PHILBY OFFERS TO WITHDRAW BOOK ON CAREER AS PART OF SKY TRADE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330014-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 21, 2000
Sequence Number: 
14
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 19, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330014-8.pdf129.58 KB
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NEW YORK XIU Approved For Release 20011e7E2b 6IA-RD P75-00149R00 C#H014-8 E 796 JPfiilby Offers to Withdraw Book On Career as Part of.Spy Trade, CPYRG HT Special to The New York Tlmea I T ( TDOA1~ Dee, 48 .1 ------- 40 M-AhAdrenr ills man. :A. R. (Kim) Philby,. the British +espionage official who defected to the, Soviet Union in 1903, script if the convicted Sovie spies Peter and Helen Kroger now serving prison sentence in Britai h n, were exc anged fo was reported Coda to have of-! Y Gerald Brooke, a British lectur fered to withdraw the manu- er who is serving a prison script of a book damaging tq camp sentence In the Sovie? Western intelligence if an ?ex- Union as a spy. Philby said Mr.rBrooke had Excerpts from Philby interview in Izvestia are on Page 18. been working 'for N.T.S., the People's Labor Front, a Rus- sian refugee organization,.. will was formerly financed by Brit. change of Soviet and British ish intelligence. but 'which , he spies was arranged. had himself handed over to the In the book, which he wanted: Central Intelligence Agency. 7 herefore he concluded, its. published in the West, Philby,"up to you and the Americans said he would name the col-r to decide who wants him leagues he was involved with,' back." /` r "but not in an unkindly way;:; I hope." , Soviet Publicizes Philby . "Just setting down the facts, he added In an interview with a British reporter. "I think the truth should come out." ' [In Moscow, Izvestia intro- duced the Soviet public to Philby in an article praising him and the Soviet intelli- gence services and deriding Western intelligence.] Philby's offer, of .the book and the subsequent terms of its ,withdrawal were made to Mur- ray Sayle, a correspondent' for The Sunday Times of London. Two weeks ago Philby took The Sunday Times, which in October published a series of articles disclosing details . of , Philby's 30-year; career as Soviet spy, said that it turhed - down his offer after learning that he was not interested in. money but in making "a ? de- liberate Tattempt __ to, damage Western ' interests, including' . Western Intelligence organiza- tions." Foreign Secretary George Brown has criticized Lord Thompson, who owns The Sun- day Times, for having permit- ted publication of the-October series, which embarrassed the British and American Intelli- the initiative by telephoning Mr. gence. establishmen.' Whether Sayle, who was in Moscow onto prine Philby's own story a scientific assignment Philby! now appears to have become hi offered The; Sunday Times an 80,000-word manuscript dealing mainly with his work as a trust. ed membef of British intelli- gence when in realty he wog, fdf i1Jflinst 30 yeats,? Att. Jfliiidra tant- Soviet agent..;. At ~ one of a series of meet. gs with Mr. Sayler pliilby'of e way Soviet policy `had been carried out in Africa. Alluding to the overtluow' of Kwame Nkrumah'sas prsident of Ghana, ,Philby said that he had warned against deep Soviet involve- ment in Africa and said: "Well, we did. Million of rubles down the drain. I was sorry to see Nkrumah followed now, the but are in w o n - I as proved right. Our policy now is, Watch, help, but no deep in- volvement. Incidentally, the Chinese seem to have done even worse than we did." About himself Philby spoke readily. "I love life, women 'and hildren, food and drink,?' he Glared. Asked how he felt about leav- ng his own family he replied? "I suppose I am really two eople. I am a private person longed. have followed exactly the sea I m line the whole of my adult life. The fight .against Fascism and the fight against imperialism were, fundamental- ly, the same fight." The celebration of the jubilee of the dreaded organization that was the principal executor of Stalin's terror has caused some Russians to smile without being amused and has led for- eign observers to speculate on the reasons. Most of the observers con- nect the spate or articles, film . showings and. issuance . of a K.G.B. commemorative stamp to a campaign to' draw atten= tion ' to weakness In Western,' intelligence as, well as to 'dis- credit it, and to publicize the degree, of Soviet. - knowledge and ,vigilance nd a political person. Of. nurse if there Ifli ,s,. a conct,' be-political person comes first'; How did he feel, he was sked, ' about. being called' a actor. "To betray," 'h m 'replied "you , ust ,first, belong.;. I' ~neveq.be-i Approved For Release 2001/07127 CIA-RDP7.5-001491:2000600330014-8 . somet ng of an issue of con- science among London pub- lishers. Mr. Sayle wrote that Philby spoke critically of the way the Soviet, Union had treated Dan- iel and ginyavolfy, who were sent to a labor camp?for hav-j ing smuggled ther two books would have got a week in jail, or perhaps a public censure fro: their colleagues in the Writers Union. What's the point of send- ing them to a labor camp?" ? Philby was also critical of criticizing the Soviet !Union to! Western publishers. "I was completely . against it," he said, "I thought the whole thing was a regrettable reversion to the old spirit. They