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Wilderness of Mirrors

Page 27

by David C. Martin


  Afterword

  From the death of General Walter Krivitsky to the firing of Angleton, riddle had piled upon riddle. Could the KGB really manipulate events with so callous yet hidden a hand, or were the fates that had befallen Krivitsky and Angleton merely the breaks of the game? Either way, the game was a vicious one, but it was important to know whether or not the wounds were self-inflicted.

  Was there a mole? If there was, he must surely be gone by now, forced into retirement by advancing years and recurring personnel cuts. But the question still demands an answer. The KGB penetrated the intelligence services of other Western countries. Why not the CIA? Surely, sometime, somewhere, whether through ideological empathy or simple blackmail, the KGB succeeded in recruiting a CIA officer. But did the mole ever attain a position from which he could do real harm? The answer to that lies buried somewhere in the maze of counterintelligence cases surrounding the defections of Nosenko and Golitsin.

  After both Angleton and Petty had withdrawn from the field, the CIA tried again to find the answer, this time with separate panels under the direction of two retired officers who had spent their working lives outside the double-cross world of counterintelligence. The panels—the one on Nosenko headed by John Hart and the one on Golitsin by Bronson Tweedy—concluded that both defectors were genuine. The CIA has adopted the findings as the final word, but they carry no more weight than all the other analyses that went before and do nothing to allay the fear of penetration, since to believe in Golitsin is to believe in the mole. It is possible, of course, that even a genuine Golitsin could simply have been mistaken. But what about Goleniewski, “the best defector the U.S. ever had,” who was so certain that the KGB had found out about him through a leak in the CIA? Was he wrong too? And how did the Russians discover the CIA’s plan to recruit the Polish intelligence officer in Switzerland, and where did they get a transcript of the CIA’s debriefing of the defector Deriabin?

  The mists of suspicion can never be burned away, no matter how intense the light. The resulting uncertainty is profoundly dissatisfying. It frustrates the longing for clear-cut solutions and leaves hanging questions about the existence of a high-level penetration agent. But if no amount of scrutiny can pierce the veil, it can at least reveal the mole hunt for what it was—the single most corrosive episode in the CIA’s history, more so by far than the blatant yet easily eliminated excesses for which the Agency has been publicly pilloried. Assassination was contemplated by such a handful of men and kept so isolated from the rest of the CIA that it did not corrupt the mainstream of intelligence collection and analysis. The mole hunt, with its attendant fear that all the Agency’s clandestine sources on the Soviet Union were compromised and transmitting nothing but bogus data, went to the heart of the CIA’s business—the production of reliable intelligence about the motives and methods of the Kremlin. At the beginning, in 1947, Clark Clifford had warned Harry Truman that without reliable intelligence on the Soviet Union the United States would be “at the mercy of rumors and half-truths,” and that is precisely what happened during the hunt for the mole. Whether by KGB design or CIA misadventure, that was the ultimate corruption.

  While such tactics as assassination and mail opening can be summarily banned, the dilemmas inherent in counterintelligence are not so easily resolved. The CIA has made a fresh start, but the secret war remains as devious and deceptive as ever, and no amount of well-intentioned “reform,” whether dictated by Congress or generated from within the executive branch, is going to change that. The KGB would have it no other way. And if the CIA had such trouble holding its own against the KGB when there were virtually no constraints on the tactics it could employ, how will it fare in this new era?

  The CIA’s war against the KGB is undeniably just, but the reality is absurd. The careers of Angleton and Harvey were mired in absurdities, not the least of which was that they habitually violated the democratic freedoms they were sworn to defend. The futility of the first thirty years, the expense of spirit and the burden of shame, was staggering. The wonder was that Angleton and Harvey stuck with it for so long, stuck with it for too long, stuck with it until absurdity became the only logic they knew. Immersed in duplicity and insulated by secrecy, they developed survival mechanisms and behavior patterns that by any rational standard were bizarre. The forced inbreeding of secrecy spawned mutant deeds and thoughts. Loyalty demanded dishonesty, and duty was a thieves’ game. The game attracted strange men and slowly twisted them until something snapped. There were no winners or losers in this game, only victims.

