтoбы cooбщить eмy o пoдгoтoвкe peшeния o пepeдaчe peгиoнa. Oн выpaзил пpoтecт, зa чтo и был 16 янвapя cмeнeн нa yкpaинцa Дмитpo Пoлянcкoгo. Taким oбpaзoм, oпиpaяcь нa coвoкyпнocть вocпoминaний cвидeтeлeй, мoжнo yтвepждaть, чтo П.И. Tитoв кaтeгopичecки вoзpaжaл Xpyщeвy пo пoвoдy пepeдaчи Кpымa Укpaинe, и y нeгo были пocтoянныe cтычки c ceкpeтapeм ЦК пo этoмy пoвoдy, в peзyльтaтe кoтopыx влacтный и paчитeльный xoзяин Кpымcкoй oблacти был, в кoнцe кoнцoв, низлoжeн дo paнгa зaмecтитeля миниcтpa ceльcкoгo xoзяйcтвa PCФCP. Booбщe жe, пo мнeнию иccлeдoвaтeлeй, в нaмepeния Xpyщeвa oтнocитeльнo Кpымa был пocвящeн дoвoльнo oгpaничeнный кpyг людeй. B чиcлe иx – пepвый ceкpeтapь (c июня 1953 гoдa) ЦК кoммyниcтичecкoй пapтии Укpaины A.И. Киpичeнкo, кoтopый в тo вpeмя был тaкжe кaндидaтoм в члeны Пpeзидиyмa ЦК КПCC и был нa xopoшeм cчeтy y Xpyщeвa.

I'll translate the fragment above at some later point.

An the transcripts of that Presidium hearing:
http://sevkrimrus.narod.ru/ZAKON/sten1954.htm

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
galdur
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January 26, 2016, 05:02:44 PM
Last edit: January 26, 2016, 06:41:12 PM by galdur
 #1253

It seemed like a non-event to me there in school 40 years ago because it all seemed like Russia anyway. Ukraine, Crimea and the vicinity. It looked like Russia had just changed the name to the Soviet Union but nothing had really changed as to its various districts. Kiev was as Arch-Russian as they come obviously and Sevastopol was founded by Catherine and so on.

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February 01, 2016, 12:20:39 PM
 #1254


Nemo1024
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February 01, 2016, 03:13:49 PM
 #1255



 Grin Grin Grin

"Sanctions.
Barak Obama is forbidden to enjoy the produce of the Russian land of Crimea.
Eat your GMO, monkey."

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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February 01, 2016, 11:13:08 PM
 #1256

‘Over 1 Mln Jobs Lost’: Germany Feels Pinch of Anti-Russian Sanctions

16:43 01.02.2016
During a visit to Crimea to discuss possibilities of cooperation in the field of tourism, sports and public diplomacy, the leader of the party representing the interests of Russian-Germans, as well as those with a migration background, said that he had a number of interesting business proposals for the Crimean authorities.
“Germany alone has lost over a million jobs due to the sanctions imposed against the Russian Federation. A great number of companies have gone bankrupt, gone out of business or had to move out resulting in the loss of many jobs and financial losses too,” Rempel told Radio Russia Today.
He said that many ordinary Germans and business people disagreed with the EU’s decision to impose sanctions against Russia.
“German businessmen are taking a great deal of interest in what is happening in Crimea. Unfortunately, not everyone can or wants to come over here because they are afraid of losing business contracts and things like that,” Dimitri Rempel added.
He said that with the high degree of political instability in Turkey, Egypt and Tunisia, German businessmen were now setting their sights on Crimea as a potential tourist hub.
Relations between Russia and the West soured when the European Union and the United States imposed several rounds of sanctions against Russian banking, defense and energy sectors starting April 2014.
The measures were imposed following the reunification of Crimea with Russia in 2014 and the escalation of the Ukrainian crisis.
Russia responded with a ban on the import of food from the US, the EU countries, Canada, Australia and Norway.


Read more: http://sputniknews.com/europe/20160201/1034042688/germany-sanctions-jobs.html#ixzz3yxdrBHRd



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February 04, 2016, 08:26:36 PM
 #1257

European Parliamentary Assembly passed some sort of resolution regarding "human rights in Crimea". Head of the Crimean Republic, Aksenov, commented this resolution as a hit-piece, ordered from Washington, and executed by EU, and not being worthy of paying attention to it.

