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Hardcover Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America Book

ISBN: 0300123906

ISBN13: 9780300123906

Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America

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Book Overview

An unprecedented expos of Soviet espionage in the United States during the 1930s and 40s This stunning book, based on KGB archives that have never come to light before, provides the most complete... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Should be read by all government officials

An excellent yet not complete account of Russian spying activities in the US between 1917 and 1955 which continues today.

Communist Spies

I have just finished this magnificent book. It is a welcome anecdote to those in America who prefer for whatever reasons to deny that the Soviets actively pursued U.S. secrets from the inception of the USSR until its final days. Fans of I.F. Stone will not like it. However, this book cannot be read in isolation as the same authors have pursued similar projects, using Soviet archival documents when possible.

AN ALMOST PERFECT SUCCESS

After the fall of the Iron Curtain,serious historians have started to incorporate in their research about the Cold War era the various aspects about intelligence and espionage activities perpetrated by the sides involved in this ideological conflict.It is already a well- established and known fact that the Cold War was also a war of shadows which has had a significant impact on the relations between the East and the West. The current book gives us a fascinating tale about the different activities,plots and machinations woven by the Russian spymasters during the thirties and forties of the previous century. Based on the documents transcribed by Alexander Vassiliev, who was a former KGB employee,the authors describe to what extent the USA was penetrated by and riddled with spies who came in all varieties and from all corners of the United States.Those spies were "men and women, Jews and gentiles,old-stock Americans, etc.While some spies grew up in poverty ,others basked in luxury from their childhoods.Some,like Alger Hiss,were graduates of Ivy Leagues colleges;others were born in Russia and retained a visceral national loyalty." Many of them feared the rise of Fascism;others were disappointed by capitalism, or had strong ideological beliefs in a Communist utopia ,believing they were serving a higher cause. The book has chapters on Alger Hiss, confirming he was a Russian spy.Many famous journallists were employed in this big game, including I.B STONE and Ernest Hemingway(although the last one was a dilettante spy).Some were caught and confessed,(like Klaus Fuchs) and some testified against their comrades(like David Greenglass),but most agents simply lied or took the Fifth Amendment.Other chapters include new information about celebrities recruited by the KGB(such as the sexual gymnast and daughter of the American ambassador to Berlin Martha Dodd )as well as a chapter on the infiltration of the US government. The authors highlight the fact that we should not fall captives to the perception that the KGB operations across the USA were a total success.The Bentley confessions dealt a serious blow to the Russians.True,the KGB stations managed to produce vital information regarding scientific and technological data, which saved the Soviet Union a lot of money and resources ,because as a result, the Russians could build and atomic bomb and and other military equipment.Journalists provided the KGB insights into American diplomatic,military and economic developments and plans.The sub-text of this wonderfully well-researched book is that the American counterintelligence was a failure due to its inability to have a wider perspective on the possible dangers which could have arisen not only from the Germans and the Japanese during World War Two.Thus many words uttered from the mouth of Joseph McCarthy were true and he was not just "seeing Reds under every carpet". Ideology could lead astray many intelligent people,who became blind and were duped by false and nai

Another Chapter in Soviet Espionage

Much like Haynes and Klehr's earlier work, this is a fascinating and meticulously well documented look at Soviet espionage from the 30's and 40's. This book is also short on polemic tirades (refreshingly so) and the authors stick to a "facts only" approach, not making statements that cannot be well supported and documented. There are lengthy sections on the big fish like IF Stone whose covert work for the KGV/NKVD is now documented beyond any doubt and "philosopher" Corliss Lamont (who damn near became a US senator) whose work for the KGB/NKVD while mainly circumstantial is damning. Tepidly unreliable agents like Ernest Hemingway who the KGB eventually gave up on and Robert Oppenheimer the one that despite the Soviet's best efforts, got away are also extensively covered in the book. Unlike their earlier work though, this book contains many pages on some of the lesser well know, but numerous everydayers that the Soviets had in their employment. Overall, a great read for anyone interested in espionage, leftist politics or McCarthyism.

The "Golden-Age" of Soviet espionage in America

Like Hugo's fictional Inspector Javert, historians Haynes and Klehr are dogged in the pursuit of their quarry--American communists who betrayed their country through covert relationships with the KGB in the 1930s and 40s. Nevermind the fact that the Statute of Limitations has long since expired on these crimes, or that the characters themselves were long ago swept into the dust bin of history, the historians have devoted their careers to exposing the perfidy of secret communists, and to hauling their corpses, time and again, before the court of public opinion. It is the historians' investigative spadework and their constrained sense of justice at long last being served which provides the narrative drive to "Spies: The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America." Much of the evidence presented in the book is drawn from the notebooks of the Russian journalist Alexander Vassiliev. In 1993 Vassiliev was granted limited access to the KGB's operational files for the 1930s and 1940s. His transcripts of pages from these files would eventually fill 8 notebooks comprising more than 1000 pages. Summaries of the documents were used in writing the book "The Haunted Wood (1998)," which Vassiliev co-authored with Allen Weinstein. In a lengthy introduction to "Spies," Vassiliev tells the story of his notebooks and his defamation suit against the publisher Frank Cass. He also paints a sympathetic portrait of the American spies, whom he views as heroes, which helps to counterbalance the more severe portrait painted by Haynes and Klehr. The authors open the book by revisiting the Hiss case in a chapter subtitled "Case Closed." Aside from conspiracy theorists for whom there exists no untainted Hiss evidence, it seems impossible not to agree with the authors' contention that Hiss was a committed communist and a Red Army (GRU) source until his exposure in 1948. Some of the evidence in this chapter was documented earlier by Vassiliev in the "Haunted Wood," and the lengthier treatment given here by Haynes and Klehr fully corroborates the sixty-year-old testimony of Hede Massing and Whittaker Chambers. The authors cite new evidence from the KGB files of Michael Straight and Lawrence Duggan which confirms Hiss's bona-fides as a GRU agent. They also argue persuasively, using both Venona and Vassiliev material, that Hiss was the agent cover named JURIST, LEONARD, and ALES; and they supply the likely identity of the party worker, cover named PAUL, who became Hiss's liaison with the GRU following Whittaker Chamber's defection. For readers interested in the atom-bomb spies, the book is a treasure-trove of new information. The Venona decrypts exposed the damaging Los Alamos spies MLAD (Theodore Alvin Hall) and STAR (Saville Sax), but researchers were unable to identify all the people behind the cover names in the decrypted Soviet cables. The masks have now been ripped from the faces of these spies. The authors reveal the name of PERS/FOGEL, an engineer recruited into espionage
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