24. Shentalinsky,
25. “Some aspects of the political and moral-psychological situation among members of the Moscow Theatre of Drama and Comedy on the Taganka.” Report submitted to Andropov in July 1978 (k-25, appendix).
26. Solzhenitsyn,
27. See below, chapter 19.
28. The Afghan War will be covered in volume 2.
29. A characteristic example was a plan (document no. 150/S-9195) for agent infiltration into Russian émigré communities to monitor and destabilize dissidents abroad, signed jointly by Kryuchkov and Bobkov (head of the Fifth Directorate), submitted to Andropov on August 19, 1975, and approved by him a few days later; vol. 6, ch. 8, part 6. Kryuchkov now improbably maintains that he “had nothing to do with the struggle against dissent” (Remnick,
30. vol. 10, ch. 3, para. 23.
31. vol. 6, app. 2, parts 3, 4; k-2,323; k-5,169.
32. Since he does not wish to reveal some details of his departure from the Soviet Union to the present Russian security service, Mitrokhin is unwilling to identify the Baltic republic in which he contacted SIS.
33. Kessler,
34. Michael Isikoff, “FBI Probing Soviet Spy Effort, Book Says,”
35. “Fun and Games with the KGB,”
36. The British media also assumed that the KGB defector had gone to the United States. See, for example, “Top US Officials ‘Spied For KGB,’”
37. The first exposure of Hernu’s alleged role as a Soviet Bloc agent was the article by Jérôme Dupuis and Jean-Marie Pontaut, “Charles Hernu était un agent de l’Est,”
38. “Le contre-espionnage français est convaincu que Charles Hernu a été un agent de l’Est,”
39. Since Mitrokhin’s notes, though voluminous, are not comprehensive, the absence of any identifiable reference to Hernu is not proof of his innocence, especially as his initial contacts were, allegedly, with Bulgarian and Romanian intelligence. Hernu’s family insist that he is innocent of the charges against him.
40.
41. Andreas Weber, “Die ‘Grot’ geschluckt: Die Lagepläne zu den KGB-Waffen- und Spreng-stoffdepots in Österreich sind überaus präzise,”
42. t-7,65.
43. See below, chapter 22.
44.
45.
46. ITAR/Tass interview with Yuri Kobaladze, June 19, 1998. Butkov’s memoirs, so far available only in Norwegian, contain much of interest (including KGB documents) on his career in the FCD from 1984 to 1991, but include no reference to Brandt. In 1998, while living in Britain, Butkov was jailed for three years for his involvement in a confidence trick which persuaded companies in Russia and Ukraine to pay 1.5 pounds to enrol employees in a bogus business school in California. “Conman from Suburbia is KGB Defector,”
47. k-26,88.
48. See below, chapter 26.
49. vol. 6, ch. 11, parts 26, 28, 41.
50. Scott Shane and Sandy Banisky, “Lipka Was Wary of FBI’s Spy Trap,”
51. Julia C. Martinez, “Accused Spy Admits Guilt,”
52. Joseph A. Slobodzian, “18-Year Sentence for Ex-Soviet Spy,”
53. The first edition was published in New York by Reader’s Digest Press.
54. vol. 6, ch. 8, part 54.
55. vol. 6, app. 1, part 28.
56. vol. 6, ch. 8, part 4.