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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February 05, 2016, 04:46:03 PM
 #1258

Ukrainian Foreign Minister intends to raise the question of stealing Crimea back to Ukraine for the second time (<- my wording) during the February 13th Norman-format meeting:
http://regnum.ru/news/polit/2072735.html?43432

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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February 12, 2016, 05:25:36 PM
Last edit: February 13, 2016, 02:10:29 PM by Nemo1024
 #1259

For Galdur and everyone interested in the history of Crimea, and particularly the details surrounding the voluntaristic and unconstitutional transfer of 1954, I present the following translation:

http://stanislavs.org/who-and-how-transferred-crimea-into-ukrainian-soviet-socialist-republic-in-1952-1954/

Below is my translation of a very informative article by Mikhail Smirnov, published in Svobodnaja Mysl’ (Free Thought).

It is worth noting, that when the author points out the Russian roots in Crimea, he is most probably referring to the Scythians, who are just the same people as Rus, but going under a different name. See my summery of the documentary Yes, Scythians Are Us.

When reading the text below, note one historic peculiarity of USSR of that time. While 14 republics were almost always denoted by their national name – e.g Ukrainian SSR (Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic) – there was one exception. In USSR no one spoke of Russia, to the extent that the existence of Russia as a republic was largely forgotten. Instead the acronym RSFSR was always in use (decoded as Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic).

At the end of this post, after the main article, I present my translation of the closing speech by K.E Voroshilov from the stenography of the session of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR from the 19th of February 1954, which is an important historical evidence, setting the stage for the transfer and for the peninsular and the expectation connected to the act.



It was not Khrushchev, who made the decision on the transfer of Crimea, but his rabid anti-Stalinism and voluntarism became the propelling power behind this whole undertaking. There were no objective reasons for this decision.

In the history of the presence of the Crimea within modern Ukraine, which, as it is now widely known, began with the official transfer of the Crimean region of the RSFSR to the Ukrainian SSR in 1954 and is associated with the name N.S.Khrushchev, you can set apart the pre-history, that is the actually history of decision-making on behalf of the Crimea, from hatching of the idea to the party-bureaucratic mechanism for its implementation.

As it is well-known, at the time of its transfer into the Ukrainian SSR in 1954, Crimea had the status of the region within the RSFSR. From 1921 to 1945 it was a multi-national autonomy within the Russian Federation – the Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (KrASSR) with the official languages ​​of Russian and Tatar, and in places of compact settlement – also German and Hebrew. After the well-known dramatic events during the War, the administrative status of Crimea was downgraded: Crimean Autonomy was eliminated by converting it into the Crimean region, officially – due to changes in the ethnic composition of the population of Crimea. Crimean Autonomy was restored in 1991 as part of the Ukrainian SSR, and in 1992 it was renamed into the Republic of Crimea.

In the public mind there is a long-established stereotype, which firmly connects the transfer of the Crimean region of the RSFSR into the Ukrainian SSR with the name of N.S. Khrushchev. By and large it is justified, but, after all, a few comments clarifying and enriching the picture of the event will be reasonably useful.

According to the memoirs of the contemporaries of the events, the idea of ​​the transfer of Crimea to Ukraine began to ripen in Khrushchev’s mind ever since the time, when he in 1944-1947 headed the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR, and at the same time was the first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Ukrainian SSR. The year was 1944, the war was still going on. The boss off the USSR, I.V. Stalin, demanded that Khrushchev sent from the Ukrainian SSR to the neighbouring republic 100 thousand people – they were supposed to help with the rebuilding of the Russian Federation. But the position of Ukraine itself was not less, but even more severe, as during the Great Patriotic War almost the whole of its territory saw devastating military operations, and almost all of it has been exposed to enemy occupation. Nikita Khrushchev was furious. “Ukraine itself is destroyed, and more is taken from us” – he raged. (Head of the Soviet trade unions, Lavrentij Pogrebnoy, was a witness to Khrushchev’s indignation in 1944. A few years later, he told one of the Soviet writers about the events.)

Khrushchev could not directly oppose Stalin’s orders. So perhaps even then, or a little later, he hatched the idea that a decent compensation for this extra effort (and even, maybe for Starvation [translator’s note: Gologomor, for the real history surrounding it, I’d recommend reading the article The Real Truth About USSR: Golodomor and Collectivization in Ukraine]), could become a significant territorial gain of Ukraine within the USSR: of course, at the expense of the beneficiary of the “Ukrainian brotherly” assistance – the Russian Federation, which was to boot the most rich territory-wise. Even a cursory glance at the map of the Soviet Union was enough to see the most likely scenario for this: geographically isolated from the rest of the territory of the RSFSR, but located in the vicinity of the Ukrainian SSR and adjacent to it, is the Crimean peninsula. And being by nature a voluntarist, he vowed that he will get Crimea, whatever it takes.

