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In December 1945, Bokov and Shteinberg received a film from the GFF. It featured a kidnapped Red Army private named [[Nikolai Sergeyevich Golovko]] reciting GFF demands that the USSR withdraw from Germany. Bokov quickly acknowledged that Golovko was doomed, since the USSR had no intention of retreating. Bokov suggested that three of the Werewolves the USSR had in custody should be subjected to torture, decapitated, castrated, and the mutilated parts be left where their comrades could find them. Bokov personally oversaw the executions, and left the heads and testicles at an eatery in Berlin.
 
In December 1945, Bokov and Shteinberg received a film from the GFF. It featured a kidnapped Red Army private named [[Nikolai Sergeyevich Golovko]] reciting GFF demands that the USSR withdraw from Germany. Bokov quickly acknowledged that Golovko was doomed, since the USSR had no intention of retreating. Bokov suggested that three of the Werewolves the USSR had in custody should be subjected to torture, decapitated, castrated, and the mutilated parts be left where their comrades could find them. Bokov personally oversaw the executions, and left the heads and testicles at an eatery in Berlin.
   
A few weeks later, on New Year's Eve, Bokov and Shteinberg both developed a nasty case of the flu. Initially, both men were extremely disappointed. Bokov had planned on spending the evening in frank drunken debauchery in the Schloss Cecilienhof. However, he soon had cause to be grateful for the illness, as the GFF struck again, poisoning the Russians' celebratory spirits with wood alcohol. This resulted in the deaths of several key Soviet military and NKVD officials, including Marshal [[Georgy Zhukov (Iron Heart)|Georgy Zhukov]].
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A few weeks later, on New Years Eve, Bokov and Shteinberg both developed a nasty case of the flu. Initially, both men were extremely disappointed. Bokov had planned on spending the evening in frank drunken debauchery. However, he soon had cause to be grateful for the illness, as the GFF struck again, poisoning the Russians' celebratory spirits with wood alcohol. This resulted in the deaths of several key Soviet military and NKVD officials, including Marshal [[Georgy Zhukov (Iron Heart)|Georgy Zhukov]].
   
 
Bokov spent early 1946 trying to determine who the had poisoned the party, all to no avail. The Russians had been careless about listing the suppliers of the liquor and who served that night. The USSR intensified punitive measures against Germans generally, but quietly gave up on finding the specific culprit. For his own part, Bokov realized in Spring, 1946, that the GFF were indeed playing a numbers game.
 
Bokov spent early 1946 trying to determine who the had poisoned the party, all to no avail. The Russians had been careless about listing the suppliers of the liquor and who served that night. The USSR intensified punitive measures against Germans generally, but quietly gave up on finding the specific culprit. For his own part, Bokov realized in Spring, 1946, that the GFF were indeed playing a numbers game.
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