OUR MAN IN MOSCOW

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CIA-RDP80-01193A000400170064-4
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RIFPUB
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K
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24
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December 12, 2016
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November 5, 2001
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64
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Publication Date: 
December 26, 1965
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NSPR
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Approved ForvQ01ease 2001/11/22 : CIA-RDP80-011934n0400170064-4 tsttstis>stttst>t barathea were loaded-cloth des grey destined Ono 1:2 py ON M No.199 'Neath the Silvery ... THE American Association for the Advancement of Science is worried about what planet we'll turn to for love songs when the moon becomes just a rocket base. Write a love song around the planet of your choice, to any stated tune. Limit, 15 lines. A prize of five guineas is offered for the winning entry, and one-guinea book tokens for each of the others printed. Address entries to Toby Competition No. 199, Punch, 10 Bouverie Street, London, EC4, to arrive by first post Wednesday, December 29. Report on Competition No. 196 (Expose) Competitors were asked to devise ex- tracts, along the lines of the Penkovsky Papers, from the papers of spies oper- ating in Bechuanaland, Peru, Upper Volta, Cocos Island or Great Britain. South America proved the most popular, probably because it sounds a warm, exotic place to spy in, but all countries were allotted their crack agents who were given some imaginative and amusing stories to tell. The winner is Peter Gould. only extant fragment from Com. N -v: . removed my blindfold, I saw, in the torchlight, that my captors were two brown-toothed peasants who stank of the cocaine sold in Lima's market-place. Incan carvings and obsidian axe-blades were strewn about. Suddenly there appeared under the lintel an unforgettable appari- tion-a beautiful Indian woman, sensual black eyes, her two firm pechos thrusting against her blouse. "Comrade," she said, speaking perfect Russian, "what is it worth to your government to know how the statues arose on Easter Island?" That was it! I followed her into a dim cubicle, dizzy with cocoa fumes, feeling fame near, and pleasure nearer. I saw hieroglyphic stelae, skins, maps; she closed the door, leaned towards me and, looking into my eyes, said ... The runners-up were : Two of the ostrich eggs contained water, but the third held a tiny map of Tsetse's kraal. I left them in the desert at the ap- pointed water-hole and, on the way back, met the messenger. I gave the password: "Vlei." He muttered something like "Be- yond the termites" and said his name was Butumli. I rode back troubled in mind. He seemed too self-confident for an African and soon my fears were strengthened. Van der Plonk reported he could not find the egg. He thought a well-meaning ostrich had buried it, but I knew it was on its way to Pekin or Moscow or even London. - D. HAWSON happiest days of mine career. I had perfect Oxford accent and could switch to Yorkshire. If the tykes think they did not indulge in careless talk ask how that lone raider picked out the Majestic at Harrogate at lunch time on that particular day. In London; when they were searching bombed buildings I would stroll up, park brolly and bowler on any odd bit of debris and "muck in regardless." I got the gen. And their humour! I was taking a lunch- time drink in Pontefract when the frogs croaked. The barmaid couldn't contain her- self-"What do you think lad, Froggyland has packed in. We're in the final now, and on our own muck heap. Sup up and I'll buy you one." England, to you I raise mine bock. - T. J. ASPLEY Deadline: Cocos Island The voyage from Nancowry was unevent- ful, my cover as a peripatetic Evangelist being as inscrutable as the Pentagon had predicted. Booked in at the Cocos Hilton as arranged, where Kava Dan (FBI, class of '48) con- tacted me in his role as drunken beach- combing bum. His information electrified me. Just two weeks earlier, a commie herring- drifter, en route for Hawaii, had put into Port Chatterley. "Engine trouble" had been their excuse-but the captain was whistling the Fiftieth State! The pieces fell into place. I had uncovered the beginnings of a new Soviet plot, a commie-inspired Confederate Army was being equipped. Hawaii was about to secede! I'd to meet Mr. N in the Plaza San Martin. To make him inconspicuous he'd be wearing a poncho, but I'd recognise him by a special shrug. I fingered my poisoned arrow wondering if he'd come. He did. Among all the passing shruggers he was the only one in a poncho. "Come with me," he said. "The secret of the country's wealth is in the islands." I thought of the island where the political prisoners were once kept and wondered if he was double n-ing me. Should I use the blower? I didn't. We went. The guano was a decaying trade. "The others" had won. They were