KHARKOV TANK FACTORY/TANK ENGINE TESTING

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0
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RIPPUB
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C
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72
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 10, 2011
Sequence Number: 
187
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Publication Date: 
January 18, 1954
Content Type: 
REPORT
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 CLASSIFICATION coNFIDEN:].AL _ CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY INFORMATION REPORT Kharkov Tank Factory/Tank Engine Testing ~................... .................. THIS IS UTA EVAI I IATI"n .nwnlcu H11FVRIrINIION P an o. oyjp section in civilian clothes; it was difficult to distinguish them from ordinary workmen, as tho i._.. _ =.-Med aside by side with other workmen, Plant No-75 had all types of lathes, brought from abroad. The whole plant was separated into numerous departments, the employees of which were not permitted to communicate. Each department was a secret to all other departments and the entrance to each department was guarded by police in plant uniforms. It was only through the common plant shop that everyone could pass. The plant had the following departments: Nos. 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 6oo, 700, 800, 900, 1,000 and 1,100. Department No.800 - assembly of engines, and Department No. 900, testing shop, were merged and formed Department No. 900. 4. Every regular plant pass specified the department which the bearer could enter. The workmen employed in Department 900 ware authorized to visit all the other depart- ments, and had a corresponding notation on their passes. There were several gates at the main entrance to the plant, and every workman was carefully checked here. The plant police were armed with pistols and rifles. New employees had to surrender their personal passports and in exchange received plant passports, stating that their personal passports were being kept at plant No. 75. Night and day secret agents and policemen circulated in the neighborhood of the plant and stopped people on suspicion; if a person did not have his plant passport in his possession he was arrested. 5. Plant No.75 had 24 testing etatio s, plate.: in a row. Each station consisted of two sections. In the first section the engine was set up on a stand. In the second section were the instreaaents for testing the engine. The two sections were connected CLASSIFICATION C0NFID N TIAt. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 CONFIDENTIAL -2- by a sound-proofed windo-:, through which the working of the engine was observed. These were Diesel engines, 12 cylinder, V-shaped, using heavy fuel. The engines carried the designations V-2, V-2-V and V-2-K-V. Engines V-2 and V-2-V were almost identical. 6. The en in g es w 4 the engine. The stages from 1300 to 1700 revolutions uP a engine. The stages from 1300 per minute lasted ten minutes each. Measurements were taken at the rated rotation speed of 1700 r p m with a load of 375 kilograms by means of hydraulic brakes at 400 h p and a metered Supply of fuel. ere of 00 to 450 horsepower, manufactured in series production. They were delivered from the assembly shop to the testing shop. ,,he foreman on duty d which station was to do the testing. decide was 120 per tested per engines month. Each st ation operated ated in four shilhfts of of six nsi.x hhour urs eac Beach. h. If the norm o- 1 was month was exceeded, a bonus of one hundred paid to the four brigades for each engine tested in excess of the norm. Each testing station tented from 1-4Y5 > from to 157 engines per munch. Get,. en,,?ine to test and some of the Lustig stations remained idle. en, there were no The V-2 and V-2-V engines received at the testing shop were tested for six hours. The tests started at 800 revolutions per minute and reached 1300 revn] utinno, -4+U fi. c minutes at each stage in order to warm 8. A record was kept for each motor, showing every flaw in the engine and the process of its operation. The engines consumed 1.68 litres of gasoline per hour; the tempera- ture of the water entering the motor was 65 degrees (Centigrade or Fahrenheit not known) and leaving 80 degrees; the temperature of the oil entering was 45 degrees, and leaving 55 degrees. Tests were made(a) at a minimum rate of 1850 r p m and a load of 400 kilograms by means of hydraulic braces; (b) at a maximum rate of 1950 r p m with 450 kilograms; (c) without any load and with an unlimited supply of gasoline 2000 r p m during one minute to check the stability of the engine; and (d) while reducing speed to 100 r p a to check the stability of the engine. cnvA I I I inn -- "" u- incases os _c n m ir. order to check the stability o? the engine were taken by means of in showing the number of revolutions, asYthejneedle vaK manuracture lacked stability was !,mnossible to take an exact reading. dumped in all directions and it 10. After the three-hour preliminary running the engine was subjected to a three-hour control test. This testing (six hours) did not require exactitude. All defects were noted on the record. While the engine was running every part was checked and remounted. After the six-hour test was completed, the engine was taken to the dismantling shop where all the parts were washed and the inner parts were checked. If it proved necessary to alter some detail, such as the cylinder, the connecting rod, the lover or upper crankcase, or the cylinder block, then the engine was sent back to the testing station for a three-hour "penalty" test, after which it was returned to the dismantling ship for washing and inspection, and finally returned again to the testing station for control tests. 11. The control tests lasted one and a half hours, one hour of which was used in pre- liminaries, warming up and testing at 1700, 1850 and 1950 r p m to determine the gas consumption and stability of the engine. The super isor of the inspection shop carefully examined the engine before giving permission to subject it to the thirty- minute test. The supervisor reported to the chief military inspector of the plant, 'mho personally checked and signed the documents on the acceptance of the engine. 12. Engine V-2-K, 600 h p, was tested in the same manner: 1700 r p m with a load of 400 kilograms, 1800 with 450 kilograms, 1950 with 550 kilograms. The consumption of fuel was 185 litres, and the maximum number of revolutions without load was 2200. This engine had sec,e serious defects; tue lower crankcases often cracked, the water and oil pumps and the fuel sprayer supplying gasoline to the cylinder broke down. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 C0NFIDEPTTIAL -3- Also, rather large tongues of flame spurted f th e exliaust pipes, which was considered a rom serious fault (when the tank was in operation, the enemy could easily determine its location). These engines 13. Early in 1941 the management organized four new teams for Station No. 9; these teams were cleared by the Special Section of the plant and were assigned to the testing of a new model engine, equipped with a supercharger with additic;a' air. The tests were supervised by two designers and a great many persons unknown to us. Entries in the record were strictly checked. The designation of the engine was not given in the record. This engine was of about 800 h p. It was impossible to determine the maximum speed because all the in-and out-going pipes were detrarhPd during tie tests. r? and all fuel pipcu were also do?1tached and 1'. Ta , therefore, impossible to determine tlhe consumption of fuel, but it was over 200 litres per hour. The engine became very hot. After each short test the engine was taken away for an 50X1-HUM examination . its inner parts. the engine was taken to the Urals and construction workers were sent to erect plants there. 15. In wartime all kinds of small defects were acceptable, and the six-hour tests were shortened to three hours. In 1941 workmen began to dismantle the lathes and load them on railroad cars for removal to the Urals. However, German Intelligence found it out and bombed the trains and many of them were lost in transit. 16. The main office employed about 5^'1 persons, including those who worked on the plant newspaper. The office wa, housed in a four-story building with antiaireraft guns on the roof. The testing ane assembly shops had their own office u a twu-,,;ory building; there were about 40 employe,.-s. The name of the shop supervisor was Rte . The chief engineer was L4a.yshev; he had been decorated twice by the Y. During the war no recorawnakept of the nissber of engines tested. Plant No. 75 employed about 25 thousand persons. 1'ext to the plant foundations were laid. for an exparu:ion of plant No. 75. During the evr:uation the plant was destroyed by fire. The plant was built of cement and concrete; the entire roof was made of glass. Plant No. 183 was undamaged during the evacuation. ENCLOSURE (A): Sketch Showing Layout of the Kharkov Tank Factory Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 ENCLOSURE (A SKETCH SHOWING LAYOUT OF THE KHARKOV TANK FACTORY Rexyww~~,hp~ Sr mil, v. 6VA"r # MR wwr4mY/ *,wool. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 .,. CLASSIFICATION CONFIDENTIAL CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY INFORMATION REPORT COUNTRY SUBJECT PLACE ACQUIRED DATE ACQUIRED DATE OF I Secrecy and Security Regulations in the Soviet Geological Service CLASSIFICATION COI!'ZL RIAL THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 ~,p'~ -EJE I IAL Four diagrams attached to this manuscript. i3TIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Introduction Mineral raw material (petroleum, ferrous ores, non-ferrous ores, ores of rare metals) were and continue to be apple of di.s.^o2?d" between and m--U.