Stalin planned to destroy Moscow if the Nazis moved in

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/3568041/Stalin-planned-to-destroy-Moscow-if-the-Nazis-moved-in.html>http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/3568041/Stalin-planned-to-destroy-Moscow-if-the-Nazis-moved-in.html
 



Stalin planned to blow up more than 1,200 
buildings including the Bolshoi Theatre and St 
Basil's Cathedral if the Nazis ever took Moscow, documents have revealed.



By Adrian Blomfield in Moscow
Last Updated: 7:01PM GMT 05 Dec 2008
Stalin planned to blow up more than 1,200 buildings if the Naz

Stalin planned to blow up more than 1,200 
buildings if the Nazis took Moscow Photo: GETTY

An exhibition of secret papers staged to 
commemorate 90 years of military 
counter-intelligence showed the extraordinary 
lengths the Soviet high command was prepared to go to if the city fell.

The documents were drawn from archives of the 
so-called "Moscow Plan" drawn up in the Autumn of 
1941, when German forces were within 19 miles of the city.

Soviet generals had told Stalin that the capital 
was likely to be overrun and the dictator 
responded by forming the Independent Motorized 
Brigade for Special Operations – or OMSBON – to 
destroy the main landmarks and infrastructure.

The plan was based on a strategy originally drawn 
up by Tsar Alexander I as Napoleon's troops bore 
down on Moscow in 1812. The French forces found 
the city an uninhabitable ruin and were eventually forced to withdraw.

Destroying a 20th century metropolis presented a 
different challenge, so Stalin order OMSBON to 
rig 1,200 buildings in Moscow with explosives.

Booby-traps were laid in the orchestra pit of the 
Bolshoi theatre as well as around the Kremlin and 
Moscow's best known cathedrals. The Metropole and 
National hotels were also mined, as was the towering foreign ministry.

Under the elaborate plan, ballerinas and circus 
acrobats were armed with grenades and pistols and 
ordered to assassinate German generals if they 
attempted to organise concerts and other 
celebrations upon taking the city. The composer 
Lev Knipper was charged with the responsibility 
of killing Hitler if he got the opportunity.

All country houses owned by Soviet leaders were 
to be blown up too, with the exception of 
Stalin's own dacha because the dictator was too 
scared of home-grown assassins to allow his home 
to be filled with explosives, curators said.

It was not just Moscow's famous buildings that 
were to be demolished. The water supply, 
telephone system and power stations were all too 
be blown up to in an attempt to render the city 
useless to the German occupiers.

Stalin and his generals were to retreat to the 
wartime capital of Samara, on the Volga river, 
where Lenin's body and other national treasures had already been stowed.

The exhibition is the first time the documents 
have gone on display to the public. Other 
exhibits included Stalin's order creating SMERSH, 
the military counter-intelligence unit whose name 
stands for "kill all spies" in Russian.

Although it only existed for three years before 
it was incorporated into other intelligence 
structures in 1946, SMERSH became immortalised in 
Ian Fleming's James Bond books as 007's nemesis.

In the James Bond series of films SMERSH was 
renamed SPECTRE in an attempt not to offend the Soviets.

There is also a military jacket worn by Hitler 
that Soviet forces took from his bunker after capturing Berlin in 1945.

A veteran of that operation, 90-year-old Leonid 
Ivanov, visited on the opening day of the 
exhibition and recalled how he received a note 
from a fellow officer that said: "Send a car. We 
have found Goebbels' body," referring to the Nazi propaganda minister.

But Ivanov, a retired KGB general, was 
tight-lipped when a journalist asked him what happened to Hitler's body.

He said that Soviet forces had burned it and 
sprinkled the ashes in an undisclosed location, 
then added mysteriously: "The location is known to me. I have been there.

"When we entered Germany the task was to find 
high-ranking Nazis and former Wehrmacht officers, 
but we were already switching over to work 
against the English and the Americans," he said.

"They began to recruit our soldiers. So we had to 
reorient ourselves against the British, the Americans, the French."

Other items on show included a French-made gun 
hidden in a cane used by tsarist agents before the Bolshevik Revolution.

"All the European secret services used them," 
said Sergei Kozhin, a curator of the exhibit.


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