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Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
368
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 23, 2010
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 29, 1980
Content Type:
MISC
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Iq
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STAT
STAT
STAT
STAT
STAT
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- CHARLESTON 1S.C.)
POST
Circ.: `e. 32,620
Front Edit Other
Page Page Page
Date: `;EP ! ;t)
ILI Xta
I
L
uss~an Officer Saye ------
Reds:. Plan Sui-prise, Attack
11VASHINGTt1N (AP) - Soviettthe first
public disclosure of his Ia surprise attack has been official
leaders ' would not hesitate toipresence in this country.
launch a surprise nuclear attack The slim, bespectacled Soviet since February i95 a . He said it
with a heavy black moustache, was spelled out a Soviet ly to
the United States if th ey tart' publication available only to
thought this nation could be Ispent most of his time telling of
smashed with one stroke, a for. his Soviet-style education and of high-ranking officers.' mer Soviet naval officer says. a gradual disillusionment with He said he had not himself seen
Capt. 1likolai Fedrovich Arta. So%' et leaders. lany directives ordering prepara-
rnonov testified Wednesday, that He said he had been in the tions for such a surprise assault
Soviet military strategy has been United States since shortly after Ion this nation.
based on the doctrine of a surprise be tied to the West, working with He said "no senior Soviet of-
nuclear attack since February U. S. agencies he did not name, 1ricer believes that the United
1955' , I ; ~' He said he lives now in New States would attack first. ;,
ArtamonovI 32, who was com- York City, at an undisclosed ad- Under questioning,' Artamonov
mander of a Soviet destroyer in dress, without guards or any form confirmed Western suspicions
the Baltic fleet, defected to thelor protection from Communist re- that the Soviet fishing trawlers
United States in June 1959 while taliation. frequently seen near U. S. waters
stationed at Gdyriia, Poland. Despite premier Nikita Khrush. are spying, not f bin Ue ~
His appcar2 efore thelchev's repeated pronouncements the vessels always are opera
House Committee on Un Amerl- favorin disarmament, Artamo- and manned by agents of Sov~ie
lean Activities, however, provided1nov said, the Soviet doctrine ofnaval intelligence. -
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I .. - s
Pr-11 A.fo[C' /~
K'ASHING
TON t, D. C.
PROVIDENCE (R.I.)
BULLETIN
Circ.: e. 142,535
Front Edit
Page Other
Pse? Page
gate: SEP 19G0
.Russian
Canf_
~VVashing~h (upD -
ts~m~.=he As saw nothing nartg
a'tCs.e ent that told
are. ts.
In
PY,on their efm,de
` l4 20's, he oft.
a:mmIlnief ? el; d
cuscus
iriendt
Yet.
4? 'y' ms lather and
at
31
, Nikolai Fedoro.
vich A1?ta
So monov, captain In tSoviet Navy and commander of e
a 'deshwer~, defected
the
tT
ta
a
~ i
~
l
fanmonov,' a tall, slim
a thick moustache,
l answered thl s
. je-y at a conb, queStion yestet-l
n
He did not sayana adrnlr~ I
aware of the how he became
H. tide:
arucje
m ay
log that "sudden attaa
ay
result In the ra
id
p
Coll ps
a government." He sal he td
terpreted'this to mean
ernment of the United Statese go
.
He asserted th
t
a
the nucleat
(doctrine had been restated but
not changed during the' last
four veAn
earls ,. 'Am eri --lb oil Tnelnuclear doc ..v"uv said the - -- ~' : s
Jt can East last actually .1955 trine was laid down
x
- _ In a confidential Sovie
20359
40
Dressed in a consem'ative blue elaborate a w v .es ~jLw` sea
(suit, be disclosed are el
to the publby Soviet t.,?.,,py_ahlps manned militAr., ..
for the firm, ti
L ,_ .. .
me
ev from behind th4with fish before are e even loaded
Inon Cur fain, / Isla they leave Rus-
He said he r~nfn , J an rffn.+
__ .
to
?yea the Soviet He said .
government was comtnittin d Soviet strategy for
crimes on an international More than a doc years has been
scale" and was lying to the rise trine of s
world and its own people. P " snack in ~-
It ";n.4 ,,:a_,~ fare. u. ,._, - nuclear tcar-
the told the----ouuss -u tense "-- )V]et Pre-
( He Committ ee a su Khrushchev would launch
on un-American activities. rPrise
Sta attack on the United
Capt. Artamonov, now livin tes If he became colfvUncedl
in New York __~ .. S Russia coup ,,.t., a-
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LOS ANGELES (Calif.)
EXAMINER
Circ.: m. 369,537
S. 684,605
Front Edit 0th.,
Pap. Page Pig.
Date: SEP 15 1t
pedited= Rio -? IN ikita? :..:4 .
Pears Harbor as 'any-time Just :
as the 'Japanese bombed.
Hawaii' while'.their. ministets :.
capable' of pulling an6ther ,? i
;Premier Khrushchcv, who Is
roming to America next week
to use the United Nations as
a sounding board for "peace"
and "disarmament," was de-
scribed by .a_Sov:et defector.-
Wednesday. aj a man who has
secretly set up the machinery,
for a sneak nuclear attack
the United State=..;. - r .1
I.: The defector drew a picture,
were
motto
Wash;
AuCCI teE Prk r w!r. +ota'
Kremlin; leaders: are -ready to y-1
u111e8sh' I nnelear . helecs>:d `'' r A * "KTI:tlrwr ti?.
told- a' House,-: subcommittee:
ZS:
on:,un-American activities the ' Jf?
s''.. of 7:negotiation Its
The er?Russian navy offices
"Mirushthevdoes not wish
to wait . Indefinitely for. the
a
United States to become.;,"
Socialist state by evolution
on to unltcd Stated the mm?> t Y'
ate They feel they can scores AHTA;110hOi5 `
on`cstroke`bnockout. .~'_ i-` i i" '" ;
the officer said.
'die would like to see it take
place In his lifetime."
Speaking' was 32-year-old
Nikolai ..Artamonov, former
destroyer. commander who
deserted a brilliant future in
the -Russian.. navy to seek
asylum in the United States.
Artamonov has been living
secretly in New York since
last' year. His defection wash
reveale for the fir-at. time
edne ay.
Arta onov told the. 'sub-
committEe since.1955, "Soviet
Istrat.egy has been based on
the doctrine' 'of surprise at.
"
In,' uclear warfare.
Itac
Thep ' captain quoted from
a' classified report from the
Soviet defense ministry issued
to general officers laying out
the. basic principles of sur-
prise attack nuclear warfare.
In' nuclear attack, the
re-
port said= "surprise Is one o
the'-.decisive factors" .,and
added a. "sudden attack ins
volving Nuclear weapons and
other uses - of . modern. war
Suits: thah .Uf the ? last war."
Artcmonov said'he under
stood a special force Is al
ready set up to-carry out a
surprise attack if -ordered.
Artamonov : told ; the - sub-
committee Soviet naval -intel-
ligence :.:operates :?a , fleet- of
specially',, equipped' disguised
fishing: trawlers to-work the
Coastal waters of the United
States and gather intelli-
gence. .
The fake trawlers- daily
chart and record such infor-
mation as locatloii`of shore
installations, radio and radar
frequencies used'by the U. S.
Navy, structure of 1;n52rican
fleet- torpose"s? of weapons,
ods df shipping cargo4"and
positions of U. S. air and sea
patrols.
:.,.-I i' >.';. r; ? .
tr 0
20360
eak Attach P1?n
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/S SEPr Ga
Kid- aypearaccef 3 esterda . lied
fore the Rouse ' committee : o
Un?Americail Ac'tiyltles, - hgwev.'
er,,provided the first nubile"mull
a.t
closure. of hit presence 1p`.thi
count
rimono sejQ the So
*71
8hnshchev'a:repeate~'d pro
Desp! a pn mT Ulk
he fled go- Vie, Weal 'jro3
l
ilusionment with Soviet leaders;
C b~ ~-_iJ i_ L_I.. ~ `_._ . -4..
black moustache,' apmt`mast'`
bis'time,temng of his Sdviet-s +
education and'-or a da
"
t'1 1nflJtiry rp b
JOURNAL
Circ.: e. 52,093
WASHINGTON 1. 0. C.
JACKSONVILLE (Fla.) . '~
/-l YMCK '
monov testified . yesterday: thJi
' Soviet'militaiy strategy n~ ''?? beef
(based on .the doctrine of? a, sal'.
. prise nuclear attack since Februr
ary 1955..::~.~:.~yr I. Artamonov. A?ho as co nmand;
er n/ ? T?,,~?.1.'ww_-?__..__~.a_1
titer says.. jkr ..., r..;..
I nation could be smashed. with
stroke, a former Soviet naval;"of,
leaders would ; hod tata:,it tE
launch a surprise attack
, oa jhe,
United States ' If ? they thought ;Lb
I WASHINGTON s'
(81-Buss! 'L
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~ r r ! ! J ' n t ' r cn c , , Jn t.
q
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Q e~ 1
Pr e-44 Jn (rl ua rn c,, }.
WASHING]ON 1. O. C.
rgP t Niky `i
Fedorovc ti`~Artamcno
ovlet. D ec Or
~'QC if ~p
.
. 1o_ ,. 1'
Says Reds
It ul :Attck If St
i
E
rong
ll
Washin on,1;` rk t '~'' Y' Jt~r''. "-`t'? Qu
`~ --~ w ? a surprise mtc~ear,stationed et: -':; a 1 o'8n ' d+
8ttaCS on trip Tim`#.A rl~.__ It .i ,
thought` this' natioa'r' coup"lie Ho`" apE~ffiance ~;~~`i
smashed v ith`one stioie;a 6'. co.. A COmmiti'ee~ o~} ,Un- ie
m et cu ues~ ho -, f a
~ S6vinaval off;cer ` sap ;'' th
f rt P;nli';
rus ,
e
d c]
pt. 1VikOlaf Fednin4trfi' blic s ostue- ?
1;a~oa - +. mss ~~~ Dean untte~l`Stete~~'"
q~e
doct
~
>t''o
=~''' "
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~~. a
, _
r
n
f
e~~fd the ~
Pr nucleate ry
atacY'sinj~e ~''~4 ~e 1 ?, `5'0r~o
, j . ,. ?: Wu uua pe
onov, who~York
mender Oalu=
f lm CMA.'V .t? ' $!r c J OCA
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P.2V
SEP 15 1960
Date:
P.9* Pogo /
N'll\1'C~-('apl. ~il.altl l'rtluro\it h .\ti.,mi'n" . .!r
??
ferted Ituccian nasal officer, sr.trrtlj' ll 14.141 the 111.11
i'n?Amrriran Aclivitles ('ontntitirr in 11'a0hlntl..n t11:1t
the Snslrl l'nlnn hat been prrparing, .lire lur a cnt?
price nuclear attack a;,ainct the I Wiled Ft.itec.
Lies Sickened Hit.n.
Officer Left Sovlot
1t'.\tilll~t:TO\. Sort. U a 1'.rr - \c . he c.?.\,1:"'t.ir
?-%ion,- with a ,,0\'et'nnlent Mat 4.1:11 4h.11itctl it, ,1?i 4?H 11tr
i I''ants. In hit :1'., be of:rn cl: frndrll l'u?1::1:I.i: i' ..:.
;..dicu?s in diccu~aunc \\Ith Li. f..tLrr ..n.l fl is n....
Yet. .11. Nd:oiat I:'4..t1010
tit All.11i ov. r:Iptain in the f?, :^ ? .?: ? h:; !i? r 1 ! .
-
/- ;i$ JnJlr((, fence, /nf
WAt?MINGTON 1. 0. C. i-
WILMINGTON (Del.)
JOURNAL.
EVERY EVENING
Circ.: e. 70,988
-,ont Edit Other
NO P.9. P.s.
Date: SEP 15 1960
^--:Y
1 '-
t
\ikal.t1 1'edornsiria .ltttmnnm. .1r
frrtrd Ihtc.lan naval officer. :ir%trl,lall told the. 11uu t?
t'n-American Activities Committer in R'a.lun_t"n t11at
the 5Zn\ iel Union has been prrparin: 'litre In i for 'or-
3$! ice nuclear attack against tli tailed Stales.
lies Sickened 11im-11.
Officer Left Soviot
ll' ? to the Lnr.ra Wiles. .?.~-??.. .
...... ~---- , WASHINGTON. Se t. Ii 471'r- \s a t1u1'1. hr s.\v 1'?1:1ar
l1'h): : 14 C umi*?1 l.uia t :1 p
tin the I .le?t St. \%,:h a l:oseinment that to.l ch41tltru Io i?t'v 4?u lile.
t\I:;jmnnov, a fall. slim T.11t- 1r hr..::?1C 4'0:1:1^ l?ti l::::..? .tat. In his :fl'}, lie of:en citfrrlltt-d 1'?,?1::I:u::I-t
eoJ1 w:a n one s::o.e. ??L, u?. in dlcru ...?
the 1irsF .puvu~..h-.- ?.; 1i
pfesencd in this " 61;
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t~-Sti.-ft:t.~ "r L:- 'idt~?- ..=_y.~it-:......_ - - -.:v.as.c.. ?- -.~..-~.-..,`A.~~ _~a~
- 1 J
1 b 1960
Dote:
Khrushchev's r s p e a t e a pro-'1
lJefector'Sa ys Red War -Plan nouncements favoring disarm.
} ament, Artamonov said,' ?thi+1
.1. 1 V 1.
>
t
V, ?
< ov e
oc ne of a surprise
' Is1Rs' on Atone jNurnrise attack has-been-official'; since
pred! 9n1e/19cnce, 9nc.
WASHINGj: -'--i C.
YOUNGSTOWN (Ohio)
VINDICATOR
101,758
S. 146,623
Front Edit Other -
Page Page P.p.
Circ.: e.
_Z J.
j8V Trio iCrsocleiiti Prea)-'' c.j?? ax .t"?" spelled out In a Soviet military
Waehingto Sept' 1S- tps ~T' } r ~s~ t ~ ~ publication available only' to
'Ian leaders' would not hesitate ?~*`t ~,~ r+? ^~ s high-ranking officers. i i
o launch a surprise nuclear at- Didn't See Orders,
ack on.
u the United States if He said he had not himself
seen any directives' orderin
~eY'thoght this nation could y
re smashed with one'atroke, a f ,t n preparations for such a surprise
assault on this nation. But-1W
ormer Soviet naval' officer .It / ,...} r ' added: ?: .
A 1,
'7 know of general,.broad
.1 A.
pare the Soviet officer corps
estified Wednesda -that Soviet ~ pre
nilitary ' strategy has .beW'j*
for the pessiblity of being or-
"used on the doctrjne of a sur dered to make a surprise at-
A.. I 1 1: LTD- #...u I-
efore the House Committee on
in-American `Aetlvities, 'how-
ver, provided the first public
iaclosure of his presence in
his country'...- ., .
Became Disillusioned .
The 32-year-old, Russian, a
lira, bespectacled man with a
IrLalnonov, who;. was: com-
iander of a Russian destroyer'
I the. Baltic* Fleet, defected to
We United States in June 1959
'hale stationed at Gydnia, Pa
and. :::. .
His appearance Wednesday
-A. odated Press Wirephoto
Capt. Artamonov
after be fled to the West, work-~
ing with U.S. agencies.
He said he lives now In New
'-o%1et leaders. any form of protection froth
He said ' he. had been to the Communist retaliation.
Ynited States, since shortly Despite. Premier Nikita S
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e- /0
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defectea
V1/AKiva v?
a t. Nikolat Artamonov, naval officer.
,0
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~'?c'.'1+_
,0
20367
DALLAS (Tex )
NEVYS
m. 211,763
S. 222,469
etlc ? type wI square AM first." monov detail ' .'Piley
and robust bsii~da' Neves, Russia efts h tfie
~vo~si 7aulich .:e? ucleaf attack Attamotioe advised that I{lirtuh. isut mmed up defection 40 policies off',
,'? -L.-.. aMt not want to wain in
y
Ihe 82 year-old FaT)'in, an
? AA - fiver believes that the U.S.. u Rn di.AstA the -Was fsir,
an atLaCB.~ }T . A,~ ei _s?' -
the aid of an interpreter, Arta-
rnonov said the doctrine of fur,
prise attack was established "h
a .Soviet military: publication
which is known only - to officers
of flag rank and'above."-r
Be conceded he had not actual=
ly seen any directives to prepare
for a surprise attack on the Unit-
ed States. "But I know 'of general, broad
20403
Front Edit Other
Pape Pape Page
II/ /
Dote: SEP 15 1960
t a*
navy captain, who defected' inltorial waters hunting informa- place in his U4.
l
Wednesday 'that since February,,tion, be testified. 'At'' anotheri point,' tha- fora
'
statements which tended to pre-
pare the Soviet officer corps for
the. passibility ' of being ordered
to make' a' surprise attack." add-
ed tha; slim, ex-destroyer skipper.
Artamonov said "no senior So-iemotion, he spoke in bitter wor4s
viet officer believes that the Unit-
ed States will attack fiat."....
Questioned by the - committee,
the bespectacled ~Artamonov said
cc
Russian Navy man told tbe
Chat are they seeking? Knowl- mittee: "= :: r ..? :', .~
edge about the makeup of the "If,. 1u4ish v' _ed,~.
U.S. fleet, weapons used by Amer- strength of the ' oviet Union, -
ican warships and anti-submarine overwhelm I a g he; wouldi:l
measures being t a k e n by the course, deal i 'stunning bloi,
U.S. Navy, the Russian. defector the West," :.-i =Y ~~g~1. .- u
said" r However he also ' s4-d r 1
'
probably is serious at
Although without appare n t shcbev
of Soviet Premier Nikita S. Kbru-
shchev.
i'Khrushchev, does' not wish'. to
writ indefinitely": for. the United
Russian :fishing trawlers Olt a nby'evolution, moreover, he does
Sighted near P.S. waters are op- not believe ibis will hap p e ii,''
prated by Soviet naval . cute I Ili Art amonov asserted Z-,
cIc P Ian Rive
attempting to achneve a reams
through peaceful.means to ai
war.
Later Artamonov! told'ne*Sv
-again through a i inte'rpreti
thit ,, be . is living ; in ? w`~ .
without any } special pro 9cc
Ail he has, tn. defe td,t ji
prisals;``be sa! . tiFe'..+pt
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15 Sept ';by
e
r
e c5o1'/' Jam' Se`+~ , i t~:S ea . e, . ~., t. ~ .r
Attar' . f kC?BCr
By Courtney Sheldon
S:cf Corrc?pondcnl 01 7+.e Chrishan Scirnce bfanllor
I-'asnrn`tiun , any more than necessary, and
A Soviet naval officer came
to Washington Sept. 14 with an there is the hope that relatively
entirely different story about quiet presentation of the facts
Soviet intentions than his one- will be more persuasive ip the
time superior is taking to the long run.:
United Nations. Washington generally did not
Nikolai Fedorovich Artamonov, find anything in the Artamonov
told. the House un-American testimony that' was not already
Activities Committee: suspected or verified.
"Since February, 1955, Soviet The Navy, for example, had
strategy has been based on the long ago concluded that Soviet
doctrine of surprise attack in fishing vessels laden with elec-
nuclear warfare. This doctrine tronic gear and operating close
was established In a Soviet mili- to the, United States mainland
tary publication which is known were on espionage missions.
only to officers of flag rank and His disclosures on Sovict na-
above. val ships came at a time when
"Several times over. the past; there is probably more interest
four years it has been said again here in why two separate So-
and it has never been changed.'1 viet task forces are headed Into
Mr. Artamonov's defection to the Atlantic and the Pacific.
She West has been kept secret by Accepted Interpretation
United States_ intelligence. au- The ncccptco interpretation
oecn interrogates at length, and
government officials have passed
the word along that they regard.
his information as accurate. .1
Countermove Seen .
These officials released him to
the House committee, for pub-
Llic testimony In an obvious
t
t
h
ermove
o t
4 coun
e Soviet prop-
aganga attendant on..the arrival
.of Soviet Premier Nikita S.
Khrushchev in New York next
week.
r His testimony was widely re-
ported in the nation's press, but
it appears doubtful that It will
'have the impact that the' staged
.press conference of the Martin-
i Mitchell team did in Moscow.
For one thing, the United
lStates has not been in the habit
of following through decisively
in a propaganda way after
r'such disclosures.
By comparison, when Mr.
Khrushchev gets a sensational
news event favors'ble to the
Communists, he weds himself to
tit, repeating it over and over
;again, and needling United States
officials.
The United States approach
? is more dignified. American of-
it ficials usually decline to pick up
r these isolated incidents and run
4down the field with them.
?, More Psrsuaciv
There Is a desire not to In-
flame. the. international scene 1
are r;,% ?34-,. c., t' ?~r
hc;icr.p:crs, v.hich prcr.;mably pronoun cr.,cn:a `nu ,: a
:'?:o,-td be useful in tracnir.'g mcnt."
since craft and pcrhans at- In his clef:, "life fi fief
tempting ore;rn recovery of tatorst.ip would ui:n.' :alc,? a
sf:~c+? capsules. prise attack it sae fc.:fiat
Since the dawn of the space . could win in cue sirs;;e."
age, the Soviets hate executed ' He added: no mist.
a steady progression of space -they are rawer s" ers,
spectaculars which have fur- . noliticahidcal;sts. Khr:uhe.
thcrcd Soviet prestige in oat- does not wish to wait indefinit
ural science and have turned for t t1-e United _Siaic~ to-beco
people's attention away from asocia3tst state_bx_ev luti.
?such events as the Artamonov, 1V1-rco. cr, he goes not ex
defection. - o P
Mr. Artamonov emphasized tit to happen, lie would lice
that he does not regard himself 11$e err Atake place 'shis life
in
as having betrayed his country c Navy nco spo~in t
but that the present So 'ct lead- natSovit a li com les coavnm?d
y.
crs have betrayed the Sovict- in the e United d States Navy.
people. He insisted that he would- was captain of ;: destro.'cr i,
always remain a Russian, regarded, in the Soviet press,
13e started off by remarking tq. art officer with a bright future
the committee that "or, Monday Thirty-two yc-rs of nrc,
Premier Khrushchev arri%es in has lived only ur.:icr Cnm nur.
the United States. lie says he is rule. United Slates inteilii:r?r
going to tall; about disaimainent, officials wish there were mr,
:1 feel obtigcd to point out from more lice him. Information is
Information which is available to ?
d
fi
a forthcoming space exploit !me , as a Soviet officer and a
perhaps tied in a propaganda Communist Party member that,
Khrushchev's ar- the Soviet military strategy isi
way with Mr
.
rival in New York.' . inconsistent with Khrushchev's-
$0
20404
t
leult to extract from Com:n
nist closed societies that effo?
to obtain more ara unrelcatir
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RALEIGH (N.C.)
TIMES
Circ.: e. 21,503
Front Edit Other
Pape Pape Pope
Date:. " T a0")
elected fed days Soviets'
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet
leaders would not. - hesitate to
launch a surprise nuclear attack
on the ? United States If ? they
thought this nation could be
.mashed wish' -one stroke, *a* for-
mer Soviet naval officer says.
-Capt. Nikolai Fe'dorovich Arta-
inonov testified Wednesday that
Soviet military strategy has been
based on the doctrine of a surprise
nuclear-' attack since February
1955.
'=-.Artamonov, 32, who was corn-
- nander. of a Soviet destroyer in
the' Baltic, fleet,' defeated to the
? United ' States--in June 1959 while
stationed at Gdynia, Poland.
His appearance'- before thel
House Committee -on Un-
Ameri-can Activities, however, provided,
the first public public disclosure of his
. p; esence In this,country. .
The slim,' bespectacled Soviet]
with a heavy black moustache,1
spent most of his time telling oil
his Soviet style education and of;
a gradual disillusionment with
Soviet leaders.
He said he had been in the
United States since 'shortly after
he fled to the West, working with
U. S. agencies he did not name.
y
oa 0
N
`a. G m t3:'R
He said he lives now in New
York City, at an undisclosed ad.
dress, without guards or any form
of protection from Communist re-
taliation.
Despite premier Nikita Khrush:
m o0
9q
'~ Iv a? b
,,
F < M C
m. H:-ceQ
tier-Sr.r.
08
NIKOLAI F. ARTAMONOV
(1-
~to ,
_
V
.... CJ b A
?
9 S
0 0 Ia
m
O O ,~, H
.C
m r N
' n O1
X0405
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I ? r ri'f
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0
20406
nre -3n1111irnce, inc.
WASHINGTON 1. 0. C.
NORRISTOWN (Pa.)
TIMES HERALD
Circ.: e. 26,170
Front Edit 016..
P.p. -.9.1?=l.0~ 5 I96U
i
px,. it,=^i. Ss o .r
tes r,Sa Hotl8e46LbCommlO
x r -Mk "'FPQnf09jChR~.r +
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-c S ? f t e
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I9re3,
in!cft fcnca, 9nc.
ANABA (Mich.)
ss
Ci1c.: e. 10,301
t Edit Oihw
a Papa Papa
Date: SEP 15 196U.
'Soviets Build Up
L)eiecfOr Says.
WASHINGTON : (AP) Soviet
as spelled out i~ a Sol: t mili-
ary publication a:3 a e only to
igh-ranking g officers.
He said he lives now in New
York City. at an undisclosed ad-
dress, without guards or any form
of protection from Communist re-
taliation.
Despite Premier Nikita Khrush-
chev's repeated pronouncements
favoring disarmament. ? Artamo-
nov said, the Soviet doctrine of
a surprise attack has been official
since February 1955. He said it
leaders ?ould ',16t. hesitate to
launch a surprise nuclear attack
on the United States -If.-they
thought* this nation :could be
smashed with one ..stroke;' a for-
mer Soviet naval officer.says.?
Capt. Nikolai Fedorovich. "rta-
monov testified Wednesday that
Soviet military strategy. bas been
based on the doctrine of *.surprise
nuclear attack since February
1955. -
Artamonov.. 32. who was com-
mander of a Soviet destroyer in
,the Baltic fleet.--defected -to She
United :Stated in; June 1959 while
stationed at Gdynia, Poland' . .
His, appearance before : the
House Committee on . Un-Ameri-
can Activities, however, provided
th,. first public disclosure' of his
presence in, this -country., .
He said he had been in the
United States since shortly after
he fled to the West, working with
20407
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jI.
a
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
Date: ~L(' 1
Front E& 01her
Papa Page Pape
PHILADELPHIA (Pa.)
NEWS
Circ.: e. 191,666
q L~ a/ ?7 [1It .;tip 4. ~ZZ
Former Russian Army Capt.
?Nikolai Artama'nov. 3L'~told:
defected, becaus4-.::So~ictg'.
w e r e committing'rrcr i
ofiur~i?ise attaCIOn`nPc
Soviet;lstiaTed~~slnc~g~};
on an Internation eaj
8e cnareeC-~8 e'
20408
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,'rc!! /nlett CIen Ce, -Jnc.
K'ASHINGTO t. D. C
PONTIAC (Mich.)
PRESS
e. 57,900
Frdnt Edit Other
Pa'. Pape 34 15 1J[((~~ 61J
Date:
.,. -
ays Defect r, From the So~ie . . ff
t
uska d . fo r AtMC
leaders would " pot bestt&te to
launch ' a surprise. truclea7. - attAck
on the' United States ' it ? they
thought- this . nation could bei
smashed'with one ,;stroke, i for-
mer Soviet naval officer says.
Ca
X 'Nikolai Fedom
Actl.Arta
mot Qp testified Wednesday that
Soviet military strategy ' has been
based on the doctrine of a surprise
nuclear 'attack since 'February
1955. = ?i spent most of his time telling of
United states since shorty, after,
U.S. agencies he did. lot ramie -
He said he lives 44A-New
York Qty, at an t~dlsclose~ ad-
dress, without guards or. any torm'
of protection from Communist t-V11
to Cation.; ? '? .t`>t:?,
ite premier Nikita Khrutb-
Des
p
chev's repeated pr'onouncementi
I
'
voring disarmament,' Xkamo-
iloy #aid, the Soviet doctrine' otI
'offldal
a surprise attack- has been
since February 1955..1 .said - nl
was spelled out in a ? Soviet mW=*
tary publication available only1o
'high-ranking officers. "
He said he had not hlriiself seat
any directives ordering ' prepara-
ons'for such a surprise assault
Bu
.nten ds d.,1 1s2
et
broad stafeme~itl d~
ended to prepare 'the Soviet.of-
fiver corps for the. possfity ; Of
l eing'ordered'to make'a surprise
attaCk?r.
He said ' --no sentltr_' a of
hoer. . believes that' tbs United
states_? would ' attack IIfst. ~?' : ''
Under;, 4uestioning, ArtamonoY
(confirmed Western ' suspicions
,that the Soviet fishing -trawlers,
;freQuentiy seen near U. S. waters
are spying, not fishing. He, said
the vessels al ' operated
rd ? manned by a eats of Soviet
liiavval. intelligence.
20409
;corder-of a Soviet aesuvycr w.'
the Baltic fleet, defected to the
United states in Junes it5S1 whue'
stationed at Gd>igia, Poland.
His appearance-'before the
House Committee on Un-Ameri-
can Activities, however, Provided
the first public disclosure of his
presence in this country. '
with a heavy black moustache,
fi
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Pri!! /n ie ff g en ce, inc. I
WASHIf6:. , D. C.
FAIRMONT (W.Va.)
TI ES
C rc.: r . 13,043
Front Edit Other
page Pig. Pipo
~h .
lED DEFECTOR
SAYS SOVIETS
SPY ON IJ.S:
Man navy captain who defected
to the West testified Wednesday
Ex-Destroyer Officer
Tells About Ships
Off Coast
WASHINGTON (UPI)-A Rus-~
Describing the tra ers as the
Soviet's chief method obtaining
'information about the . Navy.
'the Russian said the ve also
reported on thr }uual flight Vat-
'terns of this country's early.
warnihi pltket'planes;His -tektimony came- 6.4 Hou.
Democratic Leader John W.. M
Cormaek called on the State
partment to make a full. report
to the United Nations General
Assembly on any. espionage oper-
ations by Soviet trawlers off the
East Coast.
The . Massacbusetts Democrat
said "well over 200" Ruaitaa
trawlers. sporting a "forest of
radar masts and electronic gear"
have passed through the Baltic
Sea into the Atlantic Ocean since
August I."
"By all lndic0ppa. NATO ex-
ercise 'Swo rust' will draw a
record n of these uninvited
Soviet y ships." McCormack
said In Statement.
A considerable number of Rua-
Man; fishing trawlers have been
spotted off the East Coast in re-
cent tnom2_+ts: Otte : trice peen d ..,he
Nikolai I+'edcrov1ch Artan{onovj
32, described as a fornW com-
mander of a Soviet destroyer,,
told a congressional hearing the
trawlers were manned by Soviet
intelligence personnel "concerned
with the combat preparation of
the U.S. fleet."
Artamonov, who said be defect.
ed to the West 15 months ago be-I
cause of disenchantment wit bi
"aggressive" Soviet foreign pol-
icy. testified that the Russian
vessels did not engage in any leg-
itimate. fishing. He said they were
loaded. with fish before leaving
the Soviet Union to appear legit-
imate in the event of search by
D.S. naval units.
Artamonov told a House sub-
committee on Un-American Ac-
tivities that the trawlers are la-
den with gadgets to pick up in-formation on radar frequencies
used by the Navy and the loca-!
Lion of shore-based "signal sys-
tems."
Speaking through an Interpret-
er, he said the ships were col-
lecting Information on the com-
position of the U.S. fleet, Its ma-
neuvers and the usual location of
Its patrols. Y ,
of
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BOSTON (Mass.)
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR
Circ.: e. 159,988
Front Edit Other
Page Page Pape
Date: ?SEP 15 1960 1
ector Hints Red Attu
will be more persuasive in the
long run.
Washington generally did not
find anything ht in the was of already
testimony ny
suspected or verified.
The Navy, for ample. had
long ago concluded that Soviet
fishing vessels laden with elec-
tronic gear and ating close
.. _~_oper_ -t..t-nd
defection.
Mr. Artamonov empb
that he does not regard h
as having betrayed his et
but that the present Soviet
err have betrayed the
people. He insisted that he
always remain a Russian_
were on esplonasc a+t?~r~?
His psce at a time when
`
val ships cam
there is probably ? more interest
here in why two separate So-
viet task forces are headed into
the Atlantic and the Pacific.
/Accepted Interpretation
The accepted interpretation
is that they are connected with
a forthcoming space exploit,'
perhaps tied in a propaganda;
way with Mr. Khrushcbev's ar-
rival in New York. fly
Mr. Artamonov's defection to
the West has been kept secret by
United States intelligence au-
thorities for 15 months. He has
been interrogated at length, and
government officials have .passed
the word along that they regard
his information as accurate-, F-'._'.
strategy has beet 'based on, the
doctrine of surprise attack .in
nuclear warfare. This doctrine
was established in a Soviet mill
tary publication which is known
only to officers of flag rank and
above.
"Several times over "the pant
four years it has been said again
and it has never been changed.
United Nation.-" -.-t,
Nikolai Fedorov1ch ArtoonoV
to Washington Sept. 14 with an
entirely different sto about
Soviet intentions than his one-
time superior is taking to the
By Courtney SbelA1oa ? :.
.1a Corr its e)'
The ChrUtlaa Seleaee NC*UIl
Washington
A Soviet naval officer came
Some the sapincluding
are carrying gear,
helicopters. which presumably usef would craft and l in perhapsk a t
space
tempting ocean recovery of
space capsules
Since the1eawnhe of the space
1
age, the SoV
-a . steady progression of space
spectaculars which have fur-
thered Soviet prestige in nat-
Ural pl~ s atce and tention h awway h from {
peo
By comparison, when Mr.
Khrushchev gets a- sensational
news event favorable. to the
Communists, be weds himself to
it, repeating it over and over
again, and needling United States.
officials.
The United States 'approach
is more dignified. American of-
ficials usually decline to pick uP
these isolated incide>~t3~d run
down the field wt4it' eWnL
More Persuasive? -t'
There is a desire not tc'1;1-
flame the international : scene
,any-more than necessary; and
there is the hope that relatively
quiet presentation of the facts
Countermove Seen ?r,.
These officials released him to
the House committee for pub-
lic testimony in-, an obvious
countermove to the Soviet prop-
aganga attendant on the arrival
of Soviet Premier Nikita'8.
Khrushchev in ,New York neut
week,- ... e ~;,
His testimony was widely're-
ported in the nation's press. but
.it appears doubtful that it Will
.have the impact that the staged
press conference of the Martin-
Mitchell team did in Moscow:'.
