Intelligence / Agencies / Counterintelligence

Bearden, Milt and Risen, James. The Main Enemy: The Inside Story of the CIA's Final Showdown with the KGB. New York: Ballantine Books, 2004. 561 pages.

James Risen, a New York Times reporter who covers national security, and Milt Bearden, a thirty-year veteran of CIA operations in the USSR and Pakistan, have teamed up to produce this history of cold war espionage that sets a new standard for the genre. Readers who have consumed a great deal of espionage nonfiction will find it refreshingly different. Earlier books that disclosed as much as this one were usually written by ex-insiders who became anti-CIA. Bearden is not anti-CIA, and Risen is about as straight-laced and pro-Establishment as a journalist can get. Nevertheless, this book has lots of names, and it doesn't paint the KGB as all bad, nor the CIA as all good.

[CIA seal]

The time frame for this showdown is 1985-1991. Despite the diary format, it's not only Bearden's experiences that are chronicled. Bearden is referred to in the first person even in those sections that were written by Risen, and the book is based on hundreds of interviews conducted with dozens of CIA and KGB officers over the course of three years. This literary technique is not one that a historian would use. Nevertheless, it makes for easier reading, and it presents a little bit of continuity across various diverse topics, such as the CIA's hunt for suspected moles, various KGB spies and defectors, and the CIA's war in Afghanistan beginning in 1986.


Epstein, Edward Jay. Deception: The Invisible War Between the KGB and the CIA. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1989. 335 pages.

Edward Jay Epstein began as a Warren Commission critic ("Inquest," 1966) -- not because Oswald wasn't the lone gunman, but because he was a tool of the KGB ("Legend," 1978). This perspective came from James Angleton, whom Epstein began interviewing in 1976, and from an interview with Yuri Nosenko arranged by CIA-connected editors at the Reader's Digest.

Between 1979 and 1985 Epstein attended a series of academic conferences on KGB deception, sponsored by universities, foundations, and the CIA. From these he began to see deception as a strategic problem. The second half of this book examines some major deceptions in the twentieth century: the Soviet "Trust" in the 1920s, Hitler's armament inventory in the 1930s, Soviet faking for our spy satellites, and the mole wars. Then Epstein looks at Glasnost in the Soviet Union. It's all happened before -- five times by his count -- so Gorbachev's Glasnost must be fakery as well, designed to provide the USSR with easy cash and credits from the West.

Epstein is sincere and honest, he's a good writer, and he generally names his sources in the intelligence community. That makes him worth reading, even after Angleton has been largely discredited and Epstein's premise is forced to fly in the face of almost all available evidence.


Kessler, Ronald. Spy vs. Spy: Stalking Soviet Spies in America. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1988. 308 pages.

Most of this book recounts the story of Karl F. Koecher and his wife Hana, whom Kessler interviewed in 1987. In 1965 they orchestrated a phony defection from the Czechoslovak Intelligence Service, after which Karl became a naturalized U.S. citizen, worked full-time for the CIA beginning in 1973, and continued as a contract agent after 1977. He spoke four languages, earned a Ph.D. in philosophy from Colombia, and spent many of his weekends as a "swinger" at spouse-swapping parties with Hana. By 1982 the FBI's counterintelligence squad was getting suspicious. In 1984 Karl Koecher admitted that he had been spying for the East all along, and in 1986 he and Hana were traded for Natan Sharansky.

Award-winning correspondent Ronald Kessler spent fifteen years at the Washington Post, and has also been a reporter for the Wall Street Journal. His books include "Spy vs. Spy," "Moscow Station," and "The Richest Man in the World: The Story of Adnan Khashoggi." The first two are remarkable for his excellent contacts within current U.S. counterintelligence circles, while the book on Khashoggi was an international bestseller. Kessler lives in Potomac, Maryland.


Martin, David C. Wilderness of Mirrors. New York: Ballantine Books, 1981. 233 pages.

Journalist David C. Martin tracks a CIA Odd Couple across the years of the high Cold War: James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's patrician counterspy- in-chief, and William King Harvey, the ex-FBI fat man who nursed a grudge against Ivy League spooks.

