Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Lavrentiy Beria: The Rise and Fall of Stalin's Right-Hand Man
Episode Date: June 26, 2026Tell me your favorite episode for the 6th anniversary show! Few figures have inspired as much fear as Lavrentiy Beria. As the ruthless head of Stalin's secret police, he oversaw purges, mass arres...ts, deportations, and a vast system of terror that touched millions of lives. Yet after Stalin's death, the man who seemed untouchable found himself facing a stunning downfall of his own. His rise and dramatic fall remain one of the darkest and most fascinating stories of the Soviet Union. Learn more about Lavrentiy Beria and the machinery of Stalin's terror on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Saily Get an exclusive 15% discount on Saily data plans! Use code everythingeverywhere at checkout. Download the Saily app or go to https://saily.com/everythingeverywhere ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED TrueWerk Get 15% off your first order at truewerk.com with code everything DripDrop Go to dripdrop.com and use promo code everything for 20% off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Few figures have inspired as much fear as Lovrenti Baria.
As the ruthless head of Stalin's secret police, he oversaw purges, mass arrests, deportations,
and a vast system of terror that touch millions of lives.
Yet after Stalin's death, the man who seemed untouchable found himself facing a stunning
downfall of his own.
His rise and dramatic fall remain one of the darkest and most fascinating chapters of Soviet
history. Learn more about
Lovrenti Barria and Stalin's
Terror on this episode of
Everything Everywhere Daily.
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When we talk about cruel dictators and the pain they inflicted and the people they killed,
we often overlook the fact that they seldom did any of those horrible things themselves.
They were certainly really responsible for what happened during their rule,
but they almost never personally had blood on their hands.
They had underlings who did their dirty work.
And the dirtiest of all the underlings in the Soviet Union had to be Lovrenti Beria.
Beria was born in 1890 in the village of Mercouli, Georgia, which at the time was part of the Russian Empire.
His parents were deeply religious, especially his mother, who descended from a Georgian noble family and was a member of the Georgian Orthodox Church.
By 1915, Beria had completed his early education and moved to Baku, Azerbaijan, which was also part of the Russian Empire.
While in Baku, Beria attended the Baku Polytechnicum, a technical school focused on the growing petroleum industry, where he stayed.
studied engineering. Beria joined the Bolsheviks as part of the Baku City Soviet in March of
1917, approximately one month after the Russian Revolution began. However, Beria wasn't
considered a true Bolshevik at this point. During the Russian Civil War, which lasted from
1917 to 1922, Beria proved to be opportunistic, shifting allegiances as opportunities arose.
This pattern set the stage for his later behavior in Soviet politics. In 1919, Berkirian
had relationships with both the Bolsheviks and their main opposition in Azerbaijan,
the Muslim Democrat Musavat Party, or the Musavadis.
Beria took a position as the state secretary of the Azerbaijan Democratic Party in 19
and began gathering information for Bolsheviks, motivated more by the prospect of personal
advancement than by ideological commitment.
When the Red Army invaded and defeated the Musavadis in Baku in April of 1920,
Berya was captured as a result of the upheaval and narrowly avoided execution.
Reportedly, he was spared by Surgai Kirov, a prominent Soviet political figure,
and instead of being executed, Berya was simply imprisoned.
During his time in prison, Berya developed a relationship with his cellmate's niece,
Nina Gigi Koya, whom he married in 1922.
After his release from prison, Berya decided to join the Cheka,
an early version of the Soviet Secret Police.
As part of the Checa, Beria rose quickly through the ranks, becoming the deputy chairman of the Georgian branch of the Checa by 1922,
which had been later renamed the OGPU or Joint State Political Doctrine.
By this time, Beria appeared to be fully committed to the Bolshevik cause, and he participated in the brutal repression of the 1994 Georgian nationalist uprising.
His work eventually led him to his promotion to the chairman of the Georgian OGPU and deputy chairman
of the Transcaucasia OGPU, the regional branch of the secret police that encompassed modern
Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan.
