Litvinov, Maksim Maksimovich

Litvinov, Maksim Maksimovich

▪ Soviet diplomat
original name Meir Walach
born July 17 [July 5, Old Style], 1876, Białystok, Pol.
died Dec. 31, 1951, Moscow, Russian S.F.S.R.
 Soviet diplomat and commissar of foreign affairs (1930–39), who was a prominent advocate of world disarmament and of collective security with the Western powers against Nazi Germany before World War II.

      Having been influenced by Marxism while serving in the Imperial Russian Army, Litvinov joined the Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party in 1898. He was arrested for his revolutionary activity in 1901 but escaped and fled to Great Britain (1902). Aligned with the Bolshevik faction after 1903, Litvinov was involved in party activities throughout Europe.

      With the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia (October 1917), Litvinov was appointed diplomatic representative in London. Arrested in October 1918 for engaging in propaganda activities, he was released the following January in exchange for Robert Bruce Lockhart, the British journalist who led a special mission to the Soviet Union in 1918. Litvinov then returned to Russia and joined the Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. He achieved prominence when he led the Soviet delegation to the preparatory commission for the League of Nations' World Disarmament Conference (1927–30) and proposed sweeping disarmament programs. Having become commissar for foreign affairs (July 21, 1930), he was the principal Soviet delegate to the World Disarmament Conference held at Geneva in 1932. He also led the Soviet delegation to the World Economic Conference in London (1933) and conducted negotiations for establishing diplomatic relations between the Soviet Union and the United States (1934).

      When the power of Nazi Germany became a threat, Litvinov urged the League of Nations to make plans for collective resistance against Germany (1934–38) and negotiated anti-German treaties with France (signed May 2, 1935) and Czechoslovakia (signed May 16, 1935). The Western democracies' appeasement of Germany eventually prompted the Soviet leaders to change their policy and dismiss Litvinov, who was Jewish and closely identified with the anti-German position (May 3, 1939), before concluding the German-Soviet Treaty of Nonaggression (August 1939). Litvinov returned to active duty in 1941 after the Germans invaded the Soviet Union, serving first as ambassador to the United States (November 1941–August 1943), then as deputy commissar for foreign affairs. He retired in August 1946.

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Universalium. 2010.

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