catching the fish that fed the birds that made the guano. - R. FRASER Now it can be told-how moi, Aristide Mdingbat, arch-spy of the Haute-Volta, actuated throughout by the highest motives (five billion kowrie-kopecks), convinced the forces of reaction I was working for them, when all the time I was really working for them; kidnapped kassava-king, Toussanit La Rochefoucauld Nokoko; stole the Juju Blueprint by short-circuiting the high- voltage security-crocs; passed false infor- mation to Dahomey double-agent Zero Zero Sept in a packet of synthetic Senegalese senna-pods; blackmailed half-caste agent- provocateur Fifi St. Fayrien into revealing vital statistics; and finally, after a show-trial in Ouagadougou, received from our revered Leader the Order of Mumbojumbo, Second Class, and a one-way canoe-ticket to Togo. - D. C. F. EDGINTON "No, you ask him about seat belts-that sort of thing sounds better, coming from a woman .. ." COPYRIGHT ? 1965 by Punch Publications Limited. All rights of reproduction are reserved In respect of all articles, sketches, drawings, etc., published in PUNCH in all yams of the world. Reproductions or imitations of any of these are therefore expressly forbidden. The Proprietors will always consider requests for permission to reprint. Editorial contributions requiring an answer should be accompanied by a stamped and addressed envelope. CONDITIONS OF SALE AND SUPPLY.-This periodical is sold subject to the following conditions, namely, that it shall not, without the written consent of the publishers first given. be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise disposed of by way of Trade, except at the full retell price of 1/6; and that it shall not be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise disposed of in a mutilated condition or in any unauthorised cover by Way of Trade or affixed to or as part of any publication or advertising, literary or pictorial matter whatsoever. Reg'd at the G.P.O. as a Newspaper. Postage of this issue: Inland Bd.: Overseas by printed paper reduced rate 5d. YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES (including Postage): Everywhere in the World #5.5.0 (U.S.A. and Canada E15.0O). U.S.A. and Canadian readers may remit by cheques on their own Banks. Other Overseas readers should consult their Bankers or remit by Postal Money Order. For prompt service please send orders by Air Mail to PUNCH. 10 Bouverie Street, Fleet Street. London, E.C.4. England. Printed in E by '4adbury ' din 1 ited Saffron Hill London, E.C.1, and published weekly by Punch Publications Limited at Approve orelease o11~i2i 6Ct -$RbP8(PMig3A000400170064-4 PUNCH, Z)ecernber 22 1965 Approved Fo ., lease 2001/11/22 : CIA-RDP80-011900400170064-4 ".Don't worry your father, darling. He has things on his mind." The small threatened child gazed up at " us bland -, touchingly unaware of the lurking dangers. "Well, I am sure that you do all that you can. )'oti`d have nothing to reproach yourself with." He bent to put down his cup, and folders slid from his brief-case. "Resistance to disease" I read, "Vegetable juice-" "Do vegetable juices build up immunity?" "I suppose so, but it would be the Same if he ate lashings of vegetables." "With only eight teeth?" "Only '? Oh, I see. No he wouldn't get far with two pounds of carrots with those would he? But he could drink the juice in a couple of seconds. Half a minute, I think it says on the folder what carrot ju"tee is good for. I think it's one of the musts." "Do you drink it ?" "No, but I'm beginning to think I should. Iaye had so many colds and the other chaps in the outfit never seem to got them and they're real juice drinkers. Celery juice too, and spinach, and *ater-cress," he said, with admiration, oh, they're a tough looking lot." He was certainly no advert for doing without it, "What does it say about spinach juice?" I asked, which is nc w the reason why the dog daily leaves the kitchen as though rocket-propelled as :he scream of my health- and immunity giving vege- table juicer rends the air. 1 am glad I bought it; let me say quite, clearly that I am glad that I bought it. What burns me up is the fact that my friend `Isabel bought one toe.. "My," she said, feeding beat mounds of vegetable into her n achine, T "he certainly livened up the morning! I opened the door to him, niy dear, _and before you could say `knife' he was making low, growling noises and practi- cally pursuing me round the kitchen. There is a great life force ir the juice of vegetables," she said, with a warm,and reminiscent satisfaction, "did you know?" Wha'l I did know was, that some company have a salesman whose know- ledge c f feminine psycholcgy is diabo- lical. Now, when salesmen c kll I shout to them tbrough the letter-box to go away. I'm no taking any chances on opening my door to reveal to them he image of the Gn; at Earth Mother, herself. Act thirty-five before lunch in perfect safety? Who was I kidding? Damrnit, that. lad called at half-past nine in the morning! Private Eye "Eyes are the giveaway"-headline in the Observer BUT then, when were they ever any- thing else? These movable