U.S. MARINE GUARDS LEADING LONELY, ISOLATED LIFE IN SOVIET

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630002-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 7, 2011
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 29, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630002-1.pdf106.94 KB
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, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/07: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630002-1 STAT ONPAGE NEW YORK TIMES 29 March 1987 U. S. Marine Guards Leading Lonely, Isolated Life in Soviet ' By PHILIP TAUBMAN Special to The New York Times MOSCOW, March 28 - A United States Embassy guard, shaken by re- ports that two of his fellow marines helped Soviet agents infiltrate the em- bassy last year, turned to a diplomat on Friday and said, "Everyone is going to think we are a bunch of Communists." The remark, as recounted by the dip- lomat, reflected a mixture of anger and depression among the 29-man Marine security contingent at the embassy. The allegations that two Marine guards allowed Soviet agents to inspect sensitive areas of the embassy, has thrown a spotlight on the marines and prompted questions about whether they are particularly- vulnerable to Soviet influence. Least Prepared for Soviet Stay Security procedures at the embassy were tightened this week to prevent a recurrence of the breaches, American diplomats said. They said that em- bassy staff members were assigned to watch sensitive areas at night to sup- plement the marines. Of all the Americans here - diplo- mats, military officers, business execu- tives, journalists, students and scholars - the marines seem least pre- pared for their stay in the Soviet Union. They are generally in their early 20's, unversed in Russian and unfamiliar with the nation's culture. Unlike most Americans, who at least try to interact with Soviet society, the marines focus exclusively on embassy affairs. They are discouraged from mixing with Russians, instructed to travel in pairs and obliged to turn for entertain- ment to the English-speaking com- munity. While most seem to adjust and make the best of their circumscribed world, some become bored and lonely, devel- oping a tendency - for sheer excite- ment, if nothing else - to deal with the very world they are told to avoid That is apparently what happened in the spy case, where one marine, Sgt. Clayton J. Lone was reportedly se- duced by a woman who was a Soviet agent engaged in custodial work at the embassy. The marines guard the embassy's main entrance and the ninth floor with its sensitive areas, patrolling the grounds and serving as firefighters. The unit is headed by a gunnery ser- geant, who reports to the civilian se- curity officer at the embassy. Other Western embassies use experi- enced security forces, often drawn from the ranks of intelligence services, and consider the American system less reliable. "No one has all the answers, but it in- vites trouble to turn over security to a group of young men who are more suited for combat than for guard duty," a Western European diplomat said. The marines, while not mixing so- cially with senior diplomats, seem well integrated into the younger community of diplomats and students. Their social world revolves around a cluster of Western, includ- ing "Uncle Sam's,an informal bar and discotheque set up evenings in the embassy snack bar, similar operations at other embassies and, on Saturday nights, the foreign currency bar and discotheque at the Cosmos Hotel. For female companionship, they turn mainly to "nannies," a British term used here for young foreign women who are employed by Western resi- dents to take care of their children. Since last fall, the marines have been housed in a barracks in a new embassy compound, and have access to recrea- tional areas in the compound, including an indoor pool, gymnasium and bowl- Sgt. Clayton J. Lonetree, a former guard at the American Embassy in Moscow, who has been charged with espionage. ing alley. The espionage case is not the cal trouble to strike the Marine contingent. American diplomats said that four ma-4 rines were sent home this year after they became involved in trading money on the black market In a sepa- rate case, two marines were with- drawn when a Western woman said they had raped her. Several nannies said that Marine parties often turned wild and that the were frightened at times by the aggres- sive behavior of the Americans. Diplomats who knew Sergeant Lone- tree described him as an isolated fig- ure who never seemed comfortable the embassy. They said the man arrested as his ac complice, Cpl. Arnold Bracy, was friendly with many members of the American community and displayed curiosity about Soviet life, sometimes joining other Americans for dinner at restaurants. "Arnold was one of the first marines here who ever wore a Russian fur hat," a friend recalled. A British nanny said that Marine drills had increased and that access to the embassy was restricted for a period on Friday evening as the ma- rines conducted a security exercise. "There are not any Marine parties this weekend," she said. "It is pretty quiet over there." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/07: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630002-1