  Author’s Note

  Although I accept full responsibility for the accuracy of the facts and the validity of the opinions contained in this book, there are several people who were absolutely indispensable to me in transferring the complexities of espionage from my reporter’s notebooks to the printed page.

  My father, Joseph W. Martin, was a tremendous source of encouragement and a very tough copy editor who could somehow display as much enthusiasm for the latest rewrite as for the first rough draft. Since my father worked for the CIA for twenty-three years, I need to make one specific disclaimer about his role in my work. For his entire career he was an intelligence analyst far removed from clandestine operations and had no involvement in or knowledge of the events portrayed in this book. He was not a source of information, and with one minor exception, neither were his friends. Mike Sniffen of the Associated Press spent days of his time reading my various drafts, going over them with me line by line, sharpening the language, warning against pitfalls, and suggesting avenues of inquiry that had never occurred to me. His reward invariably was another draft to read. Irving Wechsler, a man I respect and admire above all others, and his wife, Marion, read the final drafts of the manuscript and besides making numerous improvements in the text were able to articulate themes I had been wrestling with for the better part of two years but could never express.

  Then there was Mel Elfin, my boss at Newsweek and one of the class acts in Washington. To paraphrase another prominent Washingtonian, Mel gave me unlimited time off to work on this book, and I exceeded it. Mark Lynch of the American Civil Liberties Union and Jack Landau of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press were both extremely helpful in pursuing requests under the Freedom of Information Act. Elizabeth Jones at Carrolton Press assisted me in using that firm’s unique catalogue of declassified government documents. At Harper & Row, Buz Wyeth bought the book on the basis of a five-minute conversation and from then on treated it as though it were his life’s work. Burton Beals put this manuscript in its final form, which given my penchant for last-minute changes, must have felt like a life’s work. My agent, Theron Raines, friend to English bulldogs and unpublished authors, led me by the hand through the publishing jungles without a false step.

  Finally there is my family, beginning with my wife and children, to whom this book is dedicated, and extending to a network of relatives, my parents and hers especially, who have given so much of themselves to my obsession. I visited all the torments of authorship on them without sharing any of the satisfactions. My wife, E.D., was pursuing her own studies in medicine at the time, yet she always pretended that my work was more important and pressing. Truth is, the most important thing is the life we have together with Cate and Zach.