marbles, ever the concern of poets, the test of painters, the delight of physiognomists were always the enfants terribles of the face, the irrepressibles. The mouth, slit or letter-box, Kewpie or bee-stung could always with the help of brother chin be made to play a part. A versatile actor, it could arc in tenderness, curl in benevolence, firm in resolution and lie and lie and Iie. But the eyes, never. With our eyes we first make contact with other eyes, drawn as powerfully as the very young infant who selects this feature first from the overhanging dial that is his mother's face. In eyes we seek reassurance or confirmation, match up the verdict that comes from the mouth, find repulsion or fascination, but are al- ways back on target, homing in on a word. For our part we endure eyes that bore like woodpeckers or importune like blue- bottles; eyes glazed with lies, hardened with suspicion, dulled by scepticism, radiant with emotion, limpid with inno- cence. We flash orbs on others, some- times ringing down the safety-curtain a split second too late and letting out shafts of truth. Those of us who have trouble dissembling our thoughts are forced to study our toecaps and get a reputation for shiftiness. Some find that the eyes say one thing and the maddening flush an- other. Only the practised liar up to now was able to stare and stare and be a villain. Not any more, since the experi- ments of Professor Hess of the University of Chicago prove the pupil of the eye to be the most subtle giver away of truth. Pleasurable pictures, quite simply, cause the pupil to dilate and unpleasant ones cause it to contract. Shock pictures may cause dilation at first followed by con- traction. Pupils lying about pictures they were viewing were given the lie by their own pupils. If the social implications are amusing, the way of the transgressor may hereafter be quite markedly harder. Liars will have to live in their dark glasses. Approved For Release 2001/11/22 CIA-RDP'80-01193A000400170064-4 Hubert Humphrey, Eugene Rostow on the rights of man Conrad Knickerbocker on Malcolm Lowry - ------------------------------------------------ Bill Mauldin on Gen. Curtis LeMay THE PENKOVSKIY PAPERS. By Oleg Penkovskly. Introduction and Commentary by Frank Gibney. Translated by Peter Deriabin. Illustrated. Doubleday. 411 pp. $5.95. Oleg Penkovskiy (he is spelled this way in the book), a Soviet artillery of- ficer, spied for the Americans and British from April, 1961, to August, 1962. He was shot in the spring of 1963, having stood trial with his British intermediary, Greville Wynne. Wynne was later exchanged for Gordon Lans- dale, leader of a Soviet spy ring, which testifies to his standing in the eyes of .British Intelligence. That was just all we, the public, officially knew of the affair, except that everybody denied everything (though Penkovskiy and Wynne confessed) and eight British and American diplomats in Moscow were declared personae non gratae. Since then, rumor has taken charge. In the British press, it acquired an in- creasingly informed appearance, while Washington was alive with the unblush- ing handouts of the Central Intelligence Agency, whose public relations depart- ment must have been working feverishly since Thomas Ross and David Wise pub- lished The Invisible Government and Lee Kwan revealed in Singapore that a very ugly American had offered him $3 million for his allegiance. The Papers, or Mr. Gibney's edition of them, are ominously in line with what has already been leaked. We have been softened for the revelation : here it is. Penkovskiy was a master spy. He is to be rated as high as Fuchs, Nunn May and Blake. He was not a mere half-pay artillery officer, but a key man in. the Soviet search for world-wide industrial, scientific and technological intelligence. As a war veteran, the son-in-law of a general and a member of the secret in- ner world of Soviet power, he was able to provide President Kennedy with de- tailed, up-to-date information on Soviet rocket strength and on Khrushchev's strategic and political intentions. Pen- kovskiy, we are told, dealt the cards at Cuba and Berlin, and the West got the aces. (Did he warn us in advance of the Berlin Wall? No comment.) If that is so, he presumably also carries a fair responsibility for the downfall of Khrushchev. Penkovskiy provided a de- tailed breakdown of the- Soviet spyweb, causing 300 Intelligence officers who Approved For Release 2001/11/22 : CIA-RDP80-01193A000400170064-4 BOOK,WEE OUR MAN IN MOSCOW A testament to the paradox of treason in the Cold War By John Le Carre operated abroad tinder Soviet diplomatic cover to be summarily recalled to Mos- cow. But Penkovskiy did something else, Mr. Gibney declares: he wrote to us. Penkovskiy wrote to us. These Papers, these jottings of a lonely spy, made in the secret hours of the night, are, Mr. Gibney explains, the political testament of a hero; they are addressed to us, Penkovskiy's new friends. He began writing them in the early part of 1961, at a time when he was trying to make his first contacts with the West. The last entry was apparently made in