WIFE OF SOVIET DEFECTOR SAYS THE C.I.A. MAY HAVE CAUSED HIS DEATH

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00901R000600320003-7
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RIPPUB
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K
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7
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December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 9, 2005
Sequence Number: 
3
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Publication Date: 
May 25, 1978
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NSPR
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/ TI Ci:-E A??E.,v roved For Release' 5A /lyokp, IA R91-00901 R0006 Oil FAGEA / P- , 25 May 1978 By NICHOLAS M. HORROCK spechi to rap-New YO& 73mer WASHINGTON, May 24-The wife of a Soviet defector has asked President "Carter and the Senate Intelligence Com- rY,tttee to investigate disclosures-.that' have led her 'to suspect that her hus-1 :`band's life may have been needlessly sac-1 rificed by the Central Intelligence, Agency in a counterintelligence operaton.. -..;.. letters prepared by her lawyer and sent to Senator Birch Bayh, the.-Indiana Democrat who heads the intelligence committee. and President Carter, - Eva, 'Shadrin, the defector's wife,: said that. in, the two and a: halt 3?ears since her hus- aiid disappeared in Vienna she had. information that contradicted offi- ge6n and the White House. Mrs Shadrin says that she has recently received information that indicates.- the C.I.A. may have used her husband to help solidify the position of a Soviet agent in the Soviet intelligence service despite the fact it strongly suspected the Russian was an agent provocateur. If this is true, she said in an interview, this would have-been a needless and cyni-I cal use of her husband's life. Mrs. Sha drin, who has been trying to find out' what happened to her husband since his disappearance, told `officials of both the C.I.A. and F.B.I. about the information, through her lawyer in April. She was advised that the two agencies had told. her- all they could under national security regiiilatios and that they did not know! what?ha!d happened to Mr. Shadrin. >In, her letter to Mr. Carter, she renewed' herappeal for an audience and entreated him to 'help her find her husband or the. truth about his fate. The request -for an investigation basil brought renewed attention here to -the-) murky world of defectors and double' agents. .Nicholas G. 'Shadrin Is the Americanj name of Nikolai F. Artamanov command- er of a Soviet Navy destroyer who defect edto the United States in 1959. Mr. Sha- drirf disappeared in Vienna on Dec. 20, 1975, ostensibly while on the way to: Contradictions Are Noted M ..: F Mrs. Shadrin, who accompanied her: husband on the Vienna trip, said she was:, told later by the F.B.I., the. C.I.A. and the White. House that at.the time of his, disappearance her husband was serving as a "double agent"- for the F.B.I. and' the C.I.A. She said._that the agencies had -told her that he had become a double agent in 1966 after he reported-that members of the K.G.B.; the Soviet intelligence sere ice, had tried .to recruit; him .while- h was living here and worl4rig -as it. core lilt ant 'for the Defense Intelligence Agency. But Mrs. Shadrin .and her lawyer. Rich- ard D. COpaken, said that new infarma; lion, in press reports and from sources$ they had interviewed, sharply contradict ed this.version. Mrs. Shadrin said that she believed that her husband might have been sacrificed to aid the C.I.A. in its dealings with a Soviet official named Igor, who first ap- proached the agency by calling the home of its director in May 1966 and offering his services to penetrate the K.G.B. He' held out the promise that he could be the C.I.A.'s man in the higher echelons of the Soviet intelligence service. Part of the story of. Igor was published two weeks ago in Time magazine and independently confirmed by The New York Times. According to. former intelligence offi- cers, one of the tidbits Igor offered to get the relationship under way was the; charge that a longtime Soviet operative for-the C.I.A. code-named Sasha was in i fa.cl`;a