-U nation;; alike. The struggle for the possession of raw material sources and ?or markets for the finished products continues)as before, in the open and in secret, drawing into its orbit more and more new countries. The struggle for supremacy in the world market has ceased to hear a parochial character and thanks to the achievements of modern technology, has entered the world arena. In our century, to thin struggle, was added the struggle for political domination, which we shall not stop to discuss, but we must note that political 1nfli:ence is buttres,ed not only by ideas but by force of arms and by the end-products of the working and processing of mineral resources. Therefore mineral resources as before, continue to be a dominant political and economic factor in the struggle among competing socio-political theories. For example, in contemporary events we see how political influence is acquired through the force of arms. In view of this, the supply of mineral resources is the vital nerve of heavy industry, producing tanks, aircraft, tools, fuel, shells, bombs, explosives, etc. The country that has more rare ores, more fuel and construction :materials, and more metallurgical urgical plantajCWchine-building factories, has more arms and a. greater defensive capacity. Since, unfortunately, ware have not been eliminated in our sh2LdA century, it is natural that one country nt to know about mineral resources of another country, about its factories and plants, their Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 locations, their annual output, the railway system, i.e., about its defensive capacity. In view` of the growing interest of other countries in such intelligence, it is natural that counter-activities developed, with a view toward concealing more adequately from other countries the stocks of mineral resources in the country and, with u~:G a".: .?:ern --.)f the I ?Y'=?';s, lU.'G igIl opinion about t~1C true situation in the country, either exaggerating or understating its defensive-capacity. It is well known that German, after the first World War, was restricted in the field of arms, bu.t she rapidly accumulated them, successfully concealing everything. The significance of mineral resources in the struggle for independence was recognized clearly enough by the Soviet leadership from the first days of the establishment of Soviet power in Russia. The fight for economic independence vis-a-vis foreign powers began in the Soviet Union during the first years of the establishment of Soviet power, At first it kas carried on with the assistance of helpful foreign nations, their capital and their specialists,and through the aid of the nrivate initiative of businessmen during the years of the NEP. Later, with increasing speed, a study of the internal mineral-resources was carried on. Old-time specialists were utilized and new cadres were trained, so that the country might be completely freed from foreign assistance and the undesirable presence of foreigners on the territory of the USSR. More and more attention was given to the geological studs of the USSR. In the beginning there were only hundreds, but in the suceeeding years were before the War thousands of geological survey parties ~-'sent annually to various parts of the USSR, to uncover more and more new deposits of useful minerals. The geological service was continually reorganized, and, from a subordinate to the Peoples Commissariat of Heavy Industry, was Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 :T*11 A 1_ made into an independent Geohgical Service, located in a separate ministry which now bears the name Ministry of Geology s of the USSR. It was created by decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of,the USSR on June 14, 1946. The Ministry itself in no way carries on geological work, but is only a planning2 control. 7.;.rit, and budgetry organ. In connection with the ministry, there were set up the Central Geological Archives,, the Central Commission for the Ascertainment of Reserves and the State Geological C'e ntrol Section. The direct execution of geological work assigned by the Ministry to the republic, Kray, oblast and s inter-kray division( of the Ministry of Geology USSR. Each Geological Division, independently of other divisions has a Section of Geological Archives (duplicated) and a Regional Commission for the Ascertainment of Reserves. These divisions, in all the territories of the USSR, conduct geological surveys, geological exploration,, hyd.:r geological operations,, and geological engineering work. But geological work is also conducted by other geological organizations under other ministries. To: the, All-Union ministries which have geological organizations, belong the followings 1. Ministry of Petroleum Industry 2. Ministry of Railways 3. Ministry of Coal Industry 4. Ministry of Non-ferrous Metallurgy 5. Ministry of Ferrous Metallurgy 6. Mjnistry of Maritime and River Fleets 7. Ministry of Military and Naval Enterprises 8. Ministry of the Chemical Industry Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 To the Union Republic ministries having geological organizations, belong the following: 1. Ministry of Public Health 2. Ministry of Light Industry 3. Ministry of Construction Materials Industry 4. Ministry of Fishing Industry 5. Ministry of Internal Affairs All the geological organizations of these Ministries, not directly subordinate to the Ministry of Geology USSR must coordinate their geological work with the Ministry of Geology USSR, with the object of avoiding duplication, and transmit to it for 'ptroval their projected annual work-plans. The Ministry of Geology USSR considers these plane in relation to over-all USSR aims, independently of the subordinate geological organizations. The Ministry of Geology of the USSR considers all these plans, amends, revises supplements, and approves them for the new production year, Each geological division of the Ministry of Geology USSR annually presents to its own Ministry 4ft production, technological, and financial reports for the post year and copies of all geological ;eologieal reports to the Central Division of ves of the Ministry of Geology USSR (i.e., the results of all geological work Undertaken during the ;;iveit year). The geological organizations of other ministries submit their annual report., to their own Ministries, but must submit to the Geological Archive, division of the Ministry of Geology USSR copies of all geological reports, as well as to the regional sections of Geological Archives of the Geological Division,, of the !Ministry of Geology USSR in the territories in which geological operations were conducted. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 7. 171 w ~ ML As^iuning that the geological organization of the Ministry of 11 Fuel Production in the Donbas region, n conducted geological reportcaa- explorations then the gst be,tran ted in duplicate to smit the Central Geological Archives of the Ministry of Geology USSR and to the Section of Geological Archives of the Ukrainian Division of the Ministry of Geolop_y USSR. In addition, tthep- gcaiogzcal organs?ations must submit data on the presence of useful mineral reserves to the Regional and Central Commissions for Reserves attached to the Ministry of Geology USSR. Thus, in the Ministry of Geology USSR, are concentrated all the data concerning all of the geological operations of the geological organizations of arr subordinate rank, which at any time were conducted or are being conducted or will be conducted in the future. In the present essay, we shall not touch on all the activities of the Geological Services on the territories of the USSR, and will consider only questions of security in this service. 1. A Brief Account ~r Securit iu the Geological Service of Fre-Revolutionary Russia No importance was attached to the question of security of geological targets in pre-revolutionary Russia. The quantity of reserves of various ores, the ore potential of the seams, the metal content of the ore, eta, were not security restricted, were not considered state secrets nor even secrets of the private owners. Each entrepreneur or geology specialist intere.ted in questions of Mineral ores could find a wealth of geological literature in specialized libraries. It is possible that a few entrepreneurs wishing to belittle their profits minimized the data about output, but this bore an episodic character. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 In any case, the Mining Department of the Ministry of Internal disposal Affairs had at its the necessary information about output and reserve deposits of coal, petroleum, gold, iron graphite, asbestos, copper, platinum, silver--lead--zinc ores, chrome, sulphur pyrites. common salt; construction mate*_-ials awed other useful minerals. Annually, in the publications of the Geological Committee, summaries of balances of useful minerals deposits were printed. as well as statistical data about production at the rite of these deposits. The results of geological survey operations conducted on a one-verst topographic basis by military topographers, as a rule,were Published and were accessible to all persons interested in questions of the geology of Russia. Many of these works have been withdrawn from general use in the USSR. For example, one may cite the geological survey operations in the petroleum regions of the Caucasus areas, which werw conducted until the revolution by Gub sin, BogcL:novich, t'rokopov and others. !ydro-geological works, whose aim at that time was chiefly to secure water supplies for populated areas and to investigate the mineral sources, were not considered security targets. In pre- revolutionary geological publications one could find a great deal of literature on artesian basins in the Moscow area, the Crimea, Kuban' and other areas. All the most significant results of geological operations were published by the Geology Committee and found their way to the book market and abroad. Ont can point to many geological works on the study of platinum deposits, gold, petroleum and other minerals, which were withdrawn from general circulation in the Soviet. Union, but can be -found, for example,in the Main New York Public Library. For instance) one can point out the following works: Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 1_ Grigorovi.ch - Berezovskiy: Materials on the fdro eol of the Eastern Sections of the North Caucasus. Works of the North Caucasus Association of Scientific Research Institute. 2. P. N. Chirvinskiy: A Geological Su_*' and Hydro mologjca2 Sketch of the Teie end ::uan~ ver CSasin, 3. Bogdanovich: Geological Irr~estigations of the Kuban' Petroleum Region, 4. Vysotskiy: Platinum Deposits in the Urals 5. Charnotskiy: Geological Tmmestiainns of the Kuban' Petroleum Region 6. Lodochnikov: One-Verst Geological Survey of the Caucasus Mineral Water Region, and many others. In municipal and private lthraries, were assembled great quantities of geological literature in all brarc5,?s of F thin o..;q+r,Leo Tnis i.5' explaint_d, to be sure, not only by the fact that the regime acted carelessly with respect to this branch of knowledge (and this, of course, was the ca-e) but also by the narrow standards of technical knowledge which then existed and, of course, by the different state of international relations. Russia was basically an agricultural country with a weakly developed technology. The manufacturing and extractive industries were to a considerable degree in the hands of foreign conceueion capital. A great number of foreign entrepreneurs were found on Russian territory who often were more interested in the mineral wealth of Russia, than the Tsarist government. and frequently knew more than the native specialists. For example, the petroleum deposits of the Caucasus were in the hands of the English. In the Donbass, there were 25 joint-stock companies of which nineteen were French and Belgian. They, and many other bates of mineral resources, came into the hands of foreigners. 