COMMENTS ON UKRAINIAN VETERINARY MEDICINE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 19, 2011
Sequence Number: 
573
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 13, 1953
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2.pdf394.65 KB
Body: 
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 CLASSIFICATION CON k'31)ENTIAL/ Eeu1 rry nMMM ,pv CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY INFORMATION REPORT COUNTRY USSR PLACE ACQUIRED DATE ACQUIRED I9Y SOURCE U OF nwOORTION l.a.?,nu ?r an. :a. N.4.Y?.U../ nu .u. i? n??~un.?,.. DATE DISTR./3 O .T ra NO. OF PAGES 3 NO. OF ENCLS. (LISTED SELO*) THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION Status of Veterinary Profession 1. tinder the Soviet occupation the Ministry of Agriculture in lleseov was of animal disease control for the tfrraine. The snit aim in charge ible Planning and administration was the Chief Veterinary lb tly responsible for dicai Adelaistration. This organ had a regional office in the regional headquarters_ of the lnnistryr of Agriculture at Kiev. I~lthough it was set 'AP as an administrative or, main operating function was to translate the existing and_a gulationse sent from Moscow into the tAa'ainian language. This office is. in charge of printing and distributing this printed matter. Althoyg4 yN Oe . Administration in Kiev was part of the Ministry of Agrierriturs~ I diee inary there Vse responsible only to the Minister in Moscow. His aides w e lmors em 'inspectors" and vane directors of specialised categories sseb as borne aileents, diseases Of .long-banned cattle, diseases of sheep, wines rs ttsi fool, eta. Thera vas also a statististdivision run by. so-cal. wo=%"g]*.s,? Mars we another section of agricultural education and a section for both oyajsu and dioa1 sD].Y? The editors of veterinary journsSs mown slpWstaiy from these other Sections. 2. Prances to the Soviet occupation the nest O,ia-ains yy dd l ? S aeh county had it own WieultuMl. 4Ipertss`t. tiise I.rt sets 40041sted of WtUrIny afar agrao ate, soo>reebnlslesit 1od lrfeelalelaei. The co spitaL ee>~iloyed one or two veteriaarieosi osull with istents,_and a stable man.vho took care of harm and other @MSMls. The vrterlaarlaas wan paid 41Yectly by the sad were not shored to do A'iwstis-prsatioe. I do y'iot knov the ="at ttheir s ea. 3? In P*4bviet county division vas kept intact tz+aliVaa, wbieh sat "ve ro j ~ l- lUdioal tGrlML7- vim,a Naloe w * or Vith ea ie,*- er at: ass: head. tlm a3Ajr these 's es ' 1-the Pre-. Sovirrt cord r di*lsioss s . v .n` to '"`_ d to sl er a l -- u e -. a g wane > cue]. ~ ?. z "~ '_ . ;. atQ si+ss wrs bi alt 640bilmw WORMY Cammsents on'Ukrainian Veterinary Medicine 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 coNF rrIAL//cuEm u 7ioN over the veterinary personnel in his area. The personnel of each veterinary area its rai ol territories. These was ip"luded charged all with slau the ghterhouses administration dairies, of all iu warehouses and p]wits s t wit 'iherre e processed. The authority of these Veterinary Medical Administration products v iarea personnel was absolute in animal matters except at railroad stations, military points and border quarantine points. The head of the Veterinary Medici, Administration area was assisted by a staff of a few specialized veterinarians sugh as an episootologist and a parasitologist. The minimum staff of an area adminiatz4ition was the chief veterinarian, a zootechnician, a,feldseher, a sanitary engineer, a statistician, a groom, a chauffeur, a manager and a clerk. The Veterinary Medical Administration area contained a veterinary-medical clinic, a drugstore, a diagnostic laboratory, a perma- nent hospital for non-contagious diseases, a quarantine area for contagious diseases, a gas chamber for the treatment of mange in horses, and a :section for artificial in- semination. Each area also had an installation for processing`the,bodies of dead animals and a specially prepared cemetery for the carcasses of infected animals. There was also a regional or'. ?jiedic blacksmith shop to care for the hoofs of diseased horses. Each kolkho:.~-had courses of training for the members of its .veterinary medical sanitary staff and animal attendants. Students of the veterinary school also received their practical training in the kolkhosp. L. Under the Soviet system a veterinary medical organisation worked'on the basis of special laws more ioons,and than since tintthe Soviei.,:system the life of an animal considered ,. is often of a person, these laws and regulations were complicated and detailed in form and were strictly enforced. The veterinary medical law and all the instructions for carrying out that law were, included in a special collection and published in a han'.oook for the use of all veterinarians, zootechnicians and even administrators of agriculture. By the enforcesisnt of the minute details of these laws and instructions the Soviets had turned highly qualified professionals into technical executors. The entire. activities of these men were so conditioned by specific instructions and prescriptions that they were practically unable to reach professional decisions on their. own. The extent of the ability required for them to do their fob was to follow these specific instructions as laid down for each case. 5. The veterinary medical organization, like all other Soviet orga (Atioa in the Ukraine, was controlled by a special secret service of the Iiinistrry of"lcurity. To carry out this control each institution had a so-called "special section- whose members were appointed by the appropriate organs in the Ministry of Security. These special sections controlled the work of all the veterinary medical workers. This control extended to review of all correspondence, to all their reports and even'ii- - , the private lives of the workers and their families. In this way th*?unastisfactory conditions arising from mismanagement could be hidden from the outsi&?wsrld. General Animal Health 6. Animals in the Ukraine suffered from practically all of the common infectious dis- easeei covered in accepted veterinary literature. Most of these, of 'course, occurred in sporadic outbreaks. After the first world war there were .