Extraordinary State Commission


The Extraordinary State Commission was a Soviet government agency formed by the Council of People's Commissars on 2 November 1942, by a decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet. It was tasked with investigating World War II crimes against the Soviet Union and collecting documentation which would confirm material losses caused by Nazi Germany. Some of the reports prepared by the Commission grossly exaggerated Nazi crimes for propaganda purposes, and are now considered erroneous, or outright fabrications.
The Extraordinary State Commission was tasked with compensating the state for damages suffered by the Soviet Union because of the war. This specific aim of the agency is usually referred to by historians as the work of the Trophy Commission which led the trophy brigades behind the frontline. The plunder of artwork was directed by Igor Grabar of the Bureau of Experts. The commission became instrumental in the removal of industrial installations, materials, and valuables from all Soviet-occupied territories during the Vistula–Oder Offensive of the Red Army including Hungary, Romania, Finland and Poland, and later, from the Soviet Zone of Germany. The commission's Arts Committee headed by Andrei Konstantinov was in charge of the registration and Soviet distribution of trophy artworks beginning June 1945. The transports included valuables stolen by Nazi Germany from as far as Latvia and Italy, appropriated by the Soviets.

History

The Commission's full ceremonial name was: "Extraordinary State Commission for Ascertaining and Investigating Crimes Perpetrated by the German-Fascist Invaders and their Accomplices". The official aim of this agency included "punishing for the crimes of the German–fascist aggressors." According to its own data, 32,000 regular organization staff took part in the work of ChGK. On top of that, around 7,000,000 Soviet citizens had participated in the collection of materials and evidence. The first 27 reports published by ChGK constituted the majority of Soviet evidentiary material in the Nuremberg process and the trials of Japanese war criminals. The reports appeared in English in the daily publication Soviet War News issued by the Press Department of the Soviet Embassy in London. The first report, Protocol on the plunder by the German–Fascist invaders of Rostov Museum at Pyatigorsk, was published on June 28, 1943 and the last report, Statement on "Material Damage caused by the German-Fascist invaders to state enterprises and institutions, collective farms, public bodies and citizens of the U.S.S.R" was published on September 18, 1945. A complete collection of the original 27 communiqués issued by the commission appears in the Soviet Government publication, Soviet Government Statement on Nazi Atrocities.

Communiqués

Some of the reports prepared by the Commission are now considered erroneous or outright fabrications. Particularly, the first report of the commission among notable others — published on 24 August 1944 — with the title "Finland demasked". This report purported that Finland had put the whole Soviet population of the occupied territories into concentration camps in East Karelia during the Continuation War of 1941 to 1944, where 40% had died according to Commission.
Another falsification concerned the 24 January 1944 communiqué about the Katyn massacre, published under the title "The Truth about Katyn". This lengthy document purported that the mass shootings of the Polish prisoners had been done by the Germans. In fact, the crime was committed by the Soviets on Joseph Stalin's orders. The truth was first revealed by the international Katyn Commission but confirmed by Soviet documents only after they had been declassified and made public by the Government of the Soviet Union in 1990 during the last days of the USSR. They proved conclusively that 21,857 Polish internees and prisoners of war were executed by the Soviet Union after 3 April 1940 including 14,552 prisoners from three largest Soviet POW camps at this time. Of the total number of victims, 4,421 officers were shot one by one at the Kozelsk Optina Monastery, 3,820 at the Starobelsk POW camp, and 6,311 at the Ostashkov facility, in addition to 7,305 Poles secretly eliminated in the Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs' political prisons. The head of the NKVD department, Maj. General P. K. Soprunenko, organized "selections" of Polish officers to be massacred at Katyn and elsewhere.

Soviet ''Trophy Brigades''

As early as 1942, the USSR formed special Red Army Trophy Brigades with the task of removing valuables from occupied territories and taking them back to the Soviet Union - usually by train convoys. The organization made responsible for receiving and cataloging these items, the "Commission on Reception and Registration of Trophy Valuables", was established just before the war's end in April 1945. The institution was soon disbanded as it had been overwhelmed by the sheer number of objects being sent back to Russia by the troops. The early part of 1946 saw some 12,500 crates of books and documents, along with other valuables from German libraries, which were allocated to the State Historical Museum in Moscow and to the Hermitage in Leningrad, and as far afield as Turkmenistan and Tajikistan. In April 1998 under Boris Yeltsin the Russian Duma nationalized these items; it also relieved any claims made on all Russian property still remaining in foreign lands.
The Trophy-Brigade concept included dismantling anything of utility in Germany, and using it to rebuild the Soviet economy as retributions.
…The most important dismantling action, however, was carried out beginning in March 1946. Leuna deployed 30,732 of its workers and 7,376 other plant personnel to assist 400 Soviet officers and 1,000 to 1,200 soldiers from the Red Army to remove 120,000 tons of machines and structural iron and steel from the works. Included in a long list of affected installations were eight working compressors for synthetic gas, large scale installations for methanol synthesis, and various machines, apparatus, and installations for synthetic gasoline production. What is more, the Soviets seized 117 journals and 514 books from the works library, in all a total of 1,067 volumes.

