After occupying Lithuania, the Soviet Union first arrested and imprisoned members of the Lithuanian government and later other government operatives. Lithuanian Foreign Minister Juozas Urbsys spent 13 years in prisons in Tambov, Saratov, Moscow, Kirov, Gorky, Ivanov, Vladimir, and spent 11 of those years in solitary confinement. After Stalin’s death, the cases of political prisoners were reviewed. In 1954, J. Urbsys and Mrs. M. Urbsys were released from prison, and returned to their homeland in 1956. Urbsys had to live on a pension of 50 rubles and translations from the French language, which were commissioned by the Fiction Publishing House. After returning from prisons and The Gulag, former Lithuanian state figures, including J. Urbsys, were monitored by KGB agents, and they were subjected to various sanctions to compel the service of Soviet propaganda and to denigrate the achievements of an independent Lithuania.
The historically in this issue is extremely limited – the testimony of J. Urbsys, about the confiscation of Klaipeda from Lithuania in the trial organized by the Berlin High ranking Hitlerite Officer Hans Globke, was the main focus. The main source of the investigation is the first time in Lithuanian history of the use of J. Urbsys’ records of visits by KGB employees and journalists carrying out their tasks, and publishing staff. The former minister wrote in calendars and notebooks information on the visits and suggestions of such visitors. Chronology of inscriptions were from 1960 to 1978. The chronological gaps in events were filled in with the memories of the people who knew Mr Urbsys.
In order to force Mr Urbsys to write an article useful to Soviet propaganda, the KGB also used the services of journalists, the heads of the Kaunas Executive Committee or Soviet intelligence agents under the guise of Soviet “diplomats”. As an experienced diplomat, Mr Urbsys sought to treat them diplomatically, but at the same time adhere to his principles. This helped him avoid compromising other former national figures (e.g. Z. Toliusis) with the KGB in the press.
The purpose of this article is to show for what purpose and methods the KGB attempted to use the last Lithuanian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Juozas Urbsys, to reveal what tactics the former foreign minister followed in order not to become a tool of the KGB.
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