- Czesław Kiszczak
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Czesław Kiszczak Prime Minister of the People's Republic of Poland
11th and last PZPR Prime Minister of People's PolandIn office
2 August 1989 – 19 August 1989President Wojciech Jaruzelski Preceded by Mieczysław Rakowski Succeeded by Tadeusz Mazowiecki Minister of Interior of People's Republic of Poland In office
31 July 1981 – 6 July 1990President Wojciech Jaruzelski Prime Minister Wojciech Jaruzelski, Zbigniew Messner, Mieczysław Rakowski, Czesław Kiszczak, Tadeusz Mazowiecki Preceded by Mirosław Milewski Succeeded by Krzysztof Kozłowski Personal details Born 19 October 1925
Roczyny, Second Polish RepublicPolitical party Polish United Workers' Party Profession General Religion Atheist Czesław Kiszczak [ˈt͡ʂɛswaf ˈkiʂt͡ʂak] ( listen) (born 19 October 1925), was a Polish communist-era soldier and Communist politician. A member of the PPR and later the PZPR, during the years of the Polish People's Republic he served as a high ranking officer of the Polish Army, a chief of secret services and Minister of Internal Affairs (MSW) between 1981 and 1990, during the years of the Martial Law in Poland. Associate of Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, he was also the last but one Prime Minister of People's Poland, who served briefly in 1989.[1]
Biography
Born in Roczyny (a part of Gmina Andrychów) near Bielsko-Biała in southern Poland in 1925.[1] From November 1945 soldier in Main Directorate of Information of the Polish Army, then Military Counter-intelligence agency.[1] Also from 1945 member of Polish Workers' Party (PPR) and later Polish United Workers' Party or PZPR. In 1951 he was Chief of Department of Information in 18 infantry division in the city of Ełk, and in 1952 was transfer to Warsaw where he took over position of chief of Department of Information in Directorate of Information of Military District number 1. Later Kiszczak was moved to headquarters of the Ministry of National Defense (Ministerstwo Obrony Narodowej), and become chief of General Section in Department of Finances, and year later (1954) was a student in Academy of General Staff of the Polish Army. In 1957 he was moved to newly formed Counter-intelligence agency the Military Internal Service (WSW – Wojskowa Służba Wewnętrzna). From 1957 to 1965, he was the head of Counter-intelligence for the Navy, and in 1967 become deputy head of WSW.[2]
From the end of the 1960s Kiszczak had occupied top positions in Polish military, and secret services. In 1972 he become the head of 2nd Directorate of General Staff of the Polish Army (Zarząd II Sztabu Generalnego Wojska Polskiego), that was Military Intelligence, he occupied this positions till 1979, and in 1978 he become deputy head of General Staff of the Polish Army. June 1979 Kiszczak had returned to military Counter-intelligence, and till 1981 was the head of Military Internal Service or WSW.
July 1981 he become the Minister of Internal Affairs (Minister Spraw Wewnętrznych) which, beside Ministry of National Defense (MON), was one of biggest and most powerful administrations in Poland, responsible for – Intelligence, Counter-espionage, anti-state activity in country (SB), government protection, confidential communications, supervision of the local governments, militsiya, correctional facilities and fire service. On this position he participated in preparation and realization of martial law declared in Poland on 13 December 1981.[3] He was a member of WRON (short for Military Council of National Salvation, Wojskowa Rada Ocalenia Narodowego), a Military dictatorship quasi-government administering Poland during the martial law (1981–1983). He issued orders for the pacification of the striking miners at the Wujek coalmine. Subsequently in 2004, after the fall of communism, he was judged responsible for the massacre that occurred and sentenced to four years in prison. As part of an amnesty, the sentence was commuted to 2 years suspended prison term.[1] By 6 July 1990, he had been taken off from position as head of MSW. Kiszczak was also the last polish communist party Prime Minister of Poland, a position he served briefly in 1989.[1]
Political offices Preceded by
Mirosław MilewskiMinister of Internal Affairs
1981–1990Succeeded by
Krzysztof KozłowskiPreceded by
Mieczysław RakowskiPrime Minister of Poland
1989Succeeded by
Tadeusz MazowieckiPrime Ministers of Poland Kingdom of Poland (1916–1918) Republic of Poland (1918–1939) Daszyński · Moraczewski · Paderewski · Skulski · Grabski · Witos · Ponikowski · Śliwiński · Nowak · Sikorski · Witos · Grabski · Skrzyński · Witos · Bartel · Piłsudski · Bartel · Świtalski · Bartel · Sławek · Piłsudski · Sławek · Prystor · Jędrzejewicz · Kozłowski · Sławek · Zyndram-Kościałkowski · SkładkowskiPolish government in Exile (1939–1990) Sikorski · Mikołajczyk · Arciszewski · Bór-Komorowski · Tomaszewski · Odzierzyński · Hryniewski · Mackiewicz · Hanke · Pająk · Zawisza · Muchniewski · Urbański · Sabbat · SzczepanikPeople's Republic of Poland (1944–1989) Osóbka-Morawski · Cyrankiewicz · Bierut · Cyrankiewicz · Jaroszewicz · Babiuch · Pińkowski · Jaruzelski · Messner · Rakowski · Kiszczak · MazowieckiRepublic of Poland (1989–present) Mazowiecki · Bielecki · Olszewski · Pawlak · Suchocka · Pawlak · Oleksy · Cimoszewicz · Buzek · Miller · Belka · Marcinkiewicz · Kaczyński · TuskReferences
Categories:- 1925 births
- Living people
- People from Wadowice County
- Polish communists
- Generals of the People's Army of Poland
- Prime Ministers of the People's Republic of Poland
- Deputy Prime Ministers of Poland
- Functionaries of the Stalinist regime in Poland
- Government ministers of Poland
- Polish atheists
- Polish United Workers' Party members
- Polish Workers' Party politicians
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