For one thing, the United
States has -not been in the habit
of following through decisively
in a propaganda way after
such disclosures.:
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~~ Imbw:i of . generals': ? (d
staternefU? ' ich t endedi pre-
pard`2he . 5ovlet fficerl, co Y or
tfie' Possibili ? - bein; ~ordere3
to inac air~r'ia~ i-ftacY,'*;+;.
cer esbelieves that' the' UV-i
Stat..bvouttd_atfae fiisU
.y
UNDER es,401.
e ern'.
the-
eraiy' tt a!iear?V
:kT?--
cas kivelf:1a _ _ __
-. `e
1i:
~s J9nIclligence, .9nc.
WASHINGTON D. C.
ANTAANTA (Ga.)
ATL JOURNAL
Circ.: e. 253,470
S. 502,485
Front Edit Other
Page Page Pape
Date? L r S '
SkSt
neaovie"
! 'Atf ack- Bare
yEi-Ri
Russian- leaders' would notes be'sI=
bttack 'on the' United-.Stitel
'they thought' this 'natioacouW
.mer Soviet naval officer ss> '
inonOY testified y'ednesW~,thus.
Soviet military strategy' has b4en
,,prise nuclear attack sinter F
ruary 1955. `: i
Baltic fleet. defected?to.the .unit
boned at Gdynia;'.diatld.'
f MM- IJ
before the t Hoitsp ,t , A'
Un-American ACtlVt, ~10We"
provided
} "i mars of his nresen '
I j try.
I The 32?year
bespectacled mat
his time'tellffi~''.
lusionmenl wite-Sovie0eaders1
- He saI he 'tiaa' & a R~lu'
Se fled to tha Went,-1
t. U.S. agencies ?te not r
tsad
Be.
~York at dress;'='tbotf ; tia ~1'Or
corm oI protectio
nisi relrlintYr~Atc
? ~1 fr .
Z;luvsbchev s reps ate _~.~,
ot alsurprise attack' has .bees
tida since Fcbfuary 1 ~. e'
I mlhta 7 epublic`allanavatlabi
i Be Aid lie bad mocha i I
amT;nuecavnsror earn r
dons 1 sucl d urpj '
oo this nation: Bute addtd
pare] the. So let otfI c( corps
a s rpria~i att~Ck.W' I
~`..
t sepor
Age ke. se4 :0_ti
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WASMINGTON 1. O C
MONROE (La.)
NEWS-STAR
Circ.: e. 15,803
Front Edit Other ll
Page Page Pogo
6 00
Dotes 5 1 -- -
Re ds*" . Ig oa Cane Stroke..
.~o.r
Attack, Defactor Declares
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet
leaders would not hesitate to
launch a surprise nuclear attack
on the United States if they .
thought this nation- could be
smashed with one stroke, a for-
mer Soviet naval officer says.
Capt. Nikolai Fedorovich Arts-
monov testified Wednesday that
Soviet military strategy has been
based on the doctrine of a surprise
nuclear attack -since February
1955.
Artamonov. 32. who was com-
mander of a Soviet destroyer In
the Baltic fleet, defected to- the
United States in 'June 1959 white
stationed at Gdynia, Poland.
His appearance before the
House Committee on Un-Ameri-
can Activities, however. provided
the first public disclosure of his
presence in this country.
The slim, bespectacled Soviet
with a heavy black moustache,
spent most of his time telling of
his Soviet-style education and of
a gradual disillusionment with
Soviet leaders.
He said be had been in the
United States since shortly after
he fled to the West, working with
U. S. agencies be did not name.
He said be lives now in New
York city, at an' undisclosed ad-
dress, without guards or any form
of protection from Communist re-
taliation.
Despite premier Niikita Khrusb-
chev's repeated pronouncements
favoring disarmament. Artamo-
nov said, the Soviet doctrine of
a surprise attack has been official
since February 1955. He said it
ili
i
t
m
-
e
was spelled out in a Sov
tary publication available only to CAPT. NIKOLAI Fedorovich Ar,~t,~~ onov who held the
high-ranking officers. rank of captain in the Russian "f-?y before defecting
He said be had not himself seen last year to this country, talks to newsmen after
any directives ordering prepare- testifying before the House unAmerican Activities
tions for such a surprise assault Committee. Speaking mostly in Russian with the aid
on this nation.
But he added: "I know of gen- of an interpreter, Artamonov said that despite Soviet
eral. broad statements which Premier Nikita Khrushchev's statements favoring
tended to prepare the Soviet of- disarmament, Russian military forces have been under
ricer corps for the possibility .of orders to be ready tA-te,ei! off an immediate nuclear
being ordered to make a surprise attack on this country. (AP Wirephoto)
attack.
He said "no senior Soviet of=
-ficer believes that the United
states would attack first
Under questioning. Artamonov
confirmed Western suspicions
that the Soviet fishing trawlers
frequently seen near U. S. waters
are spying. not fishing. He said
the vessels always are operated
and manned by agents of Soviet
naval Intelligence.
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`'red! Ontrff,'?cncv, inc.
BINGHAMTON (N.Y.)
PRESS
Circ.: e. 69,684
S. 69,662
Front Edit Other
Papa Papa Page
Jed Strategy.
Washington - lRl Russian
not hesitate to
launch a surprise nuclear attack
on the -United States if they
'thought this nation could be
smasr.ed with one stroke, a for.
' mer Soviet naval. officer says. -
- Capt. Nikol4_Fedorovich Ar-
tamonov testified yesterday that,
Soviet military strategy has been
based on the doctrine of a sir.
ruary, 1955.
v., who was coat- `
manger of a Russian destroyer`
i
h
n t
e Baltic Fleet, defected to.
the United States in June, 1959
while stationed at Gdynia, Po-
land. -
His Appearance yesterday be-
fore the House Committee on
Un-American Activities, howev-
er, provided the first public dis-
closure of his presence in ? this ;
countr
y, /
The 32-year-old Russian, a
.slim, bespectacled man
ith
w
a
heavy- black mustache, spent .
most of his time telling of his
Soviet-style education and of a?-
.
radu
l d
g
a
isillusionment wjth
Soviet leaders .
h
ad
United States since shortly aft.::
er he fled to the West, working'.'
with U. S. agencies be did not
name.
He said he lives now in New
York City, at an undisclosed ad.
dress, without guards or any
form of protection from Com
.Munist retaliati
n
o
.
Despite Premier Niklta S.
1Khrushchev's repeated pro-
nouncements favoring disarma.
ment, Artamonov said, the Soviet
doctrine of a surprise attack has
been official since 'February,
1955. He said it was spelled
out in a Soviet military publi-
cation available o high.
.Tanking officers.
He said he had not himself
seen any ' drectives orderingj
AFTER -Aaaodaled pre= WIRrpBo .'
TESTIMONY'- Capt.- Nircolai F
d
rovic
e
o
h
Artamonov who held the rank of captain in' t)e_1
Russian Navy before defecting last year tp this'.'
countrQ
t
lk
t
w
f
a
s
o ne
smen after testifying before
A he House Un-American Activities Committee.'
'
cme
is which tenaea t prep
assault on this nation. But be pare the Soviet offg
added:. i ~~- - .. v let for
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SALT LAKE CITY (Utah)
DESERET NEWS &
TELEGRAM
Circ.: e. 88,097
Front Edit Other
Page Page Page
Urn
'I
Date: S P 15 1960
NIKOLAI )f'. ARTAAMONOV
? ? : flees to freedom
4 bid
jBy DAVID BURA'HAMxy #l-!' Ame
ricd east CO
WASHINGTON,, ijJPI1 tuelly`s a eIa"`borate sv
A
ch
Q
e
' `
s a
i.
, he saw noth
ing
wrong with i government that
told chi]dren',to spy on-their
parents. In his` 2os he oftei
defended Communist' Party
policies in diseusslons with h
father and `friends:.;
Yet,' at- 31, Nikolai Fedora
vich Artamonov;'captain"in the
Soviet army and ?comiriandee
of a Red banner destroyer, d"?'
fected to the' United States.`'
Why?
Artamonov, a'tall,'slim Ru =''
scan with. a "thick moustache;
answeredr1 this'.:' question
Wedneeday'nf a con sessi
nal
o
rtamonov,; now: living
ilttii
New York, : veighed'againsf
the Soviet goinvernment?In' Pven
stronger terms. He'chacged? .
soviet fishing trawlers off
It .'gust didn't,mnke sensr''l
he told the House'+Un-Anieri-
can Actlvitk_i_mittet 14;
A
hind the Iron CurtefiL"--;# :'
He said he` defected -tecaur
he Tinally 1 eali?ed`the 'Sovet
government.; was. -cominitQ=jg
"cria:es` b ;an.:lhternational
scale, and .was'; ~ying 'o 'tlie
hearing..,; x ' fFf ~ +` -
Dressed !n 'a ~ conservative
blue: suit, Ni disclosed "to the
public -for the -first` t1m s
flight 15 months agmdroin bo
4r 0
20415
mann
d 1 So
te
personnel:. T e
y
even
loaded with -f(sh'.
they leave.Russta' '
ty
`. - ' ovvI t strategy F }no
,
than' four t ys ,b
bh'sed,' riiar add
prise: attack n
ad"
?
! ` e
~`
f
Ht
beI
s'
th$?'United''Stttes.`
-wW~ yv,
1955' fn;sa.'conflditia1.
He'did no(aa'ri'o`ty
.Y -___l-
1ng t]ie?"s ddep a `i
soli Ynrtht TaDid i'ti
ernniene''tittifr~ted'
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GRAND RAPIDS (~Jtich.)
Circ., e. 124,354
S. 80,678
Ptt_ j? ate
~
`: ,,
arent
Washington , - A- Rusataa Although without app
bitter
i
l
navy 'captain who, defected in
disillusionment last y-ear* ' de-
clared Wednesday that' since
February 1655 Soviet_i6ategy,
has been based on. the doctrine
of a nuclear surprise attack on
the United States.
Capt. Nikolai Fedorovich Arta-?
n
;e,
emotion,, he spo
words of Soviet Premier Nikita
Sr Khrusbchev.: ,,'..;; ... 1
:'Rhrushchev does not wish to
watt indefinitely for' the United
States . to become i socialist
state by evolution; moreover
he does not believe this will
monov, who crossed tolbe west'
in June, 1959, came into the
place in-his lifetime."
At another point, the former
Russian'navy man told the cot=
mittee: ~
"If Khrushchev believed.the
strength of the Soviet union
was overwhelming he would,` of
course, deal a stunning blow to
the west."
open before the house commit- --
tee on un-American activities.-
The 32-year-old Russian said
a realization that' "everything
being said in Russia was. not
true, but based on lies" led bim~~
to defect. He didn't say he escaped to- the 'west. ` -'
Speaking mostly In Russian
with the aid of an interpreter,,
the heavily mustached Arta-:
monov said the doctrine of sur-
prise attack was established "in
a Soviet military publication
which is known only to officers
of flag rank and above'
He conceded he had not actual- .
y seen any directives to pre=-
are' for a surprise attack on
he United States. ?
Broad Statements' - ?
"But I know of general, broad.;
tatements which tended to pre.
;pare the Soviet officer corps
for the possibility of being
ordered to make a surprise at,-
tack," added the slim, dark ex-
destroyer skipper.
Artamonov said "no senior
Soviet officer believes that the
United States will attack first." .
Questioned by the committee,
the bespectacled Artamonov
said Russian fishing trawlers
often sighted near United
States waters are operated by.
-Soviet naval intelligence. Rus-
sian submarines also hover close
to American territorial waters
hunting Information, be testi-
fied.
What are ~Le seeking?
Knowledge about the makeup
of the United States fleet, weap-
ons used by American warships
and anti-submarine measures
being taken by -the United
States navy, the Russian defect-
or said. ' .
EST-Nik lali:l
:
S TO V
e;
Tt
yi
RUSSIAN DEFEC
F. Artamonov, Sgt Russian nave r - wio '?..- !+
ties ,Wednesd y at'Sb-'ve} rn1htary st aIel
? , l .?llg
i
`
ne
o
since .l9-5 has been based on tie doctr
v
arfare
":
ucl
t
t '
a
n'
ck
t
i
r
.
~
;
q
a
~
r
,+
`s
se at
surpr
,0
20416
f "He would like to see it take
'
" I
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AUGUSTA (Me.)
KENNEBEC JOURNAL
Circ.: m. 12,987
front Edit Other
Page Page Page
3
Date: ~_r151'.1
]News In Brief.'..
DENVER (AP)-The FBI an-I
nounced Wednesday that clothing
belonging to Adolph Coors III, 44,
wealthy'. Industrialist missing
since Feb. 9, has been found.
i Scott Werner. . FBI agent In
i charge here, also said a quantity
of bones found to be of ..an adult
human being" also were found in
the area.
Werner said it has not been de-
tcrmined whether these might be
part of the remains of Coors.
The clothing was found in a
field in Douglas County about 15
miles south of Denver. A pair of
trousers containing money and a
February 1955 Soviet strategy has
been based on the doctrine of a
nuclear surprise attack on .. the
United States.
Capt. Nikolai Fcdorovich Arta-
monov, who crossed to the West
in June 1959, came into the open
before the House Committee on
Vn-American activities.
FAA Control Center
NEW YORK (AP)-The Feder-
al Aviation Agency Wednesday
announced the site for a new $5
million air route traffic control
center will be at Nashua, N. H.,
which will move the operation
from Boston's Logan lnternation.
al Airport.
Counterblow
BERLIN (AP)-West Germany
Wednesday ordered Its first- trade
sanctions against the Commu sts
for their squeeze on Berlin. The
big Western powers also pla ned
new counterblows.
pocketknife with the initials "AC
III" also were found.
"There was a large quantity of
bones in the area," Werner said.
"We thought at first these were
all bones of deer and other ant
mals, but a pathological examina-
tion Wednesday showed some of
the bones are the skeletal re-
mains of an adult human being."
Bishop Deported
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(AP)-The sudden deportation, of
the Anglican bishop of Johannes-
burg, the Rt. Rev. Ambrose
Reeves, has raised a storm likely
to have great political repercus-
sions - in this racially troubled
nation.
Campaign Charge
:ASIIINGTON (AP) - The
De locratic national chairman
ch ged Wednesday that the mails
are being flooded with anti-Cath-
olic literature in a plot to defeat
Sen. John F. Kennedy for presi-
dent.
The chairman. Sen. Henry M.
Jackson of Washington, urged that
newsmen track down the source.
700-Vote Margin
JIOXTPELIER, Vt. (AP) -
House Speaker F. Ray Keyser
f th "_
t
Atlantic Collision
SHANNON, Ireland (AP)-Two
U.S. Air Force B47 jet bombers
collided over the Atlantic Wednes-
day. A huge air-sea research be-
gan for the three crewmen of onet
which spiraled down into the
squally sea.
The other bomber struggled 330
miles to a safe landing at Shan-
non with a battered engine hang
ing beneath one wing.
r
Wi
O'C
nne
onnor
BOSTON (AP)-Youngish May-
or Thomas J. O'Connor of Spring-
field took his stunning 50.000 vote
victory over Gov. Foster Furcolo
for the Democratic nomination
for U.S. senator In stride Wednes-'
day and started right out with his
election campaign.
O'Connor, 35, Is opposing Sen.
Lcverett Saltonstali, R-Mass., in
November. Sallonstall Is 68.
Jr., apparen
" nncr o c publican gubernatorial nomina- Texas, Accident
tion, said Wednesday that U. DALLAS. Tex. (AP)-A four-
Gov. Robert S. Babcock is enti- engine DC-7 airliner swerved out
tied to a recount of votes if he of control at Love Field Wednes-
wants one. day and smashed into the Braniff
Keyser. who held a margin of I International Airways hangar.
just over 700 votes on the basis One ground crewman was killed
of unofficial returns, said Bab- and five others were injured.
cock "is entitled to know with
certainty the election outcome, Powell Victor
but it is up to him to decide what CONCORD, N.H. (P) ' New
" be wants to do."
.11ampshire Republican leaders
>~ ?r moved quickly Wednesday to ce-
t
i
St
S
ra
egy
ov
et
meat their party after a bitterly
WASHINGTON (AP)-A RU- fought campaign in* which Gov.
clan Navy captain who defected Wesley Powell won renomination
in disillusionment last year de- over Former Gov. Hugh Gregg by
Glared W e d n e s d a y that since an unofficial 1,173-vote margin. .
The 49,141 to 47,99 victory by
Powell over Gregg was a triumph
for the New Hampshire governor
- over the Republican. old guard
i f ici.ard N... Nixon' s 'per nt'.al
primary cariipai,^o' in' th state
'last \!arcb::?i r ~., ~_-
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He said he lives now in New
York City, at an undisclosed Nd-
CSe>_, without. guards or any
form of protection from Corn-
n:m:nist retaliation.
Despite Premier Nikita S.
F:hrushchev's pronouncements
'nvoring disarmament, Artnmo-
tcv said, the Soviet doctrine ^1
n rurprise attack has been otri-
February 1^:?5. lie euid
tin a Soviet
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e. 36,201
S. 36,311
fdii O1hor ````
Page t'PIDo.~ 1;?r'J
6 ill,
~t~~tOr
~
1 14, S S. I 1 7 115 4 911 S
IF 1i
KA
9
rprise,
Solons Hear'
Former Red
RTnarv nffirPV `.
BA CITY (Mich.)
TIMES
Khrushchev Seen
Planning Toward
Conquering Blow
WASHINGTON - -(AP)
Russian leaders would nots
'
hesitate to launch a surprise nuclear attack on the United
States if they thought this
nation could ? be smashed
with one stroke, a former
Soviet naval officer says.
Capt. Nikolaf Fedorovicb
Artamongv testified yester-
day that Soviet military
strategy has been based on
the doctrine of a surprise
nuclear attactk since Febru-
ary 1955.
Artanionov, who was com-
inander of a. Russian de-
stroyer in the Baltic fleet,
defected to the United
States in June 1959 while
statloned at.Gdynia, Poland.
His ap earance yesterday be-
fore the Ouse committee on im=
Americ activities, however,
provides the first public disclcs-
ure of his presence In this coun-
try. :."'.
The 32-year-old Russian,
slim, bespectacled man with a
heavy black -moustache, spent
most of his time telling of his
Soviet-style education and of a
1gradual disillusionment with :'3o-
Riet leaders.
He said he had been In
the United States since
shortly after he fled to the
west, working with U. S. ?,
agencies be did not name.
CAPT. ARTAMONOV
4to
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M. 30,851
S. 35,133
Fr nt Edit Other
Page Page Page
FORMER SOVIET OFFICER TESTIFIES - Capt Nikolai
Fedorovich Artam,onov, a defected Russian naval offs ier. ap.
peared Wednesd& as a witness before the House un-A,mer'icaa
Activities Committee. He testified the Soviet Union has been
preparing for a surprise nuclear attack on the Unite States
since 1955.-(AP Wirephoto.)
Red avy Captain Tells
OUS oviet War Stra e
s? ~ Y
s I
WASHINGTON (AP)-A Rus-
sian Navy captain who defected
in- disillusionment last year der
Glared Wednesday that since
February 1955 Soviet strategy has
been based on the doctrine of a
nuclear surprise attack on the
United States- -
Capt Nikolai Fedorovicb Ar s-
monov who crossed to the West
, in June 1959, came into the open
before the House Committee on
Un-American activities.
The 32-year-old Russian said a
realization that "everything being
Said in Russia was not true, but
based on lies" led him to defect.
He didn't say how he escaped to
the west
Speaking mostly in Russian
with the aid of an interpreter. the
heavily mustached Artamonov
said the doctrine of surprise at-
tack Nag cstablihed ''in a Soviet
1' ublication that is known
.eneral. Crowd
'Burt I know
j statements that. t`e to pre.
pare the Soviet bffioey ck for
the possibility of being arderlid fol
make a surprise Wadded
the slim, dark 7-d e t r o y e r
skipper.
Belief About .t3.`
Artamonov said. '!No senbt
Soviet officer belie Uut the'
United States will at A first.".
The committee brought Arta-
monov to its witness chair about l
a week after the Russians trotted
out two defecting American code
clerks, Bernon F. Mitchell and
William H. Marlin. Mitchell and
Martin said they went: to Russia
because LSey objected to what
they said were U.S. spy policies
risking world War 1IL , ' t
Questioned by the eomfnitiee.
the bespectacled Artamonov said
Russian fishing trawlers ? often
sighted near U.S. waters are op?
tnt ~ar) P
only to bfftcers of flag rank and' erated by Soviet naval Intel-
.1 ligence. Russian'submarines also
?y
? 'N1tF-?? t
1P,,
te 0 *
20419
above. hover close to American terri-
Ee cunced1
t ,' J
tions for such a surprise a?srdl i fired him from M.
pos
r arnonov. sai em
on this nation. But he added:- A t d the Kr J~_
"I know of general, broadl leadership is composed of powi stateme
nts which tended to, pre-. seekers, not political ideal'
20421
destro
er
y
-
in thei heavy black moustache, spent
B
lti
- -
a
c Fleet defected t the
,o
stationed at Gdynia, Poland. '
His appearance yesterday be.
Un-American Activities. howev.
er, provided the first public dis-
nuclear attack since Feb-1 country.
"
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rc1 ut4f i9rnce, 9nc.
I
WASHTrhGTON 1. D. c
SAN BERNARDINO (Calif.)
TELEGRAM
Circ.: e. 16,638
Front Edit Other
Pago Page Pa go
i{
11 't-4 I I;
is
R'5401
P
1 ~'ssM
AFTER' TEST' I11iONY
b
- .o n
o held the rank of captain'in'tbe'Ru sfan
'
i
f
e il
or
efecting last year to the U,S,`,` fl
-e
ta ~to
mn
n;se after testifying before the W`
se tinAmer(catn
Activities C
,
ommittee Spekioy
.ang mstl inssian . iv th
-
Ru
the aid of
n a
A - y'
? ?.
a
nte reter
?
t~ rp , Artamon0 sell that desp to
hev'
f. --s ewt,emenrs ravo.-?ing
disarmamen Russian military forces ]lave b +~ een = ' . u - 1 na
orders to be ready to touch %% a
)r 1-e 11
l
` ?`
n
mmediaf,
.
e nu tack on the IInited
ta
s
`
S
te
4; (AP
photo}~'
20422
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p"09nlr((.vrn4e?, J,1 .
r:,;NIP G .)N I. D. C. ,
AKRON (O.)
BEACON JOURNAL
Circ.: e. 163,191
S. 172,930
Date: SED 1960
'Spies Mani Soviet Boats"
\C.\-z IIINGTO\ It'f'II -- As
~a thil?1 !:e n??thir.; wrong
wIIh a ~?.\ri.:n:rnt 11:at laid
t?hildre:, in ?{?~ on :h.?sr p;tr-
entl. 1!? ! . :F ?.. he otlrn d?`.
trr..!i d C? ..:.mot 1'al tv 11u11-
e:.?% In ?'.-? I:-?7 '[1~ tt Iih hb.
l:uh. i a- ! !::? t..i
at
:!: ? \.nu:Jl 1?'?1?.1 Il.
t?ith :\: !.,:1:??:.??t. 4d;?:.tii1 lit
the Se-% .: i..it % :-.r.d r.'m-
ntand? r ??! a di-ii. %er. de.
frrtrd in th- Unsied St rtes.
Aria:rS? ern. tail a?:d sin.
t. 1h it Mick motmacho. livid
tth.. at a .??r:l?~.,..~al hear?
ink \,. ?: ._,;:,t.
jr 1felt t!." !;!-l Arno F.:? flit t
:?:!I:? r l;,i
A i ? ? . ? ?.. i?'
lt.y .?t ?':?t .. l.'.t 11 1?. ?..~.!n? ru- .. u?' :??' ?l:.n7? n! I-. r\?'r:
._ .. _ _ }tln?',?1 111`11.
ioad??d wish Iik)t t? f?u?.. they
1.ae.? 1:IS-.1a in en effort to
their .ptin:! ml~~usn.
Arr,mont`t . harm..
... i.?1 a...t.?g~ fur nini r!
tl:R?1 t?.IR \Cdl. ha' rIne.l
t?a?.d on a d??.tius?? of "stir.
V1101 urta,-k in r;uclr:.r \\a-?
f:UI ho .'I'1.1il:tl.'11 and
!??? hr.:rtt?. So'-In r t r;nirr
Eh:r:-! rhe\ \t..u!rl lsunch it
F'.rpri.e at:ark on thy' C. S.
If b' t,.?, .Itr.?? t "W"ino ed P,ussht
Could -Atli in t're stroko.
\ Ihltl. lI .t,Il i .t'It1\111'
... l.'a` .. $ It.vI 4.11111??.,
l.? fi?r..: Ii?I? .rd .:.y' ~..\:rt
II...a ?i I..? u!..fr?r!I.1 h..al:'.y'
20423
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1'rc? /nic,,.y...--. - 7
K'Afi MING7ON 1. O C.
CINCINNATI (0.)
POST & TIMES-STAR
Circ.: e. 265,831
Front
I?a?
3
Id;1 0,t,a
/.a? I.O.
Date: SEP 15 1960
1'
eti%moo-i, Thu.., s.11. IS, 196o The Post k Times?Star=~
`
1t ; t
C.U'T. ART.'I\IONOV
... c-i; of T.rd p1n;v
K Plots Surprise Attack \
I'iOnU.S
>,1' TI I
I
NDRF
Otticer says
Ex..Red
.
X fo'matinn ... available to members of Soviet naval in-
.
.
BY A
Scripps-lioirardStaff 11'rifer mt as a Soviet officer and telligence units. dispatched
t1' A S }i I N (. T WT he Communist Party member to gather information on
viet naval officer
diness of
S
"
o
ymin;
combat rea
that Soviet military strat? the
sat in a room in the house
office building and when he eV is inconsistent with American naval forces, the
f lheIr pa?
ti
ons o
pronounce- usual loca
I was through testifying Ni- I Khrushchev9 kits hhrushchev had been t ments." I trots, and the condition of
talks disarmament and ernment" under attar K. defen-ses.a .-,-..
plots surprise attacks Under questioning: by .'11-
against ine .?1??c. , area at. . it ie, ..,,.1.,11.,.E
('apt. Nikolai Federotich counsel. Artamonov also
? Art l;Donov, who fled the provided the first public
Soviet Union tact year, put revelation of the character
it bluntly to the Ilcouse # of those Soviet fishing traw-
- t- ? mittee on un-American , ]ers which haunt the .'stlan-
f Activities: .---- - tic. The crews of those'vec-
"Since 1'1?hruarv 191..S 'seis. he said, actually arc
Soviet stratel:y has been ? L.
if
i' based on the doctrne o
surprise attack in nuclear
warfare ... It has never
been changed."
TIIt: ('.11'"l'.tlN was spe-
cific. The surprise attack
Aralegy was contained, he
said, in an article in the
Russian journal "Military
Thnut;ht." restricted to gen-
eralc and admirals. It was
written by Marshal rnlmis-
trov, chief of thf? Soviet
A;nmic Weapons ('ommand.
At:amnnov emphasized
that such an article (could
not have been wrillen on
I(utinist:nv's own initiative
-that it niniously reilceted
orders from on high. And
the article was intended.
he said, "to prepare the
Soviet officers for the start-
ing; of such a war by the
Soviet Union"
A neat and slender an
of 12 with a blrc - us-
tat?be, the Russo noted
wryly that Khrushchev it,
arriving Monday for the'
United Nations session. "lie
saes he is going to talk
about disarnianient," said
the captain. "I feel obliged
to point out from the in.
1 %4
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J,trccrrJ- CC, Jrtc.
Af1J IN4_TO.4 1. D. C.
MEADVILLE (Pa.)
TRIBUNE
Circ.: m. 15,055
Front Edit Other
Pape Page Page
V
Date: 15~~ l
(Soviet Defector Says
Strategy of USS.S.R..
Based on U.S. Attack
WASHINGTON 0-~ Russian Navy captain who-
defected in disillusionment last year declared Wednes-
day that since February 1955 Soviet strategy has been
based on the doctrine of a nuclear Capt. , NikM Fedorovlch Arta-
surprise attack on the. nited monov, who crossed to the, West
States, in June 1959, came into the open
H
e Committee on
L --- th
ous
e
Un-American activities. ' ` '
The 32-year-old Russian said a
realization that "everything being
said in Russia was not true, but
based on lies" led him to defect.
He didn't say how he escaped.to
the west.
Speaking mostly- in Rusdaa,
with the aid of an interpreter, the
heavily mustached Artamono?
said the doctrine of surprlsb at'
tack was established "In a Soviet
military publication which is
known only to officers of flag
rank and above."- t
He conceded he hat not actnal-
ly seen any directives to prepare
for a surprise attack on the Unit-
ed States. . '
"But I know of general, - broad
statements which tended to pre-
pare the Soviet officer corps for
the possibility of being ordered to
make a surprise attack," added
the slim, dark ex.destroyer
Soviet officer believes that the !
United States will attack first."
The committee brought Arta-
monov to its witness chair ' about
a week after the Russians trotted
out two defecting American code
clerks, Bernon F. Mitchell and
William H. Martin. Mitchell and
Martin said they went to Russia
because they objected to -what
they said were U.S. spy policies
risking world War IIL: -:
Questioned by the committee,
the bespectacled Artamonov.- said
Russian fishing trawlers. often
sighted near U.S. waters are op-
erated by Soviet naval ; - Intelligence. Russian' ' submRrines also
hover close to American ' terri-
torial ' waters hunting i_nforma-
'tion,. be testified.
20425
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go
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,
.ace, J'nc.
K .3Si INGTON 1. 0. C.
SAN ANTONIO (Tex.)
LIGHT
Circ.: e. 103,427
S. 127,350
Front Edit Other
Pogo Page Page
Date: SEP 15 1960
his father and friends.:- -.::
wrong with a -government that
told children to spy oti 'their
parents. In his 20's, . he often
defended Communist party,
p9Iiclea In discussions with
WASHINGTON (UPI)- government was committing
As a child, he saw nothing ~"crimes on an International
Plans Exposec
Yet, at 31, Nikolai ' 'edoro?
vich Art onov, . captain In
1 the Soviet navy and, com
mander of a Red banner de-
stroyer, defected to the U. S.
Why?
LYING TO WORLD
Artamonov, answered this
question Wednesday at a con.
flight 15 months ago from be
Dressed In a conservative
blue suit, he disclosed; to the
public for the first time his
60
Says Beds plan attack."\
if he became convinced :Russia
could win' in one str oke
octrine was laid down {In 1955
a confidential` Sovi t mill.
be finally realized the Soviet surprise attack on the lt. S.~
t ri
scale and was lying to the
world and 'Its own people.
It 'just didn't make sense,"
he tdld the 'house committee
on un-American activities.
SPY SKIPS
Aitamonov, now living In
New York, charged:
? 4 Soviet fishing trawlers
off the American east coast
actually are elaborate spy
ships manned by Soviet Intel
ligence personnel. These ships
are even loaded with fish be?
fore they leave Russia 1.? an
effort to mask their spying
mission. . . ? f '
G Soviet strategy for more
than four years has been based
on a doctrine of "surpt'Ise at
tack In nuclear warfare." He
hind the Iron Curtain. believes Soviet Pr e m i e r
He said he defected because Khrushchev would launch a
if V
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y ......--,... IN, r? -I ? J1r
INDIANAPOLIS (Ind.)
TIMES
Circ.: e. 92,473
S. 105,790
Front Edit Orbw
Page Page I's go
Date: SFP 15 )~~11
i iss e a 4 C I e c i r A
tle ~ Tells Missia'n Naas
By AYDB W TULLY
Scripps-t1otvard, Staff , %Vriter
WASHINGTON, Sept.-15-
ept. 15 -
The young Soviet naval offi-
cer sat in a Loom in the old
H 0 u s b Office - Building and
when he * was through testify-
ing Nikita Kbrushcbev had
been EXposea again ai a man
wbo tallte dis^rmament and
plots surprise attacks against
the West.
Capt. N 1 k o 1 a i Federovich
Artamonov, who fled the So-
viet Union last year, put it
bluntly to thb HCuse Commit.
tee on Un-American Activities.
"Since February 1955, So=
'let strategy has been based
on the doctrine of surprise -
attack in nuclear warfare
it has never been
chnnged;'~ '
The capieIn toad specific. The
surprise., attack strategy was
contained, he said, In an article
in the Russian jourhal - 'Mili-
tary Thought," - restricted to
generals and admirals. It was
Written by Marshal Rotmis-
trov, chief of the Soviet atomic
weapons command.'
Artamonov emphasized that
such an article could not have
been Written on Rotmistrov's
own 1nitiatibe-that'It obstious-
ly reflected 'orders from on
1141 1% And the article was In-
tended, he said, "to prepare the
Soviet officers for Te' "starting
of such a war bye the Soviet
Union."
A NEAT AND slender man,
Of 32 With a black mustache;
the Rues'ian notes ;wryly that
Khruthcbev 'ls jrHving Mon
day for the United Nations
session. "He says be is going
to, talk about disarmament,"
said the captsIiL."2 fei'l~
to point out froth the Informa-
he said, actually are members
of Soviet naval intelligence
unite, dispatched to gather In-
formation on the "combat
readiness of American naval
forces, the usual locations of
their patrols, and the condti
tion of American antisubma.
rine defenses."
Artamonov was a c o r n f u I
when Nittle asked Sim
whether the Soviet Union
would launch a surprise attack
on the West if Communist
China went to war with a
member-nation of the free
world.
BRUSQUELY, Art a monov
replied: "I don't think Com-
munist China would start a
war without consulting with
and getting approval from the
Soviet Union. Then the Rut.
tion . . . available to me as a
Soviet officer and Communist
Party member that Soviet
military strategy is inconsiat-
eat with Khrushchev's pro-
nouncements."
That strategy was clarified
in a quotation from Rotmis-
trov's article read into the
record by the youthful de-
fector. "The clement of sur-
prise Is one of the decisive
conditions for achieving suc-
cess," the marshal wrote. "In
some cases a sudden attack
with new weapons may result
in the rapid collapse of the
government" under attack.
Under questioning by Com-
mittee Counsel Alfred 11L
Nittle, Capt. Artamonov also
provided the first public rev-
elation of the character of
.those Soviet fishing trawlers
which haunt the Atlantic.
The crews of those vessels,
20427
Minns Would deal the first b;o
and the Chinese would come in'
to support the Russian ;'?
A9 for Khrusbchev d b 1 s
moiiththgs About peat ul .coa~
existence, Artamonov sougbt,
to put Mr. K. in perapectlys..
