Strictly secret power apparatus to control the Norwegian Communist Party's (NKP) national convention in 1946.
Stalin's code name "Comrade Fillipov."
Commands through the chief of Russian foreign intelligence, Pavel Fitin: involves the leader of the Finnish Communist Party: Ville Pessi. Fitin establishes the necessary secret contacts.
The Politburo of the Russian (Soviet Communist Party) is playing with Kuusinen, Manuilskij, Mihail Suslov. The Central Committee of the Russian Party.
MID (Ministry of Foreign Affairs) Russian Foreign Ministry, Coordinated through Vladimir Dekanosov, Deputy Foreign Minister on October 27, 1945.
Embassies:
The Swedish Russian Embassy in Stockholm: Involves Sven Linderot, who selects delegates to the NKP at their own party congress in May 1946.
Leader of the Swedish Communist Party.
The Norwegian Russian Embassy in Oslo: Important: V. Krjakin, GRU, "Tass correspondent" in Norway also before 1940.
The International Department of the Russian Communist Party: Mihail Suslov - relies on reports "from our ambassadors," should ensure that Sweden's party leader Sven Linderot, the Finnish Ville Pessi, and the Danish Aksel Larsen influence Norwegian comrades against Furubotn: "provide practical advice." According to Kirillov in Moscow, they should "get involved in streamlining the Norwegian party."
The Scandinavian Secretariat in Moscow participates in influencing the NKP's national convention in 1946:
Georg Moltke at the secretariat organizes a false trip to influence the NKP's national convention, authorized by M. Suslov.
Nina Krymova, stenographer for Stalin in the thirties, on May 23, 1946, interpreter for the VOKS (All-Union Society for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries) delegation to Norway in 1946 (cultural organization). Mission: "meet NKP opposition" on April 13, 1946. Comes "accidentally" via Stockholm for a visit to Copenhagen. Meets "delegates" to the NKP's national convention. Influence.
MGB (KGB) operates through agents in various roles. GRU etc.
The Russian Foreign Ministry has both Scandinavian and Russian reporters who provide reports on the progress of the national convention, such as G. Moltke, Rodny Øhman.