Avraami Pavlovich Zavenyagin (1 May 1901 – 31 December 1956; his first name is also sometimes given as AvramorAbraham) was a Soviet politician and an operative who was a leading figure in the Soviet program of nuclear weapons in 1950s.[1][2][3][4]
Zavenyagin was made plant director of the Magnitogorsk Iron and Steel Works in August 1933 and served in that capacity until 1936 when he was appointed the assistant to the People's Commissar of Heavy Industry.[4]
From April 1938 until March 1941, Zavenyagin was in charge of the construction works at NorillaginNorilsk. While there, he established for himself and his subordinates "Zavenyagin's laws of management":[5]
First Law: Maximum performance in inhumane circumstances.
Second Law: salvation (including your own) lies in extraordinary decisions.
Third Law: youth is more an advantage than a disadvantage.
On 8 December 1944, by decree of the State Defense Committee No. 7102 ss/ov, which accelerated geological exploration work for uranium, Zavenyagin was appointed responsible for the search for uranium in the Soviet Union and in the occupied territories; to carry out the search, the Ninth Directorate of the NKVD was deployed. By the same decree, Zavenyagin was appointed responsible for issues of the country's uranium mining and processing complex. He supervised the construction of factories in mining areas.[6]
After the USSR State Defense Order of 20 August 1945 No. 9887ss/ov "On the Special Committee [on the use of atomic energy] under the State Defense Committee," Zavenyagin was responsible for the following areas of work:
He became a member of the special committee and had a voice in resolving all issues within the jurisdiction of the committee.[7]
He became a member of the technical council of a special committee that dealt with issues of scientific research and scientific installations.[7]
From the moment of the formation (20 August 1945) of the First Main Directorate [ru] (PGU), Zavenyagin was its first deputy head[7] and supervised the work of the special contingent.[8]
In the same year, Zavenyagin's headquarters carried out an operation to search for German specialists and export them to the Soviet Union. These were metallurgists, chemists and physicists, including Nikolaus Riehl and Manfred von Ardenne, totalling 70 people in 1945 and over three hundred by 1948. Subsequently, Zavenyagin was responsible for their work.[10]
In June and July 1948, Zavenyagin, together with Igor Kurchatov, supervised the liquidation of two accidents at the first domestic industrial reactor A-1 [ru], having spent a long time in the central reactor hall and being irradiated as a result.[11]
On 19 August 1949, Zavenyagin was appointed responsible for the delivery of the RDS-1 nuclear bomb from KB-11 (now the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Experimental Physics) to the Semipalatinsk test site and for the final assembly of the bomb. On the night of 29 August, in his presence, a neutron initiator piston was installed in the central part of the bomb. Soon after the test, he drove a car to the center of the explosion, where the car got stuck in the dust formed after the explosion, and had to return on foot, receiving a large dose of radiation.[11]
A protégé of Lavrenti Beria,[2] Zavenyagin survived the purge after the death of Joseph Stalin because of a long friendship with Nikita Khrushchev, which dated back to the 1920s. During the Khrushchev era, he headed the Ministry of Medium Machine Building, responsible for nuclear weapons production, for two years. He died of a heart attack in 1956.
For his contribution to the atomic project, by decree of 29 October 1949, Zavenyagin was awarded the title of Hero of Socialist Labor.[12]
A bronze bust of Zavenyagin was installed in accordance with the Regulations on the title of Hero of Socialist Labor in his hometown of Uzlovaya.[14]
A marble bust of Zavenyagin was installed in 1960 on the square named after him in Norilsk. In 1993, it was moved to the administration building of the Norilsk Mining and Metallurgical Combine, and later to the administration foyer (now the main administrative building of the Polar Branch of Norilsk Nickel).[15] In 1976, A memorial plaque was installed on house No. 1 on Zavenyagin Street, Norilsk.[16] A memorial plaque was installed in 2001 for the 100th anniversary of Zavenyagin's birth on the management building of the mining and metallurgical company Norilsk Nickel.[17]
The A.P. Zavenyagin Prize was established in 1981 by the Norilsk MMC and the Taimyr District Trade Union Committee.[18][19]
The icebreaker Abraamiy Zavenyagin escorts sea vessels along the Yenisei to the port of Igarka.[20]
^ abRichard Lee Miller, Under the cloud: the decades of nuclear testing, 1986
^George A. Lopez and Nancy J. Myers, Peace and security: the next generation, 1997
^ abJohn Scott, Behind the Urals: an American worker in Russia's City of Steel, 1942
^"Принципиальный Завенягин" [Principled Zavenyagin]. Donetsk: history, events, facts (in Russian). 2009-05-12. Archived from the original on 2013-06-05. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
^"Знак『Лауреат премии А.П. Завенягина』НК" [Badge "Winner of the A.P. Zavenyagin Prize" NK]. Award Faleristics of Russia (in Russian). 2016-03-04. Archived from the original on 2014-08-20. Retrieved 2024-05-21.
^"Будет и на вашей улице праздник" [There will be a holiday on your street too]. Znak Media Group (in Russian). 2016-11-07. Archived from the original on 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2024-05-21.