Beria first met Joseph Stalin in 1931, when Stalin was already established as the leader of the
Soviet Union.
The meeting took place during a spa trip that Stalin took to Georgia, where Beria's assignment
to oversee security provided an operative.
for their connection.
Stalin took quite a liking to Beria, something that he had not found with other members of
the party leadership in Georgia.
He found Beria to be organized, efficient, and extremely capable.
And also, like Beria, Stalin was a native Georgian.
Beria's favorable introduction to Stalin was enough for the dictator to recommend that Beria
take the position of second secretary of the Central Committee of the Georgian Communist Party
and the second secretary of the Trans-Caucasian Party.
In 1932, shortly after his initial promotion,
Burya became first secretary.
This promotion allowed him to strengthen the region's ties to Moscow,
and he combined his previous security role with his new duties,
consolidating his power base.
Under Bariah, by 1935, levels of electrical power production
and resource extraction had risen dramatically.
These results, however, relied heavily on forced labor,
underscoring the harsh methods that he used to achieve them.
One unique aspect of Georgia under Beria's leadership was his choice not to implement
Stalin's rustification policies as strictly as everywhere else.
These policies designed for forced assimilation into Russian culture,
conflicted with Beria's relative tolerance for his native Georgian culture.
These assimilation policies created resistance throughout the Soviet Union,
however, because Beria permitted Georgian culture and language,
Georgia was somewhat less resistant to Soviet control.
During this time, Beria became a member of the 71 member Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union,
and Beria used his positions to become closer to Stalin.
One of the things he did was publishing a piece titled On the History of Bolshevik Organizations in Transcaucasia,
which lionized Joseph Stalin.
In 1932, Stalin began his campaign of purges.
The purges were driven by a desire to eliminate any real or imagined threats to his power.
Deeply suspicious of rivals and convinced that enemies were everywhere,
he used arrests, executions, and imprisonment to remove political opponents,
intimidate the Communist Party, control the military,
and instill fear throughout Soviet society.
The agency that carried out the purges was the NKVD,
the successor to the OGPU.
The NKVD, or the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs,
was the Soviet Union's secret police and internal security agency from 1934 to
1946. It was responsible for law enforcement, intelligence, managing the Gulag labor camps,
and carrying out Stalin's wishes. The Great Purge reached its height between 1936 and
1938 under NKVD chief Nikolai Yezhov. But ironically, Yezov himself became one of the
purges' victims. In August of 1938, Stalin appointed Beria as Yezhov's
deputy, and within months, Baria effectively replaced him as head of the NKVD.
Yazov was arrested in 1939, accused of treason and conspiracy, tortured into confessing,
and was executed himself in 1940.
Once Beria took charge, the NKVD deepened its involvement in the Great Purge, targeting
not only party rivals, but also members of the police and expanding the use of labor camps.
What particularly distinguished Beria during this period was,
his personal participation in acts of violence and torture, which earned him an especially
infamous reputation within the Communist Party. When Russia entered the Second World War in 1939
with their invasions of Finland and Poland, as one of Stalin's trusted leaders and head of the
secret police, Beria held a quasi-military rank within the Soviet system. This elevated position
put him in charge of dealing with prisoners of war from the Polish campaign. The USSR had
captured thousands of Poles and, mirroring some Nazi tactics, the Soviet army under Beria's
oversight committed multiple atrocities. One of the most horrific examples was the Khatten Massacre,
where 22,000 Poles were executed and buried in the Khatn Forest. Baria orchestrated this event,
claiming the POWs threatened Soviet plans in Poland. In 1941, before the Nazi invasion of the
Soviet Union, Beria also participated in another massive purge of the Red Army. And so,
army, murdering roughly 30,000 people, which also included three out of the five top-ranking
marshals of the Soviet Union and 14 of 16 army commanders.
Simultaneously, Beria exerted authority over the Gulag camp system. He sent millions of people
into forced labor to supply wartime production, furthering his reputation for brutality.