K.G.B. plant. By this time Sashai had been brought. back from. foreign as- signment and was living in Virginia under the name Alexander Orlov Igor told his C.I.A. contacts that to) prove his. value to his superiors and t obtain a permanent- at.. the Soviet Embassy here, he needed to recrui Mr. Shadrin as a double agent. Mrs.. Shadrin and her lawyer said they believed - that this was the real. reason that in dune 1966 Adm. Rufus W: Taylor, then Deputy Director of Central Intelli- gence, urged' Mr...Shadrin to take air: the risky assignment. They charged that: the next nine years, during which. Mr. Sha- drip kept..in contact with Soviet agents at the instruction of the CJ.A. and F.B.I., were a waste because- the Americi}n"a thorities had strong suspicions that Igor" that C.I.A. and F.B.I. officials were deeply skeptical of Igor's "bona fides," the infor-I Approved legitimacy of defectors and penetration! agents. control on two trips to Vienna, one in " ` Several preseiit'and former intelligence officers told The Times that the publica- tion of Igor's name and the details of his case endangered "hislifeand others," as one source put It, and was detrimental, to United States security. . _ . , I Yet _ the Russians',.themselves seem: aware of many. of 'the:. contradictions ini tjte' Shadrin story On Aug. 17?'1977, in response to the first press report her about. Mr. ? Shadrin's plight,awvell-known Soviet journalist, Genrikh Borovilt,'.pub- lished the Soviet side of the story in an article; in Literaturnaya Gazeta, a weekly] newspaper. The article.-was unusual in that It. Is rare for Soviet publications to discuss their intelligence operations: or refer to K.G.B. files. Mr- Borovii_ _ uses as the pseudonym for the K.G.B.'.,agent: in- the article the name Igor ; Aleksandrovieh Orlov. This seems to couple .the Igor of the telephone call with. the named. used by the agent called Sashes since-Sasha is` a short form for Aleksandr. C.I.A. Complicity Suggested .- The 'article suggests that. instead o .Soviet agents capturing Mr. Shadrin; the C.I.A. may have had complicity in his disappearance to= avoid the embarrass meat of his returning to the Soviet Uniott and publicly denouncing C.I.A. methods: Mrs, _Shadrin said_thaL thelgor matter was not the only contradiction-she -had found between her own investigations and the official 'information given her. She said that when she accompanied Mr. Shadrin in his flight from Poland in, 1959, she believed that his defection was an imprcniptu act to permit them to mary -and live in the-Westr - A She said she had now received-infol~ mation that her, husband wasinfactre ccruited for the C.I.A. by Indonesiarrilavy officers whn wt- ~ being traiged by Mr. -Shad?ih 'aiid.-others at the Pom Poo of Gdynia. In ner letter'-to the-Senatecorhri ittee, she saidthis factor placed a whole new complexion on her -husband's decision :1966 to work as a double agent and sue Bested that he, had littlechoice: but., to take on the assignment.. - There is no firm indicaatiorr of Mr. Sha drin's fate since his disappearance.-The -C.I.A:? has -said it'bekeves. that. h -was .killed or kidnapped bythe K.G.B - The If the American intelligence servicesi doubted Igor,.- Mrs..- Shadrin said in an. For ReleasfW;4ffa:M?000600320003-7 .f C01ITIT Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R0 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE 42-48 abi M NEW YORK 8 May 1978 ". :. Shadrin disappeared after United Ste. lessly thrust him into the role of double age It was through a stunning succession of blunders, carelessness, and inexcus. able acts of intelligence greed span- ning a sixteen-year period that the United States lost its most valuable Russian military defector. The missing man is believed to be either dead or incarcerated in the Soviet Union. There are still questions which prob- ably never will be satisfactorily an- swered, but all indications are that the man known as Nicholas George Shadrin was kidnapped by the Soviets through the fault. of American intelli- gence agencies. There is little reason to believe that he redefected voluntarily, that he was. killed by the CIA (as the Russians have insinuated), or that, tired of being