But Khrushchev began the direct implementation of his idea later, in the first half of the 50s, or more precisely – starting from 1952, when the signs of limitations in functional capacity of Stalin became more and more obvious for the party leadership. (Stalin announced that he was going to retire at the October Central Committee plenum of 1952, which was held after the completion of the XIX Congress of the CPSU. But already starting from February 1951, three Politburo members (G.M. Malenkov, L.P. Beria, N.A. Bulganin) were given the right to sign various documents on behalf of Stalin, as, according to Molotov, due to the decrease in performance he did not sign many government documents for a prolonged period of time.) The real opportunity opened up only in connection with the death of Stalin. But it is possible that another significant cause for activation of Khrushchev on this subject at that time was also the activity of a supporter of Stalin’s policy in regard to the Crimea, which brought to the fore the ideas that went counter to Khrushchev’s.

According to unconfirmed records, in October 1952, the first secretary of the Crimean regional party (in 1949-1954) P.I. Titov, while being a delegate of the XIX Party Congress, addressed personally to Stalin with a written offer to rename the Crimean region into Tauridia. In his opinion, it would be entirely consistent with the history of the region, starting from the XVIII century. In particular, as one of the arguments, Titov appealed to the forgotten Soviet Republic of Tauridia. He believed that for the Crimean region of the RSFSR “it’s high time to restore its Russian, Rus name”.

Titov’s proposal was not priorly discussed in the Crimean Regional Party Committee and was not approved by them. But we know that the second person in the region – D.S. Polanski (in 1952-1954 the chairman of the executive committee of the Crimean Regional Council) – objected to this initiative. On the other hand he supported the transfer of Crimea to the Ukrainian SSR. Twenty years later, the nomenclature Party member G.V. Myasnikov, while at that time the second secretary of the Moscow city committee of the Komsomol remembered Polyansky thus: “I remember how he went up the hill. He met Khrushchev and Titov in the Crimea. An idea of ​​the transfer of Crimea to Ukraine was brought up. Titov rejected the idea right away, while Polyansky said it was “brilliant”. The next day they gathered the plenum of the Crimean Regional Committee, Titov was driven out, while Poljansky became the first secretary of the regional committee.”

But it is more likely that this “cleansing out” of Titov took place more gradually, after the first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of USSR, N.S. Khrushchev visited the Crimea in October 1953. Khrushchev’s son-in-law, Adjoubei Alex, who accompanied him on his trip around the country, recalled that when Khrushchev came to the Crimea at that time, he was shocked by how disastrous was the situation in the region and how great was the discontent by this among the local residents. At the same time, however, Khrushchev remained true to himself, and when he saw at the local airport some aircraft, he immediately ordered to fly it over to Kiev. And then, a few hours later, he already talked, over a supper, with the local party leaders about the transfer of Crimea and resettlement of Ukrainians into Crimea. Most likely, it was at this moment that an open dispute ensued between him and Titov. According to Titov’s deputy, L.G. Mezentsev, the head of the Crimea was called in to Moscow in mid-January of 1954 to inform him of preparation of a decision on the transfer of the region. He protested, for which on the 16th of January he was replaced with a Ukrainian Dmitry Polyansky. Thus, based on the totality of the memories of witnesses, it can be argued that P.I. Titov strongly objected to Khrushchev regarding the transfer of Crimea to Ukraine, and he had constant clashes with the Secretary of the Central Committee on this issue, which resulted in this imperious and prudent owner of the Crimean region being finally deposed to the rank of Deputy Minister of Agriculture of the RSFSR. In general, according to the researchers, Khrushchev initiated a rather limited number of people into his intentions with respect to Crimea. Among them – the first secretary (since June 1953) of the Communist Party of Ukraine A.I. Kirichenko, who, at the time, was also a candidate member of the Praesidium of the Central Committee of CPSU and was in good standing with Khrushchev.

But Stalin, who was by that time ill, delayed an official response to Titov. According to the memoirs of some of Titov’s colleagues, in the spring of 1953 and later he, nevertheless, referred to a brief personal answer from Stalin, which was sent personally to him in late January 1953, saying that his proposal was “interesting and perhaps correct. This question can be discussed and resolved.” In the middle of November of 1953 Titov told about this opinion of Stalin to Khrushchev and Polyansky, when the principal decision on the transfer of Crimea to Ukraine had in fact already been made.

