IT'S MORE IMPORTANT TO BE FREE THAN GO BACK

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220010-3
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 9, 2012
Sequence Number: 
10
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 19, 1986
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OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220010-3 ARTICLE APP \RED ON PAGE cA INQUIRY ArkaO S6anking kA~ 55, the highest official to deject to the West, becomes a U.S. citizen Feb. 28. In April 1978, he walked power and prw tug asftansenr Soviet at the United Nations. He had worked for Foreign An" (~nmy and former Soviet leaders Nik to Khru- shchev and Leonid Bnezh- nev. Shevchenko was inter- viewed for USA TODAY by Lee Michael Batt Topic SOVIET DEFECTORS Arkady Shevchenko USA TODAY 19 February 1986 It's more important to be free than an back USA TODAY: You're about to become a U.S. citbun. Do you ever have second thoughts about leaving the life and prestige you had? SHEVCHENKO: I miss my country. There's no question about that But for now, I have a new country, and I don't think that anything will happen in the Soviet Union which can change my mind. I've never had any regrets. USA TODAY: What about your family? Your wife Lina died mysteriously a few weeks after you defected. And your son Gennady and daughter Anna - bow could you leave them? SHEVCHENKO: I didn't ac- tually leave them I gave my wife a full chance and Opportu- nity to make up her own mind and decision. I strongly believe that the Soviets eliminated her. Of course, I have regrets about what happened with my wife, USA TODAY: You were a dedicated communist. Did you fed like you had betrayed year come" by defecting? SHEV(HENKO: Yes, I did betray a regime, an elite. I lost all my beliefs in the system. tI have no feeling my country that the betrayed people. USA TODAY: Did the U.S. government botch two recent defection cases - Mirsulav Medvid, the Ukra la sallor Soviet who jumped omw spy VIW Yurchenko who defected then recanted? SHEVCHENKO: Partly. I cannot say that in my case. But I will be frank. I didn't like the idea that the FBI said I had to be in a safe house, new ap- pear in public, never write, never speak, never be a free man. The sailor's case Is a clear-cut indication there is Incidents wet embarrass the [3., `overo- ment on the eve of the Gene- va summit talb. Do you be- lieve that? SHEVCHENKO: No for the simple reason I don't think (So- viet leader Mikhail) Gorba- chev or the Sovernment want- ed to embarrass the president on the we of the summit. They were serious about the summit USA TODAY: Is it sere? sary for the USA and the U.S.S.R. to have talks? SHEVCHENKO: It's abso- lutely essential and inevitable. We live on the same earth. With absolutely no dialogue, a miscalculation could escalate into a major confrontation, leading to a catastrophe, to nu- clear war. Both we and Soviet style socialism would be buried in the same grave. USA TODAY: Would you fa- vor a return to the detente of the Nixon and Carter years? SHEVCHENKO No. I was with the Soviet government, and I knew what the Soviet Union under Brezhnev's lead- ership actually had in mind at that time. The Soviets gained a lot during the period. There was an enormous military buildup, and they increased their sphere of interest. USA TODAY: Do the Sovi- ets really want normalization of relations between the USA and the U.S.S.R.? SHEVCHENKO: On one hand, the Soviet leadership doesn't want any major con- frontation with the West and the USA in the near future be- cause of their preoccupation with domestic dilemmas. They want to improve the economy and to eliminate the growing gap in high technology be- tween the West and the Soviet Union. But in the long range, you have to understand that the final objectives and goals of the Soviet leadership never change. It is the same thing - that they will win in the histori- but I don't feel responsible for of command, it was really !fl cal competition with capital- her death. I OR haven't lost en- handled. The Yurchenko case ism, if not in this century, then ttrely the hope I can be reunit- will remain a mystery. in the next ed with my daughter. My son? USA TODAY: There Is a USA TODAY: Then the So- It will be a pain for me always, theory that Yurchenko was vlet Union plane to take over but he preferred to stay in the KGB all along, and that these the USA and the world even. Soviet Union. He told me in a letter I shouldn't bother him. something wrong in the chain o sa ership thtbat ink the a~specciific timetable and kind of a master plan of how to dominate the world. It's rather a philosophi- cal concept in which they be- lieve that capitalism contains elements of self-destruction. USA TODAY: Should what Nikita Khrushchev said at the United Nations - "We will bury you" - concern us? SHEVCHENKO: I was pre- sent when Nikita Khrushchev said that He was sorry he said it We were trained: "Don't tell about this revolution. Don't frighten them about bloody revolution and everything." USA TODAY: You briefed President Reagan before the Geneva sammlt. What did you tell him? SHEVCHENKO: Several things. One thing. which I've been saying for a long time, was that I have a strong belief now that the Soviet Union feels comfortable with