a pawn for both sides, he decided to create a new life for himself somewhere in the world. Shadrin disappeared . in Vienna in December 1975, after United States intelligence had senselessly -thrust him into the immensely dangerous role of a double agent working with the KGB, the Soviet secret service. He vanished under circumstances that make it clear that he was cruelly used by his su- periors as bait for the Russians. Spies, after all, are expendable when they become a problem. That Shadrin, a gregarious, intelli- gent, onetime Soviet Baltic-fleet de- stroyer commander, was recruited by the CIA in 1959, and had not simply fled to the 'Vest to marry the woman he loved--as alleged at the time by him and the United States government-- It'explains why he agreed to serve as a double agent under extremely bi- zarre and controversial conditions, and it may also help to explain the strange behavior, after his disappearance, of two succeeding administrations, their unwillingness to open secret intelli- gence files on him to his wife and her lawyer in their search for the truth, and the glaring inconsistencies encountered during a private investigation of the Shadrin case. Defectors. are one of the most sensi- tive subjects in -intelligence operations, after all, and neither the administration on the highest level nor. senior intel- ligence officers are prepared to discuss rer %iua .ry.......-....-- -- - - ----- t chant-marine captain). It was a point C less deception, because he, testified as, Artamonov in an open session of the House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities in September 1960, and the audience included a Soviet diplomat busily taking notes. Afterward, no ef- fort was made to conceal his real iden- tity, and Shadrin was the nearest thing to a public figure in intelligence circles. This was the first major blunder and led to all the others. Nobody, it seems, wishes to delve. into intelligence secrets that could cause considerable embarrassment -to various theories surrounding the Shad- -. the United States. Full disclosure could, I rin case. (This reluctance was further for example, highlight the sixteen years enhanced by the defection last month of Arkady N. Shevchenko, the Soviet diplomat who served as undersecre- tary general of the United Nations in New York. Shevchenko is the greatest diplomatic intelligence prize ever won by the United States.) At first, Shadrin was worth his weight in gold to the United States. At the time when the Soviet Union launched a major buildup of its navy, the information brought by Shadrin was crucial to the United States Navy. After he outlived his usefulness, how- ever, he was transformed into a double agent to satisfy the insatiable appetite of American intelligence. If it were not for this greed, Shadrin would be living tranquilly in the United States today, like other Soviet defectors. His name originally was Nikolai of blunders surrounding Shadrin's ac- tivities in this country and abroad, methods employed .by American intel- ligence, and conflicts involving the CIA, the FBI, and the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency. Shadrin was not a run-of-the-mill spy or defector: He had high-level ac- quaintances and friendships in Ameri- can intelligence, which made him a vulnerable figure. One friend was Admiral Rufus L. Taylor. who, as director of naval intel- ligence, was his boss during the time the Russian ex-officer served as a spe- cial consultant to the navy. And Ad- miral Stansfield Turner, for example, 11 got to know Shadrin sufficiently well to write him "Dear Nick" letters (Shad- I tin had lectured at the Naval War Col- Mystery men- CIA fires yielded these pho- 1 . now, and it she ~yd a 1~ ar qz~ Mares R Agems t31eg Korlov (left) 011 Mal on his covert relatio s with the Ameri- after his arrival to the ni eQ iryshe~u (center), possebly can intelligence establishment. he changed it to Shadrin--after the hero the last men to see Shadrin (right) alive. I was a closely, guarded secret, until \jASfi l;;(;rc,? PC ST Approved For Release 2Oi5/12/14 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0 p The documents, about 800 pages gat- =luence to get a