"Kbrfiehthjv does hot wish tb;
wait Indefinitely for the Unitedl
States to blrome a Socialist,
state by 'evolution," Arta.'
monov said. " Moreovet, be does
not believe this will happen.:
He would like to see It take
place in his lifetime."
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"I ~6Y- "P a l zs.:~rL
..
WASHINGTON I. D. C.
B -LL EFONTAIN (Ohio)
EXAMINER
rc.: e. 9,339
j . Nikolal.1'edoroyicIZ Artoa;onoy~a
WW wbV -1 -1 w W. -t-7-7-Y'
States 15~ monttiI go.
mit oM{ Vn-America .Actc3tig
that Sovlet' mi!itarr;; c r t
since 1953 has bceri based t
then"Qoctrlne of surprise Sttaec
in nudes: wafirs.0 ,-'~ r~- '
20428
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}
s ?,
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f'rcdd ynt*c~(i cnce, . /nc.
WASN,NG-roN 1. D. C.
SA1N JOSE (Calif.)
M RCURY
Ci c.: M. 68,575
S[.' p 105,294
Fr nt ~Fd~tl jot~ir
P p? Page Page ti
(sSia N% as not tr;ie.
l ^ced. rcrc' led. try i
defect. Ile didn't sib hoc
he escaped to the West.',
Speaking mostly in Rus
si'an with an Interpreter,
the ] eavily mustached Ari
tamo' ov said the doctrine
of surprise attack was es-,
tablished "in a Soviet mils
tary publication which Is
known only to officers of
flag rank and above."
He conceded he had not
actually seen any directives
to prepare for a surprise at-
tack on the United States.?
"But I know of general
broad statements which
tended to prepare the So.{
viet officer corps for the,
possibility of being ordered
to make a surprise attack,"
dark ex-
de
dded the slim
,
a
stroyer skipper,,
iil
n
a
.
s
0 sei
90, v
~wnr1..A.A m. Pi ~~ f. ~el~r..n ?1..!
, Uf-l t?~~e
li3 ' :-ye`ai-old'I i fan 22!
ie House ComnQl~i. .
tme into the oprp I.. e .
rtamonov, who crossed. to
.ie West In Jt44&t?59,
orovich Artamor ov, who
held the raiik ur'captain
in the I:ussian Navy be-
fore defecting last year
to the United States,
talks of newsmen Wednes-
day in Washington after
testifying before the
House Un-American Ac-
tivities Committee. ,
Red Attack
Pian Told
By sJ al
WASHINGTON,-(AP) -,A
I,ussian navy captain who
:efected in' disillusionment
ist year declared Wednes-
,ay that since Fte uary,
955, Sov.i t' bas
een based ,-~;--. rYha
f ' a
nt:clea?~a`sit rise ~l~t
-tck on thct r~ teci SC2tes.'
Capt. Nikolai Fedorovich:
Questioned by the com-
mittee, the bespectacled
Arta monov said Russian
fishing trawlers often
sighted near U.S. waters
are operated by Soviet
naval intelligence. Rus-
cian submarines also
hover close to American
territorial waters hunting
information, he testified.
What are they seeking
Knowledge abou the make
up of the U.S. 11 t, weapon
used by American warship
and anti-submarine meas-
ures being taken by the U.S.
!Navy, the Russian defector
said
Al . though without appar-
t emotion, he spoke In
en
bitter words of Soviet Pre-
Nikita Khrushchev.. .
-,-.
wish to wait indefinitely for
the United states to: be=
come a sq allsb state by
' h
e
evolutio oreover.-
does believe this will
hap a n," Atttamonov as-
e would like to - see It
t,.ke place in his lifetime"
for-
h
nier
Khrucllchev bclleved
.; iihe strciith cif '..e So,{1ct
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Red Attack
Plait Told
(Continued from 'Pews 1)
for Soviet officer believes
that the united States will
attack first."
The un-American Activi-
ties Committee brought Ar-
t^monov to its witness chair
about a week after the Rus.
clans trotted out two de-
fecting American code
clerks, Bernon F. Mitchell
and William H. Martin.
Mitchell and Martin "said
they went to Russia because
they objected to what they
said were. U.S. spy policies
risking World War III:
e
At another point, t
o??i3n navy man told
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WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
TIMES
ST. PETERSBURG (Fla.)
Circ.: rn 112,029
S 112,393
Front Ed Other
Page Page Page
all Vl G.
And, too, his heart just wasn't
in. it, - _ : .
The Red defector is a young
7nan but iszra ured heavy.
brusb mustache and matchint
big black brows give him an
ppearance beyond his 82 ears.
WASHINGTON Congress- . However, he was no code-
m ~i
an,r ris t>n'Q!i rma i Vtw ng official nor the equiv=
of V ~? Ames' of a U-2 spy. Merely a
arl aiv'itie~;`pn?lEiV ide his gptam in the Soviet Navy -
cloak and dagger'and'Zftoduced and third class at that. What
a genuine, live Communist de- secrets could he tell?
fector from the U.S.S.R. Capt. Mikolai Fedorovicb Ar-
Thls was his answer to the tamanovrdefected a year ago,
public performance in Moscow 1rid'1t-took Representative Wal-
starring our two 'defective Na. ter (D-Pa) that long to bring
tional Security Agency officers. him out into the open to dis-
But, instead of matching the close the man's "irside infor-
Soviets' razzle and dazzle, law- mation" on the Soviet threat
maker Walter's show seemed to us.
to sputter and fizzle. In the first place, our arena
The witness, there In the twi. of inquiry was sadly deficient
light gloom of the House eau- theatrically. Only two dimly-lit
cus room, was telling all, chandeliers in the vast auditor.
right. But what he told we must Imo' The Soviets at the U-2
assume fur infp11iennre ..n...d. trial, for example, had 34 chan-
By k.n lyOTERf3A
fiance across his face as the
interpreter read his translated
message announcing his reason
for defecting. I
"As an officer, wouldn't I be I
betraying my own people by :
running away frond them?"
"No. I shall never betray my
people. I was, I am, and I shall
always remain a Russian -
but not a Soviet Russian."
He was, no question, a dis-
illusioned ex-Red. His one "im-
portant comment'! was start-
ling, Indeed. But as his inter-
preter read It. It came out in 1
tired tones and the audience
listened with folded bands and I
stoic faces. - ',
The Kremlin, he said, holds
to a doctrine of surprise atomic
And the Captain, though fully atic"ZI on the United States
.
cooperative, appeared emotion The look in the collective
any. inwardly, awkwardly, face of the spectators seemed
even his interpreter. Yet there means and Initiative-to-do bet
20430
?to,_SEP ~~ - -
FOREIGN INTRIGUE
Is `phis The Best That We Can Do?
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sE!'T / "a
0
/91e-4-4 -9n ie / ?cn ce, J`n c.
WASHINGTON 1. 0. C.
ALLENTO AtN (Pa.)
CHRONICLE
Circ.: e. 21,951
Front Edit Other
Pape page Page
5E P I 3'~''p
Date: _ .. i;
"Surprise A-AWW&CkTOI1. U.S
;'Zed Aire DefectorSays
WASHINGTON
(API Soviet York City, at an undisclosed ad.
~ieaceis would not' hesitate to dress,without guards or any form
launch a surprise nuclear attack of protection from Communist re.
on the United States if they taliation.
thought this nation could be . Official Policy
smashed with one stroke, a for-
- s repeated Pronouncements
rta- a-_
I Capt. Nikolai Fee orovieh A
monov testified 14' d d M t favoring disarmament, Arfamo
e
a
nes
y a nov said, the Soviet doctrine of
Soviet military strategy has been a
(based on the.doctrine of a stir rise surprise attack has been official
p since February 1955. He said it
(nuclear attack since February was spelled out in a' Soviet mill!
11955.
Artamonov, 32, who was com- tary publication available only tti
. ,
high-ranking mander of a Soviet destroyer in He said had officers.
pre seen
the Baltic fleet, defected to the iv ordering pre not himself
United States 'in June 1959 while any directives
stationed tions for such ch a surprise assault
t
a
Gdynia. Poland. on this nation.
Disclosure
His appearance before the r
ruse Committee on
+'tin?Amen . f
, n Activities, however, provided
The slim, bespectacled Soviet
spent most of his time telling of
a gradual . disillusionment with
Soviet leaders.
He said he had been in the
United States since shortly after
he fled to the West
working with
,
U. S. agencies he did not name.
He. said he lives now in Newt
0
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/6 5EPT / 9Gd
Pccd! role// cncc, inc.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
NEW KENSINGTON (Pa.)
DISPATCH
Circ.: e. 10,649
Front Edit Other
Page Page Page
6 1 ^O
AFTER TESTIMONY Capt.
Nikolal Fedorovich A tamonov
who held the rahk of captain
in the Russian Navy before
defecting last year to thin;
country, talks to newsmen
after testifying befora the
House unAmericeh Activities
Committee. Speaking mostly
in Russian with the aid of an
interpreter, Artamohov saidp
that despite Soviet-Premier
favoring ' disarmament, Rus
sian military forces have been
under orders to be ready to
touch off an in lmedi6to nu-
Blear attack on this country.
(AP Wirephoto)
204132
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/G -)t /d7 / 9 O
Artamonov, who held the
rank of captain in the Rus-
sian Navy before defecting
last year to this country,
talks to newsmen after testi-
fying before the House Un-
American Activities Commit.
tee. Speaking mostly in Rus.
sian with the aid of an in-
terpreter, Artamonov s a i d
that despite Soviet Premier
Khrushchev's statements fa-
voring disarmament, Russian
military forces have been
under orders to be ready to
touch off an immediate nu-1
clear attack on this country.
(AP Wirephoto
20433
[JrcS3 ._' tlef gence, .Jnc.
WHEELING (W.Va.)
INTELLIGENCER
Circ.: m. 21,681
Front Edit Other
Pays Pape Pape
aLi' 16 1360
18
Warns of Attack
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O
101
PI-CM -9aA
lgencei, -91C.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
TARENTUM (Pa.)
VALLEY NEWS
Circ.: e. 23,192
Date: SEP 1 G Ion
AFTER TESTIMONY - Capt.
Nikolai Fedorovich rtamonov
who held As rank 'of captain
in the Russian' Navy before
defecting last-' year . to this
country, talks to newsmen
after testifying' before the
House unAmerican Activities
Committee. Speaking mostly
in Russian with The aid of an
interpreter, Arfamonbv said
that despite Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrushchev's statements
favoring disarmament, Rus-
sian military forces have been
under orders to be ready to
touch off an immediate nu:
clear attack on this country.
(AP Wirephoto)
20434
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PI-05.4
EAST ST. LOUIS (III.)
JOURNAL
Circ.: 32,642
. 34,524
-atr 1 t? i:i J
U~iectors Mat
h
d
c
e
The witness test
p
ans
u
p cation and espionage generally has been
to officers kept secret_st L
t ..
eas
r such an attack:. ?-~, ~'? ?. aiarun, made a counterblow, Both "But I know of general.,'broad to U S ]e.
men had objected
Y p
tements which tended to ire said SPY policies which, they
e the Soviet officer co , risked another world war,
r
ps or But release of such testimony
e possibility- (of such an or. is less effective in the wake of
r)"; he said. "No senior r, ,q t
fficer believes that the United East-West U-2 flight and other
fates will attack first." _ Ping incidents. Both
Tending to corrnhnrnfn t^.._ sides have, in effect, claimed t
'
'
Mn Ariamonovs testimony was
,at of an Fast German army of-
cer who fled to- the West with
TESTIMONY of at least two Among these were documents
defectors from the Communist
bloc has been brought out into earmarked for distribution after
the open, presumably as a coup- the Communists had marched
,ter-propaganda blow to the state. into West Germany. One poster, a
ments of two American intelli- "Notice to the Population',, ad-
gence men who have defected to monishes the people to cease all
the Soviet Union. ~ resistance, stating "the war will
The ? gist of this testimony is be over for you in a few days".
that. the Communist bloc long has Another says the East Germans
i been planning strategy and pre- are coming as an army of libera.
paring Its armed forces for a sur- tion.
iprise all-out attack on the West, The Soviet defector, called a
This, of course, should surprise prize "catch" by Western intelli.
nobody, The West Is not likely Bence men, to receive any advance notice of was identified by
a yeti e attack Bonn officials as Capt. Guenther
unless such in- Dfalikowski. He did not appear
formation filtered out by means in public.
of espionage activity. Soviet startegists, of course,
A Russian navy captain,~ilc o? have prepared an overall war
lai Fedorovich .?Artamonov, bald plan just as Pentagon experts
in open testimony ', before ' the have done-and apparently are
House Un - American Activities continually revising But what.
Committee' that: the doctrine of ever information the West pos.
purprise. attack was established sesses as to Communist
l
m a- Soviet milita -
"-
xuments purporting to show
'at the East German "army was
Bing oriented for attack on west
iermanv_ - .
You
re another", leaving
of bewilderment ^or? cyn-3 M ically de.
tarhment
r
g
ope amount of indignation on
both sides, East-West negotiations
on such real issues as disarms.
meat can be resumed in earnest.
a
20435
.which' is known o
.Vf flag rank and ab
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I9,66
t~_
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1 1 If
pieAA .9nrc[[tv'ence, .9ne.
WAOHINcTON t. D. C.
INDIANAPOLIS (Ind.)
TIMES
Circ.: a 92,473
5. 105,790
Front
PLO$
Off$"
Pape
FRED ' DEFECTOR
/P 60
Walter Matches Razzle With nozzle
By ED KOTERBA. _. 1,
Walter, chairman of the Commit-
tee on Un-Ame. ican Activities,
pulled aside his cloak'and dagger
and produced a genuine, l i v e
Communist defector from the
/ .
Ho q e caucus room, was telling all, all right. But
what he told we must assume our Intelligence
.people already knew-and more.
And, too, his heart just wasn't in it.
The Red defector is It young man but his
manicured heavy-brush mustache and matching
big black brows give him an appearance beyond
his 32 years.
However, he was no code-cracking official nor
he equivalent of a U-2 spy. -
llllll Merely a captain in the Soviet navy-and
third class at that. What secrets could he tell?
Capt. Nikolai Fedorovic Artamonov defected
a year ago, and it took Rep. Walter (D. Pa.)
that long to bring him out Into the open to die.
close the man's "Inside information" on the So-
viet threat to us: -
In' the first place, our arena of Inquiry was
sadly deficient theatrically. Only two dimly lit
maker, Walter's show seemed to Hoterba
sputter and fizzle. '
USSR.- , , ~ :, -
This was his answer to the pub.
lie performance in Moscow star-
ring our two defective National
Security Agency officers-
chandeliers in the vast auditorium. The Soviets
at the U-2 trial, for example, had 34 chandeliers
burning.
Here we had no Kleig lights, no television
cameras-and the witness was forced to testify-
with his back to the audience.
And the captain, though fully co-operative, ap.
peared emotionall
i
y,
nwardly, awkwardly, mixed
up.
He coughed nervously. His eyes avoided his
Inquisitors, even his interpreter
Y
t
.
e
there was
a strange look of calm defiance across his face.
as the Interpreter read his translated message
announcing his reaso
f
n
or defecting.
"As an officer, wouldn't r be bet~a
i
.
y
n
-, .... aaaem 1-4 ow,
Capt. Artamanov twirled the dripping
" paper cup.
N
o, I shall never betray my people. I was,
I am, and I shall always remain a Russian-but
not a S
i
"
ov
et Russian,
He was. no question, a disillusioned ex-Red.
His one Important comme t"
indeed. But as his Interpreter readait,sitrcani e
out in tired tones and the audience listened with
folded hands and stoic faces.
The . surprise atomicat be a said, ion the holds Uto a nited dSta e of
s,
The look In the collective face of the spec. T'
tators seemed to say: "So?
that." We already know
There is no question about the serious Corn.
munist threat to our very lives. But the vague
testimony of a third-class captain defector fault
enough to electrify us out of our lethargy,
Surely. Walter has the means and initiative
to do better than that.
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WASHING ON 1, b_ C
HAVERHILL (Mass.)
GAZETTE
Circ.: e. 10,363
/2reJ! 9n Ic/t en ce'
Front Edit Oth.,
Page Page Page
NIiiOLAI FEDOROVICH MONO ?r .
Russian navy, captain who defeetedTO 32-year-old
months ago to th
i
s s,1101171 as he-told the House S est 15 +
mittee on Un-A .
strategy can Activities that Soviet m 1i ltam
gy since 1955 has been based on "the doctrine of.
surprise attack in nuclear warfare."
(UPI T
elephotoj
20437
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international and diplomatic relations. And Ike would be
In'
out of character if he stooped to personal denunciation..
But *this is no friendly visitor who comes before the
t.tnited Nations with honest intents to serve all man
kind. He comes only for making the U. N. the sounding;
board of Communist propaganda.
Even as the ship he's on is approaching New York;
harbor, a former Russian naval captain, Nikolai Fedo
rovich Artamonov tells a House investigating comma,-
tee on un`= `nierican activities that Russian militaryi
strategy since 1955 has been based
th
d
, Cabot enry candidate fo Vice-Presidentand our former er ambassador'
to the UN-who knows the Russian attitude better
than any man in the country-says:
"The Soviets intend to pursue their course by con-
spiracy, subversion and midnight treachery. They want
to take over the world."
Already Khrushchev is fuming and foaming over the
Washington edict that he will be cooped up in Manhat-
tan during his U. N
Ito
__ .. ..
-and thi
l
~rP~! . ,fe(~~frlce, /1c.
W&?twLiI.gN t,
D. C. BENTON HARBOR
(Mich.) NEWS.
PALLADWM
Circ.: e. 22
901
,
Front Edit Other
Page P.14 Page
`T r r' LET HIM HAVE IT, IKE
President Eisenhower will address the United Na-
tions next week Thursday. He will speak before the
Russian Premier, Nikita Khrushchev, has a chance
to unload his vials of insults and propaganda.
Uninvited, unhonored and unsung, Khrushchev is
coming to these shores with hate in his mind and heart.
Striking a posture of hypocrisy last May in Paris, he
blew up the summit conference, shedding crocodile
tears over the U. S. spy plane incident and then de-
nounced, insulted and ridiculed the American President.
He also cancelled the prospective visit of Mr. Eisen-:.,
.hower to Russia, obviously afraid that his own prestige t
in his own country would suffer if this American ji
apostle of world peace met the Russian rank and file t
face to face.
Last week in Washington, at a press conference re-
ferring to the Khrushchev sly appearance at the U. N.
as the head of the Russian delegation, the President
said in his contemplated address "I do not intend to
debase the United States by being a party of invective
and propaganda."
. This is the courteous, gentlemanly, quintessence of
the very highest quality of
on
e
octrine of
surprise attack in nuclear warfare and adds;'
"Khrush hev does not wish to
it i
d
w
a
n
efinitely for
the United stns to become a Soci
li
t
t
a
s
s
ate b rQvolu-1
Lion; moreov r, he does not think this will happen y.'"
. Caron in i Ch' H `
-
.
s a
so
hands with his Russian buddy in his impudent fist
shaking at Uncle Sam.
The President will be making a grave mistake if he
doesn't make it forcefully' plain in language the world
can understand that- this country will not only pursue
its.efforts for peace, but that there will be no Munich,
no appeasement, that if war does come from Russian
plottin
w
h
g
e
ave the strength and the determination to, meet it-and to win.
Too long and too often we've handled Mr. K. with,
kid gloves. This Kremlin bully is an artful genius in the'
art of propaganda. Behind the facade of his smile and'
quips is' a mixture of bluff, hatred, masked ruelty l
deception and no respect for solemn agre is and ob.
ligations. - , -...
He'll be listening to the Preside of the United
States next Thursday. It's Ike's ch.:nce to let him un-
daitstand he can't come waving an=alive branch which
conceals' his missiles and U-boats. We know they are
there:.-and are not cringing.
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Front Edit Other ~/
Page Page Page (/
Date: SEP 16 19,59.
---+
Thoughts - rh Passin
~a~~~-t$Si-.fir T~nris} --ii ~~.e ~~~I - ~ ~_ -~...._ _' ___ - '
PI-CM Jnfc11iyenCie, AC*.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
SUN$UR (Pa.) I
DAILY ITEM
A RUSSIAN DEFECTOR, Captain Nikolai Fed-
orovich Artamanov
came to the U
it
d
e
nesday when th H C
eouseommit-
tee on un-American Activities announced that he
1 was about to testify in one of its sessions. Later it
I was disclosed that Artamanov, former commander
of a destroyer In the Soviet navy, told the committee
the Russian strategy has, Since February, 1955, been
based on the doctrine of a nuclear surprise attack
on the United States.
And the Russian refugee added: "If Khrushchev
believed the strength of the Soviet Union was over-
whelming, he would, of course, deal a stunhing blow
to tbewest.11-
That latter statement should answer to some ex-
tent the ill-advised statements that too frequently
are made by Americans about the military weakness
of their country., On the other hand, the hush-hush
treatment given ?the defection of Artamanov is in
such sharp contrast with the extravaganza recently
staged in Moscow when two American traitors were
presented on television that one is led to wonder
'ho w ]long he Pentagon will continue to yield to the
!Soviet ad antages'that once gone cannot be recap-
tured.
Wh^ the Kremlin has long since known about
-many aspects of the struggle between communism
and freedom cannot properly be labeled "classified
(information.".
,
n
e
States in
June, 1959, but that fact became publicly known for,
the first time W
d
Circ.: e.. 20,369
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/9-g~ 0
4
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pr.,, genc., .9nC.
W SH.N-TON I. O. C.
LANSING (Mich.)
STATE JOURNAL
Circ.: e. 64,288
S. 63,334
front Edit Other
Papa Papa Page
Date:
'161960
a
Reds W~t11dB1
s r w ' i .: TKO a?' J 1
i. . Y ~~~~i!`-:i~~,_?~::rya.-_._~. a
ii'sta, eteclU
tale to launch i surprise i:ucltar~haa_been q icia%aincp. b2':
be smashed; with one ktroYe, a acauapie ; n I s
officers
: '
~?
offi
a
e
o
i
.
l.
cer.aas
form
et nav
r S
y
}} Capt. Nikolal Fedorovich Alta- He, Bald: he
II +:Sites
li~ohov testified Wednesday 'that gee
prise nuclaa atticlc since Fcbr - added" F; ,-A
ary 1955.'%
' Artamonov, ?,w h o,ua cc - state statemen
R a~,(
mander of a Russian de'str ),er prepare the Soviet ofcc i
in' the BalllSte' fleet, defeated' to for the. possi'blli b~Iug o
the United ates inJune` 1959 tiered to affil a ihr$i at ac
while stationed at: Gdscii; *Po? ri? wtin eec covt~iur_ :~ h+
PT. ARTAMONOVFIRST DISGIOSURE',Ij,~r k' Re' g`^Ja scm''D~
bp
offlcei ? ' v_es tfit'
His appearance Wednesday be-i
fore the house committee on '4m-
American activities; how a v'e r,
provided'. the 'first public ills-
closure .on 'his tesenc 'In,skis
country.'-.. ~, ~ -: ; g
The 32-year=b'1d~P,usslth1 a
slim, bespectacled mina Ih a
heavy . black moustache; pent
that theSo I !
n
freQiientlyj a
e
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16
The USSR, Might Attcick
One of the great errors some in the
United States, for the most part in
relative innocence, have committed It
to advance the notion that because the
A- and IIbombs are capable of such
near-total devaatatidn, no nation would
begin a war certain to bring a-:zh
wrapona into swift action.
The idea has grown that whatever the
Russians intended to "win," they would
get without overt military action, using
such nuclear tools or not using them.
gored by the Russians too bloodily, t
deter the SovLets from an attack on
their own.
In short, you have to make a poten-
tial enemy-or an actual enemy which,
war or no, Russia is-understand and
b:lieve thrt ;?cu might Attack In order
to give him those second thoughts that
might prevent hire from seriously con-
sidering an attack.
If no high Soviet officer Iieves we
might attack, then our deterr -nt power
is reduced. If not eliminated, d Soviet
Itus~,iana would just all back and wait policy will be based on o er con-
fur ua to decay, and when we had suf- siderations.
ficlently "ripened." they would put us Further, In* West Germany Capt.
in the hole and bury us. ? - Guenther Malikowski. who has defected
But statements by two from beyond to the West after being a political train-
the iron Curtain now are available ing officer with the Fast German army.
which ought to set the nation thlnklnV has produced documents and posters
in more realistic terms. Capt. Nlkola which show that Fast Lerman forces
Artamonov, who defected to the U. S. have been trained for an attack against
from thg Ruesian navy last June, has West Germany. One poster displayed
now told the House un-American activi- said "The war will be over for you In a
l es committee that the Soviet Union few days." It was directrd at the West
bas prepared its high officers for open German people, and presumably would
attack against the West. He says that be used if the East Germans did attack
this has been policy since 1955. West Germany.
And Artamonov also says that no high We must, as a people, realize that
Russian officer believes that the United Russian attack Is entirely possible. The
State-it would attack first In a war.viet lenders are not "drifting.' The
This last Is important heraus are not patient as some would have ou
affects the power of the United States, people believe. In short, time Is not a
An assumption has grown that the
by threat of potential attack if we are all necessality on our side.
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lG
9
yT44 1. 0. C.
WAS
ABERDEEN (S.D.)
AMERICAN-NEWS
irc.: e. 20,625
S. 20,710
SEP mi;;
Date:
Testifies
monov, a defeetc Russian nav-
1 al officer appea as a ndtness
before the Hous unAmerican
Activities Commi ee. He testi-
` fled the Soviet ion has been
preparing for a surprise nuclear
attack on the United States since
1955. (AP Wirephoto).
er 0
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JJir!! yn or y i nc", .}inc.
WA fHS NuiJH I. D. C.
BtLUNGS {Mont.)
G ZETTE
C rc.: m. 25,285
S. 37,228
F, nt Edit Oth.,
P. ? Peso Pago
0
? J ('
Date: :.r-P 1 6
YHEY
Sxi . Tr~wIer S ,
11 .0\1 lk"llyt
WASHINGTON (UPI)- t
sign navy captain A Rus.
to the Who defected
West testified Wednesday
that Soviet fishing trawlers oper
ating -off the U.S. East Coast ac-
tuelly are instrument - loaded
chips
units. on American naval
efilmors-auff
YS.
Nikolai Federovich Artamonoy,
32, describe,' as a former corn.
mander of a Soviet destroyer,
told a congressional ; hearing
trawlers were the
manned by Soviet
intelligence personnel "concerned
with the combat preparation of
the U.S. fleet."
Artamonov, who said he defect.
ed to the West 15 months ago be-
cause of disenchantment wit h
'aggressive" Soviet foreign pol.
Icy, testified that th
e Russian
vessels did not engage in any leg.
ltmate fishing. He said they were
loaded with fish before leaving
the Soviet Union to appear legit-
imate in the event of search by
U.S. naval units. .
Artamonov told a Ho
use sub-
committee on Un-Ar.~erican Ac-
tivities that the trawlers are la-
den with gadgets to pie) up in-
formation on radar frequencies
used by the Navy and the loca-
tion of shore-based "signal sys-
tems."
I S
ps were col-
lectingormation on the com-
position of the U.S. fleet, its ma ~
neuvers and the usual location of
aking through an interpret.
16
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FERGUS FALLS (Minn.)
JOUR. L
Circ.: 13,221
Front Efit Other
Page Page Page
Date:
Number of U.S. Traitors Is Small
The two traitors. Martin apd Mitchell. who
went over to the Reds a short time ago, carried
a great deal of valuable information as they had
access'to America's most important military sec-
rets, and all of the nation's secret codes, but
the number of Americans who have gone behind
the Iron Curtain is trifling compared with the
number of Russian officers who have defected to
the United States. The latest reports place the
number of officers who have come to this coun-
try from Iron Curtain countries, at about 9.000,
and they have given, and are giving American
military officers important information all of
the time. The most disquieting information is
that given Captain Nikolai Artamonov who
told the Houle Committc on Un?Arrierlcan actiW-
ties Wednc fay that the Russians have been
under order to be prepared to stage a nuclear
attack on the United States ever since 1953.
Ile said further that Khrushchcv would stage
an attack on this country at any time if he feels
that he could win at one stroke, and that he is
not willing to wait indefinitely for this country
to go Communist. The Russian dictator appar-
ently feels that even present progress is too
slow in this country.
/(I
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g he USSR Mkil AR.~,~t1th
One:;of the great errors some In the pored by the Russians too bloodily, it
United States, for the most part in deter the Snvtcts from an attack on
relative innocence, have committed is their own.
to advance the notion that
A because the In short, you have to make a poten.
A. and H--io mbs are capable of such fiat enemy--or an actual enemy which,
near-total devastation, no nation would war or no, Pucka ls--understand and
begin a war certain to bring such believe that you might attack in order
Ucapons into stvlft action. to give him The Idea has grown that whatever the might prevent r hirnsfrorn seriously clon?
Russians intended to they would sidcring an attack.
get without overt military action, using if no high Soviet officer believes r;e
such nuclear tools or not using them, might attack, then our detcrre^t power
An assumption has crown that the is reduced. if not eliminated, ar.d Soviet
Russians would just sit back and wait policy will be b: sed on other con.
for us to decay, and when we had suf- siderations.
ficlerrtly "r;pened. ? they would put us Further, in' '"'cst Germarny C? .t,
in the hole and bury us.
Guenther bfalll:otes!a, who h; : d~(;?c'-,;
But statcrnerrts by
the iron Curtain norv?a~re a bll bte to the 1,cst after bcin. a politic- tr:
g
a bash ought to set the nniron thtnktn/ 1n ofro cr with the i s: -t G rod
in more rcallstte terms. Capt. p, )pas pr'!'rcr?d decamcnta rod
/lrtamonov, who defected to the Lto)il which s;ow that 7:ast Grrm.~n (
from the'Russlan navy last June, has S. have 1'c t bCcrmnny c One poc!-r-ri'.
now told the House un-American aefivl. said "The war will be mcr for 3:,;?
tics committee that the Soviet Union few days." It was dlreclc 1 f'r?
has prepared Its high officers for open Lerman propi.?, end prc c:.. JI%? t,,
attack ne:,inst the \Ve t. Be says that be used if the Fast
this has been policy since 19.3.
And Artanronny also says that no high `} We art st, nas a pcnp;c. rc:,`
Russian officer believes that the United Russian attack is entirely p-
States would attack first In a war. Soviet le: drrs are art
This last Is Important because tt ar?e not paticat a- a ~.
nffects the power of the United States, people bclierc, In
by threat of potential attack if to arm ~!!~.cr -..; fly on sour c:
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Piael inlv[ligsnce, inc.
W/~... 7N 1. D. C.
IAWNEE (Oki.) NEWS
AR
re.: M. 10,896
oM
p.
S. 11,116
Edll Other
Pao. Page
ate: SEP1619
powers
Ron
OBERTS. a?gainst the United ` ; = ,:' ?' v;r..~r M
(AI' tie K. An.!y.t) la,; f + ., ;.
i t ?
and plans a
ain
t th
C
m
1 j
r'-~ -
g
s
e
o
b
munist
rm
coe a ,est Germ tlkbotlce
p
an ys .,,. aany can be taken too, , toa au eacefuo6xistnce
e testiriony of two' defecting calmly, : land the refusal of the. United
ary o are that the Coin- The United States, West In
,,In present world circumstances,IStates to falltor.it. with-behind
stsr-are making ivar plans mane ."-,4 *,e.n.. _--
I? ne.
United States, by its pro-
f extr
Shawnee (Okla.) News-Star, Friday,'-S~pt, -ig~ 1601"'_? ~7
tack. Yet there is a great differ-
ence between nlannine t.,,. r?d.
eme reconnaisn
sace
measures, long ago recognized an
of military staffs, and the politi-
cal intent to make war
The l
t
.
a
-
ter is not now evident.
pressing so hard, as she is now,
for advantage in the cold war. i
I
m
e to her actu to be a better clue to her actual I
attitude than the harsh word sh
from the U.N.-held
% the Congo, however would see
is expending over that situation,
o
ing toward .a
West Berlin
- .m . .
She is n
II policies which could brin
l .her to
h
i
i A
she expected to do so regarding
Berlin
p
ys
a
war is shaping ups-indeed -it al-
ready has berun ii the Cnrhr;a.i
Another big battle in the cold,
o(uzing all of his poppets in arj
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/1-e 43 -91, 11 llnnll9 cncc, 9n c.
A WASHINGTON 1. 0. C.
GREENVILLE (S. C.)
NEWS
Circ.: m. 77,877
S. 83,194
r, ont Edit Other
Page Page Page
~_~ -- -
-tC:,rr i u pm;
' ar~ Plan
Makin
g
U
New;, It's !I Ifoutute
Associated Press News'Analyst
The ; tcslinony .of two dcfecl-
ing ? military' officers that the
Corimunists Ogre raking' war
plans against the United States
and West?Germany can'-bee Olen
calmly.'
The United States,, West Ger-
=many and?NATO are malan; war
plans against the Conurwnists,
hi present world circumstances,
that is routine. :
The United States, by its pro-
grain of cxtre r', rcconnafssance
....s es lnnn son redognIzed. an
,
ence between planning for possi-
ble wars, which has always been)
the :peacetime preoccupation of l
mi;itcry staffs, and the political
intent to make war. The latter
is-not now evident.
There is, of course, always dan-
ger of an accidental war at times
when the Soviet Union is press-
ing so hard, as she is now, for
advar:'.age, in the cold war.
Her planes which turned back
from the U. N: held airfields in
the Congo; however, would seem
to be a Letter clue to her actual
attitude than the harsh words she
t
f
ex
e
....... a -- e-
oueye.iae a
- is
p
ie;;treme dangc .' o
20447
Yet there is it great mucr au, 1118 /lal :,1 yw.~+~ parv v ^ - - - - r -
By J.' hf, ItOBRRTS; 1tack
. demonstrlate, tie
~!-- 'A W"St Rrrlin? ' attempt , to
She is not pursuing to the limit strength of ? lnteraation comnni
policies which 'could bring her to nisin and to einbarass t. Unltedj
a physical face-up with the United Sttes.., ~::;
nor is she This .L~. ex
pl 1
ected lo be eae
the Congo
St
t
i
,
.?
p
a
es
n.
expacted ? , to do so regarding the greatest demonstrations 'ever)
Berlin.'''.?.': \ .. . _ , to talk about peaceful coexistea
Indeed, the revolving jail doors and the . refusal : of - the Unitedr
in Leopoldville suggest that the States to fall or' It, with. behind
situation there has boiled down to the. scenes sound effects of ralr
something like an even battle be- tling'rockets
tween' the local figures,' It may.be,true, as. the forner
,riother big battle In the cold Soviet rsval officer testified?'in
war is 'shaping up-indeed It al- Washington; ,that Soviet lea?lsrS
ht the
th
h
y
oug
ey
ready has begun in the Security would attack if t
Council-at the United Nations. could wire with one nuclear stroke.