In the case of the most famous spy of the century, Harvey's instincts were better than Angleton's. Englishman Kim Philby of Britain's MI6 was close to Angleton, whom he had known in wartime London. But he was also a KGB penetration agent, and it was Harvey rather than Angleton who figured this out. Philby's defection to Moscow set off Angleton's long-running, destructive CIA "mole-hunt," whose excesses eventually brought down Angleton himself. (See Mangold's "Cold Warrior," indexed in NameBase.)

The pistol-packing Harvey, meanwhile, oversaw the famous Berlin tunnel that briefly tapped Soviet communications. Later he ran the CIA's notorious Operation Mongoose, whose avowed object was to assassinate Castro. Harvey got so close to mobsters like John Roselli that he was eventually fired by Robert Kennedy -- a biographical detail that has not escaped the authors of JFK assassination books. What these two radically unlike men shared was their fanaticism. -- Steve Badrich


Trento, Joseph J. The Secret History of the CIA. Roseville CA: Prima Publishing (Forum), 2001. 542 pages.

Joseph Trento has been an investigative reporter on the national security beat since 1968. He had some scoops in the 1970s, and kept at it through the 1980s and 1990s by cultivating insiders such as James Angleton, William Corson, and Robert Crowley. Through them he managed to interview dozens of other retired spooks. Now he is president of the Public Education Center in Washington DC.

This book covers roughly three intermingled topics. The first is the CIA's early years at the Berlin base, where high-flying corruption and Soviet penetration was rampant, and even seemed to help one's CIA career. William Harvey was a key player here. The second involves the migration of some of these players to Vietnam, and also to Chile. The primary source on Chile is Edward Korry, whose story is told here in some detail. The third aspect of this book is the mole wars, where Angleton plays a major role. Trento makes a strong case that Igor Orlov and George Weisz deserve top billing as moles, but is less convincing when he describes Angleton's theories about Oswald. In the end, the point of the book -- that the Soviets consistently ran circles around a corrupted and incompetent CIA -- is rock solid. It wasn't our self-serving Keystone Cops who won the Cold War; it was simply that our arms race outlasted the Soviet economy.


Wise, David. Cassidy's Run: The Secret Spy War Over Nerve Gas. New York: Random House, 2000. 228 pages.

From 1958 to 1980, the FBI ran a counterintelligence operation with the help of Joseph Cassidy, an army sergeant untrained in espionage. Some 4,500 pages of classified documents about the U.S. nerve gas program were passed to Cassidy's Soviet handlers. Some were real and others were doctored; the army and FBI hoped to mislead the Soviets by suggesting that a powerful new gas was part of the U.S. arsenal. In fact, this gas had proven unstable. The assumption was that the Soviets would spend good money on a dead-end program in an effort to keep up with the U.S.

Over 23 years, two FBI agents working the case were accidentally killed when their small plane crashed, and the operation flushed out ten Soviet spies, including University of Minnesota professor Gilberto Lopez y Rivas. (Lopez is now a congressman in Mexico.) Wise notes that ironically, this operation can be considered a failure because it spurred the Soviets on to greater efforts in the area of nerve gas research, which were ultimately successful. To make this point, Wise interviewed various officials in Moscow, as well as Vil Mirzayanov, a nerve gas scientist who was arrested in 1992 for revealing the existence of Novichok. This gas was developed in 1973 and is between eight and ten times more toxic than anything in the U.S. arsenal. Until Mirzayanov blew the whistle, no one knew the Soviets even had Novichok.


Wise, David. Molehunt: The Secret Search for Traitors that Shattered the CIA. New York: Random House, 1992. 325 pages.

Along with "Cold Warrior" by Tom Mangold, "Molehunt" tells the story of defector Anatoli Golitsin and his protege James Angleton. Golitsin's tall tales, together with Angleton's paranoia and power, led to a hunt for double agents that effectively ended the careers of some loyal CIA officers. Mangold concentrates on Angleton himself and manages to interview Yuri Nosenko, a defector who was locked up in solitary by the CIA for over two years and mentally tortured, all because Golitsin and Angleton decided he was a false defector. Wise's book is more name-intensive and takes a closer look at the careers of some of the other players affected by this drama.