CIA agent admitted ___ ing from the late 1950s through 1977 to Berkeley's political science gradu- CIA. In the summer of 1966. Inter- ' ate school. Apparently, the agent's views also established the names of have been released under the- Free- only interest was. to pursue academic several professors referred to in the dom of Information Act and made studies. documents. ,::.: available to the Los Angeles Times. Vice.Adm. Rufus B. Taylor, former They cover a wide range of coopera- The Freedom of Information re- uty director of the CIA confirmed de , p quest on the,CIA's relations with the - Live activities conducted between the q university, several of its nine cam- University of California was origi- .+Bolton's service, saying he was brought in because of his expertise ecords Shwv.CLz1.,: of California Reldizons By Narda Zacchino ? A series of CIA-sponsored semi- and Robert Scheer nars in Berkeley and other locations Loa Angeles Times with professors thought to be friendly LOS ANGELES-A long history of to the agency, to share information. contacts between the Central Intelli? ? Providing a steady flow of CIA lug documents under the Freedom of 1 gents Agency and the University vice , materials on China and the Soviet Un- Information Act, the names of princi- pre s California-highlighted by a UI; vice ion to CIA-approved professors. pal parties are blanked out. An inves- presi dent's tour of duty with the CIA ? At least one instance in which a tigation by the Times determined that during the height of student unrest- it was former administrative 'vice is revealed in documents released by CIA staff person asked a Berkeley po- president Earl Clinton Bolton who rofessor to use his in_' the CIA. ?- litical science pules and the intelligence .,agency; nally filed in May 1978 by Nathan including- ..:. Gardels, a political science student in administrative matters invalvin'g ? The UC vice president's two-week and UCLA research assistant. The re- the knowledge of student affairs. quest was endorsed by a number of University officials expressed con _ tour with the CIA during which he ad- wised the agency on such matters as UC's student and staff groups. earn over the documents relating to student unrest, recruiting UC stu- But the CIA has released only a the role of Bolton, who used Univer dents, academic cover for professors' . portion of the documents, and the pri- city of California letterhead station- doing research for the CIA and im- vate Center for National Security cry to correspond with Taylor, proving the agency's public relations Studies in Washington Joined Gardels UC President David Saxon saidBol- image on UC campuses. to file appeals. The center Is expected ton violated university policy by using --- . the letterhead,' 'while Saxon's rxecu- tive assistant, David Wilson, said Bol- ton used "poor judgment'.:; in his work this week to file a lawsuit to force the CIA to release the rest of the docu- ments. ' - As vice. president for administra flee and maintaining -liaison with headquarters of the 'Atamie' Energy-. agencies- and major ABC labs and con- ducting negotiations for . renewal of t- three major AEC contracts ,with the ''Belton `retired ' from- the university*?:. ..In 1970 after 10 years and is now, a vice president in the Los Angeles of international'managementi ~eonsultant firm. He said he would.`.'neithei con- firai'norc" deny" that ? he spent those headquarters is the Summer Of.1 i&. } .. - ,,. time' has ' been ,confirmeed.:ihzough P 1-4i But his presence In McLean at .that, Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901 R000600320003=7 1: '3DAY r Approved For Release 20051121/Y4 `:' =1 DP91-00901 R0006 iii 4/ 3y 11m Coiling . C. v:zi Ian :e:ia W ritcr Can an A!nzrican citizen sign away, .is rights under the First Amendment? lpparentiy he can, because it hap- -en.d to a-trhor Victor Marchetti. It all brean:,then Marchetti submit- x'rl his re = n- tirm to the (:'cntral Iil.