SOVIET DEFECTOR DEFENDS BOOK AGAINST CRITICISM

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000301860009-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 15, 2012
Sequence Number: 
9
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 1, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000301860009-8.pdf86.7 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/11/15 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000301860009-8 STAT -.CLE AP u NEW YORK TIMES )1?1 PAGE 1 August 1985 Soviet Defector Defends Book Against Criticism By EDWIN MeDOWELL Special to The NIT York Times WASHINGTON, July 31? Break- ing a monthlong silence, Aricady N. Shevchenko, the highest-ranking Soviet official to defect to the West, today denied allegations that his best- selling book is exaggerated, embel- lished or inaccurate. The book. "Breaking With Mos- cow," has been on the best seller list for 22 weeks. But an article by Ed- ward Jay Epstein in The New Repub- lic magazine earlier this month charged that Mr. Shevchenko, who defected in 1978, made up important parts of the book with the apparent complicity of the Central Intelligence Ageoga...The article also sought to cast doubt on Mr. Shevchenko's claim that he spied for the United States beginning in 1975, while he was Under Secretary General and the ranking Soviet diplomat at the United Na- tions. During an hourlong news confer- ence at the ?rational Press Club this morning, Mr. Shevchenko described Mr. Epstein's charges as "unwar- ranted attacks" and "plain false- hoods." If his book is a fraud, he said, "then two Presidents of the United States are frauds, both Carter and Reagan, who knew about my story, and the several National Security ad- visers also are frauds." A number of high-ranldpg United. States officials have said that Mr. Shevchenko's book is essentially cor- rect. These Include Senator Daniel Patrick Maynahan, Democrat of New York, who had been chairman of the Senate Intelligence mmittee, and Stens-field Turnerwas Di- rector of central Intafle frini 1977 to 1981. Blames Faulty Memory But Mr. Epstein's article cited a number of apparent inconsistencies in Mr. Shevchenko's account, several of which the former Soviet diplomat today blamed on a faulty memory. "Human memory is not a perfect instrument," Mr. Shevchenko said. "I'm amazed that I didn't make more mistakes than I already did." He de- scribed the errors as minor. The most important of them was in describing at length a 1978 dinner party at the apartment of Boris Solomatin, the head of the K.G.B. in New York, at which they and Georgi A. Arbatov, the Soviet authority on the United States, supposedly dis- cussed President Ford's chances of winning re-election ? discussions that Mr. Shevchenko said be relayed to the American cue offtcers., In his article, Mr. Epstein wrote that Mr. Solomatin had returned to the Soviet Union in July 1975, six months before Mr. Shevchenko began his alleged spying for the United States. Today, Mr. Sheychenko said that he may have been wrong about the date. "I think that it happened a few months before" the date cited in the book, be said. But he insisted that the dinner and the dinner conversa- tion were accurate. Mr. Epstein, said today that Mr. Shevchenko's explanation still does little to inspire confidence in the ac- count in his book. "I don't doubt that be met Arbatov or Solomatin," Mr. Epstein said. "The question is did be meet with them the way he describes it. In the book, be tells of relaying information about that meeting to the U.S. If the =Wag took place before July 1975, it was Wwe he supposedly made con- tact with the C.I.A. and the F.B.I. If it was after Mc Solomatin wasn't even in the U.S. Either way, the ac- count is fictionalized." Mr. Sheychenko, dressed in a dark suit, yellow shirt and red checked tie, said that he waited until now to re- spond to the article because he was out of Washington much of the time and because he had not wanted to re- spond at all. But, he said, "when it's been snowballing, I felt that I had to react." In answer to a question, he ac- knowledged that he had not been out of the country on vacation late in June, shortly before Mr. Epstein's ar- ticle appeared, as his editor and law- yer had said he was. Mr. Shevchenko denied any C.I.A. involvement with the book, except to help him find transIrs vffilen he bugaziating_m_garker _virfoin in Russian. He said he assured the aitenc?TrThat he would not reveal the names of its officials, but the agency did not help him write the book, did not see it before it was published and did not particularly like the portrait that he painted of the agency in the book. ?XI-though Mr. Shevchenko said he could not speculate on Mr. Epstein's motives in attacking his book, he said that Soviet officials "have been work- ing here in the United States to com- promise me." He said he was told that some Soviet officials were talk- ing to Congressional assistants and journalists, presumably to under- mine his veracity. Goar - Saniti7ed CODV Approved for Release 2012/11/15: CIA-RDP90-00965R000301860009-8