Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Stalin's Last Crime: The Plot Against the Jewish Doctors, 1948-1953 Paperback – February 17, 2004
Purchase options and add-ons
A new investigation, based on previously unseen KGB documents, reveals the startling truth behind Stalin's last great conspiracy.
On January 13, 1953, a stunned world learned that a vast conspiracy had been unmasked among Jewish doctors in the USSR to murder Kremlin leaders. Mass arrests quickly followed. The Doctors' Plot, as this alleged scheme came to be called, was Stalin's last crime.
In the fifty years since Stalin's death many myths have grown up about the Doctors' Plot. Did Stalin himself invent the conspiracy against the Jewish doctors or was it engineered by subordinates who wished to eliminate Kremlin rivals? Did Stalin intend a purge of all Jews from Moscow, Leningrad, and other major cities, which might lead to a Soviet Holocaust? How was this plot related to the cold war then dividing Europe, and the hot war in Korea? Finally, was the Doctors' Plot connected with Stalin's fortuitous death?
Brent and Naumov have explored an astounding arra of previously unknown, top-secret documents from the KGB, the presidential archives, and other state and party archives in order to probe the mechanism of on of Stalin's greatest intrigues -- and to tell for the first time the incredible full story of the Doctors' Plot.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateFebruary 17, 2004
- Dimensions5.31 x 0.95 x 8 inches
- ISBN-100060933100
- ISBN-13978-0060933104
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
A new investigation, based on previously unseen KGB documents, reveals the startling truth behind Stalin's last great conspiracy.
On January 13, 1953, a stunned world learned that a vast conspiracy had been unmasked among Jewish doctors in the USSR to murder Kremlin leaders. Mass arrests quickly followed. The Doctors' Plot, as this alleged scheme came to be called, was Stalin's last crime.
In the fifty years since Stalin's death many myths have grown up about the Doctors' Plot. Did Stalin himself invent the conspiracy against the Jewish doctors or was it engineered by subordinates who wished to eliminate Kremlin rivals? Did Stalin intend a purge of all Jews from Moscow, Leningrad, and other major cities, which might lead to a Soviet Holocaust? How was this plot related to the cold war then dividing Europe, and the hot war in Korea? Finally, was the Doctors' Plot connected with Stalin's fortuitous death?
Brent and Naumov have explored an astounding arra of previously unknown, top-secret documents from the KGB, the presidential archives, and other state and party archives in order to probe the mechanism of on of Stalin's greatest intrigues -- and to tell for the first time the incredible full story of the Doctors' Plot.
About the Author
Jonathan Brent, editorial director of Yale University Press and founder of its distinguished Annals of Communism series, holds a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and is writing a biography of the Soviet Jewish writer Isaac Babel.
Vladimir P. Naumov, a professor of history, has been executive secretary of the Presidential Commission for the Rehabilitation of Repressed Persons in Moscow since its inception under former president Mikhail Gorbachev.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Stalin's Last Crime
The Plot Against the Jewish Doctors, 1948-1953By Brent, JonathanPerennial
Copyright ©2004 Jonathan BrentAll right reserved.
ISBN: 0060933100
Chapter One
The Untimely Death Of Comrade Zhdano
Moscow, September 6, 1948
You went your glorious way, comrade Zhdanov
Leaving eternal footsteps behind
-- Aleksander Zharov, Pravda, Sept.1, 1948
With what biting sarcasm he threatened all the old enemies, all those
who would poison young Soviet literature with their pernicious
poison! With what annihilating scorn and hatred he exposed
the mercenary bourgeois literature of the West today, that
corrupts the minds of readers, that aids reaction, that served
fascism once in no small way and now serves the lackeyism of the
imperialists -- the instigators of a new war!
