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Chapter 491 Easily crushed

The plenary meeting of the Central Presidium is held in November every year, usually studying the problems that arise in the year. Sometimes Khrushchev will make some personnel adjustments. This year, Khrushchev actually wanted to talk about the agricultural issue when convening a meeting, which was already a difficult problem for the Soviet Union. However, if such a thing happens, the agricultural issue must be postponed before it is discussed. There is no problem that can be compared with the unity of the Party.

Before entering the Kremlin, Selov's special car stopped from the door and went in after no abnormality was confirmed. The Kremlin garrison was very important in Selov's mind. This was not to put a few commanders and leaders with their own people. Although he was the chief of these people in the name of the KGB Chairman, the people in the Kremlin were the supreme leadership of the Soviet Union. It was impossible to make the commanders of the garrison without obeying orders.

The Kremlin garrison troops can also be used to capture him at appropriate times. So even if the hidden line is buried, it is still unreliable. Selov must lay the hidden line among ordinary soldiers. Every year, he will install more than 200 teams into the Kremlin garrison troops. These people have legal identities, but in fact they are all blank people who came out of the Seven Major Agents City. They arranged an identity with the KGB and then entered the Kremlin garrison troops to serve, and replaced once every two years. After serving, they were sent abroad or found a position in the country to continue to do spy work.

As a person who is not very good at math, Selov relies on his pretty good memory to memorize the list of these people in his mind. Even Valia doesn't know about this. Today, everything is normal in the Kremlin. After encouraging him for a few words, he continued to get in the car and go to the conference hall of the Central Presidium.

After getting off the car, Selov stood in front of the building, but the light of his eyes saw the second secretary's car slowly coming from another direction. He quietly took out a medicine bottle from his pocket, took out two things that seemed to be pills and stuffed them into his mouth, and entered the building with a expressionless face.

"Chernenko, have you seen Selov's actions?" Brezhnev asked with all this in his eyes.

"Have you heard of what Selov has?" Obviously, as a secretary, Chernenko, was qualified. He did not need anyone to teach him about his words and expressions. He also saw what Brezhnev saw.

"Selokov said that sleeping pill bottles were found in the garbage dumped in the KGB President's office." Brezhnev revealed this news, which surprised Chernenko. "Selokov was only 37 years old. Will he take medicine regularly?"

"We, the president of the KGB, go abroad more frequently than anyone else. Maybe it's the jet lag that's not as good as the jet lag?" Brezhnev calmly put forward an idea. As early as when he was the director of the General Administration of Military Administration, Selov had entered the KGB General Hospital for treatment. Although the specific matters were strictly kept secret, it was not a secret to hospitalization. Then he began to exercise frantically, and the entire Rubiy Yangka knew the intensity of this exercise.

Linking the two things, Brezhnev believes that Selov should have serious insomnia, which is to the point where medications must be used to control it. As for high-intensity exercise every year, it may be to consume energy and make the body exhausted. Physical workers know that if you do physical exercise all day during the day, it is easier to enter your dreams at night.

After two sentences, Brezhnev got off the car and entered the building with Selov. Sherov looked calm when he entered earlier, chewing the milk candy in his mouth that looked like pills. He just ate two pieces of candy, and he was the chairman of the KGB. He has understood this kind of thing over the years. As for why others think about him, if someone asks about his physical condition, the answer he will naturally get from him is that his health is not as good as it is. Anyway, Selov has not lie, and it is your own business to believe it or not.

This meeting of the Central Presidium was actually destined from the beginning. The two people found out were actually not qualified to challenge. So what about the Central Secretary in charge of the organization? The opponent is the First Secretary and Chairman of the Council of Ministers. The collision of this level should be similar to that of Selov's beating his son, and it is destined to be a tragedy.

Khrushchev wanted to deal with a member of the Central Presidium without any effort. This could be seen from the fact that Khrushchev could not hear any objection during meetings. Except for Kozlov and Suslov, basically no one would face to face with Khrushchev. Brezhnev and others just protested after Khrushchev calmed down, making Khrushchev respect other members of the Central Presidium.