its present military balance. It is really in- terested in arms control - there is more flexibility, which might even lead to more arms control agreements. USA TODAY: What else did you tell President Reagan? SHEVCHENKO: He wanted to know from someone who lived in the Soviet Union whether it's really true that the Soviet leaders believe in Marx- ism and Leninism or if that's just a cover for retaining pow- er. I assured him there are some who've lost belief. But the core - Gromyko, Gorba- chev - are true believers. USA TODAY: Do you think Gorbachev's call for bilateral disarmament by the year 2111 is serious? SHEVCHENKO: No. The So- viet Union has never been seri- ous about that. That is a utopi- an idea They will never trust us like we will never trust them. They will never trust an American president - Demo- crat or Republican. USA TODAY: How do the Russians view Reagan? SHEVCHENKO: Hatred mixed with respect - hatred Continued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220010-3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220010-3 because they cannot forgive the president two things: one, the strong effort at the begin- the administration to mmode~rnize the strategic foorce,, and secondly, Reagan was open and frank as far as the na- ture of the Soviet system. USA TODAY: Did Reagan seem to have a grasp of the intricacies of Soviet govern- ment? SHEVCHENKO: I think he did. I cannot say that he knew or even should know absolutely all the details of everything, but I think be has a very clear understanding of what be is talking about He Is equal if not superior to some of the Soviet leaders. He has an understand- ing of Soviet objectives and thinldnlL USA TODAY: Is Gorbachev different as a Soviet leader? SHEVCHENKO: He is a hardcore communist, a prod- uct of the Soviet system, a be- liever in the Soviet system. He has an acute sense that unless the Soviet economy is modern- ized, the tremendous technol- ogy gap with the West eliminat- ed, survival of the Soviet sys- tem will be at stake. It's not so much because he is concerned about the well4,efng of the So- viet people. He is concerned about the future of the system. We can expect a major effort to reallocate the resources in the Soviet Union from the mili- tary to the civilian sectors. USA TODAY: Last sum- mer, Edward J. Epstein, in the New Rep *114 called your book, Bre-dng With Moscow, "a fraud," and said that you "made up sources and even fabricated direct conversa- tions." SHEVCHENKO: There is only one year which I con- fused. And when you put the right year in, everything would be in its place. USA for tbe CIA? SHEV : No. I didn't feel that I was a sov. It was a secret cooperation with me CIA or the American men t, that's e. USA TODAY: Did You at p by the CIA? S _ [ ENKO: I have nev- er been on the Devroll?of the CIA. USA TODAY* N but the save you a year to ve H V NKO: Do You it to me snow i that mv hank am wouw 29& V~LMW and live wituout W of CIA The took was delayed for M and I was at the m. to sell my car and every USA TODAY: Wasn't your crediibiliitty ynd rm neddsb oral thousand dollars a mouth sup. porting a can girl who later wrote a book called Defec- tor's Mbar"* SHEVCHENKO: To a cer- tain degree, yes. But I think it was a usual exaggeration by the American press. They made it a sensational story. rm sorry it happened. But Fll be frank with you. I wanted a companion, a woman. I was in very bad shape. USA TODAY: Now you get ,Mil a speech, and you made S51N,N1 from the sale of film rights from your books. Have you adjusted well to the capitalist system? SHEVCHENKO: Of course, some of the things are a little bit exaggerated, I feel a suc- cess in the United States, and I like the system. My dream is to be absolutely financially se- cure in the nearest future, and then to join some solid, serious academic institution. USA TODAY: You live openly. Aren't you worried that the KGB will track you down and kill you? SHEV(HENKO: The KGB has a long memory and a long hand. My public profile is my defense. Anyway, rm ready to take all these risks because its more important for me to be free than to go back to the Sovi- et Union. TIMELINE: Arkady Sh vch nlco Arkady Shevchenko lives near Washington, D.C., with his second wife, Elaine. Oct. 11,1990: Born In the Ukraine, son of a physician. 1954: Graduated from Moscow State Institute of In- ternational Relations; later received a doctorate In inter- national law. 1956: Joined Soviet Foreign Ministry. 1958: Began participation in United Nations General Astem and disarmament negotiations in Geneva. 1963- 97th Served in the Soviet Mission to the United Nations in New York. 1970-1973: Personal adviser to Foreign Minister An- drei Gromyko; named Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleniip~oary , highest Soviet diplomatic rank. 1 T;tenti1978: As undersecretary, he headed U.N. Politi- cal and Security Council Affairs. Summer 1197& in would hayl to Q= MMBX of nrrAog for d*A CIA. April 111117M He defected; his wife returned to Russia and died under mysterious circumstances. F - 198& in am" Wfth Shevchenko Said he SOW for ths CIA more man At VMS Dom am IM, Scheduled to become a U.S. citizen. Sower. USA TODAY is w h Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000403220010-3