-- Mikhail Sholokhov, Pravda, Sept.2, 1948
The workers of the entire world mourn the untimelydeath of com. A. A. Zhdanov
-- Izvestia, Sept.3, 1948
On August 31, 1948, at about 4 o'clock in the afternoon, Andrei Aleksandrovich Zhdanov, a powerful member of Stalin's Politburo, "unexpectedly" died in Valdai, a health resort for members of the Soviet political elite, about two and a half hours by car to the north and west of Moscow, on the road to Leningrad. Zhdanov was fifty-two years old. Hisdeath provoked a public outpouring of grief throughout the Communist world. Condolences were published over many days. Mao Zedong from China and Georgi Dimitrov, the new president of Bulgaria, expressed their sorrow, as did the leaders of Communist parties of Great Britain, France, and Austria, as well as all the Soviet satellites. His body was borne on a gun carriage through Red Square to the Great Hall that housed the Politburo, followed by a procession of dignitaries and mourners, with Stalin in the lead. Eulogies by Molotov and other Politburo leaders were declaimed inRed Square to a sea of mourners. Poems were dedicated to his eternal memory. Mikhail Sholokhov and other noted writers, along with members of the cultural elite, referred to the "great heart" and the "crystal bright mind" of this "true son of the Motherland and the party." It was said at the time that no Kremlin leader had been buried with such public attention since Sergei Kirov, who died in 1934.
A. A. Zhdanov had been the former, brutal boss of the Leningrad party and the architect of Soviet postwar ideology and cultural policy. It was he who gave the keynote speech at the 1934 International Writers' Congress, where he had invoked Stalin's dictum that writers were the"engineers of human souls." In 1946 Zhdanov had issued the infamous "report" on literature and ideology that included, among other things, harsh criticism of the poetry of A. A. Akhmatova, and led to her banishment from the Writers' Union. Akhmatova, Zhdanov wrote, was "A nun or a whore -- or rather both a nun and a whore who combines harlotrywith prayer." He described her poetry as "utterly remote from the people ... What can there be in common between this poetry and the interests of our people and State? Nothing whatsoever." Another time he had rebuked Shostakovich for not writing music the average Sovietworker could hum. Zhdanov's report unleashed what came to be termed the "Zhdanovshchina," which terrorized Soviet arts and letters for a decade until the Khrushchev "Thaw."
After the Second World War Zhdanov had been represented as a hero of the siege of Leningrad; he had given his life to the "interests of the State." At the time of his death he was considered by many to have been the most powerful member of the Soviet government after Stalin. He had defended Stalin and Stalinism all his life and had earned the respect of the people as well as Stalin's confidence. In September 1947 Stalin entrusted Zhdanov, not Molotov, with delivering the keynote speech at the Szklarska Poreba conference in Poland that set out the basic terms of Stalin's Cold War vision to leaders of the satellite countries and foreign Communist parties. Zhdanov depicted the postwar world as "irrevocably divided into two hostile camps." American expansionism, he charged, was comparable to that of the fascist states of the 1930s.
More than just professional or political sympathy drew Stalin and Zhdanov together. Stalin was said to have personally preferred him because Zhdanov was educated and more literate than most of the other Politburo leaders. Zhdanov enjoyed playing the piano at Stalin's dacha and discussing literature with Gorky. In the spring of 1949 his son, Yuri, married Stalin's daughter, vetlana Alliluyeva, something that was possibly more a sign of political realities than of personal choice.
But in early July 1948 Zhdanov had fainted on the way to his office in Old Square near the Kremlin, returning from a Politburo meeting held in Stalin's "nearby" dacha the Blizhnyaya. Though just over fifty, he had had a bad heart for some time, the result of years of overwork, drinking, and hypertension. Earlier that spring Stalin had given him other reasons to be anxious. In April, only nine months since Zhdanov's historic speech at Szklarska Poreba, Stalin had reacted very negatively to the role Zhdanov's son, Yuri, had played in discussing the botanist T.D. Lysenko at a meeting held under the auspices of the Central Committee, saying that those responsible for this provocation should be punished in "exemplary "fashion. Although not formally dismissed from the posts of Secretary of Ideology of the Communist Party and head of the Leningrad party, Zhdanov knew his position in the party was now at risk and his life might also be in jeopardy. Stalin's suggestion that he recover in Valdai had carried with it the same solicitude that had accompanied the demotion of other Kremlin leaders since the thirties. The head of the Kremlin Hospital signedthe medical certificate authorizing Zhdanov's leave and he was sent to Valdai on July 13. "Strict bed rest" was ordered for him to safeguard his health, but its other purpose, as Zhdanov might have guessed, would have been to keep him out of active political life.
