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Serghei Nicolau
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Serghei Nicolau (born Sergey Nikonov; 22 September 1905–1999) was a communist espionage chief and a general.


Biography
An , Nicolau was born on 22 September (or 5 November) 1905 in , in the Bessarabia Governorate of the , the son of Ion and Ecaterina. According to other sources, he was born in , Duchy of Bukovina, . He also called himself at various times Serghei Nicanov or Sergiu Nicolau.

Like his future boss Emil Bodnăraș, he was recruited by the . This occurred in 1922, when he was sent to study in Belgium and France as an agent of the Comintern. His studies abroad, in and , were paid for, and in the latter city, he was part of the local French Communist Party leadership. In 1931, on behalf of the Soviet Intelligence Service, he came to Romania, where he became a member of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR). He was expelled from the Chemistry faculty of the University of Iași, for attending meetings of the banned PCR. At some point, he deserted from the Romanian Army and left for the . In June 1935, Nicolau took over the management of a spy ring that operated on the territory of . In December 1937 he was arrested with the entire ring (including his brothers, Alexandru and Valerian Nicanov) and was sentenced to hard labor for life for having collected and transmitted to the GRU secret military information. In prison, he spent part of his sentence alongside another NKVD agent, Gheorghe Pintilie. While at , the two belonged to a group of Soviet agents around future PCR leader Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej. Biografiile nomenklaturii , at the Institute for the Investigation of Communist Crimes in Romania site

After the coup d'état of 23 August 1944, Nicolau was placed in various positions within the Allied Control Commission (Soviet side). During that time, he re-established contact with colonel Nikolai Petrovich Zudov, the chief of NKVD operations in Romania. Following the arrest of , he was appointed Director General of the Romanian Secret Intelligence Service (SSI), which he headed from 9 January 1947 to 6 January 1953. Guided by Bodnăraș, he worked to recruit loyal agents, both within the agency and in the Romanian Army.Oprea, p.31 In consultation with the local Soviet espionage bureau, the pair reorganized the SSI into four bureaus: foreign information, supervision of diplomatic missions in , domestic information and counterespionage activities.Oprea, p.31-2 His chief of staff, Mikhail Gavrilovich, and his personal security guard, Valerian Buchikov, were both MGB officers. In October 1949, the former communist Minister of Justice Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu and his wife, Elena, were handed over to the SSI for questioning on the personal order of Gheorghiu-Dej, acting on instructions from Aleksandr Sakharovsky, the chief MGB adviser to the Ministry of the Interior. Nicolau tasked Petre (Petr) Gonceariuc, the head of the Counterespionage Directorate of the SSI, with Pătrășcanu's interrogation, with the purpose of establishing his connection with foreign espionage agencies through the intermediary of .

The Soviet handlers were not content with only training and assisting officers, but they actively started recruiting some of them. Nicolau protested this practice to Gheorghiu-Dej, who refused to intervene, since he was seeking at the time the support of the Soviets in his campaign against the faction of the PCR. As a result, Nicolau was removed as head of the SSI on 6 January 1953, and replaced by ; according to Pintilie, he was punished by the Soviets "in some way that remained between them." On 1 April 1953, Nicolau transferred to the information services of the Ministry of Defense. From March 1954 until 27 November 1960, Nicolau, who held the rank of lieutenant general, led the military espionage bureau of the Romanian General Staff, after which he was head of the Control Department at the Ministry of National Defence, until he retired in December 1963.

He was married to Nina, née Bogaliubov (born 28 February 1906 in the Russian Empire), herself a Soviet agent in the 1930s. In the early 1950s, she was Gheorgiu-Dej's personal secretary. The two lived in the Primăverii district of Bucharest (a neighborhood largely restricted to the communist ), on Grădina Bordei Street (now Jean Monnet Street), right across from where Bodnăraș resided.


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