An indirect confirmation of the fact that Stalin was quite seriously considering Titov’s proposals, can be the process of renaming of the Crimean Tatar names into Russian ones, which began from the mid-1940s and which was initiated by Stalin himself after the deportation of the Tatar population from there. There are many sources describing this. For example, a comprehensive project on renaming in Crimea was dated with the 25th of September 1948, when the Crimean Regional Committee passed the decree “On renaming of settlements, streets, certain types of work, and other Tatar designations”. However, it was not planned to rename Crimea itself. But even before that, in the 1944-1946, 11 out of 26 Crimean regional centres were renamed (for example, the Ak-Mechetsky region into Chernomorskij, Larindorfsky into Pervomaisky) as well as 327 villages. In the period from 1948 to 1953, it was planned to rename some towns. The documents recorded in particular that Djankoi was going to become either Uzlovo, Severnyj or Verhnekrymsk, Saki turning into Ozernoje, and they wanted to call Bakhchisaray – “Pushkin”. Kerch was supposed to be given the name of “Korchev”, known from the old-Russian chronicles. In general, during 1947-1953 new – Russian – names were given to 1062 settlements and nearly 1300 natural object, mostly replacing Tatar ones. It is obvious that in the context of this process, also Titov’s proposal to change the name of the Crimea looked quite logical. However, the renaming slowed down when the turn of the cities came. And after Stalin’s death, the plan to rename the Crimean cities was abandoned altogether.

Thus, we can see that the project of the inclusion of Crimea into Ukraine was preceded by a project of strengthening of Russian presence in Crimea, and in 1952-1953, as a logical completion of the latter, there was also a project, which remained on the level of an idea, of re-renaming the Crimean region into Tauridian.

(An aside from the translator: Crimean Tatars are more likely Mongolians, the descendants of the Golden Horde of the Mongolian Khan Baty, who raided and occupied the peninsular in the 14th century. The name given to the peninsular by them was “Kyrim”, meaning “trench”. Before the Mongol occupation the peninsular had the Greek name of “Tauridia”. What the endemic population, Scythians, called their land back then is lost.)

As is known, the Russian presence in Crimea has been recorded since ancient chronicled times. Of particular interest to us – in the light of the events of the XX century that we discuss here – is “Tmutarakan” sub-plot of this presence. The original antique city of Panticapaeum, which in the era of the Khazarian Khaganate (translator note: For a well-researched foray into the history of Khazarian Kaganate, I would recommend reading Lada Ray’s Earth Shift Report 6: UKRAINE – NEW KHAZARIAN KHAGANATE?) of the VIII century got the name of Karsha or Charsha, which in Turkic means “market” or “bazaar”, is mentioned in the old-Russian historical records of the events of the X century under the Slavinised name of Krchev (Korchev) [Къpчeвъ]. In the tenth century, Tmutarakan principality – part of the Ancient (Kievan) Rus – takes root on the Crimean and the Caucasian coasts of the Kerch Strait. Korchev was closely associated with the capital of the principality – Tmutarakan, while the Eastern geographers of that time called the Kerch Strait for the Russian River.

And so it was in Kerch that, after a long period of Ottoman history in Crimea, Russia once again establishes on the peninsula, several years before its full incorporation into the Russian Empire. In 1771 Russian troops took Kerch and neighbouring fortress Yeni-Kale. By the Kuchuk-Karnadzhiyskomu peace treaty between the Russian and Ottoman empires, which ended Russian-Turkish war of 1768-1774, this city with its fortress was the first of all the Crimea to become part of the Russian Empire, while, in accordance with that agreement, the Crimean Khanate as a whole then became independence from the Ottoman Empire, with the exception of the influence in the questions of religion. The manifesto of Catherine II was issued on the 8th of April 1783 and decreed the accession of Crimea, Taman and Kuban into the Russian Empire. By the decree of the 2nd of February 1784 Tauridian region (oblast) was established, covering some of the continental land. Later it was transformed into a province (county).

It is quite possible that the role of Kerch, and the Kerch Peninsula as a whole, in the Russian development on Crimea was the foundation for another P.I. Titov’s proposal in November 1953, which he already addressed to Polyansky and Khrushchev, and reiterated in January 1954. It pertained to the inclusion of this region (ie. Eastern Crimea) with the status of the “Kerch region” into the composition of RSFSR. Already then Titov had a well-founded belief that it was inadvisable for RSFSR “to vacate” Crimea, and, thanks to the newly formed region, the strategically important Kerch (Azov-Black Sea) Strait – “Russian River” – would still be a part of RSFSR. Titiov’s “Kerch” was outright rejected by Khrushchev followers, so much so, that the entire water area of ​​the Kerch Strait in the subsequent transfer of the Crimea ended up being assigned to the Ukrainian SSR.

