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Ramón Mercader

Jaime Ramón Mercader del Río Hernández (February 7, 1914 - October 18, 1978) was a Spanish Communist who served as a foreign agent of the NKVD during Joseph Stalin's time as ruler of the USSR. In that role, he became famous as the murderer of Stalin's great rival, Leon Trotsky.

Mercader was born in 1914 in Barcelona, but spent much of his youth in France with his mother, Eustacia María Caridad del Río Hernández, after his parents separated. As a young man, he embraced Communism, helping leftist organizations in Spain during the mid-1930s. He was briefly imprisoned for his activities, but was released when a left-wing government took control of the country in 1936.

By this time, his mother had become a Soviet agent herself, and Ramón followed in her footsteps, traveling to Moscow shortly before the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War to train in the arts of sabotage, guerrilla warfare and assassination. He was given the codename "GNOME" by his superiors.

His bosses at the NKVD selected him to assassinate Trotsky, who had left the USSR many years earlier after losing a power struggle to Stalin, but who had continued to antagonize the Soviet leader with his writings from exile. In October 1939, Mercader slipped into Mexico with a fake passport identifying himself as "Jacques Mornard ", a businessman.

An elaborate trap set by Mercader and other NKVD operatives in Mexico failed on May 24, 1940, and a second attempt was planned. This time, "Jacques Mornard", who had avoided raising suspicion during the first attempt on Trotsky's life, befriended an unmarried secretary of Trotsky's. Through her, he began to meet with Trotsky personally, in the guise of a Canadian supporter of Trotsky's ideas. On August 20, Mercader fatally wounded Trotsky with an ice pick in his study at his home in Coyoacán (a neighborhood in Mexico City). Trotsky's guards burst in and nearly killed Mercader, but their leader ordered them to spare his life, yelling "Do not kill him! This man has a story to tell."

He was turned over to the Mexican authorities, to whom he refused to give up his real identity. Nevertheless, he was convicted of murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison. It was not until August 1953 that his true identity was discovered, and his NKVD connections were never revealed until after the fall of the Soviet Union. After the first few years in prison, requested release on parole, which was denied by Dr. Jesus Siordia and criminologist Q. Cuaron. He was released from Mexico City's Lecumberri prison on May 6, 1960 and moved to Havana, where Fidel Castro's Communist government welcomed him. In 1961, he moved to the USSR and was awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union medal, one of the country's highest decorations. He split time between Cuba and the USSR for the rest of his life, revered by the KGB (the successor to the NKVD), and died in Havana in 1978.

He is buried in Moscow's Kuntsevo Cemetery and has a place of honor in the KGB's museum in the Russian capital.

01-04-2007 01:16:19
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