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Yakov Davtyan - the Spy and the Ambassador

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  • Yakov Davtyan - the Spy and the Ambassador

    Yakov Davtyan - the Spy and the Ambassador
    By Pavel Simonov, AIA Russian section

    Axis Information and Analysis
    30.06.2005

    Yakov Davtyan (1888 - 1938) was one of the prominent representatives
    of Soviet diplomacy and the intelligence community during the initial
    stages of the history of the USSR. Beginning in autumn 1927 up to
    the end of 1929 he served as the ambassador to Persia.

    Armenian by origin, Davtyan was born in the Nakhichevan area (today
    a part of Azerbaijan, that borders with Armenia and Iran).

    Yakov's father was a simple peasant. He died when his son was two
    years old. Later Yakov's mother sent him to live with his brother in
    Tiflis (Modern Tbilisi - the capital of Georgia). Yakov studied in the
    gymnasium there and joined the Bolshevik Party. Upon his graduation he
    moved to the then capital of the Russian empire - Saint Petersburg. In
    his new home Davtyan actively participated in the illegal propaganda
    activity of the Bolsheviks, especially among the military. At the
    end of 1907 the police arrested him for this activity. Some months
    later he was released and left for Belgium. There he acquired higher
    education in engineering, simultaneously participating in the activity
    of the Belgian Socialist Party. In Belgium Davtyan got acquainted
    with Inessa Armand - the mistress of the leader of the Bolsheviks,
    Vladimir Lenin. After the Bolshevik revolution of 1917 Armand promoted
    Davtyan's career.

    When WW I started and Belgium was occupied by the German armies (1915),
    Davtyan was arrested as a citizen of a hostile state (Russia was at
    war with Germany). He was imprisoned for almost three years, most of
    which he spent in a maximum-security camp and another eight months in
    solitary confinement. In August 1918 the Germans released Davtyan at
    the request of the Soviet authorities. By this time the civil war in
    Russia between supporters and opponents of communism was raging. For
    the next year and a half Davtyan carried out various special tasks
    of the Bolshevik leadership in the Ukraine and the Caucasus.

    In the Diplomatic Service

    In March 1920 Yakov Davtyan started working in the Foreign Policy
    Department. His first foreign business trip in his new position
    was to Estonia, where he was appointed to be the first secretary of
    the Soviet embassy. Later, Davtyan was the adviser and head of the
    diplomatic missions of Soviet Russia in Lithuania (02-09.1922), China
    (10.1922-04.1924), France (05.1925-09.1927), Persia (10.1927-12.1929),
    Greece (04.1932-02.1934), and Poland (04.1934-10.1937).

    In the early stages of his diplomatic career, Yakov Davtyan was
    under the patronage of his fellow tribesmen, Lion Karahanyan (Deputy
    Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1918-20), and Inessa Armand (she died
    in September 1920).

    The Founder of Intelligence

    Yakov Davtyan was the founder and the first head of the Soviet
    external intelligence - predecessor of the modern Service of External
    Intelligence of Russia (SVR).

    In December 1920, within the framework of the first secret service of
    the Soviet regime (the All-Russia extraordinary commission - VChK)
    the Department of External Intelligence was formed. It was named
    "The Foreign Department " (INO VChK). Following the recommendation
    of Inessa Armand, Yakov Davtyan was chosen as the head of this new
    division. He held this post for two periods of time: from December 1920
    until January 1921 and again from April until August 1921. Davtyan
    prepared the first documents defining the rules and methods of the
    activity of the Soviet External Intelligence. He also defined its
    structure and hired the first employees.

    Consequently, when he came back to serve in the diplomatic department,
    Davtyan continued to cooperate closely with the intelligence
    services. Being in China as an adviser, and later as an ambassador
    he likewise supervised the Soviet intelligence's fixed-post spies in
    all of the Far Eastern countries.

    The Execution

    At the end of the 1930s a mass wave of state terror started in the
    Soviet Union, and millions of people became its victims. In particular,
    the best representatives of army command, heads of intelligence and
    leading diplomats were killed. In October 1937, Yakov Davtyan was
    recalled from Warsaw where he headed the Soviet embassy. The following
    month he was arrested. False charges were brought against Davtyan,
    claiming his connection with Polish intelligence and establishment
    of an "anti-soviet terrorist organization". On July 28, 1938 Yakov
    Davtyan was executed by shooting.
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