There Nikita Khrushchev Is mo- But that's a big, and asaving, if.j
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F1 ~
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1 c? ..~r(li,r,i c, /nt.
911
NEWS
C;rc.: rn. 30,216
ronl IIII oih.-
Page Pay. Pay.
a~
--
ILMINGTON (Del.) `
W
MSS ,,,,a? 1 D G
------------
16 ?6u
:
I Date:
Show Fizzled
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lit, ..;W 11 it1? 1 1 t?n'l , ,11_11
,1,t t1a? tin.1C: ~:.:.' to Ito
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V .1
/G
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WASHINGTON 1. D. C. -
BILLINGS (Mont.)
GAZETTE
Circ.: rn. 25,285
S. 37,228
Front Ed!t Oth.r
Pogo Page Page
Dates ' - 1 1G'I
Soviet S{udies
Attack Plan ..
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Soviet
leaders would not hesitate to.
Munch a surprise nuclear attack
on the United States if they
thought this nation cculd be
smnshed with one stroke, a- for-
mer Soviet naval officer says.-
Capt. Nikolai Vedorovich Arta-
monov testified Wednesday That
Soviet military strategy has been"
based on the doctrine of a surprise
nuclear attack since February.
1955.
Artamonov, 32, who was com-'
wander of a Soviet destroyer In
the Baltic fleet, defected to the
United States in June 1959 while
stationed at Gdynia, Poland. '. His appearance before ' the
House Committee on Un-Ameri..
can Activities, however, provided
the. first public disc_osure of hiss
presence in this country. i
He said he had been in the'
United States since shortly after
he fled to the West, working with,
U. S. agencies he did not name.:
He said he lives now in New
York City, at an un' isclosed ad-1
dress, without guards or any form
of protection from Communist re-
taliation. - . , '
Despite Premier Nikita Khrush?
chev's repeated . pros? uncements
favoring disarmament Artama
nov said, the Soviet doctrine of
a surprise attack- has be official
since February 1955. 11e said it
was spelled out to r Soviet mili-
tary publicctlon available only to
high-ranking officers.
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' le/f en tat -JnC.
1. O. C?
WASHINGTON
' WISTOWN (PO.)
5 NTINEL
Jrc.: e. 13,593
Page rage
SLQ 1r ~~E~J
nt Edit Other
SOVIET DEFECTOR Nikolal
onoV. 3Z. a
I edcrorich cap-
defecting Russ n nary
tain who once skippered a Red
destroyer, tells the Rouse Ua-
I American Activities Commit- ;
tee that Soviet military strat-
egy since 1955 has been based
surPr-
on the doctrine ~
tack In nuclear lralie i
also said Soviet bW eastern coast
en off the U. S. roman
operate under the co nn1t.;
of a Soviet IptelliCence
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WILMINGTON (Del.)
NEWS
30,216
Page Phe
Date:
Other
Pane
ED KOTERBA ?
Assignment: Washington
"I 'his- Show k izzled
15- emotionally, inwardly, awk-
t
Se
ON
p
.
,
WASHINGT
Rep. Francis Walter, chairman , mired up.
of the committee on Un-Amer- - lie coughed nervously. His
lean Activities, pulled aside his eyes avoided his inquisitors,
cloak and dagger and produced even his interpreter. Yet there
was a rige de,
a genuine, live Communist fiance sacross look of calm the ace as defector from the USSR.
This was his answer to the interpreter read his translated'
public performance in Dios- message announcing his reason
cow starring our two defecting for' defecting.
"As an officer, wouldn't I be
National Security Agency off*
I- own people by
cers. But, instead of matching betraying my
j
the Soviet's razzle and dazzle, running away from . them?"
L a wm a k e r Walter's show Now, Captain Artamanov twirl-
seemed to sputter and fizzle. ed the dripping paper cup. "No,
witness, there in they I-shall never betray my people.
? The-
twilight gloom of the House ?J was, I a am,- andaI shall
but alwt aya
caucus room, was telling all,
all right. But what he-told we Soviet Russian." .~
must assume our intelligence
people already knew - and lie was, no question, a die.
more. And, too, his heart just. illusloned ex-Red. His one "im?
wasn't in it. - porfant comment" was start-
The Red defector is a young ling, indeed. But as his In-
man but.his manicured heavy- terpreter read it, it came out in ?
brush mustache and ?niafching 'tirgd. tones -and' the audience
big black brow's give 'him"'an ' listened with folded hands aid
appearance ? beyond.. It I s '? 32 stolc'iaces.
years.- . - , Tl; e? Kremlin, be said, holds
However, be was no code- ,{o doctrine of surprise atomic
cracking 'official nor the equi-? atfeck on the-United States.
valent of p U-2 spy. Merely.a, . The.look, in the collective
captain in the Soviet navy- face of the spectators seemed
and third class at that. Whit' to. say: "Sq?We already know
secrets could he tell? that." ' ..
* * * There Is 'no_ question. about
Capt. Mikolai Fedorovich 'the seriousness of 'the Com?
Artamanov defected a year,' munist threat to our very lives.
epresentative But the vague testimony of a
agog fdlt took Representative'
1'; alter (D-Pa) that long to third-class" : captain , defector.;
bring him out into the open isn't enough 'to electrify us out
to disclose the- man's ' "inside ' of "otSr lethargy-.',
information" on the ,Soviet - urely, Mr. Walter as the
threat to us. means and `initiative, tq; do
j And the captain, though better than that.'- _ ;';? ;`
fully ? cooperative, appeared 'tcoarritnt, t96a, United 1e'torn' a., Inca
0
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occupatiOr. powcl'.
We have cc,:-
filial end to Fascism and mil-
ltarisin in Ger mrny. We wish
good ca-operation with the i
democratically minded and i
constructive forces of the city.
'The City Commandatur
will place the reorganization
of municipal life In the hands
of a democratic administra-
tion.
"Your active co-operation
will help to restore peace,
order and security and to
make the vestiges of war dis-
"
PCa
a
By --Gaston Coblentz
From the Jlcraid Trib:ale Bureau
N*i q t 15 -West Ger-
sep 16 1960
]onn Says!
E. Genany
Plans .at'
Cites Documents
Of a Defector
EASTEF
?'.Y. 11orn1d 1-i6uro the waling pcputatton 1.3 an
ninny charged today that East Lower Saxony Leaflet
Germany is preparing a %-ar of A leaflet addressed to the
aggression and produced some people of Dower Saxony-v.
rather bloodcurdling documents also borders on East Germany.
was couched in similar lan-
il, support the accusation. guage, it announced that the
At a special press conference, East German army had arrived
Cl`ancelloi' Xonrad Adenauer's as a "liberator."
government displayed placards These and other documents-
and leaflets said to have been one of them addressed to "our
distributed to the 1st East German brothers" and another
addressed "to all"-appeared to
German Motorized Division at indicate thht the East German
Potsdam for use upon capture army expects to occupy Kiel
of the West German city . of and Lower Saxony.
Kiel and the West German ' other divisions besides the Is
state of Lower Saxony. motorized Unit at Potsdnm'pie-
This and other material was - sumably are equipped with
sr.id to have been brought to ? sia isaof maWestterial Gormse in other
West Germany by an East p Conversion of Army
German army captain who dc-1 Cnnt ve hlrJikovski has tested
ranks less than a month ~go.
Sure It's .luthcn(ie
A senior spokesman of Dr.
:':dcnauer's Press Tirlistry saidl
.fiat the Bonn government isl
:.~colutely certain of the au-
thentictiy of the documents
and of the good faith of the
defector, Guenther Alfons-liali-
kowski, who is thiryt-two and
was born in the former Ger-
m n city of Danzig.
The dramatic aspect of the
documents which the captain
was said to have brought to
West Germany was that they
s
"Resid:nts of KIM the as
nests of resistance in the city curlty. Iiowever, slide portraits
have been smashed. The city of the officer were flashed by a
is in the hands of the troops projector onto the wall o: the
of the National Peoples Army room In which that news con- i
of The German D:?mocratic Terence was held in a wing of
Republic (East Germany). the Bonn Paraament building.
'T`ie army of Germany's one of the pictures showed
first workers' and peasants' the captain talking with the.
state has not come to oppress r
dant" and read in part: cos
1 t conference for reasons of se-
to the West?German authorities
that the material which he
brought signifies the conversion
of the East German army from
a basically defensive to an
"aggro sive" force.
He reported that the conver-
sion began last spring and is
still under way.
She Bonn spokesman ? said
that this development disclosed
the true meaning of the violent
barrage of i,rgression charges
that have been directed against
,West Germany by the Soviet
Union and East Germany for
the last few months.
Sees Smoke Screen
He said that the anti-West
German campaign was a smoke
seemed to be genuine sample
c: material thatw ould be usedl screen Intended to deflect at-
rations for
by the East Gciman arrrly if its aggression on the Communist
marched into the Bonn. repub- side.
lic. Asked whether the Bonn gov-
They were displayed to news- errment took Capt. hfalikowski's
paper men by slide projector. material seriously, the spokes-
and photocopies were made replied, with a flash of irrita-
available for closer studs, tion:
One of the documents was a "Very seriously. For us it is
Placard clearly intended to be the most serious thing there
can be."
posted on building walls in the It was explained to cerrespon-
city of Kiel. It was signed with dents that Capt. Malii:oweki
the words "The City Con:man ld no apnear at the press
20452
.
i .
p
Kiel is a city of 270,000 Jo-
cated on the Baltic cost a short
distance across the frontier'
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J, s,zPT Go
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a.~ Co Cog. W S... - ;;
o C)
aO 4f 2 of?y~lin'+ CL- _ G :3 o
t
m
w
?~ .?
a
~ M o ca
y
4?, paippo Ma.~, ~ a
po mg~?~ -gOQic
w N N
F, r*
rt y ;
I been.in .tlie United States, appar- win in one stroke. Make no mistatce
;
ently'undef, wraps, for more than -- they are ;power seekers, :sot po-,j
a year'p`' litical idealists:
A"rtamonov's- ' testimony -- his
first in public since his flight - was *, * R
~' h d t Jsh to
h
een a high-ranking of-
Having 'been'
ficer cited for military competence
and proficiency in propagandizing
Communist Party, decisions in the
tive than, the ,gabble of those two
defecting-, young? American secret
code clerks who"were put on ex-,
hibit in Moscow, recently..
c ev oes no w
vastly more- sensible and- informa- . Khrus
i Here's;what he said:-
"Since. February, 1955, Soviet
strategy bas.been based on the doc-
trine of. surprise, attack in nuclear
warfare. This doctrine was estab-
lished- in a Soviet military publica-.
tion which'is known only to officers
of- flag -.rank and. above. Several
.times o er ??the past four years it
has bee said again and it'has never
been "ch nged'? '''
"This concept;.w as obviously in-
'tended ?to"prepare the Soviet of-
' ficers )or the starting' of such a.
vvar b J. the Soviet Union. It was de-
signed as an excuse to be presented
C3
wait indefinitely for
States'to become a So
by evolution; moreover,
believe this will happen.
he United
ialist state
e does not
"He would like to see it happen
in his lifetime.';
These statement's are not a reve-
lation; for years:- The Western as-
sumption has been that the Soviets
are. equipped to deliver a surprise
attack, and'would have no hesita-
tion :about doing so if they thought:
they would escape obliterating re-
taliation that would make "victory",'
meaningless.. . , .
But Artamonov's statement doesv,
lend pointed emphasis to the de-
fense concepts of the United States :
and its allies. It's .additional proof
that fear of retaliation is the de-I
terrent - perhaps the only deter.
rent - that prevents the Soviet-,
dictatorship from attempting a new
"Pearl Harbor."
We arm and stay armed to keep
the peace. This is a cliche of the t
political orators, but it is literally
true. .. t
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/- r4mAnfe[[iycnce, -9nc.
WASHINGTON t. D. C.
DETROIT (Mich.)
FREE PRESS-
Circ.: m. 456,117
S. 494,506
Front Edit O1her
Page Pape Page
Date: SEP 17 190-0
invaluable information about
the operations of the Soviet
Navy.
Artamonov said he had de.
c)ded .to leave his country be.
cause he found Communism "a
system based on lies."
He said he wanted no part
din preserving it or spreading
it t
o other unwilling peoples.
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~s f ~ -~I-~~'?toti'r
Naval 06"'t eetor Says Reds
ossess 1? ucle i r Sub
New York Tlmes Service
WASHINGTON .. ' ' A former Soviet naval officer who
fled to the West last year said Friday the Soviet Union has
a nuclear submariner
He said he also had reason to think that the Soviet Navy
now can launch missiles from submarines. Some Soviet sur- j
face ships are fitted'but for missile-launching as well, he I
said.
These disclosures camb from
Nlkolai Fcdcrovich Artamonov,
ex-commander of a Soviet de-
stroyer in the Baltic fleet. He
fled to asylum in June, 1969,
THE DEFECTOR-Who once
was cited in the Soviet press
as a model officer-declined,
for security reasons, to say
how he knew the Soviets had
I a nuclear sub, or to say how
many such vessels there were
according to his information.
As in all such cases, there
was reluctance about passing
on to the Soviet intelligence
authorities just how much
the escsped officer knew and
how much he had told spe-
ciallsts in this country.
But it was apparent from
an intervie with Artamonov,
who held a ank equivalent to
a lieutenant commander in the
United Sta Navy, that he
had been a 1e to give United
States intelligence speciallats
t'
i
r
/7 &eT ed
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ed! en cc, /ne.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
BOSTON (Mass.)
HERALD
irc.: m. 182,816
S. 293,904
F{ont Edit Other
P19? SE P PaL?~
SE f '"17 i Jr.l
Date: ..?
D- --1
Tussia Has'
Nucleur Sub'
r
Ex-Red Navy Officer
Cites Missile Ships
By WILLIAM J. JORDEN
(TWe New York Times News' Service)
WASHINGTON-A former Soviet
,naval officer who fled to West
last year said Friday that the So-
viet Union has a nuclear subma-
rine. -
Details Veiled '
He said he had reason also to
think that the Soviet navy now
can launch missiles from subma-
rines. Some Soviet surface ships
,are fitted out for missile-launch-
ing as well, he said. a. .
These disclosures came from
N ikolai. Frederovich Artamonov,
ex-commander of a Soviet destroy-
er in the Baltic fleet., 4ie fled to
tt it d tan 3'a t ~i4t> ^ ?'-:
I # - U~3 Ia has` "l
(Continued from First Page)
to his information.
As in all such cases, there was
1reluctance about passing on to the
1Soviet intelligcn,Q sties just
'asylum in the West in June, 1959.
from the Polish -port of Gdynia,
where his unit was based.
The defector - who once was
cited in the Soviet press as a
model officer-indicated there was
no reason for speculation about
whether the Soviets have a nuclear
submarine. He declined, for se-
curity reasons, to say precisely
how he knew or to say how may
such vessels there were according
give U. S. Intelligence specialists
invaluable information about the
operations of the Soviet navy and
conditions prevailing inside it.
third grade (equivalent to a -lieu-
tenant commander in the U. S.
Navy) that he had been able to
Nuclear Sib'
I
'REASONS 1~ ~.ns h
Artamonov said he had decid(d
to leave his enune.se he
found communism "a system
based on lies." He said he wanted
no part in preserving It or spread.
ing it to other peoples. -
He said he considcred Commu-
nist leaders completely cynical
and bent only on "slaying in
power and expanding that power."
Artamonov said Soviet military
theory was based on the principle
of surprise attack. He said such
an attack would be made when.
ever it was decided in Moscow
that it had a chance In succeed.
He considered Premier Khrush-
chev's talk about disarmament
misleading and designed to con-
fuse the West.
He said the Soviet fleet mould
play an impnrlant role In any
military move against the West.
It was obvious that nuclear sub-
marines with a missile-launch-
Ing capability would be an essen-
tial part of an effort.
He described the Soviet sub-
marine fleet as the "shock force"
of the navy and its most import.
ant 'segment. He estimated the
size of that fleet at between 450
and SOO sub-surface craft.
TRAWLERS DO SPYING
The Soviet navy has many
traweers that served as an inte-
gral part of Moscow's military
intelligence effort, he said. In
(he Baltic fleet, for example,
there is a special trawler squad-
ron. 'Those who man the vessels
are navy officers and sailors al-
though they wear civilian clothes.
The ships are fitted out with the
most modern technical appartus
- sonar, radar detection instru-
ments, radio equipment, and the
like.
"Like all trawlers, they carry
fish." he said. "But unlike
most, they load the fish on be-
fore they leave port. These
ships are after a different kind
of fish."
He said the trawlers located fre-
quently
off the U.S.. coasts un-
doubtedly were on intelligence
mission. ' Since they operate int
international waters, he said.
there is little that can be done
about them except to keep track
of them.
He sai(l"irpose was to
detect radar installations, take
depth soundings and make charts.
follow U.S. naval activities if:
possible, and locate radio sta-
tions for possible directional pur-I
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Prep J . _ 91 ..9,w)
I WASHINGTON 1. O. C.
CLEVELAND (Ohio)
PLAIN DEALER
Circ.: m.
309,264
S.
500,790
Front
Edit
Other
Page
Pape
Page
Date:SEP 17 1960
cmm us. model offici.ra cied,Jord
The` defector.1who_olrx ?s
--
guvyca.y -- - ,We
fled to asyluiri J? :the : 2
These disclosures' came
Nikolai Federdvich~
missile-]auncling, ?as icelf. s'h~.'
said.
,.ter ,....... ~~-----..::.. ..
submar es r Spore; So 4 sur
face ships are iitted'..oii i'a
. He said nedr also ,n.+. ;Eow
to think that the oviet A'4
nuclear submarine 4,11~~"'
H
,? WAS. ~? ~ . : {.>, r~tfe
{ So,jet naval-' ofticer
t to the West,t~3a._ ;
1 ? ??Y' f ~ ~ I++ 1 r!n
terday the Soviet Unprn-
e
4 : ?
INGTON'-~ 3A for
iv York Times $ert'
/ \
?. Reds I1aye.;
I Uefecfor;Sggy ?
y {~..._, -- -- . ). how.he kner aboutth ei nudes
2:.-
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'N EUROPE
]Y Tim=S the cseapcd officer had in his
17 Sant l QAO poFscssion, and how much he
An Atom Submarine
clans G8 in ya ww? * j.
Soviet Said to Have Imnlusbk. Data Given
submarines. Some Soviet sur-! in preserving it or spreading it
r-,... -ti.t.,- .,-- o;e#~a ,.,.. s..-' 1-tn nthrr unwillinr t eooles.
By WILLIAM j. jonDEs
nectal to Tee tier Yett :Imes.
SS
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16-A
former Soviet naval officer who
fled to the West last year said
today that the Soviet Union had
a nuclear submarine.
He said he had reason to
think that the Soviet Navy now
also could lai:nch missiles from.
missile-launching, he said.
These disclosures came from
'~ikolai Federovich Artamonov,
former commander of a Soviet
destro yerinthe Baltic fleet.
He* fled to the West in June,
1959, from the Polish port of
Gdynia, where his unit had been
based.
The handsome and eloquent
defector-who once was cited
In the Soviet press as a model
officer-indicated there was no
reason for speculation about
whether the Russians had a nu-
clean submarine. He decline'
for security reasons, to say how
.many such vessels there were,
according to his information.
As In all such cases, there
was reluctance about letting
Soviet intelligence authorities
know bow much Information
President in Berlin
Meanwhile, the Communists
fulminated as West German
P: esident Heinrich Luebke flew
to West Berlin on one of his
periodic visits to the harassed
city. this time a three-day stay
during which he will attend an
international medical congress
and inspect and Industrial ex-
hibition.
The East Ger:n::ns, who are
maneuvering to disrupt West
Berlin's links with the free part
of Germany, charged that Air.
Luebke's trip was a "provoca-
tion" and that it was illegal for
him to exercise his office on
\Vest Berlin territory.
However. they made no at-
te-npt to Ir.terfere with his
flight to the city on a United
States military transport air-
craft.
They likewise di4 not molest
his wife. Mrs. Wilhelmina
Lubke. who does not like to Sly
and arrived in West Berlin on
a German train that Is op-
erated by the Communists dur-
ing its passage across East
Defense Minister of Communist
China during a visit by the
latter to the Potsdam military,:
garrisons. The picture was citedl.
as proof of the defector's im-
portance as a political officer
in the Potsdam division.
23
He sata ne consiocrea e:om-
~munist.leaders completely cyni-
cal and bent only on "staying in
power and expanding that
20477
interview with the former cap-
tain third grade [equivalent to
a lieutenant colmnandcr In the
United States Navy] that he
had been able to give United
States intelligence specialists
invaluable ' information about.
the operations of the Soviet
Navy and conditions prevailing
inside it.
-1--7 SE's bD
Captain Artamonov said he,
had decided to leave his country-
.'because he had found commu-l
"
1
nism "a system based on lies.
He said he had wanted no part)
power."
Soviet military theory, he
said, Is based on the principle.
of surprise attack. Such an at-.
tack he went or., would be
F.inadq whenever Moscow decideds ?
that it had a chance to succeed.
He considered Premier Khru-;
- ' ~~kkf
shchev's talk about disarms-. _
meat misleading and designed! ? t to confuse the West. HC'-i
The former Soviet naval of-,
facer said the Soviet fleet would , .
:play an Important part in any
military move against the West.'
It was obvious that nuclear sub-.
marines able to launch missiles
would be an essential part of
such an effort.
He
y
He described the Soviet sub-
marine fleet as the "shock
force" of the Navy and its most
important segment. He' esti
mated that the fleet had be-
tween 450 and 500 submarines.
The Soviet Navy has many
trawlers that serve as an in-
tegral part of Moscow's military
intelligence effort, he said. In
the Baltic fleet for example,
there - Is a special trawler
squadron.
These vessels are manned by. .'
Navy officers and sailors, who
wea rcivilian clothes. The ships
'are fitted with the most mod-
ern technical apparatus-sonar,
radar detection Instruments,
radio equipment, and the like.
"Like all trawlers, they carry
.fish, Captain Artamenjov said.
"But unlike most, they load the
fish on before they leave port
These ships are after a different
kind of fish."
He said the trawlers fre-
quently -seen oft the United
States coasts undo'lbtedly were
on intelligence missions. Since
they operate In international
waters he said, there Is little
that can be done about them ex-
cept to keep track of them.
lie said their purpose was to
detect radar installat!ons, take
depth soundings and make
charts, follow United States
naval activities if possible, and
locate radio stations for possible
directional purposes.
Foreign Officers Trained
The Soviet Navy is busily
training officers for other coun-
tries, Mr. Ariamonov raid. He
STAT
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-hIriself 'took part In training
Indonesian naval officers. Egyp.
tsars also were taking training
courf,s. ix said.
His : :.onal experiences In'
Poland, '.:litre he was based for
a ti:ae, contributed to his decl.
Mon to break with communism,
th9 a3?yoar-o1d defootor saki.
"I saw the discontent of the
;people with communism and
with Solict control," he said.
"I sa:n conditions improve and
morale go up every time there.
was some relaxation from con
trols."
Captain Artamonov said that.
Ideological training in the armed'
forces was a 'serious problem
for the Communist leaders, par.'
? titularly. in the Navy.,, , . .. .
"iirushchev could never per.
He said the level of resistancel (mit it free press or free discus-
Icatlon and suph!stication of the
officers, but that resistance was
also strong among enlisted men.
"Sailors would sooner swab
tho decks, or stand guard duty
than go to the political lecture
tvo:y Monday morning," hi oald,
Polico Control Is Tight
But though political opposi-~
tion was strong and widespread,)
Captain Artamor.ov said it was
not too grave a threat to the
leaders. For one reason, he said,
the Police control is too tight
to ppermit any effective oroanl-
zation. Moreover, despite the
discontent, some doubt that
whet might replace the present
system would be any better.
i u the doors were opened tol
real cont nets and If outside
news cane in, the rcglmc would
icollapse in a month."
The captain said that he still
regcrdr?d himself as a Russian,
one who loved his pro le and
his country. L'ut he left, he
said, because he dcc!ded It was'
hopeless to try to work anair.st
communism and its masters
from inside.
He is now living in New York.,
He hopes to go to a university
and to find work in this coun-
try, probably In engineering. He
plans to become an ? Amercan
citizen and to do what he can
to oppose the men who now rule)
his country, l
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WASHI; .AEON t. D. C.
BUFFALO (N.Y.)
COURIER-EXPRESS
Circ.: m. 163,149
S. 307,254 /
Front Edit Other
Page Page Page
Date: SEP 17 1~W
Defectoi'
He ; said he considered Com-
munist leaders completely cyni-
cal and bent only on "staying In
power and expanding that pow.
er.
'Artamon;jv said Soviet mili-
tary theory, was based on the
principle of surprise attack. He
said such an attack would be
made whenever it was decided
In Moscow that it had a chance
to succeed. He considered Pre.',
mier Khrushchev's talk abou
disarmament misleading an
designed to confuse the West.
The Soviet Navy has ma
trawlers that serve as an Inte-
gral part of Moscow's military
Intelligence effort, he said. In
the Baltic fleet, for example,
there is a special trawler squad.
ron. Those who man the ves
sels are 'navy officers and sail-
'ors though they wear civilian
clothes. -
The ships are'fitted out with)
the most modern technical ap-
paratus-sonar, radar d"tectionj
instruments, radio equipment,
l and the like.
AJ8ub
Says Rii:s,',:;
By WILLIAM J. JORDEN .
?Ac Nc?r York 71mca' N w aervles
WASHINGTON, Sept.' 16--Al
former Soviet naval officer who
fled to the West last year said
today the Soviet Union has a
nuclear. submarine. .
He said he also had reason to
think that the Soviet Navy'now
can launch missiles from sub-
marines. Some Soviet surface
ships are fitted out for missile-
from Nikolai Federovich'Ar-.
tamonov, ex-commander of .a
Soviet destroyer in the Ealtio
fleet. He fled to asylum in"
the West in June, 1959, from
the Polish port of Gdynia,
where his unit was based.',
The defector-who once was
cited in the Soviet press as a
model officer-indicated there
was no reason for speculation
about whether the Soviets have
a nuclear submarine. He de-
clined, for security reasoni, to
gay precisely how be' knew or
to say how many such vessels
there were according to his In-
formation. .
Reluctant to Tip Reds!
As'In all such cases, there
was reluctance about passing on
to the. Soviet intelligence au-
thorities just how much infos'-
oration the escaped officer had
In his possession, and how much
he had been able ' to relay' to
specialists in this country.'.
But it was apparent from an
interview with the former
captain third grade (equiva-
lent to a lieutenant command-
er in the U.S. Navy) that be
had been able tot ive U.S..
Intelligence Epecialis S Invalu-
able information a out the
operations of the So let Navy
and conditions. prey Iling In-,
side It. . t ??'
Artamonov said he. had de-
cided to leave his count cause he found communis
system based on lies,, .He said,
he wanted no part in'preserving,
It or spreading it to othef un-'
- -
tie .saw - -
riiunist leaders completely synl-
nd bent only. on "staying in
,
a
20478
er. - 1
ory , was basedeon the
Lary Arta theeory,
principle of surprise attack.? Se
said such an attack would be
made whenever it vas decided
in Moscow that it had a chance
to succeed. He considered Pre-
mier Khrushchev'S talk about
dVarmament misleading and
designed to confuse the West.
The Soviet Navy his many
trawlers that serve as an inte-
gral part of Moscow's military
intellience effort, he said. In
the Baltic fleet, for example,
there is a special trawler squad.
Tho;e who man the %cs-
ron.
. officers and sail-
se s a
ors tl?ough they car civilian
clothes.
'1`~r 'ltttii :.rP fi'.ted out wish
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1-91c13 inc.
,VASHINOTTON1.D C. -
MIAMI (Fla.)
HERALD
Circ.: m. 275,067
S. 332,230
F,ant IF dig Other
Page Pool- Page
Date: CEP 1 7 196U
Russia's
Defector
THE UNITED STATES turned the ta-
bles on the Soviet Union this week and
offored a Russian defector to public view.
The appearance of Capt. Nikolai Fedor.
ovirh Artamonov before the House Cont.
mittce on un-American' Activities may be
presumed to be our answer to the two
turncoat code clerks who shooed up in
Mewow? the other day.
Capt. Artamonov, having once com?
mandrel a Soviet naval destroyer. clearly
outranked the runaway Americans. It is
doubtful. ho%%e%rr. if he contributed any
think more of value to us than our turn.
coats. cnntrihutrd to Russia.
Just what purpose these exhibitions of
defection r.ervea, except a small arms fire
in the propaganda war, Is and to discover.
Based solely on what s said publicly
by the two ex?Amerlcans and the one ex.
Russian, we'd say the latest exchange was
a standoff.
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track with: aeva'stating force:;' .. peril:
X, 41
even admit lettin the natin in for suc
. a doubt of its ability to strikegoh
QUO i
ow'v; r.
,
ucioar AFM
Force Gen. Thomas S. Power, Gen. I their pledges, - -;,? I`' ;
Others who have sounded *arn- I monists agree to disarmament with
ing the dangerous situation are not an Chinese roai at ekingg and'
adequate: , 5' t ? then keeping it there ntil the' Coma
planes, that It does not have enough striking power to ; tine point that'
Force has obsolete and obsolescent -: ' a program - 6f.,- stiength ning-. our'
Seri. Le +`May ] ? Our only safetyy `lfe's in jauncl&
warned that the Ali,- ; g
20480
~trength,?ofi the' United States to.'.., '. inferior,': to- ussia stare not , su#-{
T- of allowing he' -relative? that the United Stat 'power Is note
havewatchedbCommunist activity. Public denial bywPiesident Eiaen-Y
disab] 't ~~., ' _.-V-b 1 edl made their decision honestly,
e his patio with one blow y
Possibly.. the :timony did not and on` the basi? of the 'best infdr
offer anythin ` new' to those who ? ? mation ? they 'could"g It
a :surprise =. attack ? on .the United, these. specialists could , be wrong.
Pow`er vas again made clear by the Rickover,' who developed the first'
testimony' of `a` loaner comrt,ander atomic' submarine. ~, ?' I. ~ '
of ' a.' Soviet` destroye before I the--`., Thesb : are , In addition,' o th
House Committee' on -Un-American Gaither Committee's''impartiay and'i
Activities ; top secret report 1hifh declared
= Capt ` N1kolai-r Fedorovich ,,4r*. 7;. "the United States in the gravest
tamor,.oy testified that Russian mill- danger In its history.' i V ?. ~ ;- Un4.
tarystrategy' envisioned a successful A report of John .Hopkins i Y,
Surprise 'nuclear attack:;,:. ;=t'~; ? ~~, versity ~researchers_ Iaaso decla'red;lt
` The 'naval officer who defected declinein military osition "had left'
W- the -'United States said ; Soviet.. 1. the cou{itry facing , It. greatest peril,
leaaers'~would?not hesitate tolaunch It is ''hardly possible that t alt ;1
/-rde! - nax-Oancf, int.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
HUNTIK,
J U4 (W.Va.)
ADVERT
ER
Circ.: a
20,899
digonals
Date:
Front Eft "W
Pap. P ? Pays
SEP 17 1960
of t.0t U.
,+ q t..?I. r = -. ? iCl.~,?xl .lR~ %-a' ~; Y' ...~} ..:I. ,.: :., .~? ?!S?'t'i
The xital necessity of maintain Maxwell D. Taylor,'retired Army,
Ing su A TTnited States military I chief of staff and Adni. Hyin ?
Maj. gein; John B. Medari?, the - , There*- should _ bey n4 room' for:
s falling below that of the Soviets. .. their surprise nuclear assault?.',f
o------ ,.
iother'has warned- - that our power. 'the'rampaging Russjaris to'Iaunch'
istsino-W- In-many quarters:" room at least for cioytit_^,,.,;
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.- -
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(,
Prep Jnfe[[`geneer inc.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
DECATUR (III.) R` VIEW
Circ.: e. 35,24\
Date: k 1
Front Edit Other
Page Page Page
Etates will not attack first. . , volvement In espionage is stI111
Where the spy clerks merely news, but even "inside". stories
asserted that they were appre- about Russia's plait for attack
hensive about the warlike policy are not?surprlsing, - '? i-: "
M7~
tack and assumes that the United Apparently United. States -3n-~
said that Soviet military strategy by, .and; it is, assumed; consid:'
Reporte y m this . country with. top press coversi~e~, while
since the spring of 1959, Captain the Russian captain.iecAsved ses-
Ivikolai Fedorovich `Artamonov and page treatment in, 6W coun-
testunony more damning than their receptions were-- uite dif-
that given to Russian inquisitors ferent. The U.S.. defe orswere
by the ex-code clerks. -
' i eceived' both here : abroad
ITn-American Activities I Commlt its.practJce;of spying 4p allies;
tee to testify in the case of two thhee S Ruet' ofnce ass is . ged
thee
Union wItli planning .t?
American spy code clerks who shoot frstt~~`~~~
defected to the Soviet Union, a Both'withesses gave what ap-
Russian nary captain has given pea~'ed to be inside stoiie but..
Russian Esp!oiiage Not N e~'g;;
41.
rY .T ' w. i.
DROUGHT before T'the'House beingpursued'bythe U.S. and
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PROVIDENCE (R. I.)
J URNAL
rc.: m. 57,908
S. 183,699
I 4at- gall Other
r.O. Iie4. , P.
1 1651
Dcaos St d' 7
Defector Says Russia
R?AChin.ton-A former Sovletjin ;K'wcr and e.\pandinq that
Has .tom Submarine
Continued From Peg. On*
inc capability w?rxald,be an cscen-
tint part of an effort.
lie tested, l the Soviet snlu.
ntnrine fleet as the ''shapes.
f.,rce" of the navy anti Its mint
11113sit?tant sc-;rnrotl, lie rstinu,t-
ed the Bice (if that fleet at Ir??
tssci n 4W anti :d10 subsurface
Craft.
The -)sin navy has nt.ut%
Irawlcra that 'case as an?inlet.
rat pail of Moscow's tnihl i
intelligence rffurt he said. ]n
the. Baltic Fleet. for csantple.1
thrlr Ic it sj 'cial trawler squad
ion. 71an.r sshn man the vessels
:ere n;.sv nffierra and uailoi'.