On September 6, 1948, one week after Zhdanov "went his glorious way," an emergency session of experts was convened in the Kremlin Hospital to investigate whether the doctors who treated him in Valdai had misdiagnosed Zhdanov's illness and had provided criminally negligent treatment. The Kremlin Hospital doctor responsible for the last EKGs of Zhdanov's heart had sent a secret letter accusing the doctors of this negligence to Lieutenant General Nikolai Vlasik, the Head of the Kremlin Bodyguards, known as the Okhrana. In her letter of August 29, 1948 -- two days before Zhdanov's death -- Lidia F.Timashuk asserted that the attending doctors had underestimated the "unquestionably grave condition of comrade Zhdanov." Soon after his death this evaluation turned into an accusation of outright murder.For some fifty years this accusation has been viewed as the essential element in the instigation of the Doctors' Plot, and for fifty years, ever since the accusation against the doctors was dismissed by the Soviet governmentafter Stalin's death, it has been widely assumed to have been a false charge, stemming from a premeditated plan to launch a conspiracy against the doctors ...
Continues...Excerpted from Stalin's Last Crimeby Brent, Jonathan Copyright ©2004 by Jonathan Brent. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper Perennial; Reprint edition (February 17, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0060933100
- ISBN-13 : 978-0060933104
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.31 x 0.95 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,303,430 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #399 in Russian & Soviet Politics
- #589 in Historical Russia Biographies
- #2,138 in European Politics Books
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs and more
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the plot thrilling and describe the book as tedious.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the plot thrilling, fascinating, and well researched. They also appreciate the nice glossary and chronology.
"Very difficult reading! Interesting story but hard to put all the pieces together into an easily comprehensible understanding...." Read more
"...proffesion dropped. The book is written very convincingly and impressive but the story of this crimecould be extended.dropped." Read more
"...repetitive, and although it is well-annotated and contains a nice glossary and chronology, it has no illustrations, for which I have, regrettably,..." Read more
"Fascinating well researched subject matter but somewhat ruminative and tedious...." Read more
Customers find the book difficult and tedious.
"Very difficult reading! Interesting story but hard to put all the pieces together into an easily comprehensible understanding...." Read more
"...in this otherwise highly recommended book is that it is at times slightly repetitive, and although it is well-annotated and contains a nice glossary..." Read more
"Fascinating well researched subject matter but somewhat ruminative and tedious...." Read more
-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
In fact, Jews featured prominently—though they were by no means a majority, as Hitler would claim–in the communist leadership. Granted, when he planned to forge a Soviet-Nazi alliance, Stalin dismissed Maxim Litvinov, the Jewish Foreign Minister. He replaced him with Vyacheslav Molotov, the principal signatory of the Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939. Later, in 1941, when Germany invaded the Soviet Union, Stalin manifested an uncharacteristic optimism and trust in the strength of his alliance with Hitler. The Soviet leader didn’t react promptly to the news of war. For a few days he isolated himself in shock and even forbade his generals from making preemptive strikes against the German forces gathered at the Soviet borders. Having been deprived of information about the Nazi campaigns against the Jewish people all over Europe, about 4 million Soviet Jews were left vulnerable, on the path of the Nazi attack. Although many of them were able to escape before the Germans invaded their region, a large number of those living in the Western parts of the Soviet Union were trapped by the rapid German advance.
