Jonas Deksnys
Deksnỹs Jonas (secret participant of the resistance participant Daunoras, Alfonsas-Hektoras and others, Petrauskas of the Soviet security agent) November 18, 1914 22 August 1982Vilnius, a member of the Lithuanian resistance to the Nazi and Soviet occupation regimes. Later, Soviet security agent. In 1933 he joined the Lithuanian Communist Party under K. K. Girnius. 1934-36 worked in Kaunas at The Automatic Elektric EC., Ltd; learned English and German. In 1937-38 he studied at Vytautas Magnus University. In late 1940-mid-1941 imprisoned by Soviet occupation authorities; liberated during the June 1941 anti-Soviet uprising. Until 22 September 1941, the Lithuanian activist front the general secretary. After the establishment of the Lithuanian Freedom Fighters Union , 1942-44, fighter for her newspaper Freedom editor. Representative of the Union in the Supreme Lithuanian Liberation Committee since 25.11.1943 (VLIK), Head of its Information Commission, Editor of Underground Radio Station. Arrested by Gestapo in Kaunas on 01.05.1944, released from US prison on 14.04.1945.
Arriving in Lithuania secretly (and from VLIK) on June 6, 1946, he met with Tauras County partisan commanders and J. Markulis, a representative of the alleged resistance committee in Vilnius (actually a Soviet security agent) , proposed the establishment of an alternative VLIK Resistance Center in Lithuania, the Supreme Committee for the Reconstruction of Lithuania (VLAK). At the initiative of J. Deksnis and J. Markulis, the Supreme Armed Forces Headquarters, a fictitious security-controlled organization, was established at a congress of guerrilla leaders convened in Vilnius on August 12, 1946 (the partisans and J. Deksnys were unaware of this).
With documents provided by J. Markulis, J. Deksnys (accompanied by security major L. Maksimov; J. Deksnys was unaware of this) arrived in Sweden in late 1946 and announced to the Lithuanian diaspora the SLAC and the Alliance for Democratic Resistance. establishment. In early 1947 he convened a conference of the LAC delegation in Kirchheim (Germany), and established the LAC Information Center and the foreign delegation of the Commonwealth Movement in Stockholm; through them, security (J. Deksnis not knowing) abroad misinformed about the situation in Lithuania and divided the diaspora. When the Baden-Baden meeting of 7 July 1948 Resolved to continue the representation of Lithuania's resistance abroad only by VLIK, and after the unveiling of J. Markulis, VLAK activities were terminated, J. Deksnys called the VLAK delegation the Lithuanian Resistance Union and continued to represent Lithuania's resistance abroad.
On May 1, 1949, J. Deksnys, assisted by British intelligence, landed on the Lithuanian coast, where Soviet security guards were arrested. After a long period of ideological processing, it was recruited and used to send radio messages, misinforming Western intelligence and Lithuanian expatriate organizations. He tried to discredit the Lithuanian partisan struggle. Mr Dexney's security sent his intelligence officers abroad. In the 1960s and 1960s, J. Deksnys spy on familiar Lithuanian intellectuals. In the Soviet press, he published articles condemning so-called bourgeois nationalism, the VLIK and his fallacies.