With all of the literature about the CIA over the past two decades, it is easy to forget that for the first half of the Agency's history, almost nothing was in the public domain. Washington journalist David Wise changed all of that with "The Invisible Government" in 1964. CIA director John McCone called in Wise and co-author Thomas Ross to demand deletions on the basis of galleys the CIA had secretly obtained. When that didn't work, the CIA formed a special group to deal with the book and tried to secure bad reviews, even though the CIA's legal counsel had found the book "uncannily accurate." As the unofficial dean of intelligence journalists, Wise is still working on future books from his Washington office.

Here are the names most frequently mentioned in the above books:

    ABIDIAN JOHN VINCENT     ACCOMPURA TULLIUS     AKHTAR ABDUL RAHMAN     AKSILENKO VALENTIN     ALLENDE SALVADOR     AMES ALDRICH HAZEN     AMIN HAFIZULLAH     ANDROPOV YURI V     ANDROSOV STANISLAV A     ANGLETON JAMES JESUS     ANTON BOB     ARBATOV GEORGI A     BAGLEY TENNENT H (PETE)     BAKATIN VADIM     BARNES TRACY     BARNETT DAVID HENRY     BASFORD TRENWITH S     BEARDEN MILTON A     BELITSKIY BORIS     BENNETT LESLIE JAMES     BENTLEY ELIZABETH     BERIA LAVRENTI P     BEVELS CHARLES     BISSELL RICHARD MERVIN JR     BLAKE GEORGE (CINCINNATI ENQUIRER)     BLAKE GEORGE (SPY)     BLEE DAVID HENRY     BLOCH FELIX STEPHEN     BLUNT ANTHONY FREDERICK     BOKHAN SERGEI I     BOSCH WILLIAM GEORGE     BOYCE CHRISTOPHER JOHN     BRACY ARNOLD     BRANDT WILLY     BRANIGAN WILLIAM A     BREZHNEV LEONID     BROWN JERRY G     BRZEZINSKI ZBIGNIEW     BULIK JOSEPH J     BURGESS GUY FRANCIS DE MONCY     BUSH GEORGE H.W.     CARLSON RODNEY W     CASEY WILLIAM JOSEPH     CASSIDY JOSEPH EDWARD     CASSIDY MARIE KRSTYEN     CASTRO FIDEL     CAVANAGH THOMAS PATRICK     CERNY OLDRICH     CHAMBERS WHITTAKER     CHEREPANOV ALEKSANDR N     CHERKASHIN VIKTOR I     CHIN LARRY WU-TAI     CHISHOLM JANET ANNE     CHISHOLM RODERICK WILLIAM     CLINE MICHAEL KENT     CODEVILLA ANGELO M     COLBY WILLIAM EGAN     CONEIN LUCIEN     CORSON WILLIAM R     CRAM CLEVELAND C     CROWLEY ROBERT T     CUBA CIA IN     CUBELA SECADES ROLANDO     CZEMPINSKI GROMOSLAW     DALEO RICHARD J     DANILIN MIKHAIL I     DANILOFF NICHOLAS S     DAUTREMONT CICELY     DAVISON ALEXIS H     DE MOWBRAY STEPHEN ARTHUR     DE SILVA PEER     DE VOSJOLI PHILIPPE THYRAUD     DENESELYA DONALD E     DERIABIN PETER S     DEVINE JOHN J     DIEM NGO DINH     DIMMER JOHN PATRICK     DOWNING JACK G (CIA)     DRIVER WALLACE (WALLY)     DULLES ALLEN WELSH     DUNGAN RALPH A     DUNLAP JACK EDWARD     DZERZHINSKY FELIKS E     EDGEWOOD ARSENAL RESEARCH LABORATORIES     EDWARDS SHEFFIELD     EPSTEIN EDWARD JAY     EVANS JOSEPH C     FAULKNER DAVID E     FEDEROV MIKHAIL     FELFE HEINZ PAUL JOHANN     FIERER