Raul Hilberg documents that Stalin’s decision not to evacuate promptly civilians from the areas invaded by Germany were prompted by two main considerations: “One was the prevention of a hasty flight of people. Their production was needed until the very last moment… The second guideline was applied in cities whose fall was imminent. In these situations, priority for evacuation was usually given to skilled workers, managers, party functionaries, civil servants, students, intellectuals, and various professionals… But there is little evidence of any Soviet attempts to evacuate Jews as such” (Perpetrators, Victims, Bystanders, 250-251). The refusal to evacuate civilians as quickly and efficiently as possible affected Jews more than other groups, since they were in the greatest danger of extermination by the Nazis. But at this point Stalin’s strategy was not directly aimed at the Jews. They fell victim to his general policy, which affected everyone in Soviet areas occupied by the Germans.
All this changed between the years 1948-1953, when Stalin began mounting a specifically anti-Semitic campaign in the Soviet Union that, some claim, could have led to a second Holocaust. While it’s not clear how far the Soviet leader would have gone with his plans, what is clear is that like Hitler, Stalin began targeting Jews as Jews for discrimination and abuse. There’s also strong evidence that he was planning another massive purge.
As usual, Stalin offered a pretext: the death in 1948 of a prominent Soviet official, Andrei Zhdanov, much as Sergey Kirov’s assassination in 1934 offered Stalin the pretext to launch the “Great Terror” purges of 1937-38. From 1946-7, Zhdanov was Chairman of the Soviet Union. He organized the Cominform, which set the official policy for Communist parties throughout Europe. In his role as Chairman, Zhdanov also set the tone for cultural production in the Soviet Union. He is infamous for his censorship of writers and artists, including the famous poet Anna Akhmatova.
Years later, between 1952 and 1953, Stalin used Zhdanov’s death as a pretext to accuse several prominent doctors, six out of nine of which were Jewish, of conspiring to assassinate Soviet leaders. He cast doubt upon Zhdanov’s cause of death, suggesting a Jewish conspiracy. Aside from turning on the doctors themselves, including his personal physician, A. N. Vinogradov, Stalin also targeted Jewish intellectuals, whom, according to Alan Bullock, the Soviet press labeled “Zionist agents of American imperialism.” (See Hitler and Stalin, 951-952) Lydia Timashuk, a sycophant and political instigator, “discovered” the Doctors’ plot. She even received the Order of Lenin for her false denunciations. Stalin took over the case, ordering that Vinogradov be imprisoned and the other doctors tortured. The media called Jews the “enemies within” and the anti-Semitic campaign and initial arrests were followed by more “spontaneous” pogroms in the Ukraine.
The question remains why Stalin chose to target the Jews in his plans for new purges. Aside from his all-pervasive sense of paranoia, which led him to suspect treachery and sabotage even from his closest friends and allies, there are several reasons for Stalin’s anti-Semitic turn. Jonathan Brent and Vladimir Naumov, authors of Stalin’s Last Crime: The Plot against the Jewish Doctors, 1948-1953 (New York: HarperCollins eBooks, 2010), argue that in the early 1950’s Stalin was planning an even greater purge the one he launched during the Great Terror (1937-38). They maintain that Stalin was motivated by three principal considerations: 1. The need to reestablish the reigns of power through terror and purge the Ministry of Security; 2. The threat he saw in the establishment of the state of Israel and the spread of Jewish Zionism in the Soviet, and 3) the growing tension with the United States after the end of their alliance in WWII. Although the Soviet Union had recognized the state of Israel early on, Stalin perceived the U.S.-Israeli alliance as a threat to the Soviet Union.
Six million Jews were killed by the Nazis during the Holocaust. The Soviet Union had the largest remaining Jewish population: according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, about two million Jews. During the war, Hitler and Stalin became archenemies. Ironically, had Stalin lived to carry out the planned purges, he might have accomplished Hitler’s dream.
