Vyacheslav Molotov
Vyacheslav Mikhailovich Molotov (February 25, 1890 - November 8, 1986) was a Soviet politician.
|
| Molotov (left) and Stalin at the Yalta Conference |
Born in
Kukarka,
Russia, Molotov in
1906 joined the
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. He was, along with
Alexander Shlyapnikov, the senior
Bolshevik in
Petrograd at the time of the
February Revolution as figures such as
Lenin were still in exile. After what appears to be an
odyssey through the landscape of geographic and political Russia including an important role in the
October Revolution and editing the newspaper
Pravda for a while, he started working under
Joseph Stalin in
1922. At the eve of
World War II, he became
People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs (Foreign Minister). After
British-
French-
Soviet talks held in August of 1939 failed, he negotiated the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact with his
German counterpart,
Joachim von Ribbentrop.
Molotov died on November 8, 1986, in Moscow, USSR, two years after the Communist Party rehabilitated him for his involvement in an attempted coup in 1957.
The Molotov cocktail is named after him, because this weapon was created by the Finnish Army when he served as Commissar for Foreign Affairs the time of the Russo-Finnish War 1939-1940.