1AL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 CONFIBENT IAL The limited development of the mining industry, the inadequate study of the depths of the earth, the lack of plants and factories, the presence in the country of foreign capital, and the insufficiently serious attention given to questions of economic independence on t^e ^2rt of the tnarist regime did not give rise to any questions of resources security. Foreigners freely travelling about Russia, had intimate connection with may of the prominent leaders of Russia, participated themselves in studies of the country's deposits. Each of them could collect information at will and transmit it to his government if it was of interest to them. In time of war, there was no accumulating of stocks of structural raw-material (at that time, such a term did not even exist). Rserves of useful minerals, hydro-electric data, geological surveys, the output of mines, the export and import of mineral resources were not regarded as objects of security. Only the First World War compelled Russia and may countries re-examine to( he cola of mineral resources in the national econoay. Foreign countries from the first days of the war realized the role of mineral resources in the military equipment of armies. Methods of war became complicated; armament techniques advancedj* significantly: wars, instead of being local, assumed a world character. More and more mineral sources of mdneral ore was required for-the equipment of armies both in quantity and variety. At Verdun the Germans expended millions of ton, of metal. The kmw ricans in a single battle at St. Mihiel,in a four-hour period fired one and a half times as many shells as were expended by the Russians in the entire Russo-Japanese Ware Owing to this an increased tempo and scale of military operation,, the stocks of mineral resources quickly began to run short. Ra UUUIIFIVENT!AL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 :ifIiAL "At the end of 1917 the French had an insignificant mount of steel left] their explosives had been almost wholly expended. The Germans were no better off. They lacked nickel, copper, and aluminum, and by the Spring of 1918, resins and petroleum"' The quantity of chemicals expended in the First World War was not yet so vast as in the Second War, bait the quantity of mineral ores used in the war significantly exceeded the conjectured figures. Although the war of 1914-1918 was called a world war, its scale, the numerical composition of the armies, the armament techniques, etc. were significantly inferior to these of the Second World War. The importance of mineral ore reserves, their territorial distribution, remoteness from frontier areas and the location of the extractive and manufacturing industries w~ already realized- in the first years of the first Word War, battles depended not only on the personal courage of the soldiers and the genius of the generals but on the combat equipment. Who van fire more shells in a given time? Who can supply military equipment more intensively to the firing line? Who will be exhausted i.Iirst? Already in the First World War these questions occupied the minds of government leaders, economists, and technical specialists. Without the answers to these questions it was impossible to predict the outcome of battles and the war as a whole. Knowledge of their own defensive capacity also was of little help; it was still necessary to know about the armaments, industry .,and so forth of one's enemies. Therefore, the First World War underlined the necessity of concealing the information concerning one's mineral, mineral ores, heavy industry, and the nu ,rical strength of one's armies, particularly in those countries which did not consider themselves especially powerfu. o;r.k LM&IAa is ieiIiAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 :~ a 1 h.it54:1 a All the lessons of the First World War were learned by the Soviet government and well studied in order to avoid repetition of the mistakes of the tsarist regime in paying insufficient attention to the mineral reserves. 2. A brief Account of Security in the Geological Service of the USSR Actor the end of the First World War and the conclusion of the Revolution in Ru=sia, with the establishment in Russia of the Soviet power, the period of reconstruction set- in, The Soviet goverment proceeded to heal the wounds which were sustained by the general economy of Russia during the World War and the Civil War. But from the first days, a course was established by the Soviet power, directed towards world revolution. Political war was declared on capitalism as the most dangerous enemy of Communism. The first years of Soviet rule already show that the Soviet power itself was not in a position to reconstruct quickly the industry of Russia with its own methods and forces. The N.E.P. w_is announced. The worst enemy of Communism, - Capitalismawas invited to assist in the reconstruction of Russia's ruined industry. A series of undertakings were turned over to foreign firms -- concessionaire,. Order were given to foreigners for the construc- tion of new factories and plants. The private initiative of old-time rpecialists war enlisted. The Chiatura manganese deposit, were given to an English concession; Americans built the Gor'kiy Automobile Plant; German drilling experts were sunsoned to the oil field, of Uralneft' 47ral Petroleum Work?, who brought with them Virtovskly drilling machines, etc., etc. This gave the Soviet power the ppportunity to wend the destruction fairly quickly and to erect new plants and factories, to familiarise themselves with new European techniques, and to create cadres of new Soviet specialists and leaders. fits' st; ~ Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 I -U During this time the geological service continued in the same way as prior to the Revolution. The Geological Committee which existed in tsarist Russia, passed over to Soviet rule unchanged and remained so for twenty years. The regional branches of the Geological Committee were preserved, with their functions, fields o^ work, geological terms, geological publishing houses, etc. Special attention was not yet given to questions of security of geological objectives; a central leadership and control of all geological operations did not yet exist. The Geological Committee operated in the old way -- mainly, in direct geological- survey operations; prospecting work was pursued by individual organizations, Glavki gain Administration) and people's Commissariats. Nevertheless, the Geological Committee retained the right to gather to itself all the data on the exploitation o' useful ore dsposits and re'eives. Annually, suuiazies were published of the output of minerals, including petroleum, gold and non-ferrous metals. In the collections of statistical i.rformation on the mining and met--a]lurginal industries, published at the end of the 'twenties, we find detailed information on asbestos, petroleum, platinum, mercury, silver-lead-zinc ores, sulphur pyrites, common salt, coal, chromite, copper, etc. - The last such full collection was published in 1929. At the end of the 'twenties and during first gears of the 'thirties, a sharp change is observed in the Geological Srrrice of the USSR, with the organization or the Central Geological Exploration Survey Board in the People's Commissariat of Heavy Industry. All the old geological literature was reviewed and clasri?ted and the important materiaiyfrom the point of view of and. the public interest, was withdrawn from general use, assembled in special archives, inaccessible to persons not having special permission. The stamps, Not for Publication", "Secret", 11 CI1NFL :i i IAI Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 iif,l6 IAA. "Top Secret" appeared more and more frequently on geological publications (books, geological reports, and manuscript materials) published in pre-Revolationary? times and after. More and more new geological targets and aspects of geological work were taken p,.,-ssion ofa The or ~~se tafOrephic ..=ps for +h..- of-cor + of geological exploration work became more difficult and the stamps "Not for Publication", "Secret" and "Top Secret" sprgad to more and more topographic maps of new regions, drawn to new scales. At first, the one-verst maps of all frontier regions were given security classifications; then, contour maps of cities with situation details, all geological works containing such plans, as well as geological reports on petroleum prospecting, non-ferrous and rare metals, and hydro-geological data. were made secret. In those came years (the end of the 'twenties), in view of '?;r ro"in- of rrcra+ t, L-cl .':al r-aterial, secret governmental instructions, decrees, directives, orders, confidential instructions concer.rAng the mobilization of stock- piles, secret plans, materials dealing with the security- classification of specialists, etc. , an organization of special bections of the Pecret service was carried out not only in the geological service but in all the governmental, economic, industrial, scientific, co-operative, and other organizations of the Soviet Union. Geological literature, subject to security, was removed from private and public libraries, institutions and enterprises, and concentrated in special repositories. Works on the stu4 of the mineral waters of the Caucasus Mineral Waters.kdministratio37 carried out by Professor Ogil'vi, and the goologist~Langvaeen, were made secret. Works on geological surveys in the region of, C WF14 iAl Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 whfi,MINI [Black Seal the petroleum deposits in the Kuban' and ChernormorskayaOblast, MIaykop, Groznyy and Baku, made by Academician I. M. Gubkin, Bogdanovich, Charnotskiy, Prokopov and others were made secret. The hydro-geological reports of Professors Chirvnskiy, Gatuyev anti Lodoch ni}_ ,.arc' made secret. Fi_ the works on the study or the landslides along the lines of the Black Sea railroad,,the engineering-geological works concerning the construction of sanatoriums in Sochi-Matseyeta, ~ all the engineering-geological and hydro-.geological investigations for construction of hydro- stations, etc., were made rccret. New geological works, if subject to secrecy from the point of view of the State, were given security clas-ifications and those srecialiste were entrusted with the composition of such works to whom the party and the government as-igned the execution of' thp.^.e erc? r .1..~e secret Work or the +o. ewi Arshives seetion Seery fselsgioai paz, on the e0*1etion of its field work proceeds to an office processing of the geological data gathered. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 IAL The result of the office processing is the geological report, consisting of the text and the cartographic saterials. Where, then, are the secret geological reports stored, i.eo the results of geological-survey, geological exploratory, hydro- geological and geological engineering operations? All geological reports (secret and non-secret) are kept in the Geological Archives Section, attached to each branch of the Ministry of Geology USSR, as well as in the Central Geological Archives in Moscow. For the keeping of se-.ret reports special quarters are net the apart, equipped in senner of the special sections. Each geological branch republic, kray, oblasg of the Ministry of Geology USSR has a Geological Archives Section, and the Ministry of Geology has this section also, but it is Balled the Central Geological Archives Section. Sections of Geological Archives are to be found in other specialized geological org`nizationc not u der the Jurisdiction of the Ministry of Geology USSR, such as in the Ministry of Coal Industry, the Ministry of Non-ferrous Metallurgy, the Ministry of Petroleuta Industry, and others. All the geological branches of the Ministry of Geology USSR are obliged to tranaott fall copies of all geological reports to the Central Geological Archives Section and to have these reports in their own Archives Sections. All geological organisatiooe,not responsible to the Minlstrlr of Geology USSavare also obliged to transit full copies of all geological reports to the Central, Geological Archives Section the Geological Archives e.otios(of the tray and oblast branches of the Ministry of Geology US;as and to have then in their own Geological Archives. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 ret:,y nrZIA7 To the kray and oblast branches of the geological archives are transmitted those geological reports which elucidate geological vorr carried out on territory under the jurisdiction of the geological Ai] branch of the Ministry of Geology USSR. But sometimes it happens that the geological organisations of other ministries submit geological reports only to the Central Geological Archives, ignoring the local branches. In this vay the kray and Oblast branches the Ministry of Geology USSR have in their geological archives sections all the geological reports for the territory serviced by it the Ministn7 independently of what particular geological organisation conducted the geological works and the Central Geological Archives have all the geological reports of geological work conducted on the total territory of the Soviet Union independently of who executed these activities. The functions of the sections of the geological, archives ANWof the geological hranchcs of the Ministry of Geology USSR include the following: 1. the registration of all opened, surveyed and exploited are deposits on the territory vhiehnrvioed by a given geological branch; 2. the verification of all reports concerning the discovery of new deposits and the gesating of rewards for the discovery of such deposits; 3. the composition of maps showing useful mineral deposits on the basis of the one verst topographic map L. the satie.koeping of secret and coo-assist geological reports, mainteneaos of an accounting gates in rsgart.ty them, the reception of geological reports from other geological organisatlons and the tesuanos of geological reports shoving the availabilitr of this We on; rib Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 I A L the issuance of all possible types of information touching on deposits of useful ninerale, hydro. geology, and geological engineering; 6. the am composition of an amuial,balance sheet for. deposits under exploitation. We shall not Pause to consider all the activities of the Geological Archives Section and viU speak only of those operations which are secret. As we have already indicated, in the Geological Archives Section are kept secret geological rsporto, separately (in other quarters) fram the non-secret. The quarters where the geological materials are kept, are especially equipped, the windows have iron grills, and there are fireproof safes as sell. Neat to the room where the meant materials are kept, is a ^`:t-r, on.. Geological set ret reports may not be taken further than! this room, in which one my familiarise oneself with them. At night the Geological Archives Section also is sealed with a am 4m, spesialk.sts from som than cleared for security, w use the .esret geological reports, if they have appropriate pink permits. Practically, this is accomplished in the following ways Geologist H., mast examine a report on the results of geological-sorry work of the N skiy volfram deposits in order to draw up a plan for new geological praspscting operations or for the comparison of new results of prospecting operations with the old, ? or for the composition of an explanatory mrwores:dnm, or, speaking generally, in the line of duty, and not for reasass of Personal interest? In this can also, as in the receipt of secret siML Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 EN 1i;L maps, Geologist H. writes a aeaoran to the particular chief of the geological organisation requesting permission to examine such a report. The chief engineer verifies the propriety of such an examination of the report,,and then the organisation chief appends an indorseaent for the issue of this report for examination. Geologist M. having received such permission, goes to the chief of the !,chives Section, who either issues the report himself or authorises his deputy to issue the requested report. Then Geologist M. goes to the room reserved. for secret work (it is located next to the secret reports storage room) and, there, waits until an employee of the Geological Archives Section brings him the report. It is categorically forbidden to make written extracts from such reports in regard to the deposit reserves, the thickness of the seams, the percentage of metal content in the ore, depth indications, etas the Having finished work, Geologist M. must return the report to the employee of the archives section and the latter makes a mark on his report, indicating that the report was returned. Still another secret activity is conducted by the Geological Archives Section -- the asking of balance sheets concerning deposits of useful minerals. All organisations, independently of their organisational location, which engage in the extraction of useful nineral%anet transmit ante lly to that Geological Archives Section on the talritory in which thq are working, a summary or the output of usetljl minerals. Heperts are presented fbr both secret and none-secret deposits. On the basis of these a+otesries, the Archives Section makes up .anneslly the balance and sends it by secret chamel to the Central 08ological Arehives, where such a balance is made up for the OR as a whole. Therefore, the Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 El0NFi E aiAL status of the mineral raw material bass for the entire Soviet Union is known to the Central Geological Archives Seotion,the quantity of ores availabls, and what area must be intensively searched for. The Archives section conducts the work of assembling maps of useful minerals. Rath declered deposit, auryeyed_ or exploited, is indicated on a map of a scale of 1 s 1,2,000 (1 verst ^ 1 inch) and attached to this map is a card index of the deposits, giving detailed data on all the literature touching on this deposit. All this material is classified secret. In a similar manner are assembled maps of all veils, and all artesian wells, with a detached card-index. These materials are also classified secret. Secret correspondence is also conducted in connection with the issue of all kinds of information and the receipt of information from other organisation concerning mineral oros. All secret correspondence - its dispatch and receipt -- is carried on through the Spatial Soethom. At the head of the Geological Archives Section is the section chief, subordinate to the chief of the organisation. All employees of the Geological Archives Section must, of necessity, be cleared for secret work. No one of the security-cleared geologists, ezoludisg employees of the Archives Section, has the right, without special permission, to use the secret gsologisal materials of the Archives Sestiss mor may the Chief of the Archives Section, without permission of the thief of the organisation, grant access to anpoas for the inspection of secret geological reports. Neither msp the Chief of the Spesial Sector Cspetesekto) wAft give pamissiom for the use of secret isologl.sal materials, but he is obligeg if so required by the Chief of the Archives sestiory to confirm that a given parson (partloulerb from other organisations) was clears/ for secret west. L, ~i him aft ?t h Et AL 1dr,t: a n JAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 j?Jt . ~LI? IV i e:4L The Geological Archives Section carries on its own secret work within the section quite independently, but the Chief of the Special Sector Zpbtsaektcr, watches over the observance of the security regulations, and carries out, through the ref of the organisation, all measures which nay be neosssaryibr the observance or the -ec,arity, regulations. A register of all secret materials, costing into the Geological Archives Section is kept in a separate Volume in which they are all described in dstail, The special section lfaintaias this register. 7. The Manner of fee i and ransaitt 'Secret Geolo loaio -_.~ a+1 Materials in Geo al Btpeditlons In the two preceding chapters we familiarized ourselves with the secret geological wort of the Special Section and the Asologieal Archives Section. and now wo shall acquaint ourselves with secret work in geological expeditions. A we have already voted aboue, the geological branches of the Ministry of Geology of the US dervice a definite Oblast, kray, or republic. Therefore, the Moscow Branch of the Ministry of Geology of the t1SSR, for exastpl?, eondaets the geological work on the Moscow Oblast territo, the Stalingrad branch on the Stalingrad Oblast territory; the Vme,.8l"k Sea, Black Sea Branch, on the territory of the Asow.Zrq.etce ~ A=UW, the geological branches send to various regions of the krqe or obLsts which they serviee, gsologieala gsologr.snrysy, geological engineering , fro gso3ogiaal, topographic and geodesic detaehmentss parties, aoaplsa Parties .,Or expeditions. lla. tIR'U1a mob gWratioas or detaohstseta~partlet, eto., nay be aaoduoted now inhabitated points, and sometiwes at a great distanes from them. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 G~14ii 44 ^?f' 11 ~SS S'1L'Li The following question, therefore arieast how can the leaders of the geological parties, if their place of work is sometimes more than a hundred kilometers from their geological branch, acquire all the secret geological materials needed for the execution of is the work, if it upoesible to take then with them (to carry than out of the office of the 0eologica3. Section?) In such a ease the field.