Claudia Moscovici, Literature Salon
in Soviet Union not long before Stalin's death. Western people could not figure out what has
happened in soviet society after Stalin started this plot against doctors. It was conscious
setting on majority of population against medical specialists. This plot had at least two major gouls:
to switch public attention from hardship of life to hatred to "unpleasent" part of society and, as
as a result, to increase peoples support of governtmental policy. Thousend and thousend of doctors
and nurses have been fired. The hatred started to spread to russian doctors also.The prestige of medical
proffesion dropped. The book is written very convincingly and impressive but the story of this crime
could be extended.
dropped.
The problem for the protagonists and antagonists in this Stalinist nightmare, the unfolding Kafkaesque drama of the plot against the Jewish Doctors, is that of survival. The moral conundrum is how to survive without denouncing other innocent human beings. And yet perceived survival, or at least the delaying, as long as possible, the loss of life and limb by the avoidance of physical torture could only possibly be attained at the expense of the lives of others in similar, dire circumstances. Moreover, what is one to confess to without knowing what it is one needs to confess to, without divining what was in Stalin's evil mind?
Thankfully for some, there was the critical issue of timing. Some of the victims beat the clock and survived; others did not and perished.
The untangling of this Gordian knot of conspiracies and plots is the convincing achievement of the authors of this incredibly suspenseful, historical drama. They accomplished the impossible; they unraveled the master plan behind Stalin's plot against the Jewish doctors.
During the period 1945 to 1947, overt anti-Semitism was suppressed in the USSR. Why? Firstly, because Stalin was considered the savior of the Jews, the man who defeated Hitler and had liberated the eastern European concentration camps from the Nazis. Secondly, many of the Bolsheviks were Jewish, Leon Trotsky, Lev Kamenev, Zinoviev, Lazar Kaganovich, Maxim Litvinov, Yakov Sverdlov, Genrikh Yagoda, P. Zhemchuzhina (the wife of Molotov), etc. Thirdly, Stalin had initially supported the birth of Israel, the Jewish state.
But then about the time that Golda Meir visited the Soviet Union in the fall of 1948 Stalin decided Israel and Jewish internationalism, including Russian Jews, were a threat to the Soviet State. Jews had been too festive and had shown too much admiration for the Israeli Prime Minister! And then members of the Jewish Antifascist Committee (JAFC) had traveled extensively outside the USSR, and the vozdh ("the great leader") had become suspicious of this as well!
Suddenly all Jews were becoming potential traitors, enemies of the Soviet state, spies in the service of American and British intelligence services. On Stalin's order Solomon Mikhoels, leader of the JAFC was assassinated in Minsk (1948) and by 1952 virtually all of the members of the committee had been arrested and shot.
So, as stated by Talleyrand, treason is only a matter of timing. And 1948 was that pivotal year, not only for the answering of the Soviet Jewish question, but also because Stalin had come to believe that the old guard of the MGB (i.e., the feared Soviet repressive security organs and precursor of the KGB) and its Minister, Victor S. Abakumov, could no longer be trusted.
The security chief and former head of SMERSH ("Death to Spy"; military counter-intelligence, death-squad units during World War II) knew too much. He was, like many of his predecessors, such as Nikolai Yezhov and Genrikh Yagoda, simply expendable. He would be charged with being a protector of the nonexistent Jewish underground, even though, just recently, Abakumov had arrested and wiped out the Jewish Antifascist committee.
For good measure, the communist officials involved in "the Leningrad Affair," who had already been executed would be added to the developing plan and linked to the Jewish Doctors' Plot as well. These officials had been arrested and executed simply because they had had the temerity of staging a trade fair in Leningrad without Stalin's permission!
Stalin also believed that the USSR was becoming stagnant. The Russian people had been overcome with "thoughtlessness," losing sight of "wreckers" and failing to "unmask enemies of the people" in their midst. Even the members of the Politburo, his close inner circle, "could no longer see the enemy in front of their noses." "What," Stalin asked them, "would they do without him?" And the MGB security officers had become "waiters in white gloves." And to Minister Semyon Ignatiev (who had succeeded Abakumov), he yelled, "If you want to be Chekists, take off your gloves. You are degenerating into ordinary nincompoops!"
