MEXICO CITY DEPICTED AS A SOVIET SPIES HAVEN

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000200810043-7
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
43
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 23, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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A D Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24 CIA-RDP90-00965R000200810043-7 ARTICLE APPEARED NEW YORK TIMES 23 June 1985 Mexico City Depicted as a Soviet Spies av The following article is based o1.1 re- here declined to be interviewed for this porting by Robert Lindsey and Joel article. Brinkley and was written by Mr. :Brink- Mexican Government officials de- ley. clined to offer official comment on Special to The Now Yak Timy MEXICO CITY, June 21 American officials say the Soviet Embassy here is increasingly being used to mount es- pionage operations against the United States and that it has become a major conduit for the illegal diversion of ad- vanced technology to the Communist world. Soviet intelligence officers "in es- sence have a safe haven here," John Gavin, the United States Ambassador to Mexico, said this week- A senior Mexican Government offi- cial acknowledged that there were es- pionage operations in Mexico City, but he defended Mexico's policy of permit- ting one of the largest overseas contin- gents of the Soviet intelligence and in- ternal security agency, the K.G.B., to operate here with virtual impunity. Mexico -an open Country' questions concerning the Soviet pres- ence here, although others were willing to discuss the matter if their names were not used. United States counterintelligence specialists estimate that at least 150 ?K:G.B. officers are working out of the ..Embassy under cover as diplomats, _.clerks, chauffeurs, journalists and in other jobs. Agents Teddeally Trained i ? Increasingly, these specialists say, .the K.G.B. officers assigned to Mexico City have technical training so they can manage Soviet efforts to steal Amer- ican military and industrial secrets, using not only American agents but also what Mr. Gavin called "dummy companies" set up in Mexico to buy ad- vanced American technology and then conceal its ultimate destination: the Soviet Union or- other Soviet bloc na- Mexico, he said, is "an open coun- As the United States begins trying to try" and any country is allowed to have improve its counterespionage capabil- as many diplomats stationed in Mexico ities in reaction to the Walker family city as it chooses. spy case, many American officials say they can not fully contain the problem New attention has been focused on Mexico City as a result of the arrest of John A. Walker Jr., who is accused of running an extensive spy ring for the Soviet Union. Agents searching Mr. Walker's home in Norfolk, Va., found receipts from a trip he apparently made to Mexico in 1975, and a senior American official said the Central Intelligence A en and the Federal Bureau of Invest .i a- uon were trying to determine what role the m Y might have p ayed in Mr. Walker's activities. far, the o cial sal , agents have found nothing conclusive. But they know that numerous Americans ac- cused of spying for the Russians have acknowledged using the Soviet Em- bassy here to meet their Soviet con- tacts. Diplomats at the Soviet Embassy as long as the Soviet Union maintains a large, unrestricted espionage opera- tion in Mexico City, less than 700 miles from the United States. American and Mexican officials say the Mexican Government allows Soviet agents to work here virtually without restraint as long as their target is the United States, not Mexico. Soviet secret agents have been active ip Mexico for much of this century. In 1810 Soviet assassins murdered Leon {rotsky, who had taken asylum in Mex- ico City three years earlier. Today the Soviet Embassy, an im- posing, wailed complex in the heart of the city, is watched closely by the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency and, to some extent, by the Federal Security Direc- torate, Mexico's secret police. Although the C.I.A. maintains a large station here, a senior American official said the C.I.A. officers cannot effectively monitor Soviet activities be. cause they are far outnumbered by ~ of the K.G.B. and other Eastern ocnations that maintain embsasiea here, including Cuba, East Germany. Bulgaria, Hungary, Rumania, Poland and Czechoslavokia. Intelligence offi- cers from those countries often work in concert with the K.G.B. U.S.