=W oases of glanders and scabies, in horses in the Ukraine and many cases of soabiesi>ii sheep in West Ukraine. During the years 1928 and 1930 the glanders disease was.vipid but by using ma.Lleln cation on, all horses, donkeys and mules by.in brat. All animals show- ing positive reactions to this were liquidated. In do cites the underskin -method was used and all animals showing positive?reeetiau-wers kil ed. At that time the state insurance company was paying -100% for stint li 'for which 'post-maim eiamina- tions were negative and 75% for post-mortem positive asses. Thin was is aocordaue with Polish law. 7. mange. was treated by usIM oiniments and -IM-m?, to likes tieneliniasnt, a. mixture 'ef owns-hi t ail] and orris-matt pttrolaumi and sulphur and calaiwa (r 4' get: rlaleent). During the seecad.' world war range in horses was cu se in gas a rs. 'there were ' 60 of these *as ehssbsrs is Veat_ tOQaine._and=the trpatasnt.-w-ps ormse- = -g obta d by bm fig in vro The r' unts of _thi s, gas ek sr Mabee IS good deity in those, Cases .vhsre the gaschaobers-wnv-hemptic and the eonountratiea of Bop was Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 cotDEIAL/srrr xt+e= -3- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/07/21: CIA-RDP80-00809A000600040573-2 8. Other infectious diseased which occurred frequently were anthrax and b]1lck1o&'in cattle-swc eeerysipel fowl _cholera rabies in dogs and other ani>as1-s~ ", f' ~ ni n cattle, sheep and rabbits] puilorum diseased h sir and.disin "t :W tle, dogs. Diiseaasssllikee hog pra, foot and mouth dl brucella, contagious ~aeumonir., bovine y1aearo-? uwonis, ?tuberculosis. sisins cattle at wand fowl, plasnosit is cat1e :is vadded areas, ty p f l, In harness end oattl,+ fowl Plague, b less ?tr equeatl3-? 9. Specific outbreaks,includsd?an epidemic of botulism in the Terebowls region. This epidemic occurred in 1930and caused the death of 82 horses. The outbreaks of this disease were enmootic during the entire year and epiacotic during the early spring months due to the Pact that in these made there r e is a lack of green fresh mass: eemont months olkh bay and other feed. According to, animals was spread by incorrect cticee. . In 1941 the t at botulism the ko]khosp Soviet State Collective liiusbandry=practices. 1 b n err ) e ~ village of Sorocko In. the Terebowla.re" tbere vas an outbreak of botulism in chickens. During one night 200 chickens were found dead. According totat, inform$tion ,obtained from the fen birds had been fed with screenings which had been, stored for a long time indoors? They bad become wet and had sprouted. This particular stnrnge area was also littered with a large number of dead mice. In' 1933 in the Lvov County area, there was an out- break of botulism on a .large dairy cattle farm. These cu?cle:t!c,. been fed spoiled beet and.. other plant. tops from silos. These tops. had been oontatsitlated with dirt. Veterinary Pharmaceutical and Biological Production 10. There were no pharmaceutical or biological plants in the West Ukraine. There were some plants in the?East'Ukraine, but I have no infot`mation on these. Veterinary Education, Research' and De a opmsht ? 11. The school of veterinary medicine at Lvov was, the highest veterinary school in the West Ukraine. There were intermediate schools in almost every district and lower echelon courses for veterinary workers in every regional laboratory. Ail of the higher schools ? were financially, dependent on the Ministry of Agriculture, the Neti od lliniatry and other state' organs. They were also controlled by the'Nalstry of 1dua.tion in Moscow, which dictated;all?political comrsds 'and-activities'of the atuAe4ts end faculty. The intermediate and lower schools were under the local $inietiy of iauea- tion. 12. about the time of the start of the engaged in teaching and research at the school of vateriaaiy asdicIas in Lvov - Ttwtre. wars graduate veterianrtsas teaching ani-studying in other qW. at Lvov but I do not rreed~ am tly bow a -. `S do not r -Los a~- R ssisn veterinary.medi'eal JotL s 3ihbsd in the soviet t>hi6n. Thera were, hawawrf.~lsgr aussian dud tAoFsinisn pacodbasiams-1 t stbootu ao4 ai~o t l.-ttnei or aersMtn ? These traoitdtsoatt imdn3ad ter dtl+s~ "~uaissgr" by 0-03 r and 'Pathojbq? clad TlerVeutice- oY- Diseasbd or'Do?estic Aai>sais's by 1~lrtpna, Ehtrk and lls?ininger. _ 4, 13. 2 hi rssasr?b atudaritie 'vans ueifsr 'tea sVa vision- ad- direetio)r of the ? U' i a Lenin AwanW. in Weioov. Ail: or tkidiie vsirs ?looitwd in far ytEmaiss. Liaowstwin. fOr the -pmtloal `1195l1oatiOn or soientiiib-rasa chi rs' -"'tob33abtidlis, '4lstfriet. sash of *one hsboae tgs tea,, bi1.i *$ Sts s'^~etor-w rlaarian, b>d~ at -its ? it at least fosie'or five other vetO3asri aiy as iootblogtsty s saroloOat, $ parasite-- ogist and s d s iee.l tacbbolot1st. Id West- bile tSis 22" to s vast bested in Lvov, ifania]an asd.1100~ 1e. All the ftsdirsi inattuwnts either mile in Pbliaod or vere `lagorW Beare l (Bar~oae tLk war-l9'e0)~~1 =L~ vol!* - - --- oe stica 4t ivv $t-.4,1. v 'as a Tea shits of, Maas bsct e~ii 3ogiesi t treutbt-ll :_-