Добавить в корзинуПозвонить
Найти в Дзене
Denis Karagodin

Я обратил внимание на то, что снос мемориала жертвам политических репрессий в Томске – 19 апреля – совпал с датой основания СМЕРШ

Возможно, это совпадение. Но, в российской политической аналитике для таких совпадений существует вполне устойчивый термин — «чекистский юморок». Сигнал считан. A Chekist Wink on SMERSH’s Anniversary: The April 19, 2026 Demolition of the Stone of Sorrow The date of the demolition itself introduces an additional layer of possible interpretation. The removal of the Stone of Sorrow memorial — carried out in a controlled manner, with restricted access and indications of coordinated oversight — took place on April 19, coinciding with the anniversary of the establishment of SMERSH (April 19, 1943), a Soviet military counterintelligence organization within the NKVD system (an acronym for “Death to Spies”), tasked with identifying and suppressing suspected enemies and “spies” within the armed forces. Historically, SMERSH has been associated with harsh internal enforcement practices and remains a deeply controversial institution, often viewed ambivalently or negatively in public memory. Whi

Я обратил внимание на то, что снос мемориала жертвам политических репрессий в Томске – 19 апреля – совпал с датой основания СМЕРШ. Возможно, это совпадение. Но, в российской политической аналитике для таких совпадений существует вполне устойчивый термин — «чекистский юморок». Сигнал считан.

A Chekist Wink on SMERSH’s Anniversary: The April 19, 2026 Demolition of the Stone of Sorrow

The date of the demolition itself introduces an additional layer of possible interpretation.

The removal of the Stone of Sorrow memorial — carried out in a controlled manner, with restricted access and indications of coordinated oversight — took place on April 19, coinciding with the anniversary of the establishment of SMERSH (April 19, 1943), a Soviet military counterintelligence organization within the NKVD system (an acronym for “Death to Spies”), tasked with identifying and suppressing suspected enemies and “spies” within the armed forces. Historically, SMERSH has been associated with harsh internal enforcement practices and remains a deeply controversial institution, often viewed ambivalently or negatively in public memory.

While there is no direct evidence that the timing was deliberately chosen as a symbolic reference, the alignment is notable in light of a long-standing Soviet practice of associating actions with historically charged dates — a pattern that continues to resonate within both Soviet-era and their institutional successors operating in the Russian Federation today.

In contemporary Russia, such temporal alignments are most often interpreted — particularly by those familiar with internal cultural codes — as part of an informal symbolic language associated specifically with the Federal Security Service (FSB), the direct institutional successor to the Soviet NKVD. Within Russian analytical and political discourse, this phenomenon is occasionally described as “chekist humor” (чекистский юморок): a subtle, internally legible mode of expression through which the institutional actions of the FSB may acquire additional layers of meaning beyond their formal purpose.

In this context, the coincidence may be read, at least at the level of interpretation — as part of a symbolic repertoire that frames acts of removal in terms of protection, threat, and the identification of internal or external enemies.

Read more:

https://karagodin.com/?p=15822#a-chekist-wink-on-smersh

Support Denis Karagodin’s work with a donation — in ₽, $, €, or crypto — your support makes this work possible!

Subscribe to Denis Karagodin’s channel for updates.