-liaison, man of the NKVD Cl1V 7 comes to their assistance. The leader of the partythe engineer - when geologist; or geologist ( a Geological-surrey is being conducted), selects, in the Special Section of the geological branch; the topographic saps which are necessary to his in the operation and leaves the address to which the Special Section must forward theme In the Geological Archives Section he takes the excerpts out of the geological reports nooessary to him transmits then to the Chief of the Archives Section, and the Chief of the Archives Section transmits then to the Special Section, In the Special Section ..a:;y-tbiag is packed and forwarded through the field-liaison man of the MVD, according to the address, to the particular leader of the party, If the office (sometimes this I. only a part of the room in which the leader of the party lives) is in a populated area or not far from one, the secret mail is delivered to the office of the leader of the party, If the office (when operations are located far froa populated areas, the geological party settl.. in tents) of the leaden of the party Is rasotely loom, the secret mail is delivered to the nearest populated point, to the authorised MID man (they are located in every sizable populated areas and in tide ease the leader of the party out himself receive his packet thorn the authorised MID man. Having read" the field location of the geological operation, the leader of the party must go to the local gcversasnt center, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 produce hie credentials and declare that geological work will be carried on in that area. All secret geological documentation produced in the,course of work rest be directed back through c to the Special Seotor,~peteeektor of the geological branch in the new of the pa. rty leader. In this con, the leader of the party himself delivers everything to the MVD ? On envelopes, packets, and parcels forwarded through security Q ailr.e_z; the following is wi%iLten: Ministry of Geology USSR SECRET Moscow Branch Moscow, Boulevard Ordynka 20 Type "A" Orekhovo?Zuyevo City Lsninskaya Ulitsa 25 To the Leader of the Orekhowo?,Zuyevc Geological-.sassy Party, Conrad* I. Ivenov When the leader of the party, at the conclusion of operations. transmits secret mail, he w.?ite: thus. The 0rokhovg,.2uyeve Geological survey party 0rckho?o-Zuyewo SECRET Lsrinshuya Ulitsa 25 Moscow City Boulevard 0rdynka 20 .Moscow Branch of the Ministry of Geology USSR To the Leader of the (h skhovo.Zuyevo Geological Survey Party, Conrad* I. Ivanov Letters, packets, or paresis of a secret nature must always be stitched with thread or cord with srpple1100tal waz seals, bet the seals mast not be on the knots. It looks like thins Pace side of envelope Reverse Bids Address of seeder geerst The s0903epe ay be steIFBd is the servers. Ike packets and, by the seas tel[ea, PIP06110 OW be staffed an the sides. The restpient of secret sell mast asserts" that the Beals are Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 AM the place of works in the office, the leader of the party has a fire-proof eate in which the secret documents are stored. He, also,, like the Special Section Chief, must seal up the safe with a wax seal. It is natural that when the leader of the part s on the scene of operations, he should have before him secret nape, if they are needed. Secret geological materials, in the field, are used mostly by the leader of the party,, who has? Overall direction of operations, and who is personally responsible for the execution of all work. He is the administrative and technical director, and as it were, also the chief of the Special Section of the. party and the chief of the irchivee Section of the party. In most (seasonal) geological parties, everything is concentrated in the hands of the leader of the party, including finances and bookkeeping. Such are the security regulations for the leaders of ne_,ol.,p ,-, Parties as amt. b1!swea b ,_-. --- w -,%, but y as W Mother they are elways carried out, . we shall see in the next chapter. 8. The Breech of Security- ASgu]atimu No matter bow severe the regulations concerning the use of secret materials,, how severe the punishment for breaches of these regulations, breachom do occur with and without the kaowledge of the Special Section. First of all,, in almost all gsNagioal parties working only in the P sr season (and they are by tar the most mserons), there are no safes. Therefore, the leader of the party keeps all secret materials on his person in a field pouch= and when be sleeps, he puts than under his pillow. If the materialris bulky, he keeps it in a portable track,, locking it with a padlock, or conceals it in his noon in a place know only to him. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 FIi Eil I A L It is known to the chief of the Geological Section and the Chief of the Special section, that the leader of the party keeps secret docaesnte in such a manner. If then, a hogs or theft of these document., so kept occurs, the leader of the party is $01027 responsible, since he ? kn"Iprescribed for K the'^enner the custody of secret documents, acted carelessly in regard to this serious matter. It happens very frequently that the leader of the party, going into a region remote from populated areas, carries secret maps and geological materials on his person, risking his head. This occurs especial.lZ frequent,>,y when the geological party travels by automobile. Thorn who travel by rail or water transport, run lees risk. This happens because the leader of the party is bound by definite dates for the beginning and the comlteio . _... _. . -r-+.rw va AL frt. Delay in the transmission of seize--et materials, especially when the Scene of operations is very r-enota from populated points, where there are authorised !ND agents, may sharply affect the execution of the work plans and the financial oondition-of the party, and that is why the leader of the party (without the consent of the chief of the geological branch or the Chief of the Special Section but with their knowledge and sometimes without it) risking everything, carries secret material with his, Not a single geological branch chief or chief of a Special Sector ?spetssekto) gives Permits such an illegal act, In order that they themselves might not beeome responsible, but emery one of them ma advise the leader of the party to take secret material with him, since they also are deeply soseermed with the e=eoation of the work-plane. V ~j 2M^,I {r,~: U1~1 Rt.}~. ~C ii~L Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 1 -~' i At iii + Of course, not all party leaders wish'to risk their heads so blindly and, therefore, require the chief o! the geological branch to supply thaw with a fire-proof chest, although it may be small. Such pa rtw leaders who stubbornly insist on these legal requirements, do not erjoy the especial confidence of their ohiefse Neve Lheless, all parr leaders try to guard theneeolvee against accidents, and, therefore, writea report to the chief of the geological branch. They give this report to the secretary of the organisation and keep a copy for, themselves, on which the secretary writes that tho report was received. In the report, the chief of the party write to the chief of the branch that in view of his lank of a dqe, he is obliged to keep secret materials on his person and, therefore, declines responsibility for undesirable ConseouenOem chink occur. Naturally, in any event the leader of the party is guilty, but the aaistevoe of such a report may lessen his guilt. It frequent], happens that an inter?kray or inter?oblast geological branch in some city opens its own branch, which is distinguished from a geological party in that it has a permanent address (i.e., a permanent location) over a period of two, three, or more years. Such branches are called. stationary geological parties or a geological group of parties. They have their own offices (two or three rooms), a small staff of employees (finance officer, planner, secretary, and technical personnel), and small geological archives but no Soeoial lle_ i . and therefore maw security problems are handled in an illegal reamer. Secret materials are not kept in special rooms but in the ett4r of the grasp leader or the leader of the stationary party, and not always is a safe but a frequently is the chief's desk. There is no special room for the processing of secret ge logical atiterials. The leader of the group U Ld f?UL t l i1'7L Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 himself receives and transmits secret mail, and is personally responsible for all breaches of the regulations covering the keeping of secret doousents. In such geological groups, security-cleared and uncleared employees sit in the same rooms during the processing of geological materials. In view of the shortage of draughtsmen and the haste in completing reports (there is always haste in the USSR), it is the private practice of draughtsmen to take drafting work home. Breaches of security regulations in such groups are of significantly greater frequency than in geological parties, since the strictly secret materials in the possession of the leader of the party are usually only those he can actually stow in his field ponds (he tries to take only the most necessary ones), while in the groups these is a such larger quantity of secret materials and normal conditions for their safekeeping frequently do not exist. The work tenpo (although everything is planned beforehand, the beginning of operations is always delayed, and therefore the lost time will have to be made up), the special manner of financing the geological parties, (the financing is determined on the basis of measurement of work activities), the shortages of necessary amounts of working space and equipment, and so forth, encourage the breaching of security regulations. 9. The Contimn st of Seoarjty-Cleared Smecialiets In the fifth section -- 'The York of the Secret Seotions? we described the general manner for the clearing of specialists, and here we shall concentrate on the clearance of specialists in relation to their speciality. All employees of the Special Section and the Geological Archie" Section are pss y iadtew into the security gstea. Besides the Chief of the Geological Drench, the following mast be permanentljr Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 L 12J L 's e n required to be cleared if they are not carrying out some special secret operation in the field, as for example,, a topegrappar. Each leader of a party (whether or not he has access to secret work) receives a letter of authorization from the chief of the geological branch for the conduct of work,, in which$ among other things,, it is noted that "the leader of the party had a clearance for secret work, but only grants the right to receive that everybody is cleared for secret work. It does not constitute including correspondence." This, of course,, does not mean the right to receive and transmit all types of correspondences and transmit secret mail in exo.ptionaj. circumstances, The case may also arise when the parent organization wishes to commmioate something to the leader of the party that the other members of the party must not know,, and it therefore writes to his; in such a case, t.wo gh secret charm ls, For example,, the Special Section of the Geological Administration has discovered that an / a certain employee of the N akaye Geological Par iSiRiljtfA element". In such a cases a letter to that effect is transmitted to the leader of the party through secret channels,, so that the employee may be removed from the project,ete. From the foregoing we no that the execution of secret geological operations is carried out not only by secu ity-cleared specialists, but there is really no need to screen all the workers, since,, in the field,, all the secret material is concentrated in the leader of the party only,, and in fact secret materials only appear when the field work is completed and the leader begins to ascemble the geological report, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 'G NTIAL 10. 