Iclotlics. The ship's rue filled oil
Iwith the most nt.-ftlern technica
apparatus - sonar, radar tie
tertian inai-unwnts, radio cqui
ntent, and the like.
fish." lie said. "But unlike 'most
leavo port. Thew' ships are all
cr a duffercnt kind of fish."
lie said the trawlers lticatri
ently off the U.S. cost
t n4oubledly were on Intelligent
missinns. Since they operate I
there It little that can be dun
t1 1).-1 .
w
The defector-who onrc ne!Red Atom Sub
cited in the Soviet pees as a
pxnt n a Jme, wh(IC her tuut~-
~ 1 1
.torte, I9:i9, from Ill" i'rtlicltConf;nue.d on Page 11. Col. 7
ft'1
fled to asylum In the Weal Ind m:u',n. s mob a nucar l.rnnr It
fiknlal Fctirrovlch A ninnnv.jiilny an intl??nt.,nt part in ant
I inc as well, lie raid. ilt?r'd.
are filled east for miscrir-launch?,.,nd rlc?i;;n??tt I't r.,nlutiest;:chcr Darstc:'.lung hatte Sha-
c:: it in \ti:cn im Au ftrag. der amerik:tnisrheri
ISua ?e: nolire: FBI mi: zwei KGB-Agentcn auf
den. Siufen der Votivkirchc verabredct. Scither
seine amcriknni:.chen Auftrag,;cber
and seine in den USA lebendc Frau Blanka ver-
gcblich auf cin Lebcnszcichen.
Nn:,h Darstelluag der sow'etischen Llteratur-
zcit:?riu?:it nnhm Sha%irin bereits 1966 Kontakt
mit cincm :owjctirchcn Konsuiarbcamt,n in
\C:,shir,g loi: ,uf and bot an, Iniormationen aus
scin.r CIA-::tigkeit weiterzugebcn. Konlakt-
mann Shc:drins sci von d:: an Orlow gcwesen -
ein tnitteibarc: Hinweis auf Line Doppelaoen-
t
Orlow h.-.be rich auch in Wier mit Shadrin in
\'erb:udung ;csetzll. hcilit es in dcm Artukel.
Zv,ci T:,ge spetcr sei er vcrscliwunden. Lei dens
G :?pr.:cli hahe Shadrin Kontaktmann Orlow ge-
hct.n, tin fdrinlichcs Gcsuch urn Erlnubnis, in
! die : uwcj.tuuion zur0ckkchren zu durfen, an den
Obcr.,l n Sowjct weitcrzulciten. Dies habe Or-
l:n+ zur.esat;t: .Die Ruckkchr %vur sein Traum.
i:r v: u2ie. dG er cin toter Diann sein wurde, falls
l the Aricrik:Liter ci;:s herausfiindcn.- In dem Arti-
kol wind die ;:irk uikanische Reg'icrung aufgefor-
dc:t, d::s Sciiicl_sal SL?:idrins aufzuhcllen.
Name Guillaume: Im Spiel
In I',?richicn ens W hinglon hatte es ar.15B-
lieu ck Beauchs von 13L4ndcskjnAer Helmut
Sdtn:idt i:i den USA im Juli geheI3cn, die US-
Rc;icrung plane, die Auslicterung Shadrin
dt:rclt c.nen Tausch ge; en den als DDR-Spiou
veiu'?t.iiten chcrlaligan Kanzleramtsmitarbei-
tcr (.; Lntcr Guillaume zu crrcichen.
Der nuitn::a:iehe Dnpc-latent i\:icho-
las Shadrin it nacn so~v jetidcher Dar-
stellung vum US-c;eheimcienst CIA
Lind nicht voir. sou?j=?tischen KGB in
Wien entfiihrt worden. In der '.Moskauer
Wochenzeitung .Lileraturnaja Gazeta"
hief3 es. aus KGB-Akten er_ebe situ
eirdeuti;t, dall Shadrin vor zwei Jahren
in die Sowjetunion habe zurdekkehren
wollen and daran von der CIA gehin-
dert worden sei. Die CIA habe Shadrin,
der 1959 als Nikolai Fedorowitsch Arto-
mow in die USA desertiert sei, im De-
zember 19:.5 auf dcm \V-,, zu einem
Trefien mit dem KGB-I.htarbeier Igor
Orlow ab?efa:tnen raid ..climiniert?.
Nach wz.1 icher Darstellung hatte
sich Shadrin in Wien im Auttrag der
amerikanischen Bundespolizei FBI mit
zwri KGB-Agenten vor der Votiv-Kir-
che verabredet. Seither fehit von ihm
jedes Lebenszeichen.
In Beiich'en aus \Vashingtor. hatte es
aniblIlieh des Besuches von Bundes-
kanzier Helmut Schmidt im .Tuli gehei-
Gen, die US-i;e;ierung plane, die Aua-
lieterua, Shadrins durch ein Tauschge-
o-chaft zu errcichen, :i: dem der als
..DI)R"-Spion verurteilte ehecralige
Kanzlerumtsmitarbeiter Gitnter Guil-
laume tine ?., ichtize Itolle ' '?
cams to have informationTthat.wxE'sup-
nuclear warfare. 4" pnsea to be disseminated on y+ to " Fussfanii'-
i This, he says, has been true s3nc "V--u officers of fl
.., - ~
For what
It's worth, a defector -ri
from the p cret * ~I ' t ~ .
Soviet Navy has told thenlouse Un-American officers inrone.15 a onths'wt1":.
le ineI1)eence
7 Arfil?if tee /1...?-~I..__ .. _
ore
Warning On Pei ;Q 1fY11? 3t j_-
Pags
3 1. I -MV
rary, . ag rank and above.
1955, regardless of how much Soviet Premier The message hd?s'giving us is that the R
Fihrushchev talks about disarmament; as he is clans would undertake a surprise attd,c1'if.themiyit
ea.-pected to do before the United Nations. ' felt they coulddn'in one stroke-thaf ihcv'
power-seekers no~'~
The defection of 42-year-old Nikolai Feder- No matter what you'trhaytM kiof.defectors k
ovich Artamonov, Who held the 'equivalent of ours or their, It would be safest 1t keep our
commander in the Russian Navy, has been guard up at all tunes.
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f WE HAD a pleasant recent afternoon at a session of the
House Un-American Activities committee hearing a
Russian defector - but those Soviet experts sitting on
either side of us kept us baffled, .
One of the experts was Gennadi Shishkin, a personable
young man who Is chief of the Tars news bureau here.
The other was Leon Volkov, also an amiable youth, who
Is Newsweek's authority on Soviet shenanigans.
As the Interpreter translated the remarks of Soviet Naval
Capt. Nikolai Artamonov, it was clear that Mr. Shiskin was
unhappy. We asked him what the trouble was.
"That Interpreter." he said, 'ire Is not translating accu?
rately. He Is not complete. For Instance, when Capt.
Artamonov was asked whether he got special favors as a
member of the, Communist Party, the Interpreter didn't
? bother to mention that Capt.,.Artamonov said being a party
member meant he had to ao a lot of unpaid extra work in
his spare time. Also, the Interpreter doesn't get all the
. ? nuances; the Captain emphasized that party membership
meant added responsibility but the Intrepreter didn't say
that."
? We turned to Mr. Volkov. "How about it Leon?" we
asked "Sbs
s
ik
u1
ays the interpreter is a-bum."
"Nonsense," Mr. Volkov answered. "He's one of the best
I've ever heard. He translates everytime Capt. Aortamonov
clears his throat"
Incidentally. altho Capt. Artamonov has been In New York
since he defected more than a year ago, he's still un-
employed. His board and room are paid for by the United
States government, probably the Central Intelligence
Agency. altho that outfit is not saying. His rank, Captain,
equivalent to that of a commander in the
T. Third Navy.
?Y?
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y i * f
g 't
r--.. Ar,r,rrs., d Fr\r Dol-o 0n1 nin7I Y ('IA flDQQQnn.~mDnnn".~nn1 QC (VH 7
now l portant the `Religious Vote's
A 50-STATE LISTENING ~OST SURVEY: CAMPAIGN '60
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01u' much did the reV trQ~~ '-`'~a`~rn~~ .t, - L`
.5 gacllcl?r 1 rt U.g, ` Plenty. The h d ora now? 3+: ~?..s 1 ..4
..'S+ V: y. w mRL+lu ~'~&7e~r 1Ka ~-.. :+ 2 . / l r ' ~y, ? I.1.
u
tors Aug. f - c . . ?, . , r. M ;
? "tsti0 Me New York Naro-d t
--~.. - ,sus _? ".~
.;,ar?az~?s~r_:'t, . ,sue-~~r .
'
'
4 ;} C111300u S3~ ~~ ttdtctalto Sccurit y a access to top?ucret files in the
! ! r .?_.y.lrtLrr J 1,,,~ 1 Agency and often -.3 L 1lstions
r3. Turncoats May Have Uopca venter rapers -11 INw
T
ld
b
~ P
f
o
ro
e
set?~
Secrets Missing D o
.[.~? i K, r : _ ?~_~ ,~ ,y ? S'It ?-. 1 ~a11"~ -a i?~..ir'c'..li.:~ ii_.! !dL
DEFECTORS:
The Risk, the Danger
Behind locked doors in the Old House
Office Building, the Penthgon tried its
best last week to be reassuring about the
defection of Bernon F. Mitchell and
William H. Martin, the two National
Security Agency employes who turned
up in Russia.
In offering a stout defense of the gov-
ernment system of security checks, J.
Vincent Burke Jr., the Defense Depart-
ment's bulky, bustling general counsel,
testified that, save for an instance in
Mitchell's youth, there was no evidence
of homosexuality in the traitors at the
time of their hiring.
This drew a quick blast from testy
Francis E. Walter, chairman of the
House Un-American Activities Commit-
tee, who declared that the NSA's secu-
rity procedures have been "very sloppy"
and that the agency moreover has a
"very serious perversion problem." Why,
said Walters, a psychiatrist who had
been treating Mitchell told him that he
once diZh-ssed with worried officials of
the NSA the possibility of starting a clinic
there, "because perversion was quite a
problem and they didn't know what to
do about it." -
The real crux of the case, though,
came when Burke told a subcommittee of
the House Armed Services Committee
how much Mitchell and Martin knew.
ltrntnt: Burke insisted that the two
defectors could not help Russia crack
U.S. codes. NOT, he maintained, did they
know anything about the U-2 flights,
prior to the ill-fated sortie of Francis
Cans Powers.
But Burke conceded that the traitors
could help Russia improve' their codes.
And he confirmed that they had access to
the top-secret files from the day they en-
tered the NSA in 1957 and could call for
the files 'as needed" (NE%VS%VEEK, Sept.
19). It was possible. Burke went on,
that the defectors may even have taken
some briefing notes from the files with
them when they headed for Moscow.
To the Congressional probers, who
planned further bearings, Burke's testi-
mony was hardly reassuring. After all, in
August, when it was first announced that
Mitchell and Martin were missing, the
Pentagon said they were minor clerks,
with "no access" to information damaging
to U.S. security.
rnie `Valuable' Russian
Although he w?asn t billed as a coun-
terattraction to the Martin-Mitchell case,
the Russian defector who was brought
out of wraps in Washington last week
certainly was calculated to serve that
purpose. He was a former naval captain
-the onetime commander of a Soviet de-
stroyer-and it was just possible that,
from a practical military point of view,
he could contribute more hard intelli-
gence to the U.S. than Martin and
w..?-i.t.a en..
Artanionov: 'liege for measure
S - % -?c.:
Mitchell could to Russia. American in-
telligence officials, in fact, called him
.the most valuable" Soviet defector in
more than a decade.
Actually, 32-year-old Capt. Nikolai
Federovich Artarnonov had been in this
country for fifteen months, but his pres-
ence had been kept secret until his ap-
pearance last week before the House
Un-American Activities Committee.
Obviously, the witness-slim, bespec-
tacled, and mustached-was not going
to repeat at an open hearing the kind of
military information he reportedly has
been giving to intelligence agents in long
months of questioning. But he made at
least two interesting points:
'The great fleet of Russian "fishing
trawlers" that roam the world-and spe-
cifically the coastal waters of the US.-
are definitely espionage vessels, loaded
with electronic listening and watching
devices. They are also loaded with fish,
but the fish are put aboard back home
as stage props.
'Soviet strategic planning centers on the
concept of a knockout nuclear attack on
the U.S.-but Russian Premier NikitJ
Khrushchev obviously would not risk this
unless he were sure that the first blow
would be a decisive one. As of now,
Khrushchev cannot be sure.
Artamonov also declared-though not
before the committee-that the Russians
have two nuclear submarines capable
of launching missiles; however, he
added, these are still in the testing stage,
and the Soviet Navy, by and large, is
still about five years behind the U.S. in
this respect.
Another encouraging report from
Artamonov. has it that there has been
growing dissatisfaction in Russian mili-
tary forces ever since Khrushchev fired
Marshal Ceorgi K. Zhukov in 1957; and
it has become increasingly intense, he
believes, since the dismissal of 1,250,0M
Red military by Khrushchev early this
year. Whether or not this is just the cus-
tomary resentment that fills military men
in times of cuts, he did not say.
Artamonov is a graduate of the Rus.ian
Newsweek, SeptemLer 26, 1960
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NAT1.40 AL .tE'/'.tIfl
equivalent of Annapolis and was consid-
ered one of the most promising of the
younger Russian naval officers. But he
shared the discontent that followed
Zhukov's dismissal and became increas-
ingly curious about the United States.
In June of last year he made his es-
cape simply by jumping his own ship in a
Scandinavian port and asking the nearest
U.S. Embassy for asylum. His wife ac-
companied him, and the two in recent
months have been living quietly in New
York. One reason Washington kept his
presence secret for so long was that until
this year his mother was still living in
Russia. Since her death, he has no fam-
ily ties in his homeland.
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~
SEPTEMBER 26, 1960 25c
INDEX-PAGE 23
How Important the_ `Religious Vote'?
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Turncoats May Have Copied Other Papers
Missin D of eetor probe Told
secrets
e New Tortt Herold Trbvne Sept U,
DEFECTORS:
The Risk, the Danger
Behind locked doors in the Old House
Office Building, the Pentagon tried its
best last week to be reassuring about the
defection of Bernon F. Mitchell and
William H. Martin, the two National
Security Agency employes who turned
up in Russia.
In offering a stout defense of the gov-
ernment system of security checks, J.
Vincent Burke Jr., the Defense Depart-
ment's bulky, bustling general counsel,
testified that, save for an instance in
Mitchell's youth, there was no evidence
of homosexuality in the traitors at the
time of their hiring.
This drew a quick blast from testy
Francis E. Walter, chairman of the
House Un-American Activities Commit-
them when they headed for ~!~ osco~o:"" `hlitchell'M"c'ould `E'o Russla:''Arnbrl 1
To the Congressional probers, who
planned further hearings, Burke's testi-
mony was hardly reassuring. After all, in
August, when it was first announced that
Mitchell and Martin were missing, the
Pentagon said they were minor clerks,
with "no access" to information damaging
to U.S. security.
The `valuable' Russian
Although he wasn't billed as a coun-
terattraction to the Martin-Mitchell case,
the Russian defector who was brought
out of wraps in Washington last week
certainly was calculated to serve that
purpose. He was a former naval captain
-the onetime commander of a Soviet de-
stroyer-and it was just possible that,
from a practical military point of view,
he could contribute more hard intelli-
tee, who declared that the NSA's secu- gence
"
rity procedures have been "very sloppy
and that the agency moreover has a
'very serious perversion problem." Why,
said Walters, a psychiatrist who had
been treating Mitchell told him that he
once discussed with worried officials of
the NSA the possibility of starting a clinic
there, 'because perversion was quite a
problem and they, didn't know what to
do about it." -
The real crux of the case, though,
came when Burke told a subcommittee of
the House Armed Services Committee
how much Mitchell and Martin knew.
Denial: Burke insisted that the two
defectors could not lielp Russia crack
U.S. codes. Nor, he maintained, did they
know anything about the U-2 flights,
prior to the ill-fated sortie of Francis
Cary Powers. -
But Burke conceded that the traitors
could help Russia improve their codes.
And he confirmed that they had access to
the top-secret files from the day they en-
tered the NSA in 1957 and could call for
the files as needed" (NER'SWEEB, Sept.
19). It was possible, Burke went on,
to the U.S. than Martin and
telligence officials, in fact, called hi
"the most valuable" Soviet defector i
more than a decade.
Actually, 32-year-old Capt. N'ikolaif,t
"country for fifteen months, but his pres
ence had been kept secret until his ap-
pearance last week before the House
Un-American Activities Committee.
Obviously, the witness-slim, besp
tacled, and mustached-was not going
to repeat at an open hearing the kind o
military information he reportedly , ^a
months of questioning. But he made a
-The great fleet of Russian "fishin
trawlers" that roam the world-and spe
cifically the coastal waters of the_U.S.-
with electronic listening and watching
devices. They are also loaded with fish
but the fish are put aboard back horn
)Soviet strategic planning centers on th
concept of a knockout nuclear attack on
Khrushchev obviously would not risk thi
unless he were sure that the first blow
would be a decisive one. As of now
Khrushchev cannot be sure.
Artamonov also declared-though no
before the committee-that the Russian
have two nuclear submarines capabl
of launching missiles; however, h
added, these are still in the testing stage
still about five years behind the U.S. ii
Another encouraging report fro]
Artamonov has it that there has bee]
growing
tary forces ever since Khrnshchev fired
it has become increasingly intense, lie'
es
the
belie
,
---
Red military by I]rushchev early thi
year. whether or not this is just thaLLus-
tomary resent-----"-
in times of O
Art-inonoy -
01
ow much did :he two traitors know?
Plenty, Thy - had access to top-secret files in
Security Abeacy and often used there,
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` ,TjrtPN.IL AFFAIRS
equivalent of Annapolis and was consid-
ered 'one of the most promising of iha
younger Russian naval officers. But ;he
shared the discontent that fo11o1 ed i.
1 Zhukov's dismissal and became incrcas-,
h
e
ingly curious aoout t
In June of last year he made his
cape simply by jumping his own ship n a Scandinavian Scandinavian port and asking the nearest_.3
U.S. Embassy for asylum. His wife t-.~ ?j companied him, and the two in reCen'
months have been living quietly in \Lew"
York. One reason Washington kept mis -
presence secret for so long was that uniifl.
hi ,. 1 is rnuthe o.ac cfill livinO_ m
t
.
riy ties in his homeland. ",F
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-2.7 41C107-
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Preld interrend, inc.
WASHINGTON 1. D. C.
BATON ROUGE (La.)
ADVOC TE
Circ.: 37,955
S 50,450
Front Edt 0th.,
P.9. Page Page
Gd
v,. : y.
1+^r
{Q Russia's War Plans. _T ~_i -{ ; >
ccd
e
a
de
the
tgA
our concern over
it
+r D
,
I;
e
esp
1
f
r
`
e
clerks Mitchell and Martin and?ofhers_whoaye;gl,
over to the Russians, we still are ahead in-th eact an
e
h
r, ..O ?i}'.~
the latt
wit
military men and civilian. officials who"bade{be rn
"
ind the lrQ
fe
h l
v?..
i
led up vtii
--.:- .. ? =.t -
safe
dom will bear tvitne sa It is
f f
id
;
ree
e o
to the s
guess that we are,ahead in information gained: v%e1.
as numbers granted asylum.:.., !.A
The information brought;tousbythes fuglti e
from communism has bden.useful, nstruc ioe~ Tinti e
instance, Soviet Navy Capt.? Nikolai r'eaorovi m: _^rta:
monov, who reports that. since' 1935 }Russian 'str
has been based, on the doctrine ofaxai;p*ise`nclear-
attack on the United. States. Heliias'not''seen anyidu co
tives ordering preparation, or such anattacb, he saya
but he knows of "general statements , bicf ,ten$ed to
for the 'ossibih 4f
officer corps
Sovie
th
,
t
e
prepare
being ordered to make a surprise ' attac ..-fir
cause no great astonishment 'amon rofessior a1 m:
tary men. Intensive planning for every possirne, e~ eg
ality and every Imaginable course 'of action'I i :A?
o
activit of the military' forces of all nations
f
.
Defense Department is constantly devel(pI!n j pIanso
t he?
So~are
ituation
bl
i
s
:
.,
e
va
si
action for use in every conce
military strategists of England, France and other-co
'
' `''?
d
tries outside the Iron Curtain. - ' ~= > ~
The Russians undoubtedly;liave;such plans., (
best guarantee against their ever being earned ou'I
inaintenante of our ability to retaliate in devastz !pg
to the extent that the Russians feel themselves
Ia
t
_
g
o
capable of striking a decisive,-Without feaz of these"
AwI
l
il
i
s
e
ar p
;n
ome s
se or
ans. },,4 ,,~77_` Fr~
into execution th
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ASHING7
ON 1, p, C.
PORT HURON (Mich.)
TIMES-F)ERALD
Circ.: '
Front
Page
- Date:
Ede'
P.
31,203
31,018
0th.,
Page
loaf
. At j .
Soviet Alm: Surprise
A former Russian Navy com- dictatorship ,would under ke4 a
wander who defected to the United pri ' ' '
sur se AttaCl;:'f ;she feI that: ;'a
Ststes has testified befor Co
a------
that the Soviet "fishing boats" .~ ' .
lieve this will ha ' " ..'.... I
Ile went on to state publicly ppen? He' would like
what U.S. Intelligence has long to see it take place his lifetime"
not attack first, evolution..Moreovert herdoes not he.`'
gressfonul committee that the Soviet ahe could Kin !n' one s oke:f Z ?1!
military doctrine is based on a sur. Make no jnlstaLe they are. f
prise attack. power-seekers, not p 01 i t! e a 1`
Nikolai Federovich Artamonov, idealists. t ~` > -. `_ ~
who described himself as disillusion-
"Khrushchev-'noes tl not. 5
ed with Communism,' also said that want.
Soviet military authorities are urnani- wait indeiin)tely.for ,the'' United-'
mous in agreeing that the U.S. will. States to become a Socialist titate'by
off our Atlantic coasts are jam- The frus:ratfng thing about b'Ir.
packed with . electronic equip- ' Artamonov's statements is that Rua-
ment to spy on whatever aspects sia, of course, will roundly 'deny
of. U.S. military strength are them. And his' entire testimony will
%vithin eavesr#ropping range. be dismissed by the Reds as the rant.
about world disarmament and living
in peace with other nations.
itions; of the world.
puppets were on their way to the UN would do the most good - In 'the
in New York, where they presum- councils of the so-called "neutrals
Activities committee even as pre- hope that Mr. Artamonov's words*, of_
mier Khrushchev and his Communist warning will. be felt where they".
"I feel obliged to point out," said
Mr. Artamonov, "from the informa-
tion available to me as a Soviet of.
ficer and Communist party member
that Soviet military strategy Is in-
consistent with Khrushehev's pro-
nouncements on disarmament.
"I believe that the Soviet
But for Americans generally bli
testimony should serve to cori$ritr.
If any confirmation' is' ne; d
fact that our. national defe
remai
di
n pre
cated on ? msi 'y
tallatlon.
R
i
uss
a will nor attacl u&. 41
believes our retaliat_!on ou1d
fate th
S
iet
ni
e
ov
U
on.. By ti(
ese
token, ' If our delens ; AV-4-1-
and ^ "
our'strllce-1,ack' ::e.r vital
ed, the. Sovleta i otiid IMF 7~{ s~~.=~ ?
.I gyp, ~? Y..F~
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,-), 0 0 C -7- el, 6)
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N e e'd e' d o n T h i s
'I beli eve that te Soviet dicta".
torship would undertaVe a' surprise*
atta.ek if she felt she could win"In
one *stroke.
&o 7s~oke Nikolai 'Fe orov"icb.
*& fonner Ru s' 'i
Artahionov, S iiih n vy
captavin" who defected to the Weit,
before a congressional corrimitteei,
'Meanwhile, in Aloscow, the " two
Ameri~an defectors Mitcbe-11 and
Martin' denounce the gbve,rnmejit-
of the United States.
Defectors are by nature and'de f-6
Inition suspect..It,would ~e'~%,ell t6'
keep.'a large salt shaker handy,.In
evaluating 'their remaAk
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S a I..I
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I`'
n t~
peal J'n~illlye"01 ne.
WASHIHOTOM 1. D. C.
NEW B UNSWICK (NA
HOME 4EWS
Circa 39,920
378695
,,w1 4" 0110
vote F.1.
-ee~
Rov l 1960
Dc3too
Pass the Salt
n
"I believe attack to she the Soviet dictatorship would uff,
dcriake a surprise
ono stroke... 9"
So spoko Nikolai Fedorovich Artamonov. a for-
mer Russian navy captain who defected to the West.
before a congressional committee.
Meanwhile. in Moscow the two American de-
fectors Mitchell and Martin denounce the government
of the United States.
suspect-
Dclcctors are byeetu4c lrg d ealt ab ker handy
It would be well to keep
I evaluating their remarks.
ZO5
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/
'K (0
i4 A Pi.Arru::, ID41
Sian propaganda on the Cu-'r.'t ` 1uhs
ban invasion.
Xs=-tacheyev s;.id th ere
was too much publicity on
this coutit.?y's role in train-
ing A:114 euppor.ing the rebels.
group. t a on two-day Prujnct Ac-
Nikolai Artamonov, formert?on KTbup Is being provMed
commander of a Russian do- nr'eting room at the nsval
strayer, said In an interview f iii station free by the base
. Thursday the West is losing''~!nmander, Capt. Robert T.
the cold war in economic,~hieling.
political and psychological. Naval personnel have also
fronts. ?Deen provided, out of uni-
Aleksander Kaznacheyev, form, to assist in parking
who fled his post as attache,I`ars?
In the Russian embassy at Each of the participants in
Rangoon,. Burma, in June the seminar paid $7.50 for
1958, is to address the group meals at the base over the
?at'8:20 a.m. Saturday. two days.
Kaznacheyev said the Rus- The Twin Cities Citizens
scans would like to provoke?_-ouncil for American Ideals
the United States into armed I s sponsoring the meeting
intervention "as in Laos or, ith the co-operation of the
Cuba." ,':ambers -of Commerce of
The vi: itors- blarned the;.
he; . ' ~lrneapolis and St. Prul and
western pressor aiding Rus- , he >>rnneapolis Council of
you are doomed and not
worthy to exist:,` according;
to the corpmr.nis% mind, Nie-
meyer said. - I
The first of two defected 1
Russian officials here for the
seminar was to.speak to the'
it KO.i:(:T ACTION J
U.S. -of
Sees
Reds Wrong'
A professor of political
science from Notre Dame uni.
versity said today the Ameri-
can concept of communism
and Communists is generally
a mistaken one.'
Dr. Gerhart Niemeyer
spoke to some 500 Upper
.Midwest residents gathered
at Wold - Chamberlain field
for a two-day seminar on
American ideals and the
dangers of communism-
Project Action.
Niemeyer said Americans
think of communism as just
an ecznomlc system, a stand-
ard of living or the use of
force
46- Communists, however, are
"impetvious to all reasoning
based on normal assump-
tions," Niemeyer said.
If you are not working to-
ward the "Socialist future
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1!--(--r ---ti
.
WE
rIs
s
A111 01 .
t3
Soviets,
War with the West, not
ideological coexistence, is the
ultimate objective of Red Rus-
sia, a Soviet naval commander
who defected to the Free
World four years ago declaredt
here at a meeting of the Free.!
doms Foundation.-
are already under way, ac-
cording to Capt. Nicholas Arti-
minov, former commander of
a Russian destroyer, who dis.
closed that the Soviets now
have.between 24 and 36 "spy
ships" on patrol off the At-
lantic coast and at least 12
off the ' Pacific seaboard.
The 35-year-old former Com-
munist made his revelations
at a ? three-day Freedoms
Foundation seminar in, the
auditorium of the Union Oil
C'eriter;'ehd1ng today.{ . ?,-.." -
`"Americans fr e q u e n~ 1 y
make the mistake of con.
fusing the concept of peace.
with the idea of co-existence
between derimocratic ideals
and Communist ideology,"
he said: ' -
"I heard Khrushchev him-
self, "deelare in an address
to the Central'Comnilttee of
the Communist Party, of
which I was a member, that
there can be no co-existence
with the West.
- "The objective of world
communism is'bonquest by
force and both Russia and
China are dedicated'to that
end."..=. .J-~J t? i?'.
. SPY SHIPS
as trawlers, but equipped with
the most modern of electronic
detection devices, are integ-
ral units of the Your` major
fleets of the Russian navy, he
have been seen off Cape Can-!
averal -and at the site of the;
nucleai submarine Thresher,
tragedy, were undoubtedly on
detached duty from the main
"spy ship" squadron in the
"They look lute' fishing
boats, but they, are after
bigger and different kinds
of fish," be added. _ -1 . _
x0543 00
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Is Offering to Exchange jD
U
S
.
tf
Soviet A gent for an A incricanife~
Al j- .3. ~b+
to T he \.r [Kt T.z'f, s
WASHINGTON. March 22-.zation
scnon o ito 22 ey ts. Heias
was
The Ctatr ncpartmc nt has pro?t -i nn. a t,rm he ?c row sere- la
,f d i'., Gntr:n ir^ at the Fc,ic,ai Pcn:te ry sF
ment that it cxch?n'e Sarkis
,at Leavenworth. Kansas. Int
?O. Paskalian, who pleaded guil-I John Corbett. Mr. Paskalian's ut
ty Jast Sept. to a charge of cot:rt-appointed lawyer, said~th
,spying for Moscow. for an:today that he had been tele-ia4
American intelligence agent phoned recently by a Washing- V6
now in Soviet cus;ody. an ton lawyer. represc:iting thelhi
'American official cnrf,rmrd to- fa ni!v of the American agent.lth
day. we ntcd to ,:n w ' wicthe-;pc
The official raid he did not Paskaian would he interestect'an
knew the identity of the Amer.- in going back" to the Soviett
can agent or whether the Soviet Union in return for the Ameri' '
Government had respbrdcd fa. can's freedom.
vorZSiy to the p:c;lu-ai. "I said, if you were doing,
Mr. P:~>katri, a :3n-year-old 22 years in Leavenworth,:
t
Arr.;er.ian. .Nas air. a?d ;ast wouldn't you be interested in!!'
June in New Yoik'by the Feder- going back?" Mr. Corbett re- MA
la 113ureau of lnvectica?i-n and-ca:;cd. adding that "the last w.
ch.s:ged with having transmit- word I had or, it % vas that we,
ted a top secret s::ay of the the Russians wou:d let us knowi' sun
X?rth Atiantir Treaty Organi- something this week.' r+,.
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ly rO.IOHy Ilpll- ^ use 310 I(N14aK He yMannno
npCCTynnC1(Hq, COncpUJeHHoro
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,5"~~?f_ ...>fJr:'+"'~i!~$:~.r~;~.':i_/-riS"~c TI.'.~1I~ ~-~`i
Guillaume zu einem Mith2ftling:
an Wir leben hier
loch wie
die Rattenej
In seiner Rheinbacher
Zelle Nr. 173 im
4. Stock des FlOgel A
(Pfeil) trostet sich
der Spion mit scharfen
Sachen - mit unga-
rischer Salami, Schnaps
vom Schwarzbrenner
and schnuckelioen
Pornos. Er rechnet test
damit, Anfang 1979
ausgetauscht zu
werden
'
N
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,y.
? ~ ~'a>~~~e "aYa {,? 1.
Reg=lm?
Pierre G
seinem
Berlin-R
and brir'
Godesb
mit, we
Vater irrs
besuc t
5.c
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e
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!`-"-~ .; sry. ..Yr ; t _?t"YrJi.}?e ?.i~. fL~
.`mow'?tei-?., .~..~:~1ph~`,~Q? r.}:',? - ~~~; !,
~.,- ttiA ..~1?t-~.1_~-S 1'.:c. Sf ~w=~,(.?;,Fib ..:.~ `~`?ti~ ~:~ t?? . ??~`1ii?2
neinsam mit den 47 an-
ren Leuten aus der Schrei-
rci zur Freictunde auf einen
r vier Gefangnishofe hitl-
;tretcn. Einrnal in der Wo-
ninimt er am Handball
el teil, .wcgen der scho-
.t Luft". Einmal in der
relic sicht er sich von 18.15
r his 21.50 Uhr das Fern-
,programm im Gemein-
aftsraum an. Und an je-
n Donnerstag geht er in die
uppe des Anstaltslehrers
ihien, um klassische Mu-
zu horen. Aber Freunde
er im Knast nicht gefun-
n. Zu ihm halten nur die
!tgefangenen Rademacher,
kel and der Jugoclawe Du-
n Lukic, wegen eines Eigen-
msdeliktes zu \ icrcinhalb
hren Haft verdonnert.
Abwechslung in den eintu-
gcn Gefan.enenalltag bringt
it der Ausflue. den Guillau-
e alle sechs Wochen macht,
.nn cr seine Frau Christel
der Justizvollzugsanstalt
Sln-Ossendorf besuchen
,rf. Aus Sicherlicitsgrunden
rd er auch hierhin in einem
t%v der Anstalt and nicht in
r ,Grbnen Minna" chauf-
?rt. Ganz fursorgender Ehe-
ann. bringt Gunter Guil-
ume seiner Christe] stets
3bak and Kaffee mit.
Guillaume, in der DDR als
/crdientcrKundschafter des
olkes" gefeiert, ist auf dem
sefpunkt seiner Karriere an-
-langt. Auf den ersten Blick
t er einer on 500 Haft-
igen - darunter 77 Le-
mnslangliche - in der Straf-
,llzugsanstalt Rheinbach.
Doch seine Auftraggeber
ibcn ihn nicht im Stich ge-
ssen. Die Regicrung der
DR, das Ministerium fur
aatssicherheit. sorgt dafur,
tB cs ihm bescer geht als
:n andcren Miteefangenen.
tindestens einmal im Mo-
tt bekommt Gunter Guil-
ume Bcsuch von Martin
humann, dem Abgesandten
.r DDR-Vertretung in Bonn,
m einem Mitglied seiner
tarn
,,grof3cn Familic", wie cr sagt.
Dem Besucher teilt er seine
GenuBinittclwunschc mit. Und
er wird prompt beliefert, sei
es mit Salami undOliven Oder
mit teuren Tabakwaren and
eclben Arbeitshandschuhen.
Die Aufinerksamkciten wer-
den ihm von der Anstaltslei-
tung diskret nach dem soge-
nannien EinschluB am Abend
zuecstellt, damit die andcren
Haftlinge nichtsdavon merken.