The question of what was the nature of the whole of Crimean autonomy – national or territorial – is also of crucial importance. Lenin’s Sovnarkom initially created both types of autonomies, but over time only the national ones were left. The Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, in this regard, had become a unique autonomous construct, which retained its territorial nature. According to the All-Union census of 1939, Russians comprised 49.6% of the Crimean population, Crimean Tatars – 19.4%, Ukrainians – 13.7%, Jews – 5.8%, Germans – 4.6%. But as the total population during the war declined sharply, and its ethnic composition underwent fundamental changes, Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic was transformed into the Crimean region (oblast) on the 30th of June 1945. Unlike most other autonomous regions, where there was the predominance of the indigenous population, the Crimean Autonomous Republic was not Tatar from the very beginning of its establishment. Moreover, 2/3 of the population of the Crimea at the time was Russian, and only one-third consisted of the peoples who had settled here before the Russians and made up the indigenous population of the peninsula. (Translator note: in the bird’s eye historic perspective, Russians are the indigenous population of the peninsula, who were driven from Crimea, but later returned.) At the same time, flirting with Kemalist Turkey, the Soviet leadership traditionally appointed mostly men of Tatar origin to the leading positions in the republic. This created a false impression that the Crimean autonomy was, like all the other, the national one – Crimean Tatar. But as it is known, in accordance with the provisions of the National Defence Commission of 11th of May and the 2nd of June 1944, of all Tatars of all ages (about 180 thousand people) were deported from Crimea to Kazakhstan. (Translator note: the exception was given to mixed-marriage families, where a Tatar woman was married to a Russian.)

All of the above sheds some light on the political context in which Khrushchev’s fateful for the history of the Crimea voluntarist decision was conceived and prepared. But it is equally important to take into account the details of the mechanism of this decision at the state level.

The fact is that N.S. Khrushchev became the first person in the USSR leadership only in 1955. While immediately after the death of Stalin (at the time of the death he held the post of the chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers), the head of government and a key figure in the leadership of the USSR was G.M. Malenkov. By the end of Stalin’s life, Malenkov was one of the main contenders for the post of supreme leader of the country, and immediately after his death, inherited the post of the chairman of the Council of Ministers. I.V. Stalin died on the 5th of March 1953, and at that time, in the beginning of the 1950s, this was the main post, while the position of the General Secretary of the CPSU was abolished, since, according to the late Stalinist concept of the governance structure, the Communist Party should no longer play a leading role in governing of the country.

M.S. Voslensky in his famous book “The Nomenclature” writes:

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   In the days after the death of Stalin in March 1953, it was customary to conclude speeches at the memorial meetings in the following typical ending: “Eternal glory to the Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, Secretary of the CPSU I.V. Stalin! Long live Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee G.M. Malenkov!”

As it becomes clear from these titles, according to a new tradition established by Stalin, the post of the President of the Council of Ministers of USSR was the most important positions in contemporary system of power, and that it was inherited by Malenkov. And although the decision from March the 5th 1953 of the joint meeting of the Plenum of the Central Committee, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet and the USSR Council of Ministers abolished the Bureau of the Presidium of the Central Committee of CPSU, and on the the 14th of March 1953 the political opponents of Malenkov managed to deprive him of his post of a Secretary of the CPSU (ie, at the time, one of the many secretaries of the Central Committee), in 1953-55 he was still the Chairman of the USSR, and presiding over the meetings of the Presidium of the Central Committee of CPSU (as Politburo of the Central Committee of CPSU was called at the time). And thus, according to the then semi-official representations of the structure of power in the USSR, and, to an even greater extent, due to the political practice established under Stalin’s influence, he was the real leader of the country. It was during the period of his leadership of the country, that the transfer of the Crimean region into the Ukrainian SSR actually took place.

And if you take the viewpoint of those, who do not recognize that the decisions in the USSR were taken collectively, but absolutely want to assign personal responsibility for any decision to one of the “leaders”, then we must blame Malenkov, and not Khrushchev for the transfer of the Crimean region. By the beginning of 1954, when the Crimea was handed over, Khrushchev was not yet a sufficiently influential figure so as to define such major decisions. He was one of the secretaries of the Central Committee, responsible for the work of the entire Secretariat (on September the 7th 1953 he was elected 1st secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU), he was a member of the Presidium of the Central Committee, and was a member of a group, warring with the group of Malenkov. The very same Voslensky in his book indicates that Malenkov tried his best to belittle the role of the Central Committee Secretariat, and it was under him that they began to speak of the secretariat as of a purely technical body. Therefore, it is logical to assume that any significant initiatives emanating from Khrushchev, would not get the support of Malenkov.