  Index

  Abel, Colonel Rudolf, 98, 180

  Abwehr code, 15

  Acheson, Dean, 23

  Albee, Edward, 70

  Allen, George, 52

  Allende, Salvador, 221

  Alsop, Joseph, 53, 216

  AM/LASH, 151–153

  American Embassy, Moscow, 111

  Soviet bugging of, 154, 166

  American Friends Service Committee, 70

  AN/APR9, antenna, 79

  Anderson, Dillon, 89

  Anderson, Jack, 219

  ANDREY (Soviet agent), 112, 159, 166

  Angleton, Cicely d’Autremont, 12, 215

  Angleton, Hugh, 11

  Angleton, James Jesus, 1
0–12, 47, 48, 118, 119, 210, 211, 213–216, 224, 226

  counterintelligence assignment, 62–63

  and Goleniewski case, 95, 98, 103, 104

  and Golitsin case, 108–114, 148–178, 191–209

  and HT/LINGUAL, 68–72, 211

  and OSS, 12–13

  and Philby case, 55–58

  and SSU (Italy), 17–21, 34

  transfer to CIA, 34–35

  Anglo-German Fellowship, 14

  Armed Forces Courier Center, Paris, 168

  Armed Forces Security Agency, 39, 40, 43, 45, 60

  Army Signal Corps, 79

  Ashmead, Hugh, 206

  Atomic bomb, 41

  Atomic bomb project, Los Alamos, 41, 42

  Atomic energy, 39, 49

  Atomic Energy Commission, 41, 49

  Atomic weapons, 9, 101

  Australia, 61, 198

  intelligence, 109

  Austria, intelligence, 109, 198

  Avedon, Richard, 216

  Bagley, Pete, 191, 199, 200, 201

  and Nosenko case, 111–113, 153–177

  Balkans, 75

  Baltic states, 60

  Barmine, Alexander, 7

  Barnes, Tracy, 67, 68

  Barron, John, 168

  Bassof, Sergei, 2

  Bay of Pigs invasion, 117–122, 126, 133, 184

  Beard, Dita, 221

  Belgian Congo, 123, 124

  Bell System, 74

  Bennett, Leslie “Jim,” 208–210

  Bentley, Elizabeth, 23–31, 42

  Berle, Adolf, 6–7

  Berlin, 62–67, 75

  Bishop Service, 218

  Bissell, Richard, 118, 119, 120, 121, 124, 126, 140

  Blake, George, 99–104, 108, 109, 149, 161, 198

  escape from prison, 180–181

  Blunt, Sir Anthony, 109–110

  BND (West German Federal Intelligence Agency), 103, 104, 105, 213

  Bobbs-Merrill, 219, 221, 222

  Bond, James (Agent 007), 128

  BOUNTY (operation), 130

  BOURBON (Soviet agent), 111, 114, 148

  Bourke, Sean, 179–181

  Bradlee, Ben, 215

  British Admiralty, 97, 98, 111

  Soviet penetration of, 149

  British-American Combined Chiefs of Staff, 49

  British Embassy (Wash., D.C.), 8, 41, 44, 47

  British Foreign Office, 5, 7, 15, 21, 47, 50

  British Labour Party, 151

  British Security Service, 61

  BRONZE (operation), 89

  Brothman, Abraham, 25, 42

  Bugging operations, 154, 166, 188

  Bundy, McGeorge, 119, 125, 134, 137, 140

  Burgess, Guy, 47–48, 50–51, 53, 54, 57, 59, 60, 61, 109, 110

  Burke, Mike, 55, 67

  Burst transmitter, 209–210

  Cabell, Charles, 118

  Cambridge University, 47, 48, 61, 200

  Socialist Society, 13

  Campbell, Judith, 122

  Canada, 107

  Soviet penetration of, 23, 29, 109, 166–167, 198, 208

  Capitalism, 9, 13, 48

  Carter, Jimmy (James Earl), 218

  Carter, Marshall, 118, 140

  Castro, Fidel, 117, 120, 133, 137, 138

  assassination plots against, 121–124, 138–141, 145, 146, 151–153, 219–221, 225

  Castro, Raul, 139

  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA):