Beria is often identified as the Soviet Union's version of Heinrich Himmler, the head of
the Nazi SS, a label which Stalin himself,
bestowed upon him. In many ways, the comparisons accurate given both men's propensity towards
torture and murder. But on top of his World War II crimes, Beria was a known serial rapist.
He cruised around Moscow and his car picking up teenage girls off the street to be delivered to
his office. The total number of victims is unknown, but estimates range from a few dozen to over
a hundred. And there is evidence that Beria may have personally murdered many of the girls.
In 1993, the remains of young women were found at the location of his former home, and more
bodies were discovered in 1998.
His escapades were disturbing to fellow Soviet leaders who viewed him with disgust and fear.
However, what he said was often a direct order from Stalin, which determined whether you
lived or died.
In August of 1945, after the United States dropped its second atomic bomb on Japan, Stalin
gave Beria the oversight of the Soviet atomic bomb program. This move further expanded his influence
within the Soviet power structure. Baria leveraged his authority as chief of the secret police
to establish Department S within the NKVD. This move was a strategic effort to centralize oversight
of the atomic bomb program, thereby bolstering his personal power and the government's capacity
to safeguard critical secrets. However, Beria was highly distrustful of the scientists and researchers
who were working on the project.
The decades of fear caused by political purges and war had made him highly paranoid about the project's
members.
And this led to the scientists being under constant surveillance.
His role in organizing the atomic bomb program and Stalin's purges earned him a seat on the
Polyp Bureau in 1946.
Beria's success with the atomic bomb program and being the head of the secret police
did not mean his position was secure.
Stalin was falling ill, and he was Beria's prime.
primary benefactor. Outside of Stalin, many leaders in the Soviet Union disliked and distrusted him.
When Stalin died on March 5, 1953, Bariya was well positioned to become the next leader of the
Soviet Union. Following Stalin's death, he was promoted to deputy prime minister and head of the Ministry
of Internal Affairs. With this position, he could easily mobilize the NKVD and take over the country.
Other high-ranking Soviet officials were terrified at the prospect of this.
They had just endured almost three decades of Stalin's terror,
and the last thing they wanted was someone in power who might be even worse
and would have an incentive to kill them all.
Amid the confusion and power struggle following Stalin's death,
an anti-Baria faction formed.
Their mission was to discredit Beria as much as possible,
giving them an excuse to push him out of power.
This opportunity came in the form of Beria's opinions on the West.
Beria feared that the satellite states in the Eastern Bloc would be disloyal,
especially given the poor state of the Soviet economy.
He had pushed for the Soviet Union to enter diplomatic negotiations with the United States
in the hopes that it would help the Soviet economy.
Other members of the Communist Party took this opportunity and claimed that Beria was harboring imperialist sympathies.
This was enough for the Soviet leadership to organize Beria,
his arrest under the justification that he was an imperialist agent and a potential spy.
Barrio was arrested and tried in December 1953 by a secret tribunal.
At the trial, he was accused of numerous crimes, including treason and terrorism,
with his actions during the purges being used as evidence.
He was immediately found guilty, stripped of all of his titles and awards,
and then was immediately executed on December 23, 1953.
It was reported by the executioner's wife,
that he did not meet his fate bravely, grovelling for mercy.
It was an ironic end for someone who had done the same thing to tens, if not hundreds,
of thousands of people.
His body was reportedly immediately cremated, and the ashes were secretly buried.
Beria remains one of the principal architects of Soviet state terror.
Although he did not initiate the Great Purge,
he inherited and institutionalized the security apparatus that sustained Stalin's dictatorship.
He oversaw some of the Soviet Union's most brutal campaigns of repression,
including mass deportations, forced labor, political persecution, and murder.
His downfall also marked an important turning point in Soviet history.
By eliminating barrier only months after Stalin's death,
the Soviet leadership ensured that no single individual would again wield the unchecked power
over the security services that had characterized the Stalin era.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
Research and writing for this episode was provided by Olivia Ash.
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