ROBERT G     FITZGERALD DESMOND     FLORES AURELIO     FOX THOMAS D     FREUNDLICH EDMUND     FRIBERG FRANK F     FURTSEVA YEKATERINA A     GAINES STANLEY H     GAITSKELL HUGH TODD     GARBLER PAUL     GATES ROBERT MICHAEL     GEER JAMES H     GEHLEN REINHARD     GEIDE KENNETH M     GENEEN HAROLD SYDNEY     GEORGE CLAIR ELROY     GERBER BURTON LEE     GHORBANIFAR MANUCHER     GIKMAN REINO     GOLDBERG GEORGE     GOLENIEWSKI MICHAEL M     GOLITSIN ANATOLI M     GOLUBEV SERGEI MIKHAILOVICH     GORBACHEV MIKHAIL S     GORDIEVSKY OLEG A     GOTTLIEB SIDNEY     GRAVER WILLIAM J     GRIMES SANDY     GROGAN MICHAEL D     GRUENTZEL DONALD A     GUILLAUME GUENTHER     GUL HAMID     GUNDAREV VIKTOR P     HAMMER ARMAND     HANSSEN BONNIE     HANSSEN ROBERT PHILIP     HARRIMAN W AVERELL     HARRIS BENJAMIN L     HARRIS WILLIAM R     HART JOHN LIMOND     HARVEY CLARA G     HARVEY WILLIAM KING     HATHAWAY GARDNER RUGG (GUS)     HAUSMANN CYNTHIA J     HAVEL VACLAV     HAYDEN THOMAS (U.S.NAVY)     HECKSHER HENRY D     HEKMATYAR GULBUDDIN     HELMS RICHARD MCGARRAH     HERSH SEYMOUR M     HEUER RICHARDS J JR     HISS ALGER     HOLLIS ROGER HENRY     HONECKER ERICH     HOOD WILLIAM JOSEPH     HOOVER J EDGAR     HORMATS SAUL     HOUSTON LAWRENCE REID     HOWARD EDWARD LEE     INMAN BOBBY RAY     INTERNATIONAL TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH     ISMAYLOV VLADIMIR M     JACOB RICHARD C     JAMESON DONALD F.B. (JAMIE)     JEFFRIES RANDY MILES     JOHNSON MARK R     JOHNSON QUENTIN C     JOHNSON ROBERT LEE     JOHNSON URAL ALEXIS     JONES COURTLAND J     JONES REGINALD VICTOR     KALARIS GEORGE THOMAS     KAMPILES WILLIAM PETER     KAPUSTA PETER PHILIP     KARAMESSINES THOMAS HERCULES     KARLOW S PETER     KATZ AMROM H     KEHOE JAMES     KENNEDY ROBERT FRANCIS     KENT SHERMAN     KERR DONALD M JR     KHRUSHCHEV NIKITA     KIMMEL THOMAS     KINGSLEY ROLFE     KIRKLAND MARK A     KISEVALTER GEORGE G     KLIMENKO VALENTIN     KNOCHE ENNO HENRY     KOCHNOV IGOR P     KOECHER HANA     KOECHER KARL F     KORRY EDWARD M     KOVICH RICHARD     KOVSHUK V M     KOZLOV NICHOLAS     KRASSILNIKOV REM     KRIVITSKY WALTER G     KRYUCHKOV VLADIMIR ALEKSANDROVICH     KULAK ALEKSEI I     KUPPERMAN ROBERT H     LANGELLE RUSSELL AUGUST     LANSDALE EDWARD GEARY     LE SAFFRE DAN     LEONOV YURI P     LEVEN CHARLES H     LIBMAN BORIS     LIKHACHEV OLEG IVANOVICH     LOAN NGUYEN NGOC     LOGINOV YURI N     LONETREE CLAYTON J     LONSDALE GORDON ARNOLD (KONON MOLODI)     LOPEZ Y RIVAS GILBERTO (ANTHROPOLOGIST)     LOWE JACK (FBI)     LUMUMBA PATRICE     LYGREN INGEBORG     LYON HARVEY (ADM)     MACGAFFIN JOHN (NORMAN JOHN III)     MACLEAN DONALD DUART     MARTIN ARTHUR     MARTIN JOHN L     MARTINOV VALERY F     MASSOUD AHMED SHAH     MAURY JOHN M JR     MCCONE JOHN ALEX     MCCOY LEONARD V     MCDOWELL SAMUEL C.T.     