August, 1962, when Penkovskiy was already under surveillance. Pen- kovskiy concealed the Papers, with Rus- sian cunning, in his desk. A#pr6 yFtml1 eelset2Afl;U1 t1(22 rumors which preceded him, he cannot he challenged. He makes no serious at- tempt to explain how the Papers came to us. They were translated by one Peter Deriabin, a defector and former Soviet Intelligence officer upon whose experi- ence Mr. Gibney has "drawn liberally." They should be read in a fairly thick Russian accent : "I saw how natural and unaffected the people behaved..." They were hidden in Penkovskiy's desk and smuggled out of Russia almost at the time of his arrest. It is a nice thought that Soviet Counter-`Intelligence, astute enough to catch Penkovskiy, omitted to look in his desk. Who knew of their existence anyway? His Western mas- ters? His wife? And who, knowing of their existence, would not have begged their youth and to reproductions of Penkovskiy's personal calling cards (try to fake theta if you can), Mr. Gibney denies us even a page from the original manuscript. Mr. Deriabin, according to press reports, does a secret job at a secret address. Part of what you pay for this book will, Mr. Gibney tells us, be devoted to a special fund set up in Penkovskiy's name to further the cause of genuine peace and friendship between the American and Russian peoples. There goes that nice Ameri- can boy, all smiles as the cameras flash: our first Penkovskiy scholar at Moscow University. The style of the writings is enormously varied: sometimes Penkovskiy drifts into pages of polemic against Khrush- chev and the Soviet leadership. Some- times he is staccato, like end clippings from a tape recording, and sometimes he gives us straight intelligence, need- lessly duplicating, presumably, what he was already giving his Western masters. And yet, for all that, I do accept that Penkovskiy said and thought the major part of what is contained in the Papers. They may be a handout; the description of their form and provenance may be deliberately misleading; but I am per- suaded by their content. Mr. Gibney, introducing the Papers, is in no doubt as to how we should regard his subject: "a single-minded revolutionary who gave his life in a lonely fight against a corrupt dictator- ship." Mr. Gibney not only wants us to be thankful for Penkovskiy but to ad- mire him. Mr. Edward Crankshaw, in his fore- word, is considerably less committed. For him Penkovskiy is that phenomenon of Cold War treason : a lonely decider, a man explained not by single-mindedness but by paradox. In signal contrast to Mr. Gibney, Mr. ' Crankshaw writes, "This Soviet Army Colonel was in some measure unbalanced," adding "a man who will take it upon himself to be- tray his government because he is uniquely convinced that he is right and they are wrong is by definition unbal- anced, although he may also be a martyr." After reading the Papers, I am Mr Crankshaw's man If Penkovski . . y him to destroy them before the were is to be explained at all by the Papers :&%vRre 8At%1A AQ4e A0,4 4as we have them, then indeed only photographs of Penkovskiy's parents in by paradox. (Continued on page 7) Approved Foirs e s 1W122 : CJ',- &*P~1"9,0400170064-4 tartan political parties ... can be con- sidered properly bona fide political parties in a democracy .. . principle of peaceful change, and it insists upon all rights and no duties. Yet these same parties masquerade The echoing clash Damned if you do, as freedom-loving instriments of political change. The "Once Communist parties or Fascist parties cease to be f debating societies and became formidable organizations Of Rex and L ex dead if you don t for action, they present challenge that is suicidal to ignore," he writes. At such a juncture, when the totali- --------------------------------- By Hubert H. Humphrey DEMOCRACY'S DILEMMA: The Totalitarian Party In a Free So- ciety. By Benjamin E. Llpptncott. Ronald Press. 293 pp. $6.50. The place of a totalitarian party in a free society has taunted and troubled philosophers and students of politics alike. It is the thesis of this provocative and muscular tract, however, that not nearly enough of them have been sufficiently troubled and that in the riptide of political action this question has not shaken enough minds in the English and American commu- nity of scholars. The author of this book is one of my oldest friends. Dr. Lippincott was also my teacher a good many years ago at the University of Minnesota. And he has some flattering things to say about my early "anti-Commu- nism" based on my conviction that liberalism, my faith, is totally inconsistent with totalitarianism of any kind, the Right or the Left. It is not for these reasons alone, however, that I pay tribute to this critical study of democratic political theory. Dr. Lippincott's point of view will be strongly challenged by many. The question he discusses is whether totalitarian political parties that aim to achieve their ends by force and violence can be considered properly bona fide political parties in a democracy with all of the protections thereby implied. In analyzing the