Denn die Lebensmittelliefe-
rungen verstoRen strengge-
nommen gegen die Strafvoll-
zugsordnung, wonach Gefan-
gene nur zum Geburtstag, zu
Ostern and zu Weihnachten
derartige Liebesgaben erhal-
ten durfen. .Sure politischen
Gefangenen", so beschied
Guillaume cinen aufmcrksam
gewordenen Zellennachbarn,
haben in der DDR dieselben
Rechte vie ich bier. Das ist
cin stillschwcigendes Abkom-
men zwischen den 'Regierun-
ge n."
Besonders nett zeigte sich
Guillaumes .groBe Familie"
am 1. Mai dieses Jahres. Am
,,Tag der Arbeit" lief3 ihm
die DDR-Vertretung einen
Straul3 von 15 roten Tulpen
zukommen.
An diesem Feiertag lud
,.der Spion, der aus der Kalte
kam", wie Guillaume von sei-
nen Knast-Kollegen genannt
wird, ein paar Mithiftlinge zu
einer kleinen Feier ein. Es
gab selbstgebrannten Schnaps
(als Experte hat sich der Mit-
gefangene Harry Mangel her-
vorgetan), der in einer der
Zellen mit Hilfe eines Tauth-
sieders destilliert worden war,
dazu auf Speck gebratene
Spiegeleier, funf Stuck fur je-
den, and ein paar dick-e Zi-
garren. Um halb vier nach-
mittaes warGuntcrGuillaume
so betrunken, daB er kaum
noch aufrecht in seine eigene .
Zelle zuruckgehen konnie.
Am nachsten Tag rief der
stellvertrctende Dienstauf-
sichtsleiter, der Amtsinspek-
tor Pesch, den ?Oberst der
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r J{w~
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'
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Nationalen Volksarmee" zu
sich and fragte freundlich:
,,Na, Herr Guillaume, trinken
Sic h5ufiger soviel Schnaps
wie gestern?" Der Mann aus
Zelle 173 wurde mit Ermah-
nungen, aber ohne Diszipli-
narstrafe entlassen. ?Der
Gunter, der trinkt jede Wo-
che mindestens einen Liter
Selhstgebrannten'', weiB ein
Mithaftling zu berichten, ?der
hat Geld genug, urn das zu
bezahien."
.-Aut Ulbricht lasse
ich nichts kommen. Das war
ein guter Kerl?
Kein Wunder, als DDR-
Oberst (?Ich muB nur vor
einetr_ General strammste-
hen") hat Guillaume seit
Jahren tin gutes t:inkommen:
etwa 2300 bis 2500 Mark
monatlich, tin Betrag, der in
den Jahren seiner Agcnten-
tatigkeit in der Bundesrepu-
blik zu einer ansehnlichen
Summe angewachsen ist. Mit
400 Mark pro Monat unter-
stiitzt er seiner Sohn Pierre.
der als Volontar beim Ost-
berliner SED-Zentralorgan
,,Neues Deutschland" ein kar-
ges Salar bezieht. Guillaume
junior, 20 Jahre alt, hat sei-
nen Vater hereits cin paarmal
in Rheinbach besucht. Die
Gesprache z.wischen Vater
and Sohn werden jcdcsmal
von Justizoberinspektor Go-
bel uberwacht, den Guillaume
in sein Herz geschlossctt hat.
?ldt konnte keinen besseren
Beamten dabei haben, denn
er geht oft mal raus, um zu
tetefonieren."
Nach den Besuchen des Soh-
nes erzahlteVatcr Guillaume:
?Er ist Stolz darauf, cincn so
beruhmten Vater zu haben.
Fruher wurde uncere Familie
in der DDR geschnitten, weil
die Leute driihen giaubten,
ich sci rcpublikfluchtig'gcwc-
sen. Nun ?vird mein Sohn
ubcrall einucladcn. Er )var
socar als Ehrengast beim
Studtsu\v jct in Kicw."
Der'.tann, dcr Willy Brandis
Sturz als Kanzlcr auf dem
Gewsscn hat, it nicht nur
stolz auf seinen Sohn, er ist
auch Stolz auf ,ich and auf
seine Agentenarbeit in der
Bundt .rcpnt)tik.\V hrcnd der
ta.:li.hen Frcis1un11c :uf dem
Gefiingnishof. bei v.sclli. en
Gele_,rnheit: n in den Gemcin-
schaftsraumen, am Arbeits-
platz and bei privaten Feiern
in den Zellen, oft vom Alko-
hol besondcrs tcsprachig ge-
macht, plaudert er Ansichten
and Einsichten aus seinem
Doppelieben als DDR-Spion
and Kanzlerreferent in Bonn
aus.
Guillaume uber den friihe-
ren DDR-Staatsratsvorsitzen-
den Walter Ulbricht; .Auf
WalterUlbricht lasse ich nichts
kommen. Das war cin guter
Kerl. Der hat es richtig ge-
meint, der hat es richtig ge-
macht."
Gefangener X*: ,Was hat
der Ulbricht denn richtig ge-
macht?"
Guillaume: .Der hat den
Staat druben ge?estigt, der hat
konsequent den Klassengeg-
ner liquidiert."
Gefangener Y: ,Was ist
das denn, ein Klassengeg-
ner?"
Guillaume: ?Das ist ciner,
der die Dinge wiedcr ruck-
warts drehen will, der seinen
Bcsitz wiedcr haben and die
alien Verh5itrisse wieder her-
stellen will. Und so einermuB
eben liquidiert werden."
Bei einer anderen Gelegen-
heit kam cs zu diesem Dia-
log:
,,Hor mal, Gunter, das ist
zwar tinwahrscheinlich, aber
mich wurde mal interessicren.
was du machen w:urdest, falls
wir uns mal spater zufatlig
in der Ostzone treffen?"
Guillaume: ,.Such bewir-
ten natiirlich, euch zeteen, \\ ie
schon es da ist."
Gefangener Y: ,.Oder wur-
dest du un; in die Wand stel-
len lassen`'"
,.Guillaume:..Na hor mal,
halst du mich fur so primi-
tiv?"
Guillaume aber den Staats-
ratsvorsitzcndert Erich Ho-
necker- :varmt habe
ich imme- seine Frau
Margot. kenne ice
nosh als ~uhrer. Diese
Berufsju.=^-:t:-.n konnte ich
noch nie 1c?Z.-:.-
Guitiau:7e if die Frace
eines ob er wail-
rend seiner S^:onagetiitigkeit
im 13un.. ..mzleramt ,.in
den Cs-en ::funks" habe:
..Quat'.h. Das hat dcr Ver-
fas%ung~,schut auch gedacht.
Be, mir si:?.d Leine Funkae-
rate _-cfunden w?otdhn. Weil
ich nitmlich kcinc hatte. -
Die t ern-n err H.;dni6e ' nd der
Fe.'.: lion Ce~:i,rt
Vor meiner Festnahme haben
sie wohl gedacht: Wens es
cine Kuriertatigkeit cibt, dann
macht das seine Frau, dean er
selbst kann es nicht, \veil er
im Kanzleramt an zu expo-
nierter Stelle steht."'
Gefangener Y: .,Und wie
ist das nun gelauien?"
Guillaume: .Das sage ich
ganz offen unter euch hier,
den Kontakt zu den Leuten
aus der DDR, den habe ich
selbst gehabt. ich habe mich
getroffen.'`
Gefangener Z:1 ?Getroffen
hast du diet[?"
Guillaume: ?Ja, Mann! Be-
such!"
Gefangener Z: ?Im Amt
ctwa? Die haben dich im Amt
besucht? Ats was gaben die
sich denn aus?"
Guillaume: ,.Na, als Be-
sucher naturlich. Ich war der
Referent des Bundeskanzlers
fur Karteiaufgaben. Zu mir
konnten schlieBlich alle de-
mokratischen Mitglieder die-
ses Landes kommen..."
Den westdeutschen Agen-
tenjagcrn stcllte Guillaume
keine guten Zeugnisse aus. Er
halt sic fur bluti;e Anfanger,
weil sie nie eine Aeentin auf
ihn angesetzt hatten, ..ohwohl
die doch .\ uuten, daB ich eine
Schwache fur Fraucn habe,-.
Von einem Bonner Anwalt
erfuhr Gunter Guillaume in
der Strafvolizuesanstalt, daB
Willy Brandt noch immer
?bbse" auf ihn sei. Guillaume
ant.vortete. das be\.eise nur,
daB Willy Brandt ..zu gutmu-
tig fur die Politik" set. Poli-
tik sei ,schliel3lich cin hartes
Geschaft" and man konne
doch nicht dauernd nachtra-
gend sein, ?wenn man uber-
tolpelt worden ist".
Im Haushaltsausschutl,
sagt Guillaume, ertahrt
man praktisch alles
Der Gcfaneene X fragte ihn
dazu spater:-?lor mat, Gun-
ter, was rt3jQh Ttteressieren
w urde, arst doch ein
Frcun on Willy Brandt, hat
dich das allcs t~iehi moralisch
bcJ*tet?"
Guillaume:..Belas;:t schon
- ah.r nicht eehevimt oder
verunsichert."
Gef,:necn:r \: ..Aber dcr
\\ ills Br.tnot soli doch spiiter
.chr uurunter -elitten haben.
daB du sein Vertrauer
mil3braucht bast."
Guillaume: ?Er hat
ten darunter. das ist mir
lig klar. cr ist ja cis an,
diger Kcrl, viel zu anstant
Gefangencr X: ?Bed'
dich das heaie nicht irf
\41C?"
Guillaume: ?Nein,
kann das nicht bedrucket
babe ja fur mein Land
beitet."
Ciefangener X: .Mein
nicht manchmal, daB du
licber der Freund von
Brandt _eeb!ieben warst
state ein DDR-Agent?"
Guillaume: ?Nein, nei
aber in ir:tendeiner Eck,
ich fur mcine Person
froh, daB alles so gc'or
is[." Nachdcnklich NI
hinzu. sein Trattm sei 1
sen, sines Tages als Abg
neter in den Bundes al
wahlt and in den Has`
ausschuB entsandt zu we
Dori erfahre man ?prat
aiies. Man ist uber verst
Zuwenduneen ? art' den
heinidienst urt3 an Rust!
firmcn informiert".
'.ich werde
Vortragsreisen machen
bewundert werden?
Gef,:a?ener X: ?Es wt
dish besser ein Ende
Schrecken als cin Schrt
ohne Ende?"
Guillaume: .,So schlim
der Schrecken ja nun
Als Anent der DDR v
ich sicker nosh hcutc 1
Brandt mcine Funktion ,
len. Aber selbst der tudh
Referent von Brandt ist
nur ein Referent. Zu I
bin ids doch 'ne Nut
grocer, da hab' ich den
als ,Verdienter Kundsd
des Volkes' and krieg'
Orden. Ich wurde pater
traesreisen machen tut(
w undert werden ....ictt
jctzt halt nur Burch c
Tal der Haft bier. Abc
wurde ich doch durch
r,-,z-n, oder?"
Der DDR-Spion hat
Hoffnuni., nicht aufgcg
au'.,zeiauscht zu c~erden,
Sc!ucr Uberzetwung sI
sicns Anfaucu 1979. Aucit
Ii. 111 denkt Cr night an Fl
Cruiilautnc: ..Niche, sol
twine Frau hicr ist."
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_ r ?'?y I "? ~. % I 1E I.N(-,l ON 1104Z]
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MySteiy of The Defector
Who Vain sh
Vienna',
DEFECTOR, Front Al suspicions were difficult to formulate!
intelligence agency. His job there was in concrete terms, and they had toy
''nut important," according to his wife, be weighed against the enormous in
although she and others referred terest i n Artarnonov's knowledge j
to :Artamonov/Shadrln's "brilliance." about the Soviet navy which-sources
Government sources said he did not said-falrly erupted from within the
hold a sensitive position. He was a American intelligence community as)
specialist on the Soviet navy, they soon as be defected. . I
"' "" Other government sources con-
s?ory last month and began to make fined that the FBI turned Arta.
Inquiries. The Post confirmed from . . _
him and Soviet agents in the United In the summer of 19611, Mrs. Sha-l
States, and Soviet agents in henn drin said yesterday, two agents of the,
Soviet
was on a counterintelligence mission the Committee KCBB. . pfor approached State Security.,
for the FBI when he disappeared approacmonov:
in Shadrin in Washington. Though be.
Vienna in December, 1975. had changed his name, she said, he.
Jack Anderson, the syndicated col- did not change his appearance. She
umnist, learned of Artamonov/Shad- didn't know how the KGB found him:
rin's disappearance a year ago, and here.
was preparing to write an'
n article
about it last July. He was told by a for The his KCB' motherland. derland, Mrs. M him a spy
la?.ryer for Mrs. Shadrin and b rs. Sh:irfn~
"others;' Anderson said last dig by said that he reported this approach to.
the FBI
that ii he published the story a man the KGB's proposition. asked him to aothp'
Inlet be killed. Anderson decided not s Propositio- In other
10 go ahead. "There's not another rea? come words, the FBI proposed that he be-
,ui that I'd have held up that story," come a double agent, ackdi to his
he said tared "intelligence back to his
"We didn't know much of anything
Many of his colleagues In govern- about the Soviet navy then," one
Anent service attest to his reliability source said,
and loyalty to his new country. (He
became an American citizen, by spe-
cial act of Congress, In 1963.) Yet in Approach by the KGB
the upper reaches of the intelligence
establishment, persons responsible for In any case, by no means every!
protecting against Soviet "penetra. American official who Interviewed Ar-,
jlon" of American intelligence agen- tamonov shared suspicions about him.;
ties-persons for whom suspicion is Many accepted his defection at face
an instinct as strong as any other- value, as Is demonstrated by the de-
doubts lingered about this defector. cision to put him to work inside the.
Despite that, in 1966 the FBI turned DIA, whatever the sensitivity of his
Shadrin into a double agent, and au- post there.
rient: of Artamonov/Shad;in's de fee- Mrs. Shadrin's lawyer, Copaken,
ti,in and ultimate disappearance. Mrs. said he had been told by government
Shadrin and her lawyer, Richard D. officials that Artamonov/Shadrin
Copaken of the firm of Covington and forced to work as a double without
}titling, at first asked Tht Post not to pay-he volunteered his services. But
publish a story, also on the grounds this was only after one of his superi-
that Shadrin's life might be endan. ors at the Dl--k told 4 ov/;
9--rod, and because there was still Shadrin that he ought to accept accept the?
some chance that lie might be re- FBI's proposition. Copaken said. Hei
some to his wife. was originally reluctant, because be,
Copaken also said, earlier this had been told he had been sentenced
morah, that he felt time was running to death absentia in the U.S.S.R.
out in the case, and that he expected the lawyer said.
to "iii public" with it soon. According to Copaken, Artomonov/
L nbeknownst to The Post, Copaken Shadrin went on missions for the:
tool: e
the k story to The Street FBI to'Montreal in 1971 and Vienna Wall Journal, attorntly because he feared in 1972. In the Austrian capital, the:
th_t The Post would portray .1r:imo? Lawyer said, the KGB gave him train
:r.,, in the use of various secret sp;
20551
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and loyalty new country, (fie
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R'a11 Street Journal prepared an arti-
cle;reportedly for publication today.
-: A Final Stia,~e~tion
. Shadrin and her lawyer. Richard D.
Copaken of the firm of Covington and
Burling, at first asked Tht Post trot to
publish a story. also on the grounds
that Shadrin's life might be endan-
gered, and because there was -still
some chance that he might be re-
turned to his wife.
Copaken also said, earlier this
month, that he felt time was running
out in the case, and that he expected
to "go public" with it soon.
Unhaknown~t to The Post, Copaken
took the story to The W311 Street
Journal, apparently because he feared
that The Post would portray Aramo-
noN,?/Shadrin as a voluntary re-
defec-tor In its account of the affair. The
the upper reaches of the intelligence
establishment, persons r cspt nsible for
projecting against Soviet "penetra-
tion" of American irtelligence agen-
cies-persons for whom ,.uspicion is
an Instinct as strong as any other-
doubts lingered about this defector.
Despite that, in 1966 the FBI turned
Shadrin into a double agent, and au-
thorized a series of contacts between
him and Soviet agents in the United
States, in Montreal and in Vienna. He
as on a counterintelligence mission
for the FBI when be disappeared in
Vienna in December. 1975.
Jack Anderson, the syndicated cot
umnist, learned of Artamonov/Shad-
rin's disappearance a year ago, and
was preparing to write an article
about it last July. He was told by a
lawyer for Dirs. Shadrin and by
"others," Anderson said last night,
that if he published the story a man
night be killed. Anderson decided not
to go ahead. "There's not another rea-
son that I'd Have held up that story,"
he said.
The Washington Post learned of the
story last month and began to make
Inquiries. The Post confirmed from
government sources the central ele-
ments of Artamonov/Shadrin's defec-
tion and ultimate disappearance. Airs.
I affair, and she r.clined to let the ,s.~ t,r h,t? ji}?,~ ,~zn^y ~?1!'~t:%
pail n to say that a final suggestion
he -had made for a possible approach
to the Soviets aimed at eliciting at
least an acknowledcement that they
hold Shadrin might be attempted. Pre-
viously Copaken held out little hope
that this idea would be taken up b}-
the Carter administration. He called it
a lone-shot, but declined to describe
it -
The Central Intelligence Agency,
FBI. Defense Department and :'.bite
House all declined to comment on the
case.
But Mrs. Shadrin said she thoucht
the sudden call from the State De-
partment was a ploy to prevent publi-
cation of :e:w-spa r stories about the
In any case, by no Trcar.s every
American official who Interviewed Ar-
tamonov shared surpici nns about him.
Mangy accepted 11:3 date%tion at face
value, as is dermunn, 'rated by the de-:
cision to put him to work inside the
DIA, whatever the sensitivity of his
post there. ? I
In the summer of 1966, Mrs. Shay
drin said yesterday, two agents of the,
Soviet Committee for State Security.,
the KGB,- approached Artamonovi
Shadrin in Washington. Though* he,
had changed his name, she said, be,
did not change his appearance. She;
didn't know how the KGB found him
hero .
The KGIJ agents asked him t spy.
for his motherland. Airs. Shadrin!
said that he reported this approach tot
the FBI, which asked him to accept;
the KGB's proposition. In other'
words, the FBI proposed that he becyy
come a double agent, feeding doe-I
tored "Intelligence" back to hiss
Soviet contacts.
Other government sources -con-
firmed that the FBI. turned Arta-
monov/Shadrin into a "double.".
Mrs. Shadrin's lawyer, Copaken,'
said he had been told by government
officials that Artamonov/Shadrin'
ae eed to work as a double without
pay-he volunteered his services. But
this was only after one of his superl
ors at the DIA told Artamonov/;
Shadrin that he ought to accept the:
FBI's proposition, Copaken said. He'
was originally reluctant, because bet
had been told he had been sentenced-
to death in absentia in the L'.S.S.R.
the lawyer said.
According to Copaken, Artomonov/
Shadrin went on missions for the
FBI to Montreal in 1971 and Vienna
in 1972. In the Austrian capital, the
lawyer said, the KGB gave him train-
ing in the use of various secret spy-,
ng devices. .
`Doctored in Langley'?
In all these contacts with the KGB,
Copaken said. Artamonov/Shadrin
fed material "doctored in Langley"
(at Central Intelligence Agency head-
quarters in suburban Virginia) to the
Russians. The FBI regarded this op--
cr ation as a way of learning more'
about KGB operations in the United'
States. Copaken said. -
In 1975 the Soviets asked Art3?
monov/Shadrin to return to Vienna,
Copaken said- t: ntll that time the,
lawyer said, it was his understanding
that the FBI nerer fully informed the
CIA (or DIA) of Artamonov/Shadrin's
activities as a double agent- But itz
19:3 the FBI did go to the CIA. ac t
eordinq to Copaken. and the CLL ob-
jecti-d that it was too dan,:ernus to
send a _ defector -like Artaronov/
Shadrin to Vienna. -
Then, yesterday afternoon, a State
Department official telephoned Co-
Cup ake>s-who has been working on
the case for nearly 18 mont-hs and
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TBl, 1): fr ~?~ llcp~rtm~ ::l :n:d t'. I.Ite
House x41': lined to c?onuuclt, nu the
case.
But %,rs Sl:adria s%it sh^ ti!ullgnt
the st d lea call fro:n the State Dc
partnicnt v.as a plo to pi ('cut p,ubli-
cation of ncwsii,l~er storlrs :,bout the
affair. and she as inclined to let the
pt,~crs go ahead. "it was the end of
the r(uad." she said last night. "I de-
cided that the only way to 1-to was
through the press."
Dirs. Shadrin ta) s she hciicvcs the
1. nited States has not clone what it
'could have or should lave to try to
bet her husbai d back. Her la%%yer ac-
:?cuses the I oi'cnunrnt-grin:urily the
Fore ii.6ministration, but the Carter
acnanistr!tion too - t?f :c . erica of
"bluna_rs:
The Sta'e lie;i:.rtmel;t t,id Tho
Post th:a publication of a story now
woulc jeopardize the chanets of "our
present actions" to help Shadrin, but
refused to describe those actions. The
Post decided to print the story.
In a more formal statement ? last
right 'State Department spokesman
Hodding Cartcr III said: "We are not
abandoning hiin Artamonov/Shadrin)
hav enot abandoned him. and we are
making every effort to determine his
fate and pet him back. We don't know
if he's alive, and are operating on
the assumption that he is."
By Mrs. Shadrin's account, this tale
from out of the cold begins in 1958,
when a handsome young Soviet naval
officer-Artamonov, then 30--came to
Poland on an assignment to help his
? comrades in the Polish navy train
bailors from Indonesia. She iaiet him
then and they fell in love. They spent
:eight months together in Poland.
Escape in a Launch
As captain of a destroyer. Arta.
monov had a 22-loot launch for his
personal use, according to Sirs. Shad-
nn: The two of them decided to use
the launch to defect, she said yester-
da}. "He did it mostly for me:' she
explained. They took the launch from
Poland across the Baltic to Sweden,
'here they defected. The Swedes
turned them over to the United
States, which took them both to a
"safe house" on the outskirts of Frank-
furt, Mrs. Shadrin recounted.
Several sources from the intelligence
community said this was all possible,
but also somewhat suspicious. One
source noted that Dirs. Shadrin placed
telephone calls freely to her family
ri_lit after be arrived in Sweden.
..and this wasn't normal in those days,
to get right through on the telephone."
A serious grounds for s::spicion'
Yesterday Sirs. Shadrin readily admit-
ted ,hose telephone (.kills the laughed
at the s.gaitieanee alt-ihuted to them
by' the intelligence community
sources.
Sources said goir: rauent records
shoe: that questions were ai:ed by
officials oho questioned hi rr fin Frank-
fun. about the le;itimacy of Artaipo-
nog s defection. But-as always-these
1975 the FBI c ?o to the CIA, acv
curdinp to Co;.Qi Ii, and the CIA ob-
jected. that it' ti as too dangerous to
send a defector like Artamonov/
Shadrir to Vienna.
Copaken--"lin has been working on
the' case for nearly 38 njonths and
says he has talked to countless gov-
ernment officials about it-says this
is what happened next:
The rBi and CIA argued about
how to deal with the Soviet request
to Artamonnv/Shadrin to come to
Vienna. They compromised on thin
formula: the CIA would prepare.
phony "intelligence" for him to pass
to the Soviets, and would provide an
agent to "run" the operation. But it
was regarded as an FBI operation.
and the CIA station in Vict:na would
have nothing to do with it.
That agreed, Sir. and Mrs. Shadrin
went to Vienna and checked into the
Hotel Bristol. On Dec. 13. Artamonov/
Shadrin went, as he had been in-
structed, to the steps of the Votivkir-
che, a Catholic cathedral on the Ring-
strasse in Vienna. There he met a man
who invited him into a car, wbere'a
second man waited. The trio then
drove to a fish restaurant on the out-
skirts of Vienna. When the meeting
ended, the Soviets asked him to re-
turn to the same meeting place two
days later. They also told him he had
been given the rank of lieutenant
colonel in the KGB.
No Surveillance
The FBI had insisted that there bet
no surveillance of Artamonov/Shad-I
rin's contacts with the KGB In Vienna,!
for fear that the Soviets might spot'
surveillance and realize he was a
double. The FBI didn't realize (this
is still Copaken's version) that the
U.S. consulate was located on the 7th
floor in an office building in clear
view of the steps of the Votivkirche--
so photo surveillance would have been
simple. But there wasn't any, accord-
ing to the lawyer.
The evening of Dec. 20 Artamonov/
Shadrin left his wife in the Bristol
and took a cab to the. church. No
American official of any kind has
seen him since. _.
Still, according to Copaken, a pro-
foundly mysterious aspect of the tale
occurred at this point. By late evening
Mrs. Shadrin got nervous, and she be-
gan to call the CIA agent "running"
the operation. The agent was supposed
to be in a safe house in Vienna, but
wasn't. The agent. according to Cqpa-
ken, was at a dinner party. (Copaken.
says he later had a chance to "inter-
ro_ate" this agent, and that he will
"go to my grave" baffled by the agent's
role.)
Even the dinner party story didn't'
entirely explain the agent's absence,
Copaken says, because the part':
ended at midnight at the latest, andl
'firs. Shadrin,'who was by then calling
See DEFECTOR. Ata .,,l. K
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1 ,~~~+1/w Q~~ the F~ r.,rl
. Del e cto
Do able kffen ils
DEFECTOR, From A12 lieves, involved a):a
i
? .
_
repeatedly, didn't make conta
It more irnpurtar.t to help
-
an
t
i
.
c
ase:
until
I'55 a.m. In trouble, or to ma- i^tain frient ~.
Inf any case
Ar relation
t
i
,
amonuv/Shadrin , s w
ts the. Soviets?':.
wait gone. - Copaken cha.-ges thct r:issil
get i
J,'t not without a trace. Artamunov/ directly sabotaged orie `negotiati?..
Shadrin had been debriefed by. his by authorizing infor c
st M ::',,on that a mgl
CIA e n n t r o 1 agent after his (l
i
the Soviet embassy in 1ti'ashin n rn . ?..?... 'rut:n tnls happeae?]
hton, a negotiator informed Copaken that
and llikhail J. Kuryshev, once sta- he had lost his "mandate," the lawyerj
ttoned in the Soviet embassy in says.
Wien 1 Copaken trier ..her
cnan. e. s.'Ilej
Thre fnited States, through diplo- asked Ches,"r a 'or:ner
matic rhanels, queried Moscow, first t-rt'm"?rl offici:? ~ovj
about Shadrin, then about :~rtamonov, asked Stanle ? C:?. tr in turn
then about these two KGB age 3 arnc:r. a . Iumntsr
c nts. : nd tot mgr fore i_n curtr~:.c.".dent loci
The Soviets said they knew nothing , _ .for.,
about Arta munov/Shadrin, acrd that the Pos., to help arrar;e a mee!itr1
the two named a;ents weren't in Vi- with Victor Louis. a K(: opera!Wel
enr:a at the time of the disappearance, who acts as a '.journalist" in lio
cow, and whom Karnow k:?ew.
Copal:cn and Karnitw nu. sAl
))c-)ll'1':titt': N(-iv Stork' Ifelsinkl, but nothing ca n?et of it.. rq R i
mc w..
.
111os;u' , rc;orcir , to ('9..
In early .lanuat , Henry 1 cent!: in
y, 1-1476. r paken. Lo'tis told an .lmcrican di' !o-,
Kips;'Ker raised the issue with an. =flat-that he received an cmbarra sp
ato!iy F. Dobrynin, the Soviet amhas_ silepce" a;'t r ', Jcmcow,
sador in W'ashinZton. according in ask in -l case-,.
about the Ar!:(monov/Shadrin case
Cot,aken. and Dobrvnin repeated Copaken rays he is sure-largely be_?
these denials, On Feb. 7. ?\sslstant c"rse of what Vogel told him-.!
Sccretar;v t:f State :lrthur A. tiar!man tatnor;ov/Shadrin is 31i hat 4i
in told a Soviet diplomat, "q'e have a Copaken is also certainthat ivssir_
`py ea'= here." h statement Copaken -e'?. his associate. V iliiam Hyland at-tie
takes as an official U.S. admission : tional Security Council. and :36M
that :1r:antr rut /Sha,a: in was a U.S. colleagues did less than they could haves +
_ a` errt, 011 I?'eb. It;. accordini to Cu. for his (?liont's 'a:sband. Copaken .::ecti,
p;ih ,, Kisa",cr returned to the clues. I)):- C ?r,Ied Siatt?.s reeea!cdI;' to t:!We'
Lion with Dobrynin.
cases like the rlef/?ction of a MIG-2 .
1'hi: tune, acccl'din, to the lawyer. pilot in Jah;,n t.r to rs,,ionaoe char e?
Dobr?nin had a neW' story: ,-es, we against a Soviet news agency reporter'
met the man in Vienna on Dec. lE, in Tokyo to pressure the Soviets to at=
and he said lie wanted to return to least grant U.S. accc,; to Artamonuv!'
tha S')" ict l;n!un. But We never saw S!ta,lrin. Not'.tin:' c%-r happened.
hint a_ain. What makes Copaken certain that thA'
man (lid nat return to the U.S.S.R. 'rcw
Basic Problem luntarily. A lot of circumstantial evi-~
cfence. he says, p'u; the fact that tl'e-
('u , ,ken Soviets haven't al:owed any Amerir-.ri-
c?har?-,es t.r.,t Kirsinecr to see him, n'r have th?y t:-. :mpt1c:d'
oppos. d apy strong action on S):a. ,,'-bli:iy his in-01i ,.:c ? coup. if thtr's,
drip's l:,?h;rlf. while .Attorney (;,?neril shat it pas, NO. Copaken insists,- his
I:chcard it. Levi and CL~ Director n:-.n is all invotunt:(ry c'ptive.
George llcsh f::tuted strut., Or else-I;ci-hton (,r Le C'.rrc nilshtt
The ar?t:ment, actt,,n.' add-he ttas one of the hest s,ie
Copaken says lie be, to make is back in . 1 e~'crv
tut of the cold.
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VUL. CI.XXXX No. 9 !.
Out in the Gold?
T.S. Fears Counterspy
Was Seized by Soviets;
Agency Bungling Seen
Friends- of Russian Defector,
Missing ? in Vienna, Say
He - Wasn't Safeguarded
Political Problem for Carter?
By JERRY LA.YDAUER
Staff Reporter of Tae .1ALLSTR l er JOPA.,AL
On the evening of Dec. 20. 1973, an Amer-
ican working undercover for the Federal Bu-
reau of Investigation walked to the steps of
the Votivkirche in. Vienna for a prearranges'
meeting at the cathedral with Oleg Kozlov
and .Mikhail Kuryshev, two agents for the
KGB. the Soviet secret police. It was his last
stroll on free soil. He has never been seen
rInce.
The disappearance of the American, Ni-
cholas Shadrin.. hasn't been publicized or
even publicly acknowledged. The Russians
won't concede that he was kidnapped-
though the U.S. believes he was-especially
not from the capital of a neutral nation. And
U.S. officials aren't anxious. to disclose the
bureaucratic bungling that-preceded his dis-
appearance and the diplomatic blunders
that may be keeping him in captivity.
But Mr. Shadrin's fate could become a
prickly political Issue soon Whether for
good reason or not, his many admirers In
the U.S. Intelligence community fear that he
is being abandoned by the U.S. - even
though the State Department insists it is
doing its best-to get Mr. Shadrin released, if
e is still alive.. -
Now, some of Mr. Shadrin's friends are
beginning to speak up about what they feel
are the government's half-hearted efforts to
retrieve him, and details are seeping out.
They raise troublesome questions - espe-
cially for an administration espousing hu-
man rights for foreigners-about the govern-
ment's obligation to Americans who risk
their lives for the U.S.
.peril by President 2''nrd .
President Ford did appeal for Mr. Shad-
ritt'3 release in a private letter last Decem-
tr;3to Soviet party leader'Leonid Brezhnev,
r.d.'before leaving office Mr. Ford met with
l,fz/ Shadrin's wife, Bla_nka, at the White
House. But for rea -o s of global diplomacy.
.be Ford administration decided not to make
a major push for Mr. Shadrin's return.
-?, -In-January, outgoing Central Intelligence
'Agency Director George Bush briefed
-Jimmy Carter about the Shadrin.case. and
now National Security Adviser Zbigniew
Tr:,ezin_4ki is taking charge of it. He doesn't
_.ound ox_:icularly hopeful. -'I fully 9ympa-
Lhize with your frustration and anxiety,"
?1977 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. A!! h
THURSDAY, JULY. 14,
h " W '-N '' -
at s ews'
Business and Finance
MAJOR STEELMAKERS' pos-
sible price fixing on hot-rolled
items, used in making cars, appli-
ances and other consumer prod-
ucts, is being investigated by the
Justice Department's Antitrust Di-
vision. About 10 firms received re-
quests for data on price increases
made from Jan- 1, 1974, up to last
Thursday..
(Story an PsQ. 3) - , r
?
New-car sales. in the U.S.in-?
creased 15% in early July to 192,-
805 units, continuing: the strong
rate of deliveries - in'; recent
General Electric's profit in the
second period increased 14% to a
record $271.9 million- on a 12%
sales rise to a record $4.33 billion.
(Story on Paw 7)
Budget director Lance is confi-
dent his personal financial difficul-
. ties in divesting his bank stock
Won't force him to resign.
(story an paw 22) ? .
Tax sections of Carter's en-
ergy bill, including levies on gas-
guzzling cars and.-"domestically
produced oil, cleared the House
Ways and Means panel.-- _, .
(Story on Paw 2)
Talks on future. oil pricing ac-
tions took on a moderate tone as
members of: the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
ended their meeting.
(Story en Pao. 6)
U.K. units of Texaco and Gulf
Oil plan to build a 65,000-barrel-a-
day catalytic cracking unit and re-
latedrefinery facilities in Wales.
(Story on Psoe 1)
The Amex will make markets
in four call options starting yon-
day-three now are traded pri-
marily on the Chicago board ai)d
the fourth is on the Pacific ex-
change-and plans to add three
others. _ , -
* * *
Control Data reporteda 260
World-Wide - I
A POWER FAILURE blacked out much
of the New York City area.
The blackout that affected the five bor-
oughs and much of the suburbs was appar-
ently caused by electrical storms that dam-
aged power lines north of the city. A spokes-
man for Con Edison, the utility involved, de-
clined to rule out a problem in the
transmission system, however. Initial re-
ports said two power plants were affected:
Ravenswood No. 3,. an oil-fired facility lo-
cated in Queens, and Indian Point No. 3, a
nuclear plant now owned by the power au-
thority of New York State.'
