Abstract:
Veteran Soviet statesman and longtime Politburo member Anastas Ivanovich Mikoyan
(1895-1978) is perhaps best known in both the West and the post-Soviet space as a master
of international diplomacy. Less well-known is the pivotal role that Mikoyan – once a loyal
Stalinist – played in dismantling and rejecting the authoritarian Stalinist state after the death
of Iosif Stalin in 1953. Mikoyan served as the Kremlin’s leading reformer on nationality
matters under the leadership of Nikita Khrushchev (1894-1971) during the Thaw (1953-
1964). A native son of Sanahin, Armenia, he believed that the ethnic diversity of the USSR
was a strength that should be embraced, not a danger that needed to be suppressed. This
study contends that Khrushchev’s nationality policy, as guided by Mikoyan, represented a
significant departure from the state violence and centralization characteristic of Stalin’s
approach toward nationalities during the height of his power.
That departure was reflected in Mikoyan’s work in several ways, including (1) the
rehabilitation of repressed cultural leaders among nationalities; (2) Mikoyan’s expressed
effort to combat both national nihilism and national chauvinism; (3) patronage for
nationality republics (as seen in Mikoyan’s work in Armenia); (4) the use of historical
narratives to enforce aspects of the nationality policy; (5) the return of deported North
Caucasus nationalities; (6) the development of a new nationality policy in the 1961 CPSU
Party Program; and (7) the drafting of a new constitution advocating greater devolution to
national republics, emphasizing their rights vis-à-vis Moscow.