The trigger for the plot against the Jewish physicians was the death from a heart attack of A. A. Zhdanov, a leading member of the politburo and Stalin's Minister of Culture and the Arts, in August of 1948, followed by the letters of denunciation of Dr. Lidia Timashuk, alleging that Zhdanov's medical treatment was criminal. The Kremlin doctors led by Professor P. Yegorov were implicated. These physicians, as it turned out, were not Jewish but Russian physicians, part of the Soviet nomeklatura that even included Stalin's own personal physician, Professor V. N. Vinogradov. But just recently, Professor Vinogradov had the temerity to recommend to Stalin that he should step down as head of government for health reasons (e.g., cardiovascular disease and high blood pressure), a grave mistake!
As the accusations mounted and the nightmare unfolded, imaginary plots were uncovered (under torture); gradually the denunciations came to include the necessary Jewish physicians, Drs. S. Karpai and Y. G. Etinger, the latter the most eminent physician in Russia.
But it took time, Stalin had to connect the threads is his own mind, and the MGB had to do his bidding. By December of 1952 and January of 1953, Stalin was ready to act, and he ordered the arrest of the doctors, whom he called "criminals in white coats." He ordered the MGB to "beat them with death blows" until they confessed of being part of his invented grand conspiracy, a world Jewish conspiracy.
The trial against the MGB "nincompoops" (most of them, but not all Jewish) was to simultaneously take place in close session, while the Doctors' were to be used in open show trials to make the nation aware of the vast conspiracy threatening mother Russia. What was this conspiracy? A vast plot by a Jewish underground network directed by the American and British intelligence services to annihilate the Kremlin leaders, including the vozdh himself, his son Vasili and his daughter Svetlana--- and to overthrow the Soviet government.
How this vast conspiracy was invented by Stalin and unraveled by the authors is the subject of this book. I don't want to reveal more of the plot because I don't want to spoil it by unwrapping the diabolical enigma contained within the dark recesses of Stalin's multidimensional mind. The Jewish Doctors' Plot was really Stalin's concocted plan against the Jewish physicians and the Russian nation, for his own ulterior, political motives, and it was not just anti-Semitism and paranoia. He wanted to unleash a new reign of terror in Russia and perhaps even commence World War III before his own health failed him.
Let us only say that Stalin had several conspiratorial threads and objectives going on simultaneously in his own mind, and only he was privy to how they interconnected in his master plan. These threads were remote events, separated in space and time, but they would converge, when the time to act was right, and then heads would fall.
Stalin wanted to replicate the times of the great purges and the Red Terror of the terrible 1930s, to arouse the stagnant Soviet nation and preserve his power. Illegitimate power can only be preserved in a climate of fear and terror, and Stalin was a master in creating such environment for the perpetuation of his own power.
I highly recommend this book for history buffs, Soviet scholars, and avid readers of Stalin and his time, as well as students and academicians in the field of the social and biological sciences. Doctors, nurses, and health personnel will be enchanted with this book and pleased with the incorporation of the secret document entitled "The History of the illness of J. V. Stalin." This bonus material, summarized in the penultimate chapter, describes the clinical course of Stalin's final illness and death (March 1-5, 1953).
Moreover, as a final treat, this bonus document adds forensic evidence to the suspicion that Stalin may have been poisoned by members of his own inner circle, who also feared for their own lives. The only detractions in this otherwise highly recommended book is that it is at times slightly repetitive, and although it is well-annotated and contains a nice glossary and chronology, it has no illustrations, for which I have, regrettably, given it 4 stars rather than 5. These are minor detractions, and I again recommend for you to get this book and read it!
Miguel A. Faria, Jr., M.D. is the author of Cuba in Revolution---Escape From a Lost Paradise (2002)






