THE SPY WHO CAME IN TO BE SOLD

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706270003-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 2, 2011
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 15, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706270003-0.pdf91.24 KB
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Sl Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/02 :CIA-RDP90 STAT 11RTICI+R;~ pp p~GB NEW REPUBLIC 15 ~ 22 July 1985 The invention of Arkady Shevchenko, supe THE Sr~r WHO CAME IN To BE S BY EDWARD jAY EPSTEIN ARKADY SHEVCHENKO, the under secretary general who mysterious- ly defected from his post in the United Nations Secretariat some seven years ago, reemerged in February on CBS's 60 Minutes in a new role: a Le Carman supermole. While ostensibly working as a United Nations bureaucrat, he was, the report revealed, the CIA's most suc- cessful spy. "Nothing like it had ever before occurred," it was authoritatively reported. For the quality of his access to Soviet state secrets, he was compared to "Al Haig, when he was deputy to Hen- ry Kissinger." The broadcast further disclosed that this espionage coup had been such an extraordinarily closely held secret that no more than five men-including the president of the United States-had known about it. Shevchenko was portrayed equally graphically the next morning on the cover of Time magazine, which featured a gaping man-size hole in the brick wall of the Kremlin. In the dramatic breach, below an exposed red hammer and sickle, the cover line read: "A Defector's Story: The highest-ranking Soviet diplo- mat to break with Moscow since World War II describes the Kremlin's inner Breaking with Moscow by Arkady N. Shevchenko (Knopf, 378 pp., $18.95) workings." The special section inside was condensed from Shevchenko's book Breaking With Moscow, and imagi- natively illustrated with artist's render- ings of his espionage career. It was, according to Time, "far more than atrue-life spy story...." Time's executive editor described it as "win- dows on history." To further enhance its credibility, Strobe Talbott, Time's Washington bureau chief, noted on the publisher's page: "Those of us working on the project thought it important to verify the bona fides of the author and, as far as it was possible, his story." The lead paragraph began dramatically with Shevchenko's disappearance from the U. N. on "Friday, April 6, 1978." (In fact, Friday that year fell on April 7.) With this bold send-off, the film rights were quickly sold for ahalf-million dol- lars, and the book itself rose to the top of the best-seller lists. It was not always, however, such a success story. Originally Shevchenko's value as a source of reliable information was much more modestly appraised. In October 1978-after Shevchenko was filmed by NBC News in a Washington restaurant with a call girl named Judy Chavez, to whom he had paid most of the 560,000 that he received from the CIA as his anriuity-Time reported that "the CIA has been relatively lax with Shevchenko because he has been far less valuable as an intelligence source than had been anticipated." The maga- zine concluded, based on its intelli- gence sources, that "he had little knowledge of the inner workings of current Soviet policies or intelligence operations." This assessment was shared in the in- telligence community-at least in 1979. For example, analysts at the Defense In- telligence Agency, with full access to the "take" from what Shevchenko had told his FBI and CIA interrogators, con- cluded that the defector had nothing of value to offer American intelligence, aside from some dated biographical ma- terial. Book publishers, moreover, were similarly disappointed. In the summer of 1978 Simon and Schuster signed a 5600,000 contract with Shevchenko, who was then repre- sented by Morton Jank- low, for a book tenta- tively titled From Captivity into Freedom. When the manuscript finally was submitted in ole. OLDI 1979, Richard Snyder, the head of Simon and Schuster, and Michael Korda, the editor-in- chief, concluded that it did not contain suffi- cient new material about the Soviet Union to merit its publication. There were no revela- tory firsthand conversa- tions with Soviet lead- ers-and no mention of any espionage activities by him. In addition to rejecting the book, Si- mon and Schuster suc- cessfully sued Shev- chenko for the 5146,875 it had actually advanced him. Even with 5600,000 at stake, however, he was not willing to claim he was a mole. When he was deposed by Simon and Schuster's lawyers in December 1980, he still steadfastly main- tained that he had accu- rately described his defection in his chapter "Decision to Defect," which made no mention of any espionage ac- tivities on his part. The book was sent next to the Read- er's Digest Press. Steven Frimmer, the editor-in-chief, also concluded that it lacked both substance about the work- ings of the Soviet system and personal vignettes. Before rejecting it, however, Henry Hurt, the star investigative re- porter of Reader's Digest, intensively in- terviewed Shevchenko for some 20 hours to ascertain whether Shevchenko could add, possibly with his collabora- Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/02 :CIA-RDP90-009658000706270003-0