If, however, we are be absolutely exact, then from a purely formal point of view, the transfer of Crimea was initiated by a collective body – the Presidium of the CPSU Central Committee, which meetings at that time were chaired by Malenkov. This can be seen from documents published in “Rossiyskaya Gazeta” (Federal Edition #3409 of the 19th of February 2004):

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   From the protocol N 49 of the Central Committee of the CPSU Presidium meeting on the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the RSFSR into the composition of the Ukrainian SSR
    25th of January 1954
    Presided by: G.M. Malenkov
    Present:
    Members of the Presidium of the Central Committee, comrades N.S. Khrushchev, K.E. Voroshilov, N.A. Bulganin, L.M. Kaganovich, A.L. Mikoyan, M.Z. Saburov, M.G. Pervukhin.
    Candidates for members of the Presidium of the Central Committee, comrades N.M. Shvernik, P.K. Ponomarenko.
    CPSU Central Committee secretaries, comrades M.A. Suslov, P.N. Pospelov, N.N. Shatalin.

    XL About transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the RSFSR into the composition of the Ukrainian SSR
    1. To approve as amended at the meeting, the attached draft of the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the RSFSR into the composition of the Ukrainian SSR.
    2. To deem it appropriate to hold a special session of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of USSR, at which to consider a joint submission to the Bureau of the Supreme Soviets of the RSFSR and the Ukrainian SSR on the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the RSFSR into the composition of the Ukrainian SSR.

    Secretary of the CPSU Khrushchev
    AЛPФ.Ф.З.Oп.10.Д.65Л1,4-б Пoдлинник (original)

However, having the real distribution of power in the USSR leadership elite in favour of the government agencies – as a testament from Stalin, outwardly the power system in the country continued working in a mode, familiar to the people, that is, in such a way, that the decisions of the Central Committee of the CPSU were governing in relation the decisions of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR, which was only a “law publishing” body, which gave the appearance of democracy to decisions, which had actually been taken in the Central Committee. Thus, the Council of Ministers, headed by Malenkov, was sidelined on the decision of the Crimea. This decision was taken by the Presidium of the CPSU Central Committee, a meeting presided by Malenkov.

Again, from a purely formal point of view, N.S. Khruschev’s responsibility for this decision consisted only in the fact that he, like everyone else, voted “for” and in addition to this, as the 1st Secretary of the Central Committee heading the work of the Secretariat of the Central Committee, put his signature, just formally certifying the protocol. In the same way as in the Brezhnev period Giorgadze put his signature after Brezhnev’s signature. But analysis of the alignment of the centres of power in the power system of that time shows that the decision of the Presidium chaired by the economic planner Malenkov could be a bargaining chip (albeit a pretty small one) in the nomenclature and political struggle of his supporters with the group of Khrushchev – the highest at that time party functionary. In any case, with that set up, Malenkov was a guarantor that, as a result of this decision, there would be no major changes in the Crimea’s situation and, above all, in the nature of economic relations of the Crimean region within the control system of the USSR.

From the extract from the protocol N49, cited above, it is clear at the same meeting the draft of the Decree of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on the transfer of Crimea was approved, which after a multi-stage procedure, would in the end be “rubber-stamped” by the Supreme Council. The Supreme Soviet of the USSR rubber-stamped the decree draft at its meeting of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of February the 19th 1954. Here is the text of the decree:

The stenography of meeting can be consulted here. (Translator note: I will translate the closing speech of Voroshilov, which gives additional context to the political and cultural background, as well as assumed conditions, of the transfer.)

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   DECREE
    Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR
    On the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the RSFSR into the composition the Ukrainian SSR


    “Given the commonality of the economy, the proximity and close economic and cultural ties between the Crimean region and the Ukrainian SSR, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics RESOLVES:

    Approve the joint submission of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR and the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR on the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic into the composition of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.”

    Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR K.VOROSHILOV
    Secretary of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR N.PEGOV
    Moscow, The Kremlin, February 19, 1954.

And already on the 26th of April 1954 the Supreme Soviet of the USSR by the Law “On the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of RSFSR in the composition of the Ukrainian SSR” approved the decree of its Presidium and made the appropriate changes to Articles 22 and 23 of the Constitution of the USSR.

Incidentally, we must note that the issue of transfer of the Crimea went in the agenda of the meeting of the Presidium of the CC CPSU as item XI or XL (it is not very clear from the publication of the document). In any case, this issue was not perceived as being particularly important. It is possible that this attitude has led to a certain constitutional legislative negligence in the design of the entire transfer procedure. The fact is, under Article 18 of the Constitution of USSR, which was in effect by 1954, the territory of a republic could not be altered without its consent. Such consent was given by both Republics in the form of a Ruling of the Presidium of the Supreme Councils of the two Republics. However, Article 33 of the Constitution of the RSFSR, which contained a list of the authorities given to the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, there is no authority to change the boundaries of the RSFSR. Not to mention the fact that out of the 27 members of the meeting of the 5th of February 1954, during which the issue was addressed, only 15 were present.