After the Northeast power failure inthe
fallof 1965, utility officials said itwusprat.
tically impossible for. a recurrence. be-
cause of improvements instituted after
that massive blackout....:
The utility began to lose power shortly af-
ter 9 p.m. and, despite. a series of emer-
gency measures, by 9:34 p.m. the area was
blacked out. All commuter trains and sub-
ways,were halted and evacuation proceed-
ings were under way. Parkways, bridges,
theaters and sports arenas were also dark-
ened. Area hospitals were forced to cease
operations as well, and the city's main air-
ports closed down. Mayor Beame declared a
state of emergency and ordered police and
fire personnel on duty. . -
ISRAEL COMPLETED a detailed Mid,
east peace plan to present to Carter. -. -.
Prime Minister Begin said he won unani-
mous approval from his cabinet ministers
after an hour-long meeting in which the plan
was outlined. Begin didn't give any specifics
of the proposals he wants to offer Arab lead-
ers at the Geneva talks that could reconvene
in mid-October, saying he wants to discuss
them first with the U.S. President Despite
the official silence, Arab recognition of Is-
rael is known to be a key Issue, along with
questions on a Palestinian homeland, Israeli
occupation of seized territories and secure
borders. But the plan contains no maps.
Israeli sources said Begin now is
aiming for an overall settlement, rather
than more interim agreements. The
main point he is expected to press u+Acs,
he visits Carter next Tuesday is his will.
fagneas to discuss anything at Genei+4
Egypt's Pr eid.rnt sa-lat, nreaniltnt, ct-
fered to set up diplomatic and trsde reSa-
t:ons with the Jewish state five yea.-s after a
peace treaty is signed.- It appeared to be his
most detailed statement yet on a SCdca.st
puce -concept But he asserted. In an ad-
dress to visiting U.S. Congressmen, that he
wouldn't end the state of war until the last
Israeli soldier had left Arab lands.
Sadat also said the issue of linking a Pa-
lestinian home-land to Jordan should be re-
ANEW OeDt '
1974-
May fell to $1
$111.63 billion I
increased to S
adjustment; f
the Commerce
New Yor
For M
-`They'r'
By JS
`Staff Reporter of
I
NEW YOF.K
Fred Sipper's ui
he says it's prob.`
wood or one ofI
"They're always.
dark-haired groa
Sure, Fred, a
your peanut bu
But show-bl' t
They want plea
maybe even real
thing necessary
or an outdoor ca,
They come to Fret
Food Center to rrtt
L the blggest sup
azrAlnd here.
'.We provide
shot In New York
cial,'- the
t3-year
TaketheA
seas anal In a
setting. The tine
and shelving M'er
Ditto for the I
20552
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_- __ ..~ -.,.. ...... t,.......' ?'-''... . w... sane
JIG#
meeting at the cathedral with Oleg Kozlov ..
* th..at massive blackout.
and Mikhail Kurysi Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP89B00307R000300180001-2
stroll on 'Tree soil: He has never been seen
Anne.
The disappearance of the American, Ni-
cholas Shadrin,. hasn't been publicized or
even publicly acknowledged. The Russians
won't concede that he was kidnapped-
though the U.S. believes he was-especially
not from the capital of a neutral nation. And
U.S. officials aren't anxious to disclose the
bureaunratic bungling that-preceded his dis-
appearance and the diplomatic blunders
that may be keeping him In captivity.
But Mr. Shadrin's fate could become a
prickly political Issue soon. Whether for
good reason or not, his many admirers In
the U.S. Intelligence community fear that he
is being abandoned. by the U.S. - even
though the State Department insists it is
doing its best. to get Mr. Shadrin released, if
he is still alive: - ?
Now, some of Mr. Shadrin's friends are
beginning to speak up about what they feel
are the government's half-hearted efforts to
retrieve him, and details are seeping out.
They raise troublesome questions - espe-
cially for an administration espousing hu-
man rights for foreigners-about the govern
ment's obligation to. Americans who risk
,their lives for the U.S. -
by Pre -ident. lord . .
?:President Ford did appeal for Mr. Shad-.
ru'n's release in a private letter last Decem-
lrz to Soviet party-leader Leonid Brezhnev,
:;rd';before leaving office Mr. Ford met with
M4;J ?hadrin's- wife'.`Blanka,. at.-the White
House:- But for reasons of global diplomacy;
the Ford administration decided not to make
major push for Mr. Shadrin's return.
^, In January. outgoing Central Intelligence
gency Director George Bush briefed
:Jimmy Carter about the Shadrin-case. and
now National Security Adviser Zbigniew
rtrzezinski is taking charge of it. He doesn't
sound particularly hopeful. "I fully'kympa-
thtze with your frustration and anxiety,"
Mr.. Brzczirski told Mrs. Shadrin In a letter
dated July 5. "I only wish I could s&ike a
more positive note and offer you Immediate
reasaures+ce." - ~~
As all this high-level attention attests,?NI-
cholas Shadrin wasri t just an ordinary spy.
as ,'captain. In the Soviet navy who
H
e w
h
ilea to t
e -- hard intelligence processor.-...
.great amount of good,
about Soviet military developments," says -. Y. (story.on pace i)
T D -r who * *- * -
w
y .
retired Navy Capt. Thomas .
coordinated the months-long Interrogation of . Tropicana agreed -- to be ac-
Shadrin.. - . . quired by Kellogg for-stock valued
defector
Adds William Howe, a civilian then at-$378.8 million. _ .:.
working in the Office of Naval Intelligence.
- ,His information was extremely valuable.
our government had no doubt that Mr.
Shadrin wasn't a Soviet agent.
Attention In Congress
At the CIA's request, Sen. James East-
land, chairman sot We Senate -Judiciary
Committee and a.conservative Mississippi
Democrat, helped.io get.through Congress
special legislation -conferring U.S. citizen.
ship on the one-time- Communist Party
member. In the House,-the Committee on
Un-American Activities eagerly put him on
the witness sL'ind'to denounce Soviet expan-
sionism abroad and repression at home; he
testified under his given name. Nikolai Fe-
dorovich Artamonov' (he chose to use ? the
name Shadrin after his defection),
In the early 1960x. Mr. Shadrin began
working for the Defense Intelligence Agency
as an analyst of Soviet naval literature ("he
as an excellent man," a superior recalls),
w
and he lectured once a year at the- Naval
:far College. The Russians reacted fu -
1 tr n and convicting him in absen-
(Story on Paw 13)
gency measures, by 9:34 p.m. the area was
blacked out. All commuter trains and sub-
ways were halted and evacuation proceed-
ings were under way. Parkways, bridges,
theaters and sports arenas were also dark-
ened. Area hospitals were forced to cease
operations as well, and the city's main air-
ports closed down. Mayor Beame declared a
state of emergency and ordered police and
fire personnel on duty... ? .
= ISRAEL COMPLETED a detailed Mld-
east peace plan to present to Carter. -? .
Prime Minister Begin said he won unani.
mous approval from his cabinet ministers
after an hour-long meeting in which the plan
was outlined. Begin didn't give any specifics
of the proposals he wants to offer Arab lead-
ers at the Geneva talks that could reconvene
in mid-October, saying he wants to dLscus
them first with the U.S. President Despite
the official silence, Arab recognition of Is-
rael is known to be a key issue, along with
questions on a Palestinian homeland, Israeli
occupation of seized territories and secure
borders. But the plan contains no maps.
Israeli sources said Begin now is
aiming for an overall settlement, rather
than more interim agreements. The
main point he is expected to press when
he visits Carter next Tresdn y is his tcrA-
'= ingress to discuss anything at Geneve. -
Egypt's President 3a+l.at, meantime, ot-
fered to set up diplomatic and trade rela-
tions with the Jewish state five years alter a
peace treaty is signed. It appeared to be his
mast detailed statement yet on a Mideast
pers.ce concept But be asserted, in an ad-
dress to visiting U.S. Congressmen, that he
wouldn't end the state of war until the last
Israeli soldier had left Arab lands -
Sadat also said the issue of linking a Pa-
lestinian home-land to Jordan should be re-
solved before the Geneva talks. The Pales-
tine Liberation Organization, however. re-
jected the tie favored by Carter, and a radi-
cal Palestinian group vowed to kill any Arab
leader who signs a treaty recognizing Israel
WEST'GEKbsANY'S ieader got a w?arrn
welcome as meetings with Carter -Chancellor Helmut Schmidt was enthusi-
astically received in. an- exchange of re-
marks. that seemed designed to minimlze
German-American differences that have
emerged since the administration took of-
fice. After the first of two scheduled meet-
ings, the White House reported the two lead-
ers agreed the Soviet Union should become
more involved In such activities as economic
aid to developing nations. Carter also out-
lined his goal of keeping Latin America
"nuclear free" in talks described as easy
and frank. Later, after a two-hour State De-
partment meeting,. the chancellor said he
thought the sessions would be_ even more
productive than expected. -
Schmidt has been uneasy about Car-
ter's -human-rights stand, fearing it is
too 'provocative toicard 3foscow.. And
Carter. In contrast with other welcoming
ceremonies for dignitaries, didn't refer
to the issue.
Food Is
That Et
For Shc
New York
For M4
- _'They'rt
By J(
Staff Reporter of
NEW YORK-
Fred Sipper's w
he says It's prob.
wood or one of
"They're always
dark-haired groo?
Sure, Fred, .s-
your peanut butte
But show-big
They want piss
maybe even real
thing necessary t.
or an outdoor ca:
They come to Fre'
Food Center in m
L the biggest sup:
around here. . -
? :"We provide 9
shot In New York!
cl-ala," the 43-year
Take the Arnols
was shot in an t
setting. The fanej
and shelving were
So was the caterh
episode of the soe
Ditto for the food:
in Woody Allen's s
The Bloomingdale
."Fred is the B
Hess," .says Nora
of F.B.A., an Ind
mercials. "He gets
special dog dishy
-a-.sir n^..u w ua j
Indeed; Mr. Sit
Easter candy in
July and phony at.
black. eyes. For a
came up.with wt
mops that.broke
leaned on them. '
When-Mr. Sip
for the-film
through old book
terviewed retired
authentic . choppiL
foods for the turnf.
cery and other to
of the set. ?
"He did great
Stewart, the film
Stewart plans. to
for the coming
"There'll be seen
whipped-cream is
where he'll come
International Paper's second
period net slid 29% to $59.1-million.
- :..> (story on Page sl . ; .:... _
CBS' Inc. 'reported record re-
sults- for -the second .quarter. and
the first half.'.
(Story on Page 5)
The Treasury moved to quash
an informal 'futures' market in its
notes and indicated it was studying
blocking- futures trading in its
bills. _ ... , .
(Story on Papa 31)
BankAmerica expects a second
period operating net of shrAtly
above 17.5% and may recommend
a dividend boost late' this year.
rioUS Y. J. g
tia on charges of treason. His sentence was Weeder Holding earned $11
death.
Nevertheless, starting in 1966 or so, Mr. million in its June 30 third quarter,
Shadrin heeded his adopted country's call to reversing a year-earlier loss.
serve without pay as a counterintelligence Reynolds Securities' second period
agent acting under FBI direction. At sub- net fell 29%.
stantl ll risk, he pretended that he desired to (story on Pave ?) -
return to Russia, feigned cooperation with
accountants must get
the KGB, and slipped to the Russians "mil- Public ac
itary secrets" supplied by the CIA_ certain representations from cor-
Some sideline work for the FBI took him porate clients in Writing, under an
on miask?ns abroad, to Canada in 1371 and to accounting institute ruling. -
Europe in 1'x2, for example. No slip-ups oc- (Story on Page s) -
curred. "I considered him to be absolutely * * *
reliable and completely on our side," says Coal?Industry bargainers have
FBI man who controlled d t t 4th Mine Workers
W
Mr.:' Sipper's
that he has provi
moment's notice z
scripts, he has c
scenes on a day's
a cake decorate
Mildred" to a spa
was ordered. Sue
ness of TV film
$1,000 a minute.
"He understa
that's cruc!al In o
Fuhrman, a free-
Instant Italian Ca
"Once I had a
to go on camera'
to an outdoor Ital
Cunningham, a se
era "As the War
and told him I n
worth of cheeses
other stuff for su
to make the shoe
A number of
asked to provide
the TV kiddie she
recalls, "They b:
the green tops t
contacted had
tops. Finally. I
pany and had th(
Conversely, I
"New York food
"I get calls iron
brands, such as
dhiry Items, tha
I. Tn < - ye c
The CIA's No. 2 man, Deputy Director E.
Henry Knoche, quit effective next month
amid reports Director Stanfield Turner had
forced him out and planned a shake-up in
the agency's clandesuneoperations branch.
Turner denied the rumors, but Knoche, a 24-
year veteran. said "change looms"
Neutron-bomb funding was upheld as the
Senate, heeding an appeal by Cartes, voted
58 to 38 against an amendment deleting the
money from a public works bill. The Senate
then took up a compromise proposal by Ed-
ward Kennedy (D., Mass.) to give it author'
Ity to veto any production decision. -
The probe of South Korea's influence-
buying in Congress will be speeded up, the
chairman of the House Ethics Committee
announced In its first meeting in over a
month. John Flynt (D., Ga.) said hearings
could start before September. The panel
also approved an accord with the CIA on ac-
cess to classified data and adopted securty
guides.
James Wooten. an agree o mee
* * *
Mr. Shadrin's counterspy activities for 10 President Miller on the financial Work on a seabed?mining bill w u begun
years. condition of union health and Ie- by a House subcommittee. The measure
The Fiitrlnl Ili+aon tirement funds. would open the way for U.S. companies to
Then Caine the fateful mission to Vienna (Story an page 7) mine minerals on the ocean floor, even
in Uecrmber 1975. Mr. Shadrin took his wife * * * .- though an International conference on sea
along (to go skiing. he told heel. An initial nnf?,uh Corn, of Saskatche- law has yet to revolve the .ierlsitive issue.
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second period increased 14% to a
rp,cord $271.9 million on a 12%
sales rise to a record $4.33 billion.
(Story on Paw 77 -
Budget director Lance is confi-
dent his personal financial difficul-
ties in divesting his bank stock
Won't force him to resign.
(Story on Paw 22)
? .? : '
Tax sections of Carter's en-
ergy bill, Including levies on gas-
guzzling cars and -"domestically
produced oil, cleared the House
Ways and Means panel.-- _
(Story on Page 2)
.* . a * ..
Talks on future oil pricing ac-
tions took on a moderate tone as
members of.. the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
ended their meeting.
(Story an -Page N
U.K. units of Texaco and Gulf
Oil plan to build a 65,000-barrel-a-
day catalytic cracking unit and re-
lated=refinery facilities in Wales.
- a.
(Story on Pavs i).
.
The Amex will make markets
in four call options starting Mon-
day-three now are. traded pri-
marily on the Chicago board and
the fourth is--on the Pacific ex-
change-and plans to add three
others. - , -
(Story at Paw S)
Control 'Data reported a 26%
rise in second quarter consolidated'
net earnings -to $14.6 million-::;; .
_,~. ... ? ~. lifers on PaaS O
- - ---may"-^'
Itel and Amdahl, makers. of
computer.( processor's - similar =to-
IBM's - medium-to-large models
are thriving despite IBM's intro-
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r.
.sir.. tsrzcztnski told sirs. Shadrul in a letter
dated July 5. "?I only wish I could strike a
more positive note and offer you immediate
teaa,rurance." -
As all this high-level attention attests, Yt-
cholas Shadrin wasn't just an ordinary spy.
He was a captain In the Soviet navy who
fled to the U.S. in 1959. He brought along "a
.great amount of good, hard intelligence
about Soviet military developments" says
retired Navy CapL Thomas L. Dwyer. who
coordinated the months-long interrogation of
defector Shadrin..
Adds William Howe. a civilian then
working in the Office of Naval Intelligence:
"His information was extremely valuable.
Our government had no doubt" that Mr.
Shadrin wasn't a Soviet agent. ?
Attention in Congress
At the CIA's request, Sen. James East-
land, chairman ot _ the Senate -Judiciary
Committee and a' conservative Mississippi
Democrat, helped to get through Congress
special legislation -conferring U.S. - citizen.
ship on the one-time Communist' Party
member. In the House, -the Committee on.
Un-American Activities eagerly put him on
the witness stand to denounce Soviet expan-
sionism abroad and repression at home; he
testified under his. given name, Nikolai Fe-
dorovich Artamonov- (he chose to use the
name Shadrin after his defection).
In the early- 19609; Mr. Shadrin began
working for the Defense Intelligence Agency
as an analyst of Soviet naval literature ("he
was an excellent man," a superior recalls),
and he lectured once a year at the- Naval
War College. The-. . Russians reacted fu-
riously. trying and convicting him in absen-
tia on charges of treason. His sentence was
death. .
Nevertheless, starting in 1966 or so, Mr.
Shadrin heeded his adopted country's call to
serve without pay as a counterintelligence
agent acting under FBI direction. At sub-
stantial risk, he pretended that he desired to
return to Russia, feigned cooperation with
the KGB. and slipped to the Russians "mil-
itary secrets" supplied by the CIA -
Some sideline work for the FBI took him
on missions abroad, to Canada in 1971 and to
Europe in 1972, for example. No slip-ups oc-
curred. "I considered him to be absolutely
reliable and completely on our side," says
James Wooten, an FBI man who controlled
Mr. Shadrin's counterspy activities for 10
years.
The Fateful Mtgaion-
Then came the fateful mission to Vienna
in December 1975. Mr. Shadrin took his wife
along (to go skiing, he told her?. An initial
meeting with the two KGB agents on the.
night of Dec. 18 went smoothly: -
Mr. Shadrin became edgy, however, per-
haps because the Russians said he soon
would be promoted to colonel in the KGB
and he knew the KGB commonly awards
such promotions to marked men as a way of
making them feel trusted. So after a CIA of-
ficer had debriefed him, next to a running
shower in Suite 361 of the Bristol Hotel in Vi-
enna, he told. Mrs. Shadrin the names of
agents Kozlov and Kuryshev and asked her
to write them down. "Something apparently
was said or inferred which made him con-
cerned.** she recalls.
The acting CIA station chief in Vienna
had canceled all leaves and had planned to
keep Mr. Shadrin under protective surveil-
lance. "We could have put people on the
street or in autos," he says. But the Rus-
sian-:,peaking CIA u,.I,;er sent front.1Yash-
ington to supervise the mission says the
planned surveillance was canceled at the
Pl?'ixe Turn to Page 29, Column t
.. ~? (Story on Paw N ??,:~??:.
Itel and Amdahl, makers of
computer processors similar- to
IBM's medium-to-large models,
are thriving despite IB3f's intro-
duction this spring of an advanced
processor..
-c. (Story on Pao. 4)
* +- * .
Tropicana agreed to be ac-.
quired by Kellogg for stock valued
at $378.8 million.
(Story on Pan. 13)
xl * International Paper's second
period net slid 29% to $59.1 million.
(Story on Psve a) .. r.
* * *.
CBS -Inc. 'reported record re-
sults- for the second quarter- and
the first half:
'
(Story on Page Q. ....
`.
The Treasury moved to quash
an informal 'futures' market in its
notes and indicated it was studying
blocking- futures trading _ in its
bills:.
(Stay on Page 31)
BankAmerica expects a second
period operating net- of. slightly-
above 17.5% and may recommend
a dividend boost later this year.
(Story on Page 10)
Weeden Holding earned $1.1
million in its June 30 third quarter,
reversing a year-earlier loss.
Reynolds Securities' second period
net fell 29%, -
_ _ ?. (Story on Pave 10)- - ~ - - _
Public accountants must get
certain representations from cor-
porate clients in writing, under an
accounting institute ruling. -- ?
(Story at Page a) - -
Coal-industry bargainers have
agreed to.meet with Mine Workers
President Miller on the financial
condition of union health and re-
tirement funds.
(Stay on Page Y)
*
Potash Corp. of Saskatche
wan, a. province-owned agency,
reached an understanding to buy
Alwinsal's potash mine for about
$76.5 million. -
(Story on Page 13)
* *. is
Markets-a- i
Stocks:.. Volume 23,10,000 shares. Dow
Jones Industrials 902.99, off 0.42; transporta-
tion 236.07, oft 0.34; utilities 117.65, up 0.22.
Bonds: Dow Jones 20 bonds 92.74, up 0.08.
Commodities: Dow Jones futures 353.38.
up 5.69: spot index 377.63, up 4.75.
TODAY'S INDEX :.-
Bond Markets ....... 31
Commodities ....... 32
Dividend News...... 25
Earnings Digest ...... 25
Editorials _. 18
Financing Business ... 31
Foreign Exchange .... 35
Foreign Markets ..... 35
Monet Rates ..... 31
Securities M Sets.... 33-38
Tar-Exempts ...... 31..
Who's News ........
jetted the U. favored by Carter, and a radi-
cal Palestinian group vowed to kill any Arab
leader who signs a treaty recogNzing Israel.
wT.ST G? KHAN Y'S trader gut a warm
welcnn.e a nut. tings with Carter Dense.
. Chancellor Helmut Schmidt was enthusi-
astically received in an exchange of re-
marks that seemed designed to minimize
German-American ditfererces that have
emerged since the administration took of-
fice. After the first of two scheduled meet-
ings, the White House reported the two lead-
ers agreed the Soviet Union should become
more involved In such activities as economic
aid to developing nations. Carter also out-
lined his goal of keeping Latina America
"nuclear free" In talks described as easy
and frank. Later, after a two-hour State De-
partment meeting, the chancellor said he
thought the sessions would be even more
productive than expected. -.
Schmidt has been uneasy about Car-
ter's -human-rights stand, fearing it is
too 'provocative toward Moscow.: And
Carter. in contrast with other welcoming
ceremonies for. dignitaries, didn't refer
to the issue.
The CIA's No. 2 man, Deputy Director E.
Henry Knoche.. quit effective next month
amid reports Director Stan field Turner had
forced him out and planned a shake-up in
the agency's clandestine-operations branch,
Turner denied the rumors, but Knoche, a 24-
year veteran, said "change looms."
Neutron-bomb funding was upheld as the
Senate, heeding an appeal by Carter, voted
58 to 38 against an amendment deleting the
money from a public works bill. The Senate
then took up a compromise proposal by Ed-
ward Kennedy (D., Mass.) to give it author-
ity to veto any production decision.
The probe of South Korea's Influence-
buying in Congress will be speeded up, the
chairman of the House Ethics Committee
announced in its first meeting In over a
month. John Flynt (D., Ga.) said hearings
could start before September. The panel
also approved an accord with the CIA on ac-
cess to classified data and adopted security
guides.
* * *
Work on a seabed-mining bill was begun
by a House subcommittee. The measure
would open the way for U.S. companies to
mine minerals on the ocean floor, even
though an international conference on sea
law has yet to resolve the sensitive Issue. -
Quebec's separatist government proposed
an amended bill requiring widespread use of
French that left unchanged controversial
sections curtailing public education in E^g-
lish. Requirements for businesses were loos-
ened slightly. A filibuster is planned by the
opposition-_
San Quentin Inmates were confined to
their cells under close watch following the
worst violence in six years at the California
prison. Three prisoners died and tour were
injured Pi a racially sparked series of
clashes in which knives and dubs were
used.
Lawyers for two nurses convicted of poi-
soning patients at an Ann Harbor, Mich.,
veterans hospital said they will appeal. The
fury, which deliberated for nearly 9 hours,
cropped a murder charge, but the two Fill-
pino women face possible life sentences on
the poisoning counts. .
ness." ,says
of F.B.A., a
merctals. -I-
special dog
Indeed, V
Enter Band
July and phc
black eyes.
came up.wi
mops that-?Z
leaned on the
When-Mr.
for the flirt
through old
terviewed eel
authentic ct
foods for the
cery and nth,
of the set. ?;.
"He- did
Stewart, the
Stewart plan
for the con
"There'll be
whipped-crea
where he'll-
Mr.:' Sippr
that he has
moment's not
scripts, he h
scenes on a it
a cape - deco
Mildred" to e
was ordered.
ness of TV
$1,000 a mint
"He uncle
that's crucial
Fuhrman, a I
Instant Italla
"Once I h
to go on camp
to an outdoor
Cunningham,
era "As the
and told him
worth of chef
other stuff to
to make the
- A number
asked to pro
the TV kiddie
recalls, "The,
the green tol
contacted - hs
tops.- Finally,
pany and had
Converseli
"New York fi
"I get calls t
brands, such
dairy Items,
says.. To say
-'you throw a
the empty co
Mr. Sippe
years ago wt
tired father,
came by and
in a commer(
to find It him:
got quick sen
business the :
Now. Mr.
vide props ft
commercials
TV work a
the grocery
sales of $1.6 m
One key to
per says, Is k
on almost ani
uon to detarl
slip a Genera
it's a- Genera
being filmed.
~~/-.,+ ` ~~ r: ~') a S~ J' t 1'r t f t\ti its` ;~ t .C~-i -~I ~./}"~It 1 fP xr I. / !. _~ f't'1F+r
.+ir.ti.u.-w~._.-?_a.+~?-'t-l.j~..?.L.L.. ~r-i- 11-...~_- ~ .? ' ~ r - . .
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1 14 C1 tLy '`j 7
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i.SU J )LU.T 1U2g ~i e &
BY llobe; t. G. Kaiser
:V,se.:.;t e:. Pest S.211 Writer
So%ict navy captain who dclected
to the United States in 1959 aid was
turned into a double agent by tl,e FBI
in 1966 dis-ppeared in Vienna 18
tnonths a5ci t, lieu he was supposed to
be ntectin,: Soviet intelligence aents.
The man who ditappea. ed had de-
fected under the name Nikolai F. Ar-
tamonov. In the early 1960s he be-
came a consultant to the Defense In-'
teLigence Agcncy with the name
Nicholas G. Shadrin.
Since'his disappearance the U. S.
government has repeatedly asked the
Soviet Union for information about
Shadrin, or Artamonov, but without
substamtiz,l result.
Whatever his name, his case, hith-
-rto uiL spurted anywhere, is a re-
mar kable cold War espionage tale defectors in Frankfurt, West Ger-
wtth plot that might have been many. At least a few U. S. officials
tnv cntc-d by John Le Carre or Len questioned whether he was a legiti-
Dciehtun. only it happened. mate defector or a plant by the Soviet
a Polish-born dentist who defected
with him in 1959 - said she believes
that her husband was kidnaped by
two Soviet secret police (KGB) offi-
cers on the streets of Vienna while
she was waiting for him in a room in
that city's elegant Hotel Bristol. The
American officials who know the
story of Shadrin say they generally
believe that this is what happened to
him, but not all are certain.
According to well-placed sources,
questions were raised about Shadrin
- then Artan.orov - when he was
first interrogated by American offi-
cial; in 1959 at a reception center for
Union.
These doubts were soon rejected,
however, and Artamonov was wel-
coined to the United States as a genu-
ine defector. In 1960 he testified be-
fore the House Coint,tittee on Un-
American Activities, warning that the
Soviet Union had a secret plan to ?
launch a surprise nuclear attack'
against the United States. ' ?
Then, after changing his name to
Shadrin (though doing nothing to-
change his physical appearance, ac-
cording.to his wife), he went to work
as a "consultant" to the Defense Intel-
ligence Agency (DIA), the Pentagon's
See DEFECTOR, A12, Col. 1-
NIKOLAI F. AITA-MONOV
became Nicholas G'Shadrin
/'`~ Jcc t/ /977
20553
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. , 11 A u . 7 7
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`.as stew is
By David Espo
Arc:u;.ted Preu
A Russian navy Cr ptain who became a Cold War
defector to the United States disappeared 16
months ago while on a spy mission in Vienna.
A lawyer says he believes Nicholas Shadrin is in
a Soviet military prison, despite official and pri-
vate efforts to arrange his release through a spy
trade.
The lawyer, Richard Copaken, said last night he
has held five meetings in West Berlin since he was
asked by Shadrin's wife to become involved in the
case. He didn't identify the participants.
In addition Cupaken said that two U.S. secre-
taries of state have discussed the case with Rus-
sian diplomats and that President Gerald R. Ford
wrote a letter on the subject late last year to Soviet
President Leonid I. Brezhnev.
THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION also has be-
come involved in Shadrin's case. ButCopaken said
the Ford and Carter administrations are guilty of
"serious blunders and missed opportunities." He
called his disclosure of Shadrin's plight a "cry of
desperation."
Copaken said Shadrin, a destroyer commander
in the Russian navy, defected to the United States
in June 1959, at least in part because he wanted to
marry a Polish woman but was forbidden to do so
under Soviet law. The woman defected with him,
and.they were married after arriving in this coun-
try.
The lawyer said Shadrin began providing Intelli-
gence information to U.S. agencies after his defec-
tion and eventually went to work for the
government in an intelligence position.
The Washington Star ntu-.eoy. July 14.1977
But In 1966 Shadrin was ap;,r oachcd by two
agents from the KGB, the Soviet secret pr.lice, and
was asked to spy for his homeland. Ins:cad.
Copa'..en said, Shidrin went to the FBI and was
persuaded to become a double agent, fecein; doc-
tored intelligence information to the Russians
under the guidance of FBI agents.
SO SECRET WAS his new life, Copakcn said.
that Shadrin kept It from his wife.
He continued his double-agent role for nine
years, until he was sent to Vienna in December
1975 and arranged a rneetirg with KGB Eg.nts
there. After one such session he disappeared, and
Copaken said he believes Shadrin was taken to a
mlitary prison in Russia.
The lawyer said Henry Kissinger, then secre-
tary of state, discussed the disappearance with
Anatoly Dobrynin, the Soviet ambassador, but that
the Russians had no information to provide.
The Washington lawyer, hired shortly afterward
by Mrs. Shadrin, established a private line of com-
munications and held the three meetings i.. West
Berlin last year. he said.
"THERE WAS a cardinal rule laid down In this
private channel for plausible deniability" that
would enable the Russians to deny that the talks
were being held, the lawyer said.
Nevertheless, Copal:en said when he suggested
that Shadrin be released in exchange for Soviet
spy Sarkis Paskaliar., the Russians refused the
offer. ,
Instead, he said they hinted broadly that the re-
lease of Gunther Guillaume would satisfy them.
Guillaume Is a Communist spy whose presence at
the top level of the West German government led
to the downfall of Chancellor Willy Brandt.
Copaken said his negotiations collapsed, how-
ever, because a top U.S. official brought up the
matter again with the Russians In violation of the
ground rules established for the private neptia-
Lions.
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP89B00307R000300180001-2
The M"yste:y'of the
4pearing Double Agent
? ti-IKu1LAI F. ABTAMONUY
i ' . , . became Nichols G. Shadrin
By Robert G. Kaiser,
. w.ahLUton Pest &6&M WrM
A Soviet navy captain who defected
to the United States in 1959 and was
turned into a double agent by the FBI
in 1966 disappeared in Vienna 18
months ago when he was.supposed to
be meeting Soviet intelligence agents
The 'man who disappeared had de-
fected under the name Nikolai F. Ar-
tamonov. In the early 1960s he be-
came a consultant to the Defense In-
telligence -Agency with the name
Nicholas G. Shadrin.
Since his disappearance the U. S.
government has repeatedly asked the
Soviet Union for information about
Shadrin, or Artamonov, but without
substantial result -
Whatever his nacre, his Case, bit'
erto unreported anywhere. Is a re-
markable Cold War eapiocage tale
with a plot that might have been
invented by John Le Carre or Len
Deighton..Only it happened.
Shadrin's wife-Dr. Blanks Shadrin,
a Polish-born dentist who defected
with him in 1959 - said she believes
that her husband was kidnaped by
two Soviet secret police (KGB) offi-
cers on the streets of Vienna while
she was waiting for him in a room in
that city's elegant Hotel Bristol The
American officials who know the
story of Shadrin so they generally
believe that this is what happened to
him, but not all are certain.
According to well-placed sources,
que.tlons were raised about Shadrin
- then Artamonov - when be -was
first Interrogated b An rican offi-
cials in 2959 at a rec tion center for
defectors in Fran;,~rt, West Ger-
many. At least a fe! U. S. officials
questioned whether l was a legiti-
mate detector or a p$ht by the Soviet
Union.
however, and Arta
ine defector. In 1?E
son rejected.
onov was wel-
tates as a genu-
lie testified be-
fore the House C(&mlttee on Un-
American Activities,Srarning that the
Soviet Union had 4 secret plan to
launch a aurpriselnuclear attack
`against the United Site,.
Then. after charig his name to
Shadrin (though citing nothing to
change his pbyslcal' appearance, ac-
cording to his wife),e went to work
as a "consultant" to the Defense Intel-
ligence Agency (DIA), the Pentagon's
Intelligence agency. His job there was
not important," according to his wife,
although she and others referred
to Artamonov/Shadrin's "brilliance."
Government sources said he did not
hold a sensitive position. He wa?t
specialist on the Soviet navy, they
say. ? d
Many of his colleagues In govern-
ment service attest to his reliability
and loyalty to his new country. (He
became an American citizen, by spe-
cial act of Congress, in 1965.) Yet in
the upper reaches of the intelligence
establishment, persons responsible for
protecting against Soviet `penetra-
tion" of American Intelligence agen-
cies-persons for whom suspicion is
20555
an Instinct as strong as any other- -
doubts lingered about this defector.
Despite that, in 1968 the FBI turned
Shadrin into a double agent, and au-
thorized a series of contacts betwr -o
him and Soviet agents in the Un' -d' ;
States, in Montreal and in Vienna. le
was on a counterintelligence rnisson
for the FBI when be disappeared is
%ienna in December, 1975.
Jack Anderson. the syndicated col-
umnist, learned of Artamonov/Shad-
rin's disappearance a year ago, and
was preparing to write an article
about it last July. He was told by a
lawyer for Mrs. Shadrin and by
"others," Anderson said last night.
that if be published the story a man
might be killed. Anderson decided not
Ste DEFECTOR, Alt, Col. I
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don't know if he's alive, and are oiler- ' been given the rank of eulecint i,
'
!acs uacu oar a?cau avc w~+c .a.a,v.... -.... strasse in Vienna, There lie etT -
Tr man
Post decided to print the story, w-ho? in.-lted liim lnto'i'eari"~v'tbere a
In a more formal statement last second man waite&,.The Tr10 thea
" abandoning him [A r t a m o n o v i, drove to a fish iestaur ant on the' out- f
i'Shadrin) have not abandoned hire,
Yabandoning a him (Artamonov/ skirts of Vienna When the mcetltfg
ti Shadrin), have not abandoned him, ended, the Soviets asked him t 're-
"and we are making every effort to de- turn to the same. mesLeg p;s tw o
!ermine his fate and get him back. We days later. They ;.IV told h1a~ ~t ;nod
A12
Thursday
Mystery of the D~fetoi.