Vladimir Shabinsky, a Russian officer who later defected to the West, gave his personal account of his own service as member of a Soviet Trophy Brigade.
The library section of the Russian Trophy Brigades was known as the "State Agency for Literature", or, "Gosfond". The Soviet government had set up this agency to allocate the confiscated literature to Soviet libraries and cultural institutions. The plan involved Gosfond allocating the materials to enhance existing collection in Russia and acquiring meaningful additions. However, the Agency became overwhelmed with the numbers of books sent from Germany. Eventually, the exercise degenerated into a mechanical process of distribution, and the beneficiary libraries proved unable to absorb the works, or in some cases, even to store them.
In a meeting of March 14, 1946, a committee distributed 1,857 crates from some thirty institutional and private libraries among five Soviet libraries: the National Lenin Library of the USSR, the National Historical Library, the National Polytechnical Library, the National Library for Foreign Literature and the National Saltykov-Shchedrin Public Library.

Lieutenant Colonel Margarita Rudomino, director of the Library for Foreign Literature in Moscow, and an associate on the staff of the Plenipotentiary State Special Defense Committee, and part of the Soviet Trophy Brigade, argued that the German Library in Leipzig was needed for re-building Germany and restoring German cultural identity. Thus over two million volumes were evacuated to Thuringia, but they were then returned to the Leipzig library. However, she also argued for the return of the books from the Sächsische Landesbibliothek in Dresden, but they were sent to Russia by mistake, and they were returned, in part, in 1957.
Not all transfers of captured documents went well. Many of the books sent to the Soviet Union by the Gosfond and the various Trophy Brigades did not benefit either the Soviets or anyone else. With the overwhelming numbers of materials received, they were often parceled out to smaller libraries and institutes, who often received materials wholly inappropriate for their functions. As a result, many of the items were stored haphazardly, seldom cataloged or inventoried, and often were destroyed by neglect and inattention. Items which were needed at large research institutes were sent to smaller public libraries and agricultural stations, where the books were never cataloged and could not be recalled for inter-library loan or other useful activities.

Members of the Commission

The decree issued by the Supreme Soviet of the U.S.S.R on 2 November 1942 confirmed the appointment of the following members of the commission:
The Soviet prosecution introduced 31 reports from the Extraordinary State Commission as Exhibits for the prosecution at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg.
  1. USSR-1 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in the Stavropol region
  2. USSR-2 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the destruction of industry, etc. in the Stalino region
  3. USSR-2 Report of a special commission on crimes in Stalino
  4. USSR-4 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on causing death by spreading epidemic of typhus
  5. USSR-5 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the "Gross-lazarett" in the town of Slavuta
  6. USSR-6 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the Lvov region
  7. USSR-8 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Auschwitz Nazi death camps
  8. USSR-7 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Lithuania
  9. USSR-9 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Kiev
  10. USSR-29 Joint Polish and Soviet report of the Extraordinary State Commission
  11. USSR-35 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on losses sustained by State enterprises and establishments
  12. USSR-37 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the city of Kupiansk
  13. USSR-38 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on German crimes in the city of Minsk
  14. USSR-39 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in Estonia
  15. USSR-40 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission concerning destruction and atrocities in the Pushkin Reservation of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Science
  16. USSR-41 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Latvia
  17. USSR-42 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the town of Krasnodar and vicinity
  18. USSR-43 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Kharkov and vicinity
  19. USSR-45 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the town of Rovno and vicinity
  20. USSR-46 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Ore1 and vicinity
  21. USSR-47 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities in the city of Odessa and vicinity
  22. USSR-49 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission dated 13 September 1944: destruction of works of art and art treasures
  23. USSR-50 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on the destruction of monuments in Novgorod
  24. USSR-54 Report by a special Soviet commission, 24 January 1944, concerning the shooting of Polish officer prisoners of war in the forest of Katyn
  25. USSR-55 Report of special Soviet commission on crimes in the city of Krasnodar and vicinity
  26. USSR-56 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on atrocities committed in Smolensk and vicinity
  27. USSR-63 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in Sevastopol and other cities
  28. USSR-246 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission of the Soviet Union concerning destruction of ecclesiastical buildings
  29. USSR-248 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission concerning the destruction of Kiev's Psychopathic Institute
  30. USSR-249 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on German atrocities in Kiev
  31. USSR-279 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes in the city of Viazma and others in the Smolensk region
  32. USSR-415 Report of the Extraordinary State Commission on crimes committed against Soviet prisoners of war in the camp of Lamsdorf
Only one of these reports, USSR-54 concerning the Katyn massacre, appears in the English version of the NMT "Blue Series" collection of exhibits. An editor's note states that "the absence of a Soviet editorial staff it impossible to publish any documents in Russian". As a result, of the 51 Soviet prosecution exhibits included in the document collection all are written in either English or German.

Literature