  Bay of Pigs invasion, 117–122

  Berlin Operations Base, 159

  Board of National Estimates, 140, 141, 144, 193

  Castro assassination plots, 121–124, 138–141, 145, 146, 151–153, 219–221, 225

  Central Registry (RG), 123

  Counterintelligence Division, 62, 70, 153, 172, 174, 177, 201, 206, 212

  domestic spying, 213, 214, 216, 218

  Doolittle report, 61–62, 68

  Far East Division, 145

  FBI rivalry with, 36–37, 52

  founded, 9–10, 36

  French operations, 167–170, 199

  Goleniewski case, 98–99, 103–106

  HT/LINGUAL, 68–72, 211

  Italian operations, 182–187

  JM/WAVE (Florida base), 131, 132, 139

  KGB penetration of (suspected), 105–117, 148–179, 190–211, 223, 225

  Manhattan Field Office, 69

  Office of Communications, 72

  Office of Security, 175

  Office of Special Operations, 34

  Operation GOLD, 76–90

  Operation MONGOOSE, 126–129, 133, 140, 143

  Operations Directorate, 67, 68, 118, 187, 205, 206, 211

  Philby case, 44–56

  Sniper case, 95–99

  Soviet Bloc Division, 60, 92, 107–110, 128, 153, 157, 172, 177

  Special Affairs Staff, 152

  Special Services Unit, 188

  Staff A, 121

  Staff B, 121

  Staff C, 121, 138

  Staff D, 121, 127–128

  Tairova/Popov case, 92–95

  Task Force W, 128–135, 145, 152, 186

  Technical Services Division, 122

  Western Europe Division, 182, 184, 196, 199

  Western Hemisphere Division, 153, 214

  ZR/RIFLE program, 120–124, 138, 140

  Chambers, Whittaker, 6–7, 8, 23

  Cherapanov case, 160–161

  Chief Military Intelligence of the Ministry of Armed Forces. See GRU

  Chile, 221

  China, 39

  relations with Soviet Union, 150, 203, 217

  relations with United States, 217

  Chisholm, Janet, 115

  Church, Frank, 222

  Churchill, Sir Winston, 39, 40, 41, 48, 49

  CIFAR, 185–186

  Cipher machine (SIGTOT), 74

  Ciphers. See Codes

  Clandestine Service, 119

  Clemens, Hans, 103–104

  Clifford, Clark, 9, 225

  Cline, Ray, 144

  Codes, 39–13, 45, 48, 55, 74

  Cohen, Morris and Lona, 98–99

  Colby, William, 145, 183, 184, 211–217, 223

  Cold War, 10, 125

  Collier, Robert, 9, 25, 28

  Collins, Henry, 28

  Commissariat of State Security. See KGB

  Communism, 9

  Communist Party, 14

  Corvo, Max, 18

  Counterintelligence, 13, 15–16

  Cox, Dave, 219

  Coyne, Pat, 32

  Crimea Conference, 43

  Cryptanalysis, 39–43, 45, 55

  Cryptonyms, 42, 43, 45, 55, 60, 92, 109, 126

  “Crypt ops,” 43

  Cuba, 117–144

  Bay of Pigs invasion, 117–122, 126, 133, 184

  Cuban missile crisis, 141–144

  Cubella, Rolando, 151–153

  Curiel, Henri, 100

  Currie, Lauchlin, 24

  Czechoslovakia, 9, 28, 203, 204

  Dasher, Major General Charles, 88

  Davis, Brigadier General Kermit, 66

  Davison, Alexis, 115, 116

  Defectors, 203

  De Gaulle, Charles, 109

  DELANDA (CIA agent), 183

  Depression of 1929, 25

  Deriabin, Peter, 103, 105, 106, 200, 201, 203, 225

  DETECTOR (CIA agent), 183

  Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, 4, 5

  DINOSAUR (Project), 202

  Disarmament talks, Geneva, 153, 154

  Disinformation agents, 153, 156, 158, 161, 164, 167, 170, 178, 200, 201, 203

  Distinguished Intelligence Medal, 90

  Dobert, Eitel Wolf, 3, 5

  Donovan, General William “Wild Bill,” 13, 36

  Doolittle, Lieutenant General James, 61, 62, 68, 72

  Double agents, 16

  DROWZY (operation), 103, 104

  Dubček, Alexander, 203

  Dulles, Allen, 27, 35, 62, 67, 77, 90, 92–93, 118, 119, 120

 
; East Germany, 66, 159–160

  Edwards, Colonel Sheffield, 121, 139, 140

  Egyptian Communist Party, 100

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 51, 52, 61, 62, 89

  Elder, Walter, 143

  Electronic surveillance, 154, 166, 188

  Elliott, Nicholas, 109–110

  Evang, Colonel Wilhelm, 196

  Facism, 9, 13, 17

  Fair Play for Cuba Committee, 151

  Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), 200, 208, 209

  Bentley case, 23–31

  Chambers case, 6–8

  CIA rivalry and, 36–37, 52

  Krivitsky case, 3–4

  Philby case, 36–56, 59, 60

  Popov/Tairova case, 92–95, 102, 103, 112, 161

  Security Division, 38, 44

  South American operations, 36–37

  Soviet espionage division, 9

  Federation of American Scientists, 70

  Federov (Soviet agent), 195

  Felfe, Heinz, 103–105, 108, 149, 205, 213

  FitzGerald, Desmond, 145, 152, 187, 188

  Fleming, Ian, 128

  Follich, Carol Grace, 64, 222

  Ford, Gerald, 218

  Foreign Office (British), 5, 7, 15, 21, 47, 50

 

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