288. Vishlev,
289. Beria wrote: “In many places along the border the Germans have concentrated pontoons, wooden and inflatable boats. The greatest number of them can be found on the Brest-Lvov salient. Work continues on the mounting of defensive installations near the borders, mostly at night. Leaves for soldiers of German army units have been forbidden. Moreover, information has been received about the relocation of German troops from Budapest and Bucharest on an axis toward the borders of the USSR.” Iampol’skii et al.,
290. “Nakanune voiny (1941 g.),” 206; Iampol’skii et al.,
291. Iampol’skii et al.,
292. Iampol’skii et al.,
293. Volkogonov papers, Hoover Institution Archives, container 6 (Blokhin and Samoilovich). Kuznetsov requested more funding in connection with shifting the navy to combat footing from July 1. Solonin, “Tri plana tovarishcha Stalina,” 57 (citing GARF, f. R-8418, op. 25, d. 481, l. 32–33: June 4). Further, on June 4, Kaiser Wilhelm II died peacefully in Dutch exile at age eighty-two; the Reich Commissioner for the Occupied Netherlands laid a wreath in Hitler’s name. “There is no doubt that the Kaiser had the best intentions,” Goebbels instructed the Nazi press, “but . . . the decisive factor in history is not goodwill but great ability.” Boelcke,
294. Naumov,
295. Omsk would not get equipment or shelving until late 1944 (around the time some materials would begin to be returned to Moscow). Vinogradov, “Istoriia formirovaniia arkhiva VChK,” 37. Large numbers of files are still there.
296. Boelcke,
297. Cripps arrived in London on June 11, by way of Stockholm, where the general director of the Swedish foreign ministry, taken aback at Cripps’s insistence on secret German-Soviet negotiations, shared details of Swedish intercepts of Wehrmacht orders to troops in Norway for an invasion of the USSR. The Swedish official stressed a coming attack in the week of June 20–25. Gorodetsky,
298. Samuelson,
299. Lota,
300. Pavlov, “Ot ‘Iunkersa’ 1941 k Tsessne 1987”; Kuznetsov, “Krutye povoroty,” esp. no. 6 (1993): 79; Stepanov, “O masshtabakh repressii,” no. 5: 62; Medvedev,
301. Stalin arrested the family members of the military men he executed, but when one of his behind-the-lines saboteurs was killed in the line of duty, the despot awarded a 25,000-ruble cash award to the family and a pension to the widow of 500 rubles per month (the salary of the deceased). Khaustov, “Deiatel’nost’ organov,” 261–2 (TsA FSB, f. 3, op. 4, d. 105, l. 205).