Further considering the nature of the relationship of the then leadership of the USSR to the “Crimean issue”, one should also note the following. For example, in the relevant documents of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet it was claimed both wisely and pompously, “that the transfer of Crimea to the Ukrainian SSR, taking into account the commonality of their economies, the proximity and close economic and cultural ties, is fully appropriate and is a testament to the boundless trust of the Russian people in the Ukrainian people…” This is how the “Ukrainians” at the helm thought back then. At the same time, the event itself passed completely unnoticed. It was not widely presented by the official propaganda to the Soviet and foreign public as another triumph of the party reason and higher justice. Probably for this reason, the Western press said nothing about this. While in the Soviet publications one can only find a couple of paragraphs about the symbolic meaning of this act in the context of the 300th anniversary of the “reunification” of Ukraine and Russia. However, the celebrations that took place in late May 1954 were generally devoted only to the anniversary. And even in the festive speech of Khrushchev, not a word was said about the Crimea. The absence of any indication to the transfer of Crimea in the Soviet sources of the time leads to some extent to a probable assumption, that the leaders of the Soviet Union intended to create in the perception of the peoples of the Soviet Union the idea, that the presence of the Crimea as part of Ukraine was a self-evident fact, and the decision to transfer the peninsula was represented as something long-overdue and almost as correction of a certain historical misunderstanding. But it is also quite possible that there was a feeling of voluntary overeagerness, and that there was no complete confidence that the decision, taken completely privately and without extensive discussion between the peoples of the two largest of the Soviet republics, would not cause public rejection. (Translator’s note: It did, at the “kitchen talk” level, much of which I heard first-hand, while spending many a summer of my youth in Crimea.)

N.S. Khruschev made a considerable progress towards senior management position of the country only in 1955 as a result of the nomenclature struggle for the removal of Malenkov from power. In 1955, Malenkov was dismissed from the post of Chairman of the USSR, and in June 29th 1957 he was removed from the Presidium of the CC CPSU. It is not known when exactly he ceased to be “presiding” at the Presidium meeting, but most likely in the very same 1955.

Since that time, that is, from the time when N.S. Khruschev, as the 1st Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee and member of the Presidium of the Central Committee, began to gradually strengthen his position as the sole leader of the Communist Party, we can say that the party organs as a whole began to regain the lead in the country’s leadership. However, until 1958 the high status and independence of the state and economic apparatus inherited from the Stalinist era remained. Chairman of the USSR from 1955 to 1958 was N.A. Bulganin, who previously, just like Malenkov, was one of the Vice-Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers of Stalin. It was only in 1958 that Bulganin was dismissed, and his position was also taken by N.S. Khruschev while still holding the post of the First Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee. The defeat of the group of Bulganin, Malenkov, Kaganovich, Molotov and Shepilov occurred in June 1957 when at first during the meeting of the Presidium (Politburo) of the Central Committee of the CPSU by a majority vote, it was decided to abolish the post of the 1st Secretary of the CPSU and to appoint Khrushchev Minister of Agriculture, and then during an urgently convened plenum of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, as a result of the dramatically unfolding events and with Zhukov’s help, Khrushchev managed to turn the situation to his advantage, and called Bulganin/Malenkov’s group for “anti-party”. Only after 1958 can N.S. Khurshev be held solely responsible for the supreme power decisions in the country. The Crimean region was transferred to Ukraine at the beginning of 1954, while the opinion about the deciding role that Khrushchev played in it, was formed only later with the help of the official propaganda.

Soviet newspapers, like mirrors, reflected the change in the ratio of different branches of power in the USSR. The newspaper “Pravda” of the 21st of December 1955 in its report on the national meeting of the top performers of agriculture in Tashkent, said: “spacious auditorium of the theatre named after Alisher Navoi was filled to capacity. 11 am. Loud and prolonged applause greeted the appearance at the meeting the Chairman of the presidium of the USSR Council of Ministers N. Bulganin and First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, N.S. Khrushchev. Places on the podium are occupied by the first secretary of Central Committee of the Communist Party: Uzbekistan – A.I. Niyazov, Kazakhstan – LI Brezhnev, Tajikistan – BG Gafurov, Chairman of the Council of Ministers: Uzbek SSR – N.A. Mukhitdinov, Tajik SSR – T. Uldzhabaev, Turkmen SSR – B. Ovezov, Kirghiz SSR – A. Suerkulov, Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Uzbek SSR Sh.R. Rashidov.” Here, the Chairman of the USSR Council is still mentioned in the first place, while the first secretary of the Communist Party – in the second, as a figure of lesser importance.