contributions that have been made to this. question by intellectuals, scholars and political leaders, he finds a "neglect of thought" with but few exceptions. To discover the writers who have actually dealt with the dilemma of the totalitarian party in a free society, Mr. Lippincott searched 1,000 books in the case of Great Britain, 5,000 for the United States. His con- clusion : "relatively little attention was given to the totalitarian dilemma confronting democracy in Britain ull and the United States between 1917 and 1952." More- over, not only has this critical subject been neglected, but even where it has been discussed the approach has been elliptical and confused. In short, he says, it has failed to meet the issue head on. For whatever the reason-sincere hopes for defrosting the cold war in the late Forties or simply a perverseness in academe -it has not received the attention it deserved. For Professor Lippincott, the nub of the question is not a matter of compromising convictions of free speech or succumbing to the syndrome that suggests that an evil genie to destroy is lurking in the breast of every Marxist who resorts to rhetoric. It is rather a time for honest, dispassionate analysis of the twin dangers of a totalitarian party to a democratic society: the inability to tell at what precise moment the over- throw of democratic government can be consummated by violence-or the inability to determine when demo- cratic institutions can be captured without violence as in the tragic case of Czechoslovakia. The central thrust of Lippincott's thesis is that the totalitarian party is essentially illegitimate. It rejects commitment to the maintenance of freedom and the tartan party demonstrates, an ability to infiltrate social and governmental organ :nations or to tie up critical facilities, Mr. Lippincott holds that "government in- terference is not only justified but required." He is impatient with she orthodox who would not interfere with the Communist or Fascist -Party until it had embarked upon revolitionary acts, which generally means acts of violence. The spiny problem here is that governmental action may be postponed until it is too late. flow much individual violence can be tolerated before the totalitarian party should be effectively con- trolled or broken up? Surely this question was never successfully answered it Germany and Italy, nor in Czechoslovakia, where the infiltration of_governmental and social organizations ltad been so deep that a blood- less coup could be engineered without violence. Lippincott believes that his own answer to the basic dilemma is fully consistent with "the liberal point of view," He urges that the way to curl) and dismantle the power of the totalitarian party is to insist that the debate on this question does not belong within the contcxt of the individual or his freedom of speech. He places it squarely in the area of association and conspiratorial action. In this tradition, he stands with Sidney Hook's Hetrsy Yes, Conspiracy No as a trenchant critic of ritualistic thinking. It reminds one, too, of the distinguished philosopher, llrthur Lovejoy, founder of the American Association of University Professors and long one of the boldest champions of academic freedom, who delivered a stern rebuke 15 years ago to those who insisted that a member of the Communist Party had a moral right to teach in a university: ("The believer in the indispensability of freedom," he argued, "whether academic or political, is not thereby committed to the conclusion that it is his duty to facilitate its destruction, by placing its enemies in the, strategic position; of power, prestige or influ- ence.... The conception of freedom is not one which implies the legitimacy and inevitability of its own suicide. It is, on the contrary, a conception which defines the limits of is own applicability; what it implies is that there is me kind of freedom which is inadmissible-the freedom to destroy freedom. The defender of freedom of thought and speech is not morally bound to enter the fight with both hands tied behind his back. And those who would deny such freedom to others, if trey could, have no moral or ,logical basis for the claim to enjoy the freedom they would deny." Professor Lippincott';. book is highly controversial. Many academicians will genuinely attack its solutions. Those from the far-out precincts of the Right and Left will, of course, attack its premise. Then there are those disenchajted with our amiable two-party system (recalling Mencken's spoof of the Twenties-"twin tin cannons loaded with talcum powder") who, under the banner of free choice doctrine, would risk the most virulent extremism. But it is clear to me that the book makes a valuable cont?ibution toward understanding the true nature of the totalitarian party. Here is a book that should be within easy reach of all who would underitand one of the great enigmas of democratic government. It holds many lessons, not only for ourselves, but : erhaps even more importantly for the peoples of developing nations whose uneasy Hubert H. Humphrey taught political science at Ma