MEDANICH CHUCK     MEYER CHARLES APPLETON     MILCZANOWSKI ANDRZEJ     MILER NEWTON SCOTTY     MIRZAYANOV VIL     MONTGOMERY HUGH     MOORE DONALD E (FBI)     MORRIS DONALD R     MORRISSEY JAMES F     MOTORIN SERGEI M     MURPHY DAVID E     NAJIBULLAH MOHAMMED     NARODNY TRUDOVY SOYUZ     NATIRBOFF MURAT     NELSON CARL W     NHU NGO DINH     NIKITENKO LEONID Y     NOLAN JAMES E JR     NOSENKO YURI I     OFFIE CARMEL     OFLAHERTY JOHN J     OGORODNIK ALEKSANDR D     OLSON JAMES M     OPERATION MONGOOSE     ORLOV ELEONORE     ORLOV GEORGE     ORLOV IGOR     OSBORN HOWARD J     OSWALD LEE HARVEY     PALEVICH JOHN EDWARD     PAPICH SAM J     PAPUSHIN SERGEI     PARKER PHILLIP A     PAVLOV VYACHESLAV N     PEARSON NORMAN HOLMES     PELTON RONALD WILLIAM     PENKOVSKY OLEG V     PETERSON EUGENE C     PETTY CLARE EDWARD     PETTY EDWARD C     PHILBY KIM     PIEKNEY WILLIAM RICHARD     PINOCHET AUGUSTO     PLATT JOHN C     POLGAR THOMAS     POLIKARPOV BORIS M     POLLARD ANNE HENDERSON     POLLARD JONATHAN JAY     POLYAKOV DMITRI FEDOROVICH     POLYSHCHUK LEONID G     POPOV PYOTR S     POTEMKIN ROMAN     POTOCKI ANITA A     PRICE HUGH E (TED)     PURVIS JOSEPH D     RAMEY J STEPHEN     RAPHEL ARNOLD LEWIS     REDMOND PAUL J JR     ROCCA RAYMOND G     ROLPH DAVID     ROSSELLI JOHN     SCHAMAY ROBERT J     SCHNEIDER RENE SR     SDECE (FRENCH INTELLIGENCE)     SELLERS MICHAEL C     SEMICHASTNY VLADIMIR     SHACKLEY THEODORE GEORGE     SHADRIN NICHOLAS GEORGE     SHARANSKY NATAN     SHEBARSHIN LEONID V     SHELEPIN ALEXANDER N     SHERWOOD JOHN H     SHLAUDEMAN HARRY W     SHORER DAVID     SICHEL PETER M.F.     SLAVNOV ANATOLY     SMITH EDWARD ELLIS     SMITH RICHARD CRAIG     SMITH WALTER BEDELL     SNOW EDWARD     SOGHANALIAN SARKIS G     SOGOLOV ALEXANDER     SOGOLOV SASHA     SOLIDARITY UNION     SOLIE BRUCE     STEIN JOHN HENRY     STILWELL RICHARD GILES     STINE JOHN L     STOESSEL WALTER J JR     STOLZ RICHARD FAURS JR     STOMBAUGH PAUL M JR (SKIP)     SULLIVAN WILLIAM C     THOMAS CHERYL     THOMPSON COLIN R     TITOV GENNADI     TOLKACHEV ADOLF G     TOON MALCOLM     TRAFFICANTE SANTO JR     TURNER ELBERT T     TURNER STANSFIELD     VARENIK GENNADI G     VASILENKO GENNADY     VASSALL WILLIAM JOHN     VETROV VLADIMIR I     VIAUX ROBERTO     VLASSOV ANDREI A     VORONTSOV SERGEI     WALKER JOHN ANTHONY JR     WALLOP MALCOLM A (R-WY)     WALSH NICHOLAS J     WEBER STEVE     WEISS ARMAND B     WEISZ GEORGE     WHALEN WILLIAM HENRY     WILSON CHARLES NESBITT (D-TX)     WILSON EDWIN PAUL     WILSON HAROLD (PM)     WILSON SAMUEL V (GEN)     WISNER FRANK GARDNER     WOLF MILTON A     WOOTEN JAMES P (FBI)     WRIGHT PETER MAURICE     WYNNE GREVILLE MAYNARD     YAKUSHKIN DMITRI I     YANKOVSKY ARSENY (ANDY)     YURCHENKO VITALY S     ZAKHAROV GENNADI F     ZHOMOV ALEKSANDR     ZIA UL-HAQ

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