As usual, he talked about the agricultural issue. Khrushchev changed his tone and guided the issue of unity within the party. He fiercely criticized some members of the Central Presidium for setting up small circles. The intensity made everyone look at each other and his heart was filled with tension. Almost most members of the Central Presidium were dissatisfied with Khrushchev on some issues, and they themselves didn't know who Khrushchev was referring to.

Khrushchev's roar resounded in the conference room, and he also hooked back the soul of Selov, who was drowsy when he was listening to agricultural issues. He turned his head and saw Khrushchev standing in front of the rostrum, and was excited to blame certain things. "Some comrades were in charge of organizational work, but they used this work to do things that were harmful to the country and the party. This is a very bad criminal act. Do you want to oppose me? I am a person who has lived in the Stalin era. I don't want to use that method, but it does not mean that I can't do anything. Comrade Ignatov's behavior is absolutely not tolerated. This is a betrayal of the party and the country."

"Podgorne, I trust you so much. In several contacts between Ignatov and you, you did not tell me Ignatov's dissatisfaction. What's going on?" Khrushchev gasped hard after speaking, and the eyes of other members of the Central Presidium fell on Podgorne. They knew that the worst result was that Podgorne's political career ended, and the choice between Khrushchev and Podgorne was self-evident.

Just like Selov's guess, although Podgorne refuted excitedly, he was drawn by everyone almost at the beginning, saying that he had not betrayed Khrushchev. At this time, Khrushchev raised his hand and asked Selov to come up, and he got to the side and said, "I will not frame any member of the Central Presidium."

Selov, who had been wearing a plain expression, stood in the position where Khrushchev had just stood and took out a stack of documents from his briefcase. "On August 16, Ignatov had a conversation with the secretary of the Tambov Prefecture Party Committee during his vacation in the Black Sea, and expressed dissatisfaction with many of the policies of the First Secretary in his words."

"On August 19th, the person who was talking to the Tomsk Prefecture Prefecture Party Committee Secretary accused the First Secretary of the mistakes in agricultural reform and said that the First Secretary's reform in agriculture was a mess."

"August 22 is the Industrial Secretary of the Kaluga Prefecture Committee. August 23, August 25..." Selov continued to express his expression without expression, then paused for a moment and looked at the members of the Central Presidium, took out the order issued by Khrushchev and read it, "Ignatov's problem has been hindered and has been separated from the KGB's authority, and ordered the National Security Committee to continue to investigate Ignatov's problem. On September 3, Khrushchev, the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Soviet Union and Chairman of the Council of Ministers."

After reading, Selov, who said he had nothing to do with him, continued, "Since August, Ignatov and Podgorne met with the Central Secretary of the Podgorne six times, four of which the KGB had obtained a record of conversation between the two. It can be confirmed that Comrade Podgorne and clearly know that Ignatov spread dissatisfaction remarks." He paused and looked at Podgorne and asked, "Comrade Central Secretary, do you need me to read your chat records?"

Podgorne knew clearly what they were talking about that day. In fact, dissatisfaction with Khrushchev was common and he would talk about this issue in private. However, Ignatov was the person on the blacklist in Selov's mind, and he was more surprised to find out that he didn't know how to hide it, so he was discovered by Selov.

No matter how many people there were on the other side, it was the same for Selov this time. Nothing could change his determination to continue to hold his thighs. At this time, Ignatov jumped out and could only let Selov borrow the head and get some military merit first.

At this point, Podgorne also knew that his political career was over and said in a very dissatisfied tone, "Is it normal for the first secretary to use intelligence departments to monitor the activities of cadres?" Then he pointed his finger at Selov and shouted loudly, "You are just a wolf raised by Khrushchev."

Shouldn't it be a tiger? Selov's eyelids didn't move any longer during the whole process. The high-ranking secretary of the central organization was gone. All that was left was the wailing of the defeated dog. After Podgorne finished venting, he said lightly, "There is no warrant of the First Secretary, and the KGB has no right to investigate. There is no evidence of the attempt to coup, which is Ignatov's business, but you should not hide it from the First Secretary."
Chapter completed!
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