But already in 1960, at the height of Khrushchev’s personality cult, there is a dominating and familiar us from the days of Stagnation formula, where the Central Committee of the Communist Party is mentioned in the first place: “The workers of agriculture of the Penza region report to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Soviet Government and personally to Comrade N.S. Khrushchev that, realizing the historical decision of the XXI Congress of the CPSU, collective and state farms, overcoming the difficulties created in the current year due to adverse weather conditions, have grown a good harvest, and completed the plan to sell grain to the state ahead of schedule – on August the 9th – using 20 working days.” (“Pravda” of the 12th of August 1960).

There are some important considerations at the end of this brief historical sketch of this dramatic episode in the history of Russia. In that harsh time P.I. Titov became the forerunner of the modern Communist Party of the Russian Federation in that part of its activity, which is directed today to protect the all-Russian interests. It is a pity that his name have not become a symbol of the 23-year-long modern struggle for liberation of the Russian-speaking people of the Crimea against the Ukrinising occupants. In light of the events of the modern Russian history, that person is worthy of his memory being perpetuated at least by a commemorative plaque in Simferopol, and at least a mention of him in the future textbooks of the history of the Fatherland as a Russian citizen, who was not afraid to go against the voluntarist projects of omnipotent Russian Ukrainophile Khrushchev. The country and the people need to know their heroes, and not only the negative ones.



Below is a translation of the closing speech by K.E Voroshilov from the stenography of the session of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR from the 19th of February 1954. As the commentary note at the top of that site says, “The Communist regime held no referendum or any opinion poll among the Crimeans regarding their transfer into the Ukrainian SSR”. All highlighting in the translation is mine.

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   Comrades, the decision of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on the joint proposal of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet and the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR regarding the transfer of the Crimean region from the composition of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic into the composition of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic is a testament to further strengthening of the unity and indestructible friendship of the Russian and Ukrainian peoples within the great powerful fraternal family of the peoples of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. This significant act of great national importance once again confirms that the relationship between sovereign allied socialist republics in the USSR is based on genuine equality and a real understanding and respect for mutual interests, aimed at the prosperity of all of the Union republics.

    In history, there is no – and can not be – other such relation between States. In the past, especially under capitalism, at the very root of relations between states there was an aspiration for territorial conquest, the pursuit of strong states profiteering at the expense of territories of weaker countries. Only within the conditions, created by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics may there be such a fair resolution of all issues between Union Republics, decisions based on economic feasibility and sensibility, full of mutual friendship and fraternal co-operation of their peoples. The transfer of the Crimean region of the RSFSR into the Ukrainian SSR is in the interest of the Russian and Ukrainian peoples, and meets the national interests of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

    The Crimean region, due to its historical development, due to its territorial and economic status, is important for the whole of the Soviet state. And in the distant and recent past enemies have repeatedly tried to take away the Crimean peninsula from Russia, use it to plunder and ruin Russian and Ukrainian lands, establish a base there for attacks on Russia and Ukraine. However the Russian and Ukrainian peoples had more than once, in their common struggle, severely beaten the arrogant invaders and thrown them out of the borders of Ukraine and Crimea. Ukraine and Crimea are closely linked by common economic interests – this has already been eloquently stated both by the presenters and by comrade speakers. Cultural relations between Crimea and Ukraine in particular have increased and deepened. The transfer of the Crimean region into the Ukrainian SSR will undoubtedly further strengthen the traditional ties.

    Comrades, this friendly act takes place in the days when the Soviet people solemnly celebrate the remarkable historical date of the 300th anniversary of the reunification of Russia and Ukraine. This is a great traditional celebration not only of the Ukrainian people, but also for all the peoples of the USSR. Friendship of peoples – one of the foundations of our great multinational Soviet state, the source of its invincible might, of its prosperity and power. We know and rejoice that the Russian, Ukrainian and other peoples of our vast country, will also in the future continue to develop and strengthen their brotherly friendship. Let our great Motherland – the fraternal Union of Soviet Socialist Republics – develop and grow stronger!

http://stanislavs.org/who-and-how-transferred-crimea-into-ukrainian-soviet-socialist-republic-in-1952-1954/

“Dark times lie ahead of us and there will be a time when we must choose between what is easy and what is right.”
“We are only as strong as we are united, as weak as we are divided.”
“It is important to fight and fight again, and keep fighting, for only then can evil be kept at bay, though never quite eradicated.”
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February 13, 2016, 04:50:37 AM
 #1260

Excellent, thanks very much Nemo. Yes, I remember digging up Voroshilov´s speech somewhere last year. Thought he summed up the affair pretty well, a much better politician/administrator than a military man.

In the west they whine much about the breaking of international law regarding the Crimea but won´t of course bring it before an international court. Both because it´s a hopeless case to begin with and also the last thing they want is to bring light on their own long sordid treatment and disregard of international laws when it has suited their interests. Every meaningful court of law is interested in precedents.

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