Who Vanished in Vie~h~
?a' DEFECTOR, From Al
to go ahead. "There's not another rea-
son that I'd have held up that story,"
.1; he said.
The Washington Post learned of the
~~. story last month and began to make
y., inquiries. The Post confirmed from
M government sources the central ele-
. meats of Artsmonov/Shadrin's defec-
4. tion and ultimate disappearance. Mrs,
Shadrin and her lawyer, Richard D.
Copaken of the firm of Covington and
Burling, at first asked Tht Post not to
publish a story, also on the grounds
,rt that Shadrin's life might be endan-
gered,' and because there was still
some chance that he might be re-
Si turned to his wife.
Copaken also said, earlier this
month, that he felt time was running
out In the case, and that be'expected
to "go public" with It soon.
' ? Unbeknownst to The Post, Copaken
took the story to The Wall Street
Journal, apparently because he feared
that The Post would portray Aramo-
nov/Sardrln as a voluntary re-defec-
tor in its account of the affair. The
Wall Street Journal prepared an arti-
cle reportedly for publication today.
A Final Suggestion
o~ -
1 Then, yesterday afternoon, a State
'; Department official telephoned Co-
n0 paken to say that a final suggestion
tored "intelligence" back to hfs
Soviet contact. _ ' I.
Mr. - 4w ;r
Other government ""source bCon-
firmed that tbe FBI turned frta-
monov/Shadriii Into a "double.~'"
Mrs. Shadrin's , lawyer, Copikeh;
said he had been told by government
officials that Artamonov/Shadrin
agreed to work as a double without
pay-be volunteered his'services. But
this was only after one of his supers=
ors at the DIA told Artamonov/.
Shadrin that be ought to oocept:the
FBI's proposition, Copaken .aid.' He
was originally reluctant, because to
had been told he bad been sentenced
to death In abstentit In the U.S.S.R.,
the lawyer said. ; -' ?-
According to Copaken,` Arla> of
Shadrin went ? on missions fog ' t.Ef -
FBI to Montreal in 1971 and VIduYy
in 1972. In the Austrian capstr
lawyer said, the KGB gave him kaIA- ,,
ing In the use of various sec ~spg7?
ng devices.
s. i;r?
y
,r
`Doctored in'. !,angle at
In all these contacts with the
Copaken sai(; Artamonov/Shadrtn
fed material "doctored in Langley"
(at Central Intelligence Agency bead-;
quarters In suburban Virginia) to the
Russians. The FBI regarded this op-
eration as a way of learning more,
about KGB operations in the United
St
te
C
k
id= -
a
s,
opa
en sa
,),,'he had made for a possible approach.,
_t-to the Soviets aimed at eliciting at ~`In 1975 the Soviets asked Arta-
. - ,~ monov/Shadrin to return to Vienna.':
hold Shadrin might be attempted. Pre-
~:Ijviously Copaken held out little hope
's'tliat this idea would be taken up by
the Carter administration. He called it
a long-shot, but declined to describe
it.
71,
tip The Cent
ral Intelligence Agency,
a FBI D
t
f d
D
that the FBI never fully Informed the
CIA (or DIA) of Art amonov/Shadrln's
activities as a double agent But in
cording to Copaken, and the CIA ob-
jected that it was too dangerous to
ease
e
epar
ment an "SILLS 1i send a defector like Artamonov/.
House all decline to comment on the
case. ~,Sbadrin to Vienna.
C
st airs- unarm says sne oelieves Lne phony `Intelligence" for fa!I lo' Pass
United States has not done what R td. Pa Soviets, and would J4 1p
rcould have or should have to try to agent t '' in"atSie ope: Qn, $ i!
get her husband back. Her larrygr at. ?- was regarded ,es_.&n' FBI' a~trafloa, I
cuses the government-primarily the and the CIA statio'n* %1.e isl would
Ford admtniitration, but the Carter .. ~_ ~.. a ? .?-
opaken-who has been working on
the case for nearly 18 months and
says he has talked ?to countless gov-
ernment officials about it-says this
is what happened next
The FBI and CIA argued about
how to deal with the Soviet request
to Artamonov/Shadrin to come to
Vienna. They compromised on this
ay But Mrs. Shadrin said she thought
the sudden call from the State De?
partment wat a ploy to prevent publi-
cation of newspaper stories about the
affair, and she was Inclined to let the
? ,'papers go ahdad. "It was the end of
:'-the road," she said last night. "I de-
cided that the only way to go was
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- ~.
`sting on the assumption that he it"- colonel 113 the fG$.- .
By Mrs. Shadrin's account, this tale ~, . :r`
? from out of the cold begins in 1958, e'4 i-sa:
When a handsome young Soviet naval NO S-trrcITlance - ?.
,officer-Artamonov, then 30-came to
n an assl iimrnt to help his The Fill had !nsistcd that then: be
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THE WASHINGTON POST Thurida), July 14, 19;.'
Mystery of the Defecthr:
Double Agent Is Gec,
Vogel informed Copaken that be bad
lost his "mandate," the lawyer says.
Copaken tried other channels. He
asked Chester Cooper, a former gov-
ernment official, and Cooper in turn
asked Stanley Karnow, a columnist
and former foreign correspondent for
the Post, to help arrange a meeting
with Victor Louis, a KGB operative
who acts as a "journalist" in Mos-
cow, and whom Karnow knew.
Copaken and Karnow met Lootus~s
Helsinki, but nothing came of It Re-
cently in Moscow, according to Co-
paken, Louis told an American diplo-
mat that he received "an embarrassed
silence" when he asked in Moscow
about the Artamonov Shadrin case.
Copaken says he Is sure-largely be-
cause of what Vogel told him-that Ar-
tamonov/Shadrin is alive in Russia:
Copaken is also certain that Kissing-
Brezhnev, the Soviet leader. Hard to er, his associate, William Hyland at the
believe, Copaken acknowledges, but . Aaffonal SecurityCouncil, and their
Dobrynin had a new story: yes, we
met the man in Vienna on Dec. 18,
and he said he wanted to return to
the Soviet Union. But we never saw
him again.
Copaken came into the case in Feb-
ruary. His first gambit was to estab-
lish a channel to Wolfgang Vogel, an
East Berlin lawyer who arranged the
swap of Col. Rudolph Abel, the al-
leged Soviet spy in America, for
Francis Gary Powers, the U-2 pilot.
Copaken met Vogel and asked for
help.
Soon afterward Vogel indicated he
had "a mandate" tot talk further. He
got this mandate, he subsequently ex-
plained to Copaken, only after ap-
pearing directly to Erich Honneker,
the East German leader, who in turn
annealed personally to Leonid T
Vogel, t opa)-en says, told him the
Soviets had a problem: ,tbey='couldn't
admit in any open way that they
might have kidnaped an American
from the stretes of a neutral capital
(Vienna). Plausible denial was cru-
cial, Copal'en understood. Vogel also
said that whatever business they did
between them had to remain utterly
secret, and nothing said through
their personal channel could' be re-
peated In any official communica-
tions between the United States and
the Soviet Union.
matic channels. When thts happened,.
for his client's husband. Copaken urged
the United States repeatedly to use
cases like the defection of a MIG-25
pilot in Japan or the espionage charge
against a Soviet news agency reporter
in Tokyo to pressure the Soviets to at
)east grant U.S. access to Artamonov/
Shadrin. Nothing ever happened...
What makes Copaken certain that the
man did not return to the U.S.S.R. vo-
luntarily! A lot of circumstantial evi-
dence, he says, plus the fact that the
So'ieu haven't allowed any Americas
to see biro, nor, have they, tiuznpeted
publicly his intelligence coun.,if that's
what it ,was
No t'onaken lnsis'a w._
.
A Basic Problem man is an involuntary captive: 3 { 1 f
Or else-Deighton or l.a C::z? a ttb(,
Copaken charges that Kissinger add--he was one ct the Eesf" ! ever.
opposed any strong action on Sha- to make it back in out of The eo . ,
drin's behalf, while Attorney General = : '?~ s J ~Y - '.
Edward H. Levi and Cis. Director
George Bush favored strong action. .
The argument, Copaken says, be be-
lieves, involved a basic problem: was
It more important to help an agent
in trouble, or to maintain friendly
relations with the Soviets?
Copaken charges that Klsslr..ger In-
directly sabotaged the Vogel cannel
by autborizing information-that came
from it to be repeatedly to The Soviet
government through official diplo-
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V! ~ 4 i.n c~ A l A--
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. 14 Aa%A \(~ -I J 0
VOL. ('LXXXX \O.9
Out in the Gold?
U.S. Fears Counterspy
Was Seized by Soviets;
Agency Bungling Seen
Friends of Russian Defector,
Missing in Vienna, Say
He Wasn't Safeguarded
Political Problem for Carter?
By JERKY LANI1At'F3t
Staff Rrporter of THE WALLSTRKETJOCR!IAt.
On the evening of Dec. 20. 1975, an Amer-
ican working undercover for the Federal Bu-
reau of Investigation walked to the steps of
the Votivkirche in Vienna for a prearrange'
meeting at the cathedral with Oleg Koziov
and Mikhail Kuryshev. two agents for the
KGB. the Soviet secret police. It was his last
stroll on free soil. Be has never been seen
since.
The disappearance of the American. Ni-
cholas Shadrin. hasn't been publicized or
even publicly acknowledged. The Russians
won't concede that he was kidnapped-
though the U.S. believes he was-especially
not from the capital of a neutral nation. And
U.S. officials aren't anxious to disclose the
bureaucratic bungling that preceded his dis-
appearance and the diplomatic blunders
that may be keeping him In captivity.
But Mr. Shadrin's fate could become a
prickly political issue soon. Whether for
good reason or not, his many admirers in
the U.S. intelligence community fear that he
is being abandoned by the U.S. - even
though the State Department ire sts it is
doing its best to get Mr. Shadrin released, U
he is still al!ve.
Now, some of Mr. Shadrin's friends are
beginning to speak up about what they feel
are the gov.?rnment's half-hearted efforts to
retrieve him, and details are seeping out.
They raise tro'!blescrle cuestions - espe-
cially for an administration a pousing hu-
man rights for forest hers about the govern-
s cad's ubli:at.? :? to A::..ricans who risk
111
20556
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.r
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t,er to Soviet party leader Leonid Brc?zhnev.
and before le.ivlog office Mfr Ford met Kith
Mr. S!iadrin's wife. lil.inka. at the White
House. But for seasons of global diplomacy.
the Ford administration derided not to make
a major push for Mr. Sh:i,lrin's return.
In January, outgoing Ccntra! Intelligence
Agency Director George Bush briefed
Jimmy Carter abo:it the Sh:iiarin case, and
now National Security Ad.iser Zbigniew
Brzezinski is iakit:g charge of it. He doesn't
sound particularly hopeful. "I fully sympa-
thize with your frustration and anxiety."
Mr. Brzezinski told Mrs. Shadrin in a letter
dated July 5. -I only wish I could strike a
more positive note and otter you immediate
reassurance.-
* As all this high-level attention attests, Ni-
cholas Shadrin wasn't just an ordinary spy.
He was a captain in the Soviet navy who
fled to the U S. in 1939. He brought along "a
great amount of good, hard intelligence
about Soviet military developments," says
retired Navy Capt. Thomas L. Dwyer. who
coordinated the months-long interrogation of
defector Shadrin.
Adds William Howe. a civilian then
working in the Office of Naval Intelligence:
"His information was extremely valuable.
Oar government had no doubt" that Mr.
Shadrin wasn't a Soviet agent.
Attention in Congress
At the CIA's request. Son. James East-
land, chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee and a conservative Mississippi
Democrat, helped to get through Congress
special legislation conferring U.S. citizen-
ship on the one-time Communist Committee Party y
member. In the House. the Un-American Activities eagerly- put him on
the witness stand to denounce Soviet expan-
sionism abroad and repression at home; he
testified under his given name. Nikolai Fe-
dorovich Artamonov the chow to use the
name Shadrin after his defectioni.
In the early 1960s. Mr. Shadrin began
working for the Defense Intelligence Agency
as an analyst of Soviet naval literature ("he
was an excellent man," a superior recalls'.
and he lectured once a year at the Naval
War College. The Russians reacted fu-
riously, trying and convicting him in absen-
tia on charges of treason. His sentence was
death.
Nevertheless, starting In 19:6 or so. Mr.
Shadrin heeded his adopted country's call to
serve without pay as a counterintelligence
agent acting under FBI direction. At sub-
stantial risk, he pretended that he desired to
return to Russia., feigned cooperation with
t e KGB, and slipped to the Russians "mil-
itary secrets" supplied by the CIA.
S -me ,iilrline work for the FBI took him
i.n'nis:ions abroad. to Canada in 1971 and to
* in 1-1-2. for example. No slip-ups oc-
1 bred I:im to be absolutely
i ,,,ai.,ct.?ly on .,ur side,.' says
r. , , ~C ?n, ti. an Fit! man who controlled
,:l it. S ruanlirspy activities for 10
The Fateful iii-:pion
Then came the fatefU mission to Vienna
in I&ccmbcr 1975. Mr. Shadrin took his wife
along Ito go skiing, he told her'. An initial
meeting with the two KGB agents on the
night of Dec. 18 went smoothly.
Mr. Shadrir?r came edgy-, however, per-
haps, because the Russians said he soon
would be promoted to t'oloncl in the KGB
and he knew the KGB commonly awards
such promotions to marked men as a way of
making them feel trusted. So after a CIA of-
ficer had debriefed him, next to a running
shower in Suite 361 of the Bristol Hotel in Vi-
enna, he told Mrs. Shadrin the names of
agents Koztov and Kurysher and asked her
to write them down. "Something apparently
was said or inferred which made him con-
cerned," she recalls. .
The acting CIA station chief in Vienna
had canceled all leaves :ind had planned to
keep ?.fr. Shadrin under protective surveil-
lance. "We could have put pen:le on the
street or in au:ns?" he stays. Rut the Rus-
sian-:'peaking CIA officer sent from t,4:,sh-
tngton to supervise the mission says the
planned surveill:i^.ce was canceled at the
Please Tt.rn to igic 29. Co:u'nn I
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v
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'
JU L tt 1 L11C ~
l
2vnaght ,u,y rec!I,rority or even fir u. hta.ur.
Kidnapped a Counterspy in Vienna :u Lhccs Lthat Mr. Shadrin tenant. alive. p,
,t licit, hnuti:er Soviet military Zarlmov, fled from the the Soviet
Cunti,iurd From First Pegs
F'ill's request out of concern that, if spotted
by the KGB. It might be a tip-off that Mr.
:;hadrin was a U.S. agent. And on the night
of Dec. 20, the night Mr. Shadrin disap-
peared. the CIA official went to dinner at a
friend's home In a Vienna suburb and didn't
return to the city until after I a.m.
By then, Mrs. Shadrin was frantically
phoning to report that her husband hadn't
come back from his meeting with the KGB.
She h sn't seen him since that night, and
she blames a bureaucratic snafu by U.S. in-
telligence agencies for his disappearance.
Some intelligence experts agree. "I don't
think they did right by Shadrin," says U.
Gen. Daniel O. Graham, who retired last
year as director of the Defense Depart-
ment's flcfense Intelligence Agency. "Quite
obviously the U.S. people who were sup-
po..ed to keep an eye out lost track of him.
They didn't keep him under direct surveil-
lance when they should have, or else I don't
think this could have happened " Mr Gra-
him says.
When news of Mr. Shadrin's presumed
kidnapping tilt Washington, the bureaucracy
scurried for cover. "There are too many
a agencies Involved, and they're all running,"
1Villiam Hyland of the NaUonal Security
Council told a visitor weeks afterward. Sec-
ret.ary of SL-ate Henry Kissinger broached
Us' disappearance with Soviet Ambassador
Anatoly tkhbrynin; Mr. Dobryhdn said his
government didn't know anything about the
case.
Dlssat!cfied, Mrs. Shadrin early last year
hired Richard Copaken, a 26-year-old part-
ner In the Washington law firm of Covington
& Burling. Within a month, Mr. Copaken
open d unofficial channels to Moscow
through Wolfgang Vogel, an attorney in East
Berlin who often acts as a secret conduit for
exchanging spies or political prisoners be-
twren East and West; among other deals,
he handleel the celebrated exchange of So-
viet spy Rudolf Abel for American t'2 pilot
Cary Francis Powers In the early 1960s.
To one, meeting In Fast Berlin Mr. Co-
paken came armed with a CIA-supplied list
of prisoners - being hold by U.S. friends
around the world. Mr. Vogel nibbled at two,
Jorge :Mantes, a Grmmunist leader held by
Chile, and Gunther Guillaume, whose arrest
in Born on spy charges precipitated the fall
of West German Chancellor Willy Brandt's
government in 1975.
Impact on Bonn
Mr. Copaken got word to the Ford adnrin-
Lstratior, about a possible exchange with the
Russians of Mr. Guillaume fur Mr. Shadrin.
But administration officials considered Mr.
Guillaume too hign a price to pay: they be-
lieved that even pressing Bonn to release
him could trigger serious political repercus-
sions in West Germany,
Last month the Carter adminIstratlon
bungled a possible Monies-Shadrin deal. Ir.-
stead of a high-level request from the White
HoxLse asking the C'h!lcan government to
make Mr. Monts available, the administra-
tion assigned the task to an acting assistant
secretary of state. (-'Idle said no. Rather
than oblige the U.S., It dealt Mr. pontes for
the release of 11 political prisoners in Com-
mtudst Fast Germany.
"So far the policy of this administration
is to incur no significant price to get Shad: in
released," Mr. Copaken contends. "The as-
cessrnent seems to be that tine chances of
getting him back are slim, so the White
House doesn't want to waste political china."
In the last few days. U.S. officials have
assured Mrs. Shadrin that they are intensi-
fying efforts to get her horsLand released.
But the many months of Inaction by high-
level officials have made her distrustful. "I
don't have any confidence in their efforts,"
she says.
No ilia to See ShadrLn
Indeed, the U.S. governni nt hasn't even
demanded that American officials be al-
lowed to see Mr. Shadrin in return for giv-
ing Moscow access to Soviet detectors. Last
year, when Soviet air-force U. Viktor Be-
lenko new a MIG25 from the Soviet UnIon to
Japan and then sought political asylum In
.
U
c1: u .z). r ears ~o\iets
Union
t.ruon for Iran, also seeking ultimate asy-
lum in the U.S. But the Iranian authorities
held the pilot Incommunicado. signaling a
probable Intention to score political paints
with Moscow by sending him back. Washing.
ton missed the signal and didn't make any
effort to dissuade the Shah until after
the Iranian government had announced Its
Intention to return pilot Zasimoy,
On Oct. 25, 1976, the day before the
ychedriled return, U.S. Ambassador Richard
Helms in Teheran tried to reach the Shah to
determine whether the ruler might be will.
big to hold the Soviet pilot as possible trail.
ing bait for Mr. Shadrin. But the American
amba-acador didn't get through, and higher
authorities in Washington didn't try.
Hodding Carter, the State Department
spokesman, says "efforts will continue" to
retrieve Mr. Shadrin. "We are operating on
the assumption that he is stiff alive, but
frankly we don't know," he says.
Mr. Carter says that "official representa-
tions" on behalf of Mr. Shadrin "have been
carried out at various levels and have con-
veyed the seriousness of our concern." But
he declines to describe the U.S. efforts. "We
won't discuss our private communications
on the public record," he says. "We don't
believe this will serve the purpose of getting
Mr. Shadrin back,"
"Cases such as this are very sensitive
and sometimes drag on a long Ume," Mr.
Carter adds,
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~; ,--t - ? (?; t - - ; ~.~ . ~ ' o . (~ < ti ~+ ' r 7 1r
ti '~ ~ ~ .fn ~ C ,1 ,v-S} ~ .'._ ~,i i i ~ ? ;! s' ~ ~ f t'?.< ~ i ~1~, .~'i
soviet Union. Evidently accustomed to such mystery,
Louis replied that he would in principle. and we would
set a date In a later talk. A few days afterward. Louis
callvdi me from Helsinki, possibly to elude Soviet wire-
tappers. and asked if this was going to be "a wild goose
chase." I described the initiative as "important," and we
fixed a rendezvous, Helsinki cn Sept. 9.
Copaken recommended that we arrive in Helsinki a
day early in order to get a good night's sleep before the
next morning's conversations. As we took off, he ex-
1-acted from his briefcase a mathematical puzzle that.
he explained, was handmade by a wizard in Copen-
hagen. I persuaded him to qt it away and Instead fill
me in on the Shadrin case from the voluminous files he
carried.
A A T 10 THE NEXT morning, Louis was standing out-
side his hotel as Nye approached. "My room is proba-
bly bugged," he said, suggesting that a park might be
better, and he steered us to a landscaped area that ran
down the middle of a shopping street. We found an
empty bench and sat in the sunshine. I explained that I
had now finished my job, which was to bring them to-
Tether, but I would like to listen if they had no objec-
tions. They assented, and Copaken recounted the
Shadrin story, omitting the double agent part. He also
emphasized somewhat grossly that an election campaign
was coming in the United States and that the Incident, if
made public, could take on domestic political dimen-
5101LS.
Louis had kept silent through most of Copaken's brief-
ing, but now he had some comments and questions. In
the first place, he asserted, Copaken had been wasting
his time with the Vogel channel, as the Russians were
loath to meddle in Germany since former Chancellor
Willy Brandt had Improved relations with Moscow. Then
he went on to voice doubts about the entire Shadrin af-
fair. How do you know Shadrin was kidnaped? How do
you know he has not returnee- to the Soviet Union volun-
l Drily? Have you considered that he might have gone off
to Argentina to get away from his wife? Could he have
b,'cn picked up by the East Germans or Romanians?
"They do that sort of thing," Louis added rather disdain-
fully.
When Copaken implied, in answer to the first query,
that U.S. intelligence agents ktiew Shadrin was meeting
with two KGB operatives, I thought I heard Louis' brain
click. "It's inconceivable that the CIA would permit a
Soviet defector to meet two Russians in Vienna unless
something significant was Involved," he said. "Phis is
more than a simple affair of abduction."
I, IIE DISCUSSION dragged on through the day, as
we strolled across the park and lunched and dined,
and although I had felt sure at the start that Louis knew
nothing of the case beforehand, It was obvious that be
had quickly sized It up. When Copaken contemplated
various trading possibilities. Louis referred to the affair
of Kim Philby, the British agent who had secretly
worked for the Russians and finally retired In 11o'-.cow.-
-Put the shoe on the other foot," be said. "Imagine that
~
; .Y
~
44
jv ~t,ti? L
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Wife of Missing Double Agent Hopes for His Return
WASHINGTON, July 16 (UPI}-Nicho-
1z5 and Blanka Shadrin had an unusual
marriage.
- a
She spoke to him In Polish, he talked
to her in Russian and they understood
each other perfectly. Almost.
,
He was a sfp, she says, a doube agent sac later learned from the F.B.I.,, for a
for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, meeting with two Soviet intelligence
for nine of the 16 years they lived to. agents. Only after his dsappcarance, she
ge:her and she did not know it. said, did she learn he had been a double
Their romance started in Poland and
ficurished in America, until he disap-
peared in Vienna 18 months ago while
allegedly feeding false information to So-
viet secret police. thing happened, they [the F.B.I.] would
seized her husband, a naturaized Ameri-
can citizen, as a traitor. She rejects any
suggestion hi intrigues might have been
even more complicated and that he might
have been a Soviet tripe agent who re-
turned to his homeland at mission's end.
Waiting for His Return
Now, she is doing everything possible
to get back the man who gave up his
country and a Russian naval career to
marry her. "I'm waiting for him," she
said in an interview in their suburban
McLean, Va., home. "My intuition tells
me. I think he will come back."
S.' is sure he did not return to his
homeland voluntarily.
"He would be the last person in the
United States to go back to Russia," she
said. "Hhe had nothing there. He had
everything here."
R!-t Airs. Shadrin has lost patoence
Iwith the United States Government's
I diccrect effort-, to trace her husband, so
she is making her story public.
The State Departmert said that it was
doing everything possible, but its offi-
cials do not know what happened to Mr.
Shadrin. -
Mrs. Shadrin last saw her husband Dec.
20, 1975, when he left a Vienna hotel
as
"It was out of his character. Why did
he do it? He must have thought if some-
Mrs. Shadrin,'who has no children or
other relatives in America. is a dentist.
She met Mr. Shadrin-then named
Nikolai Artamonov-in 1958 when she
was 21 and he Asa a 30-year-old Soviet
Navy captain assigned to Poland. They
decided to defect when she finished den-
tal school. In 1959, they headed for Swe-
den in a 22-foot boat, stayed six weeks
and left for America.
Once United States officials were con-
vinced Mr. Arta,nonov was not a Russian
plant, they gave him a job analyzing
Soviet Laval publications. He changed
his name to Shadrin and earned a mas-
ter's degree in engineering and a doc-
torate in political science from George.
Washington University.
Unl!y P rs Irlerve.on.i
Blanks Shadrin at her home in
McLean, Va, on Friday. ,
After he disappeared, the F.B.I. told She said that she never suspected his
Mrs. Shadrin that Soviet agents had real intelligence role.
asked her husband in 1966 to work for' "He was a brilliant man,' absolutely
his homeland. He told the F.B.I. and : brilliant." she said, "He kne-,~' literature.
they made him a counterspy, ' he knew opera, he could sing any song.-
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TRANSLATION'
"Neues von Herrn G. "
(News About Mr. G.)
Stern, 4 August 1977, p. 3. para 1.
During the State visit between host Jimmy Carter and guest Helmut
Schmidt in Washington, not only military and human rights questions
were discussed, but also trade of a special kind between East and West:
The exchange of spies. The background: In December 1975, Soviet
KGB agents had lured the American CIA employee of Russian descent
Nicholas Shadrin into a trap in Vienna and kidnapped him. Through
an East Berlin lawyer Moscow offered the Americans a trade:
You get Shadrin back if your allies, the West Germans, release Guenter
Guillaume. Chancellor Schmidt bluntly refused and informed (West German)
Government spokesman Boelling: "Guillaume stays where he is".
20563
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Heft Nr. 33 im 30. Jshr
4. big 10. August 1917
Hettumfang. 140 Seitsn
Autlage: 1 970 S3E (11/1077)
Titelioto: Hand Feurer
19'7 STERN, sowed nid-t
enders angegeben.
Reproduklionen des Inhalts
ganz odor tellweise
nur mit achriftlicher Erlsubms
der Redaklion
77
TM M011
'111 M%arrm WO
Beim Staatsbesuch in Washington ging es
zwischen Gastgeber Jimmy Carter and Gast Helmut
Schmidt nicht nur um Militar- and Menschen-
rechtsfragen, sondern such um Handelsbeziehun-
gen besonderer Art zwischen Ost and West - um
den Austausch von Spionen. Der Hintergrund: So-
w j etische XGB-Agenten batten im Dezember 1975
in Wien den amerikanischen CIA-Mitarbeiter
russischer Herkunft Nicholas Shadrin in eine
Falle gelockt and entfiihrt. Durch einen Ost-
berliner Anwalt botMoskau denAmerikanern einen
Handel an: Ihr kriegt Shadrin zuriick, wenn
eure Verbiindeten, die Westdeutschen, den DDR-
Burger Gunter Guillaume freigeben. Kanz] er
Schmidt lehntebriisk ab and lieBRegierur,gsspre-
char Bolling mit-
r Gunter Guillaume
war wieder einmal in
_ _ ~~ Aon CnL,1 on?,ai 1 ~n
'DR-Splon
iunler Gulllaume
tlt Ex-SPD-
el:dt$ftafiihrer
olger BSmer
nd Ex-Kanzler
'Illy Brandt
halt die Leitung der Justizvollzugsanstalt
Rheinbach ihren prominent en Gefangenen ver-
steckt, wenn Journalisten zu Besuch koirmen.
Dann bolt Justizol rinspektor Gobel den
Haftling Guillaume us der. Anstaltsschreinerei
and schlieBt ihn in die ZTelle 173, Abteilung4,
Fliigel A ein. Auch ein Architekt, der Ver-
messungsarbeiten im`Knast nutzen wollte, um
heimlich Bilder von Gulllaume zu machen,
kam nicht zum SchuB - dem STERN dagegen gelang
es. Lesen Sie den Bericht *Rote Tulpen aus
Ostberline auf Seite 12
stern
and im Gespr'ich: Die
Amerikane* wollen
ihn haben, die
Sowjets, die DDR-
Machthabrar urid
natiirlich die Jour-
nalisten. Wo ist
er eigentlich, der
DDR-Top-Agent,.-
der sich in dais Ver-
trauen des ehema-
1igenBundeskanzlers
Willy Brandt ein-
geschlichen hatte?
Wie lebt der
1.'.eisterspion hinter
Gittern?
Damit des Geheimnis
^
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/7 Au 6t 7
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WIFE OF DOUBLE AGE
DISPUTES 'SOVIET ACCOU111'
Blanka Shadrin, who Is marled to 4.-,o
'
Russian-born ' double agent, 1\;chclas'o
Shadkin, said yesterday that she did nCi *
believe the explanation 4ive;t earlier tt;0
week by the K.G.B., tie Soviet int'jf: oi
Lence organization, (or the disapprar;,..nc,
of her husband in Vienna t;;,o y,ars c
According to excerpts from
documents and an inerviesv with, a-,,
K.G.B. agent published In the weekly U-
teraturnaya Gazeta in Moscow, Mr. Sha-
drip was killed by agents of the Central
Intelligence Agency after they learned
that he wanted to return home to the.
Soviet Union.
According to articles previously pub-t-
lished in the Western press, 11r. Shadrin
had been feeding doctored intelligence to
the K.G.B. at the direction of the F.B.L,
He disappeared, the accounts have said,
after a meeting with two Soviet agents
in Vienna, and is said to hzve been taken. -
to a Russian military prison. Mrs. Shadrin,
says that she believes these accounts
believes her husbar4 is still el ve.
?- .
{ Richard Copaken, a lawyer albs
working on the case, has said he ha.s
met with Soviet representatives to try
to arrange for I:tr. Shadrin's release, and.
that the Russians had indicated that they'-;
would exchange the double agent for a:"
Communist s?y who figured In the down i
fall of the West Ge;7ran Chancellor, Willy
Brandt, . .1
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.?,. 1 7 -7
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.20 AeKa5px. 1 ^ l i^. 0 n C. .r:. 1 111E CiVn Li
I~sses. "p
in h -F, cabin, lo::credt:.? cu.ter's r.t?:, 1 f .n.: ..irk with rv? . ki told nu
he now knew where we were; he n'wid he would to of to f;r.t sc,:,e fuel air,! iae would r' turn
to Cni;,'rna in the r.ornin'..... After :'_ta _onov l^ft two, civi?.ian3 care, up in a car. One
:,lieu "police" :"DI signaled to rr- to get: into the car. ~(vcrcl tines uttered tie aorri
"w..i;,ch" to r:n1:e hi:a sae that I was on watch a:i.: %lidn't v--ant to f;e any.; ^.?e. Then the
two of then twisted r..y arm up r;y back and pat :.wo !.nto t`n car. They took me to a build-
in;--police }u,:ldrk~-?rters, as it turned out. I c :::t r,dccl the right to phone the Soviet
Consulate. The chief said I couldn't phone t' a consulate at that. moment because eve:7-
boo;, tints a^lcep....
In the earning they too:: me to another police b.:1C,ing In the center of the city. I
saw AZ :arIo Ow' in the corridor.... lie told n . "rooks like you'll be Zoi back to
Cdynia alure; I'm stuck :tire." I took it ti--t, befrg an officer, Arta::.onov would be
held for a while, but. I told him 1 would wait if he wasn't goi^.g to be long.
Cl .,the eventug of the same day I was s in-orcd for questioning by the chief of police
t:lrou,h an interpreter--a tall, elderly .:-an, a iacssian emigree, abort 60.
I %r as asked whether I still : intaincd that Artanonov had bccorzi, lost and ended up In
Sweden accidentally. I said that we had Zone fishing and becat:.e lust, the storm having
affected our co_r ts>ses. The interpreter laughed raliciously and said that the storm
couldn't have affected the compasses.... He nicked up a ncwsrzper from the table and
:anslated for .?_ something that went rcuvhly as follcws: "A Soviet officer has quit
ids count_, and w flod to Sweden." r_,. re was a picture of our cutter. I said to the
interpreter: ':` do your pares print lies?" He said: "Perhaps it is the truth."
. IV
...Lt the end of the irterrcgatron the ir:.,.. ~~rp rr_?ter asked whether I wanted to stay
in Sweden. I told him I was a Soviet person, tern on soviet soil, and would continue
to live there; there was nothi for re in Sweden....
It was hinted several times at the interrogation that lstamonov would be staying In
Sweden, so I asked pr...ission to see hula. !',etc: the interro(,-tion I was taken below--
'.
.o Arta monov's cell. They did not let ere tall. to him alone.
A't^r..cnov asked v'.!* "Well Popov, why '- ve you co-r?" I told imam I had spoken on the
telcp'-One i? tira representative of the Soviet Consulate and that they would be co.atng
to a :rar at 2300. I expected l:rtar..onov to be delighted at this nears, but he Just
'u u : '1..~,l~t do I re f Pot
lo::errd his hi..d a.:i_tol_'' r:,.e? recd the consulate for ncsv pov? It
waitlrz for me la r`_...." An? he ?ointnd at the cell w.nal. I thought ire rear.`. the
r
"v-111" was th-at is, he zs tJ be slot. I told :ttao:onov t:nt
Swell~?
the Srl->nis:~ r,exs?,-r~er Y_'1 :e.icl that he would :!c ,.ta;!irg, in ~~. n, and I -Inked rim
,.-tilCr t.tim w::s true t'j bowed his hi ,ad an! .- =i d r.ot4Lirj.
wi.
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP89B00307R000300180001-2
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP89B00307R000300180001-2
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Sto--k`:o'.7, June
and
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, t'S a on Sunday
jrt"_c1 th',t a Jove affair ',)Ctueen a .,3-year-Old
It is rlP-o]ci car, -}I=iii girl led to ih^irarr
e lved' Itr(la1tcl ,ar:d 1 n.e r',ed in
1;eaut1:111 2~ J r~o? ,,a.,