-Mexico Cooperatiss i Under a longstanding cooperative ef- fort between the United States and Mexico, the Mexican authorities record calls to and from the Soviet Em- hamv. and transcriots of the conversa-, Lions are given to the C.I.A., according to sources in the Mexican Government. But American officials say they can- not rely entirely on cooperation from the Mexican authorities. After a recent scandal involving allegations of brib- ery and drug dealing in the Federal Se- curity Directorate, some senior Amer. Ican officials are worried that the di- rectorate has been penetrated by chef K.G.B. A senior Mexican official called that charge "preposterous." Mexico has fewer than 30 people sta- tioned at Its embassy in Moscow. But the Soviet Embassy here, with more than 300 people, is one of the largest Soviet diplomatic missions in the. world, even though Moscow has few of- ficial dealings with Mexico. Less than 1 percent of Mexican ex- ports are sold to the Soviet Union, and all the Soviet tourists who visit Mexico. in a year "would fit in this room,,. Mr. Gavin said in an interview in his office. A senior official of the Mexican In-' tenor Ministry, asked why he thought so many Russians were stationed here, answered simply, "Our neighbor." Russians Trained in Englbh Most Soviet officials sent here arrive' with more training in English than Spanisk and as they serve here, "their English improves while their Spanish does not," said David A. Phillips, a for- mer C.I.A. officer who was stationed here and later served as head of the agency's Latin America division. The Soviet officers "aren't interested at all in Mexico; they're interested in the U.S.," said Melvin Beck, another former C.I.A. officer who spent five years working undercover in Mexico c A senior Mexican Government offi- cial said that most if not all of the 10 or so Soviet journalists working hoe are K.G.B. agents, and Ambassador Gavin agreed. The Mexican official said the Soviet journalists never attended press conferences or called the Government for information. A few years ago the Soviet Govern. ment asked permission to build several new consulates along the Mexico- United States border, a request the Mexican Government denied after the United States "expressed the view that it wouldn't be helpful to us," a senior American State Department official said. The Mexicans did allow Moscow to build a consulate in Veracruz, a major port on Mexico's Gulf Coast. And now, American officials here say, the United CGnrI'wwe,1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000200810043-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000200810043-7 r States might have to open a consulate I in Veracruz, too, because of the in- creased K.G.B. activity there. Over the last several years numer- ous Americans accused of spying for the Soviet Union have admitted that they used the Soviet Embassy here to meet their Soviet contacts. Among them are these: 9James D. Harper Jr., sentenced to life in prison for espionage last year, sold numerous documents detailing classified research on the Minuteman intercontinental ballistic missile to Polish agents he met here and in other Mexican cities, among other places. 9Joseph G. Helmich Jr., who pleaded guilty to conspiring to all mili- tary secrets to the Soviet Union in 1981, passed sensitive military communica- tions data to Soviet agents he met in Mexico and Paris. 9Christopher J. Boyce and Andrew Daulton Lee admitted in 1977 that they had sold thousands of documents per- taming to secret American surveil- lance satellites to K.G.B. agents at the embassy here over nearly two years. United States officials said the K.G.B. sent a specially trained agent, Boris Skaggs, to assess the technical docu- ments Mr. Lee sold him. Walker Tied to Embassy Federal officials are also saying that Mr. Walker, the former Navy officer, apparently met with his Soviet coo- tacts here, too. In searching Mr. Walk- er's home, Federal agents said they found a copy of a book about Mr. Boyce and Mr. Lee, "The Falcon and the Snowman." Officials said a bookmark had been placed between two pages that describe a 1975 meeting in Mexico City between a Soviet diplomat and one of the Californians. That meeting came seven days after the date reportedly stamped on Mr. Walker's receipts. "We've gotten to the point where there have now been so many docu- mented cases that there can be no doubt that the Soviets we Mexico as the place for international espionage, ' Mr. Phillips said. "As much as any place in the world it has access, cover - all the basic things you need." Officials said Ambassador Gavin had discussed the espionage problem more than once with William J. Casey, Di- rector of Central Intelligence. A former senior C.I.A. official said, "There has been a lot of dialogue an this through various Administrations." But Mr. Gavin and others said the Rea- gan Administration has several new concerns. Foremost among them, Mr. Gavin said, is that Soviet agents have begun using their embassy here for smug- gling advanced American technology to the Soviet Union. Using Cuban agents in some cases, Mr. Gavin said, the Soviet Union has, set up "dummy companies, an ex- tremely clever and useful tool" for pur-, chasing American computers, micro-' chips and other items for illegal reship- ment to the Soviet Union. Two years ago the United States Cus- toms Service said it seized a multispec- tral scanner, a device used in making highly refined images of the earth from satellites, being smuggled to the Soviet Union through Mexico City. in addition, American intelligence officials say "illegal" Soviet agents. spies who slip into the United States un noticed and live as if they were Amer- ican citizens, use the embassy here as a refuge and transit point. American intelligence officials say K.G B. officers stationed here also try to recruit American diplomats, resi- dents and visitors as Soviet spies. In one example, a former C.I.A. sta- tion chief in Mexico City recalled that several years ago the C.I.A. asked the United States Marines stationed here to end their Friday night parties at a local bar because several K.G.B. agents began showing up every week, trying to overhear the Marines' conver- sations and recruit them as spies. The C.I.A. has mounted numerous counterintelligence operations against the K.G.B. here, often with some help from Mexican security forces. Once it managed to plant listening devices in the K.G.B. station chiefs apartment for a year, a former C.I.A. official said. On another occasion a C.I.A.