5'"' esental Regulations Conce rrsLag, the T H of Photographs in Connection with'Oeoloaical Activities in Frontier and Security Rogiona Frequently in connection with geological operations photo. apparatus is essployed as an aid. It is of course clear that a better method of geological documentation cannot be devised, But the use of photographic equipment under Soviet conditions requires the greatest prudence and a knuwledge not only of geology but of the basic photography regulations for all amateurs. These regulations are published in several reference books for amateur photographers. There one reads that it is categorically forbidden to photograph railway bridges and stations, harbors, airdromes, arsenals, military installations, factories and plants, government buildings, parades, court-martial,, and to make any landscape photos in the region of land and water frontiers. This regulation concerns everyone and, of course, must not be broken. But how must the geologists act if they must take photographs for scientific targets in security target areas or in areas whose territories are subject to security? In those cases, when the geologist must undertake such photo- graphy, he must secure permission from the NQVD (MVD). What the geologist plane to photograph he must enter in a separate list, which he givesto the MD administration, and having proved that it is actually necessary for scientific targets, he receives permission. If the targets in the region to be photographed are very important, then the oasvq will be conducted in the presence of an authorised MoD agent, but usually the person himself will make the photograehe. The geologist does not receive are sort of written permission; permission is given his oralljveoaetiasa with such advice as the follovings 'But, look now, Photograph nothing else since we will know all the same." The breach of photographic y 4C!r..,?i._ ill Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 regulations is regarded as espionage with all the consequences attached to this. To take Photos in frontier regions, it is necessary to secure permission in the ease manner from the Frontier Guard Administration. To take photographs in territories where there are classified structures or previously completed targets, it is necessary to secure the permission of the MVD, through the Special Section of the administration of the security classified target. Having taken the photographs, according to regulations,, the geologist develops and prints them himself. Having made use of the negatives, he must turn this over to the Special Section or the Geological Archives Section of his own organisation for filing in a photo-index, The use of such negatives for one's personal purposes is strictly forbidden. To ons-W. In -p :ctug ap-I - iv not alvys and everywhere safe, not only for amateur purposes but also for strictly scientific operations. Geologists, therefore, refuse very frequently to aco such a method of geological documentation, in order to avoid unseessary difficulties involved in requests for permission' and the possibility of unpleasantness because of ignorance and inexperience, 11, The Manner of Processing secret Glob ioal Materials The geological field worts is ooneluded, The leader of the partyi having collected all the secret material, transmits it to the Special Section of the Geological Hraacb. through the MID fiel& liaison Inn, Having returwd from field operations, the leader of the part .7 goes to the office for the processing of field materlale and the assembly of geological reports, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 In the gym, especially selected for the secret processing of geological Materials, the leader of the partry receives a work Place for himself and his assistants. Such a room is equipped in the manner of the rooms of the Special Section or the Geologies Archives Section. On the doors of these rooms is posted the notices "No Entrances Naturally, entrance into these rooms is perLmtted only to those, who are workirg in them, and to the Chief of the Geological Branch, the Chief of the Special Sector 41petssektoil, the Chief engineer, and the Chief of the Geological Archives Section. Drafting work is executed by security-cleared draughtsmen, and the reprinting of geological materials, by security -cleared machine operators. It is forbidden to take home azr kind of classified geological materials. Upon the conclusion of the assembly of the geolo._.--, ei.amped -4-Una report, it is - rots on every Page. This a are al stamp . The m~eeh~r Cf D9e OS the re rrtnt ports is placed at the end of the test of the report. To the entire material a detailed description is added -- the number of Pages, the number of appendices in the form of tables, diagrams etc., and the ember of photographs and draft Plans. All rough-drafts are also carefully transcribed and stitched together. In this form they are transmitted for safe-keeping to the Geological Archives Section. All secret maps are returned to the Special Section, and on the receipt of the leader of the part, is stamped 'Returned', but his ree pt is not destroyed but In attached to his record, kept is the special Sections the report is reprodreed in quadruplicate on the Machine` of which tee copies remain in the Archives Section of the given Geologleal Branch and two are ford.Med to the Central Geological Archives. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 The leaders of parties are absolutely forbidden to share the results of their work '; in classified problems with other part, leaders. In those cases when work is undertaken for outside organi- sations (by contract), the report is reproduced in quinta)licate, since one of the copies is transmitted to the client. The authors of the reports (the leaders of the parties) do not have the right to take a copy of the report for themselves if the work is classified secret, In the years before the, war, permission was reluctantly given to take author's copies in the area of non-secret operations. 12. The Proving of Secret Geological 8eaorts Each geological report (secret and non-secret) contains the following chapters! 1. Introduction. Hers are indicated the reasons which !!!.t_raced the --'- ' -v t-_-_ the ~vvig-LCai 6Lereaii.OR'!? 2. The geology, stratigraphy, and geo-morphology of the region included in the survey. 3. A short history of prior geological operations 1. Geology - survey operations and the results of the particular operations 5. The assay of the deposit 6. The chemical and technological character of the resoxwees. 7. !stunts of the reserves of useful minerals S. Topographic operations 9. The mining and soonosdc conditions of the deposit 10. An enclosure concerning the value of the deposit, the conditions governing its espleitation, concentration ete. The report is signed by its author, the geological eainesr.and the leader of the parlpe Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Since the Soviet do-ernaent does not credit the signature of only one geological engineer, it is customary for such reports to be sent for confirmation to a reserves commission for corroboration, especially if they are classified. Ftret,the report is reviewed by one or two geological specialists, ho examine ever page of the report and formulate their conclusion, in agreement or disagreement with the conclusions of the author, with hit. work methods, the laboratory conclusions, *to. When the critique is finished,the report is transmitted to the Commission on reserves for examination for geological-earn,! operations or is examined in the State Qualifications Commission (Gosuderstrennaya gvalifiYatsionneya Xamitsiya) for bydro.geological and engineering- geological operations. The chairman of the Commission is always the chief of the Geological Branch: And_ in hie a the uoouvo, Chi P7 engi:OSr? The scientific secretary is an engineer of the Geological Branch, usually from the Geological Archives Section. All the participants in the committee and the reviewers mast be cleared for securitye and The leader of the party makes a speeots~the reviewers come forward as opponents. The decision of the commission takes the form of an open counting of hands. The number of members on the commission is always an odd number. All the protocols (.iaatoee are kept secret in the Geological Archives Section. The protocols are attached to the report.,sinoe without it they have no value. On the protocol is stamped "Secret.. Such a geological report is considered valuable and the go esumt s4, on the basis of its oonoluslon% allocate aaiaitic?al flandea either for a detailed survey or the construction of an enterprise. Witkoat the sa.toool of the Reserves Cmmission the State Bank cannot ssoscd a sinsl0losst. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 If the author of the report d` not agree with the conclusions of the Reserves Coi issione he can attach his separate opinion to the protocol. Each specialist tries to protect himself, in any event, and therefore they frequently have recourse to the separate opinion. We shall not pause here to consider how the specialists usually try to protect themselves in this matter, but we shall note only that the Soviet leadership sees in "at every specialist a "wrecker" or an espionage agent, and that this leads to great caution on the part of the individual specialists in their setentific-technical conclusions. 13. Supplemental'Security R.aulations for Geological Operations in Special Construction Projects and Frontier Regions Earlier we noted that the leader of the partyi on arrival at the scene of operations,was required to go to the local government center and register his operation. In the natter of operations in frontier region he is also rear.ired to go to Lhe Frontier Guard Administration and cosminicate in written fors his arrival for the of new esminwn~ or he i___ -- -+ ~r?, bur* of old ones). advise the border guard of the movement of personnel (the arrival all those persons who have accompanied him. He must immediately purpose of executing authorized operations. He must indicate the initial and terminal dates of the work and indicate by family--name Guard A#ainistration in writing of the conclusion of the operations. Upon termination of work, he meet also notify the !frontier the frontier area* of the persons who have come to carry out geological operations in of the leader of the party and of all his employees. In this way the Frontier Guard Administration is assured of the authenticity Branch also informs the Frontier Guard Administration of the names The Chief of the Special Sector L11petseekto) of the Geological Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 C011F UE s IAl Some frontier areas are totally aealed as regards security, and the Frontier Guard ministration notifies the party leader accordingly, forbidding him and his party to enter them. If, howevezy it is essential that theleader`of the party examine these areas, the Frontier Guard Administration (local) does not itself give permission but directs an inquiry to its parent o:gaxization. occasionally, much tine is spent in correspondence and waiting for permission from the parent organisation. It frequently happens that the higher organisation' nay refuse permission for the visit of such areas, This, of course, upset, the work plan of the leader of the party. NOW of the personnel of the geological party has the right to visit frontier areas outside the limits of the area being examined in the course of geological operations. No photographs of arp kind may be taken in a frontier region witout special permission. All the employees ;f the geological party come under constant undercover scrutiny by the members of Frontier Guard Administration, and even local inhabitants, recruited by the Frontier Guard. The Soviet frontier is sealed and under constant supervision. Every new-cower to the frontier area will be known as such imwediately. The local populace and the troops of the Frontier Guard are notified that geologists will be working in such and such an area. In a little time they will know all of them personally. Whoever does not conform to the wort regulations in frontier areas, is placed under arrest in order to clarify his status and the reason for his appearance in the border region. Geologists, who are working in a frontier area are not re-q-, rod to be cleared for security since they may etscuts nom secret operation., butmnatu" they select the most thoroughly checked specialists for work in such areas. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 In correction with geological work on special construction (military and defer"' targets) the entire personnel of the geological party is securit7-screened although'it aq be temporary, with the exception of those persons who because of the nature of their work will not visit the structural site. 'These may be the bookkeeper of the party, the secretary, etc. Security ,screening is conducted by the Special Section of sect: a const-Uation project. The Special Section of the Geological Branch forwards all the necessary forms on the employees of the geological party to the Special Section of the Special construction projeotawhich carries the process further through the MVD, After the screening, the Special Section of the Special construction project issues to each person screened a special permit giving right of entrance to the construction site, where geological work mutt be done. At the termination of work, all permits most be turned back to the Special Section of the special construction project. ?-csponsibility in this mater rests with the leader of the party. All geological reports concerning operations connected with special construction projects and frontier regions are classified secret. 114. The Declassification of Gee cal Materials in Connection with Speeches and the Fs:ae Every year a great quantity of secret geological materials is accumulsted, which is stored in special places of custodre The contents of these materials are knove only to a very small group of specialists, and the expanding knowledge of the geological structure of the country requires ever maw osselmsioss, generalisations, estimates, etc. Natarally, classified geological materials contain not only practical conclusions, but essentially scientific data, which is probably IQrewn to all persona connected with geology. In this case, -5S- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 they have recourse to the declassification of geological materials, so that they may be used in the press and in connection with speeches at congresses conferences, etc. This is done most simply with reports of geological operations. Frequent]pr an entire report, excluding the geological maps, contains no secret material and, therefore, in order that such work may be released for general use, they resort to the deelassiflcation of the geological maps. They remove the contour lines, and minimize the situation detailef in this form the map no longer contains anything secret. The sap is published in this form and the entire report goes on sale in the book stores. Report on geological survey operations are subject to a more thorough processing before they are sent to the press. The with a view toward reventin declassification of such reports is carried on d UM a specialist reading such a report from caleulache reserves of a deposit and the yield of metal from the ore. In consequence, the following are removed from these reports: the ehapzer on the estimate of reserves the topographic survey chapter, the results of the chemical and chemo?technologieal tests and 71D4 chart of the reserve calculations; and the contour lines are removed from the plan of the deposit. The report is processed for publication as a whole, and only after these things have been done, is it sent to the press. Reports on lath o.geologieal and geological engineering research are either subjected to a very thorough processing or, if they cast light on military construction and defense targets simply do not appear on the book market; they remain accessible only to a narrow group of specialists, who use them in work on special *ei,ntific problems. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 The same considerations apply to speeches at meetings and conferences of a scientific nature. 15. The Responsibility for the Loss of Secret Documents and the Divu_Uip of, Secret Geological Data. The lose of classified geological documents or the divulging of their contents is considered the greatest state crime, with all the ensuing consequences and application of the most severe penalties. The guilt of persons, allowing this to happen, is further increased depending on the moral and political status of the person undergoing inquiry, his social origin the moral and political status of his relatives and closest friends, the existence of correspondence with foreigners, administrative penalties,convictions, service in the %hite Arxv, residence on territories occupied by the Whites and now by the Germans, etc., etc. In such cases)a committee of inquiry aiess the matter", as they say, and brings to light from the secret archives ail data which discredits the person. The MVD always has this data in sufficient quantities sines not one of the specialists, either through his own doing or through his relatives, is not "tainted", i.e., n ot completely "Pure" in `6 1, the eyes of the Soviet authorities. Thanks to this, mup specialists try to stay as far away as possible from classified work, an any pretezt.,and if they are not allowed to refuse, these operations are undertaken with reluctance. The Soviet regime never forgives anyone anything, and if it trusts anyone it is only for a time. The day comes when the specialist bears the heaviest responsibility for the most trivial mistake or carelessness, not only for himself personally, but also for the sins of all his relatives and friends,since these are visited upon aim. Therefore, to lose classified geological documents or to Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 A9 divulge their contents is tantamount to suicide. Everyone knows this and everyone tries to meet the requirements, but, of courses as in every activity,here also mistakes happens `owever,,in the Soviet regime there are no.mistakes, and therefore not a single specialist may make a mistake, let alone lose a secret document (numerous documents which from the point of view of logic contain no secret matter carry the stamp "Secret"). And once this happens to him, it indicates evil intentions, and therefore he is respon- sible -- responsible for everything. 16. The Manner of Using Secret Geological Materials of Other Organizatione Besides the Main Geological Service, located in the Ministry of Geology USSR, as we noted earlier, other ministries have geological organisations, which also have classified geological materials, also concentrated in the Geological Archives Sections of these organisations. The secret Geological Archives of the ,Ministry of Geology USSR, as well as the secret archives of the geological organisations of other ministries may be used by various specialists having the right of aoceso to then in accordance with the established procedure, This procedure is as follows lot us assume that the geological ennginwer, RXM, w rN;g in the Ministry of Ferrous Metallurgy, met familiarise himself with geological materials kept in the Central Geological Archives. In this eassphe writes a report to the Chief of his organisation, stating that it is necessary for his to familiarise himself with such and such materials. The Chief engineer adds his endorsement, and the chief of the organisation.attaches a recommendation for the chief of the special Sector Aetasekto) requesting the latter to prepare Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 a letter on behalf of Engineer "X" for the Central Archives Section. The chief of the Special Sector prepares aletter, in which he notes that Engineer "I is being sent over, with permission to familiarise himself' with such and such materials. The letter states that according to such and such a letter from the NKVD (WD), Engineer "I" has been permitted to do secret work. In the upper right-.hand corner of the letter is placed the stamp, "SECRET". The letter is placed in an envelope, a the envelope is sealed and stitched with thread, and a wax-seal is applied. The letter is given to Engineer "I". With this letter (it is not recommended that one loss it, although there is nothing secret in it), Engineer "I" is sent to the Central Geological Archives Section. The chief of the Special Sector acquaints himself with the contents of the letter and Bends Engineer "X to the chief of the Central Archives Section, who turns over to Engineer "I", the material which is soetified in the letter. Engineer "I'" familiarised himself with the geological material;, making the necessary extracts, copies of the drawings, etc. At the conclusion of the work, he hands over all this material to the chief of the Central Archives Section, who transmits it via the Special Section to the Special Section of the organisation which wrote on behalf of Engineer "I". Engineer "I" has no right to take anything with him personally. If he most work more than one day, then he most bring again the above-indicated letter. In this manner, one Speotal Section transmits classified materials to another Special Section. Although Engineer 'I^ has access to secret work, there is a field-liaison man of the NIVD (WD) for the transmission of secret materials, who must be employed in all such cases. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 17. The Secret Geological. S.,rvice in Wartime Alrea(br in the First World War, geologists were employed for the solution of various geological probleas,posed by the military command. The experience of the First World War showed that the attention given to geological data in the conduct of military operations frequently determines the latter's success. In the war of 1914-1918, for the first time there appeared on the front geological specialists -- in very small numbers, however. The British were the first to mammon geologists to the front, in May 1915, for the purpose of locating water sources. Captain Sing, the geologist, was called from London and led a small group of geologists. In the Spring of 1916, the British geologists were already directing mine operations. The Americans, transferring their are- to the Western front in 1917, brought in a group of geologists numbering five men, under the direction of Colonel Brooke. This group was continually enlarged,and in 19115 numbered 18 men. Geologists were also used by the Russian are- in securing water supplies for the armies. An especially large scale, in the employment of geologists, was attained by the German are-. German military geologists were combined in groups and task forces, working in cooperation with topographic tank-forces, In 1917 the German are- had 27 geological groups, and the number of geologists reached two-hundred. In 1916 ? a Geological Bureau was organised attacked to the General Staff of the Herman are- in Berlin, which served the army in all matters relating to geology. This bursa was the highest military geological organ, directing the work of the geological groups on the from in the investigation of water.sapply somroes, the conduct of mine operations, etc. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 al rtH hIA4. In this wary the number of geologists employed, in their specialty, for military re quire is increised significantlyj and in Soviet Russia it reached a grandiose figure. Geologists were utilised by the ataff of military engineers of the Red Army in and out of uniform. They were civilian geo;ogist% who very not called into the army but conducted operations under the staff of military engineers, and, for that reason were exempt from military service. A long tine prior to the war, lists of specialists were prepared by the Staff of the Red Are. These specialists were not to be called into the army in wartime, but were to be employed in their civilian specialty, for the fulfillment of military purposes. Among such specialists. enjoying 'ex a ;'wets from service in the Red Army) were numerous geological specialists. Therefore, as a rule, hydro-geological engineers enjoyed exemptions, but survey geologists were exempted according to their choice, =hose who were not exempted were placed in field engineer units, in technical command posts. In this war, a great number of geologists were utilised for the needs of the Red Army through their mobilisation into active arv service and through their enlistment, in their civilian capacity, for tasks of the army engineers' staff. 1* shall consider only the work of the civilian geologists, who worked for the needs of the front. First of all, geologists were employed in the construction of defense lines, carried on by the Main Ad dnistration of Defensive Yorks RYD, which had Hgon Adestni? etrations of Defense Yorks. Geological, 14dro.geolegieal and geologioab.enginsering studies were Ends by the geologis e in areas designated for defense installation,,. The tasks of the geological. ta*.foresa included Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 of the pm*ision tare Construction areas with local construction materials (stone, sand, and gravel), whose supply bases were to be located at the shortest possible distance from the construction site of the defense targets, such as trenches, shelters, emplace. ments for light and heavy artillery, emplacements for antiaircraft artillery, observation posts, command poste, etc. The geological archives (eeeret and non-secret) of the local geological organizations were utilized by the geologists in the fulfilment of these taskel supplemental BBolo gical-surtey operations were undertaken; specimen, of structural materials were analyzed in the laboratories. The work was performed at a rapid temp and with simplified methods, with one end in views the provision, under war-time condition,, of quantities of construction,materlat. sufficient .?.;. the entire area of construction, which was carried on simultaneously with the prospecting activities. The tasks of the geological engineering task-forces included the stuff of soils in the entire construction area, with the object of gauging their support capacities and angles of natural slope, for an estimate of the amount of concreting necessary for gun emplacements; the talks included also the determination of the system of trench fortification, the determination of slide areas and the manner of their arrangement during the explosion of eneq shells. E4^dro-geological work included the provision of drinking and industrial water to all defense construction areas and the investigaiioa of the groundwater conditions in order to determine the depth of foundations, etc. At the end, a detailed sap of the defense construction area was assembled, with all the geological, Iq dre.geslogical and geological-engineering data. The rpm were classified and the stamp 'Top Secrete placed on them. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Civilian geologists were also used in connection with the construction of field airdromes, In Sereh' for s , example, gaelogist~were wploysd for the investigation of water-supply sources for the armies disposed on the aeroh' peninsula, which were preparing for a counter..ettsck (this military operation, prepared at groat lergLh, concluded with the total rout of three Soviet armies, a cavalry corps, and a corps of marines). A great quantity of man-power and technical equipment was required in a short time for the investigation of Pater-supply sources. The military geologists of the staff of armor engineers on the Crimean front were not able to carry through this task them. selves and,therefore,local geologists were summoned for the solution of this problem. Genlog etc had bean ansig;nad to the Heron front by the Moscow trust, "Spetageo", and their number was increased by geologists of the Azov-Chernomorskiy 4lack Sag Hray. In addition, reinforcements were sent to the drilling operations. Similar operations, for example, were planned in the beseiged city of Sevastopol', but nowhere was the work completed, since the Oermons prevented it. In addition to the above, geologists, at the request of the staff of mill ury enginsee, assembled various types of maps on the basis of maps made for the use of the Soviet armies, that is, on the basis of one-verat topographic maps. The maps her* the following des- ignations: hydro-geological, geological-engineering and roadability naps. Oeological engineering maps were required to contain information on the characteristics of the soils, as foundation for military construction, and their p4ydea1,?aschanieu compositions to Indicate concealed valleys, ravines, to fix ;,he location of all possible kinds of caves, etc. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 The hydro-geological maps were required to indicate the level of -standing grounct.water, its variations, the direction and velocity of the under-ground streams, their seasonal fluctuationso and aired localities flooded by rain, or the overflow of rivers. to These maps had. indicate all irrigation projects, and the areas _ooded as a result of the destruction of dams, the depth of snow- cover, seasonal meteorological data, etc., etc. Roadability maps were required to show all railroad,, highways, dirt roads, country roads, and all paths. On the maps was indicated the traffic capacity of all poeible roads, and also the possibility of passage for light and heavy tanks, automobiles, cavalry, as well as the possibility of passage by fighting units. Many other operations were fulfilled by geologists in response to the needs of the az , It is natural, that for the execution of these top-secret operatione, re;airing a great number of geologists, the pereoz I was picked by the NEOD itself, since such of the work was carried out under its supervision. Geologists who had a court record and had been convicted under the 58th article ff the Criminal Code) were not given access to these operations butt in the far rears these geologists were assigned to work of military sipif eanee. In this war a great number of geologists were enmmoaed by the Soviet Arep cods and the Committee of Defense to work on the construction of defense lines and other special assignments, lie have considered questions of security in the Geological Service of the Soviet Union in peace and war, treating these questions in general terms but fully enowgh for a general under- standing of this question. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 wry !Al From chat has been presented one nay, gain a sufficiently clear notion of the type of control (overt and covert) to which every engineer-geologist is subject when be carries out secret geological operations. The system of security of geological operations was so expanded in breadth and depth that one must assume that soon all geological work -- erith few exceptions -- conducted on the territories of the Soviet Union. will be classified secrete Preparations for new military encounters is forcing the Soviet leadership, on the basis of the experience of the last war, to plan the location of heavy industry in regions soots from the borders of the Soviet Union, to develop new basso of mineral resources there and to take great care to make all this secret. Post-war geological literature is very poor in detailed geological accounts of mineral deposits opened up during the last ten years. This indicates that questions of eesdrity in the geological service have assumed an even greater importance, striking into all areas of the geological service. Geology making its way into all the fields of production, acquires especial significance not only in, but in the event of hostilities, having become the foundation of the industrial potential of the country and its eapcatty for defense, Geologists, in order that they nay work better and more selflessly, are placed in the category of specialists who are better paid, are favored by the Soviet regime with all possible eneouragement in the form of rewards and special titles. Bat the increased importance of geologists loads to as increased distrust of them, and,thseefore, they are deliberately placed in a position, where one may not know what another is doing, and thereby the seer"y of geological most is rendered eves greater, r:s:p~tII Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 atY,a sus In this manner is attained not only external but interns]. ssonritr. But n;, matter how oarsfn1] the Soviet Moment I my tr- to sake everything seoret$ aadp through the press,, to aonthe* the picture of the true"state of tneral raw-eupp],y reserves is the Soviet Union, we are nwerthelAas able to fora a clear idea of the reserves but thin in ant, the subject.oi the resent eaa . ?! tIj 11,4! STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 I'1 . Tfl A l byandix I Organisational Chart of the Total ftstg of the ministry of Geolop of the USSR Central Scientific Research and Geological Survey Institute Ministry of Gsologr USSR Mies-driii EquiPment Plants F sios "RpeteasoI ute I -- l?,~s oblast, intsi .krq aDd asoloaisai branches of the 1Qaietry- of Geoloq USSR Gsolo~ioal Publieding House Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 IIaI 1 I [AL endix 2 Chart of th. Internal Structure otthe Ministry of Geolog. Us M V D ----.1 special section Central Geological Archives Section Persooel Section F8oono4o Planning Section Minister -~ sct Pmt ion State Oological Central Section fie` Iiarer Central Reserve fisettea 7 7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 TIAt Organisational Chart of a Branch of the Ministry of Gsoloes Ussa ~a,-ja 3oction~ Personnel I Section f gal Archivi+e L__Ssotiaa Eoonoado Plamsiaj E Technical Equip- amt Section Chief of the Geological Branch i+eai~nioal Production Section Finance Section Garage and Workebop -1 Candeoioa for the Confirmation;' o. Reserves laboratorrj Gsolotieala AalogioUr.asu~o nearing. "'fie 4~ti+neL~eal partieti POW% and baiwae. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0 Laboratory. Technician Leader of the Part) c? tr DrjijRr._. ..~ Alternate Driller Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/08/10: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600050187-0