Wilhelm Zaisser
Wilhelm Zaisser (
June 20,
1893-
March 3,
1958) was head of the
East German Ministry for State Security or
Stasi from
1950 to
1953.
Born in
Gelsenkirchen, Zaisser studied to become a teacher from
1910 to
1913 in
Essen. When
World War I began a year later, Zaisser entered the
German Army. Upon leaving the service in
1918, Zaisser joined the
USPD and in
1919 returned to Essen, where he became a school teacher. During this time period, Zaisser became an active
Communist and after the
Kapp Putsch took place in
1920, a military leader of the fledgling
Red Ruhr Army. Zaisser's activities in the Red Ruhr Army led to his arrest and dismissal as a teacher in
1921. After his release, Zaisser worked for the
KPD as a propagandist. From
1921 to
1922, Zaisser edited the "Ruhr Echo" and the "
Bergischen Voice of the People." In
1923, Zaisser entered the KPD intelligence service and worked actively against the
French occupation forces in the
Ruhr. Zaisser's efficient work caused him to be sent to
Moscow a year later, where he received political and military training.
After returning to
Germany in
1924, Zaisser became one of the leading intelligence officials of the KPD, working directly for its
Central Committee. Throughout the
1920s, Zaisser was a military-political leader and instructor for the KPD in such areas as the
Rhine,
Westphalia, and
Berlin. He also worked abroad for the
Red Army and
USSR Intelligence Service from
1925 to
1926 as a military advisor to
Syria and
North Africa. Starting in
1927, Zaisser worked almost exclusively for the Executive Committee of the
Comintern, serving as a military advisor to
China (
1927-
1930) and the Czech Army (
1930-
1932). His work earned him membership in the Russian Communist Party in
1932 and
Soviet citizenship in
1940. In
1936, Zaisser traveled to
Spain and assumed the name "Gomez," where on behalf of the Russians he became a military advisor to the Spanish People's Army. Zaisser quickly achieved the rank of
brigadier general and in
1937, he became leader of all the pro-Republican international forces operating in Spain. Following the end of the Spanish Civil War in
1938, Zaisser returned to Moscow and resumed working for the Comintern. During and after
World War II, Zaisser taught anti-
fascist training courses to German
Prisoners of War.
In
1947, Zaisser returned to Germany and joined the
Socialist Unity Party. Zaisser's career took off rapidly soon afterwards, and by
1948 he was Minister of the Interior and Deputy Minister-President of
Saxony-Anhalt. From
1949 to
1954, Zaisser served as a representative in the
Volkskammer and in
1950 worked on military and tactical issues at the Marx-Engels-Lenin-Stalin Institute, a facility to which very few non-Soviets had access. In
1950, Zaisser gained membership in
East Germany's
Politburo and the
Central Committee of the
SED, thus becoming one of the most powerful men in the country. In the same year, Zaisser was awarded the Karl Marx Medal and appointed Director of the Ministry of State Security (better known as the
Stasi). Using his vast knowledge of intelligence work, Zaisser built the Stasi into a powerful organization. Zaisser controlled the ministry until July
1953, at which time he was dismissed. Zaisser's removal came as a result of differences he had with
Walter Ulbricht, who plotted to consolidate his power and remove Zaisser and others who posed a threat to his career from national prominence. Zaisser's downfall was also hastened by his power hungry deputy,
Erich Mielke, who actively worked to tarnish Zaisser's standing in the party. Ultimately, Zaisser and others in the Politburo and the Central Committee were accused of being hostile to the party and removed from their positions. Ulbricht also accused Zaisser of not using the repressive power of the Stasi to a sufficient extent during a rebellion against the East German government on
July 17,
1953. At any rate, Zaisser was stripped of all his posts and classified as an enemy of the party. Zaisser subsequently spent his final years working as a translator at the Dietz Publishing House and serving at the Institute of
Marxism and
Leninism in Berlin. He died in obscurity in
Berlin in
1958, and was posthumously rehabilitated by the
Party of Democratic Socialism in
1993.
See also
*
Workers' Uprising of 1953 in East Germany