-agent hired a Mexican prosti- tute, hoping she could be used to com- promise a Soviet Embassy communi- cations clerk. It is unclear what re- sulted from the latter effort. The C.I.A. has tapped the embassy's phone lines, photographed people en- tering and leaving it, paid travel agents to report Soviet diplomats' travel schedules, interviewed the Russians' doctors and dentists, and at one point several years ago the agency paid de? livery boys to report on what they saw while bringing supplies to the embassy, intelligence sources said. Despite all that and more, "It is im- possible to have blanket coverage of what goes on in that embassy," Mr. Beck said. Effectiveness Questioned American spies traveling here to Mr. Lee, the American convicted of selling satellite secrets, admitted en- tering the embassy several times In daylight. But Federal prosecutors said no United States agents had identified him until he was arrested by the Mexi- can authorities on another charge. Mr. Beck said the listening devices planted in the apartment of the K.G.B. station chief produced little if any use- ful informaion; C.I.A. officials learned how Russians "toilet-train their chil- dren" along with other details of their personal lives, he said. But the fundamental problem, Amer- ican officials say, is the Mexican ac- quiescence in the Soviet spying. A senior Mexican Government offi- cial acknowldged that his Government does "tolerate" the Soviet spying, al- though "we don't condone it." The Interior Ministry official said, "We have a very clear idea of what our long-range strategic interests are, and they are not with the Soviet Union." At the same time, however, Mexican and American officials say anti-American- ism is such a central part of Mexican political fife that the Mexicans tolerate the Soviet espionage precisely because it irritates the United States. Mexico has long had cordial relations with the Soviet Union. Last fall Mexico and the Soviet Union celebrated the 80th year of diplomatic relations. Mex- ico even printed a commemorative stamp. The use of Mexico as an intelligence base has a long history, too. Mr. Phil- lips noted that the Soviet Union's first ambassador to Mexico in the 1920's was "Russia's chief officer in charge of in- telligence." Mexican and American officials also said the Mexican Government now be- lieves that because Mexico tolerates the large Soviet and Cuban presence, the Communist countries will not inter- Jere in Mexican affairs. American officials say Mexico could ask the Soviet Union to maintain an embassy no larger than is actually needed for Its diplomatic mission in meet their Soviet contacts stand "little if any chance of being caught," a senior F.B.I. official acknowledged in recent Congressional testimony. One reason is that the C.I.A.'s coun- terintelligence tactics have not always been effective here, several officials said. For many years the agency photo- graphed everyone coming and going at the Soviet Embassy, hoping to spot American spies. The agency photo- graphed Lee Harvey Oswald entering the embassy in 1963, a few weeks be- fore the assassination of President Kennedy. The photography was limited in the Carter Administration, intelligence sources said. It is unclear whether it has been resumed now, but this week the managers of several buildings sur. rounding the embassy said Soviet offi- cers had asked them not to allow photographers in. Mexico. But the United States has never asked the Mexicans to order the Soviet Union to reduce its embassy staff here, and Helms, former Director of Central Intelligence, said that would be coun- terproductive because "the Soviets would then ask the Mexicans to order us to reduce the size of our embassy, and you'd just end up with hash." Protests by Mexico Feared one reason the Central Intelligence Agency does not substantially increase its staff here is fear that the Mexicans might protest, a senior American offi- cial said. In part because of the shortage of American intelligence officers here, ....t~p~ great officers stationed at the United States use of was so it was impossible to analyze all of them. And , Embassy to help track Soviet agents by Mr. Phillips said it was "possible but not likely" that the C.I.A. could iden- tify Americans working for the Soviets if they were photographed entering the embassy. automobile with a diplomatic license plate bearing the prefix "DC," identi- fying it as a Soviet Embassy vehicle. But in the end, several American of- ficials said, they did not expect the Soviet Union to reduce its espionage ac- tivities here any time soon. "Until the Mexicans feel threatened" by the Soviet Union, one senior Amer- ican official said, there is little chance "that the problem will be lessened." A. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000200810043-7