- -elli ence A_ency in 1969. One, of the irs calls 1'e reeved was from Rich- _rd Helms, then the CIA's director, ,to sei-uiianed him to Its office for a ha t. After MarCiv' i explained that he ,ad Income di c-nchanted with the 'IA and ir= covwrt operations, Helms aid, "I don't suppose there's anything c in do to r,;,k-e you change your .rind. What are your plans?" "I think Fri going to write a hoot:," -Aarchetti said. "Oh, that's interesting,'.' Helens re- Wed. "If your want us to type it for -ou. we Witt." The CIA didn't tyre the book, but t did review it for secret information -ender a contract that Marchetti had ?igned when he mined the CIA grant- hg the agency censorship ptiwe_?s. Chat book was a novel, "The Rope Dancers." a fictional account of life in be CIA that criticized the agency i'he CIA censors did not like it, but hey allowed it to be published. It, wasn't until .a few years later, when: Marchetti had decided to do a nonfic -ion book on the CIA, that the agency; -racked down. "I had a meeting in a motel in Ar- Jnyton with?Adin. Rufus Taylor [his, -Id boss at the agency]," Marchetti re-ailed in a recent telephone interview. 'lie said, 'Loot:, Victor, they're very -inch concerned with what you're ioing. Let's make a deal. Don't go on he lecture circuit, be careful what you vrite and what you say on radio and 3'V. Write your book and then we will -eview it and you and the agency can tctotiate your differences.' So we ploy ees and tedl reasonably sure Will, they :% ill be supported by the Supreme Court. .,...,ahctti, who was ?Ith die CIA from 1955 to 1939 and held sensitive 1;o::4 in tl?,,e office of tine director, said he .., . mixer fcathe = about the Sn- :reltle ~' : t'~ TBttllire- to take up the case. On tl-,,e one hand, h is di. ap- ,greed on that. I gent norne and cittt rCt he r;tit cn the o l-,er he tartO to work on the bfok. 't'hen one and is compensated for the surrender and' ticm that the g n_ int. day about a 'week later the doorbell by r, the Clary the CIA. pays h cv "_ ?_i't ;tr::?en; from Criticizing it, therefore, the T iarcl:etti case is not a -ruts; and it was the U.S. marshals ; ;tdti.;a s W C;Ii'c ('ell: O1;i1111J 1 ,~ I''il`st At' encrnent issue, according to :ml - .:r to hey had :lib aellas and in unctiolts, P ~ ~? lenity ;:1F' i'ri;;i':r:a. the agency, but a question of contract. end tlunrts.' "We foe' that the Supreme Court satis-` EtQr.1Z i.,,> ,'. Approved FRr i f1P4 et,2QQ?(A_Z Qf4 t kkR 91-00901 R000600320003-7 not a 1 ?rst. Amendment question," a CIA sour: e close to the case said. Thus Began a long and historic legal What it ccni 'c down to is. the a battle over what now is a celebrated ev'.s fear that vital secrets regardin book, "The (.IA and he 170t of Intel- I:'ethrc'r, ; =1 o^er ti' ns may be ligence." by Marcl'.e.ti anti his collabo- I'eoled by i.-;.employees and thus rator, John D. Marls-c'ciehratod be-' perdue the r:aticnal scent'ity cause it is tn,r ;i:- book ever Marchetti, on the odwr hand. ar published In America :','1111 rara_raph- that some 01 the cut the (IA lied sized bl; nl: spaces and the word firs- the mock ware nor secret but cool METED printed in bur;: ce type 133 1cUnd in the _ ,:bbe domain. He times. claims Out he I I A N " c rota' were of The legal battle reached a climax on the 01nd tt t A ,e pt t~i hcul:i l.new STAT May 2! when the U.S. SL:,-rime Court, and that no rea.ronahie interest of rhot for the second time, let stand a federal Un ted States would be injured oy' court ruling that said, in effect, that their disclosure. the CIA had the peer,,, right to I-i faCt the CIA itself, which iabel_d censor ariythin a tt^:r,- en:.1to1-ce his on hell iaa:iUCript. Top S"; -t wrote-"factual, fictional or other on the question of wise"-about the CIA. ecrecy. It initially demanded 339 At the heart of the case is the con- deletion:.'.1tt-r considerable wrangling tract Marchetti signed committing him' with Marchetti and his attorneys, it re- to CIA censorship. His attorney, Mel- duced the number to 163. One court vin. L. WulF legal director of the, further reduced the de?etions to 23 but American Civil Liberties Union, anot:ter court re'nstated the number of argued that the contract "v.-as illegal cuts to 168 and the book was published because it deprived hint cif his First I, -_,t y'ce r-it is now oat in Dell pacer- Amendment rights." The refusal of the back-with that number of dekt.'ons Supreme Court to revi te case, he v bite the court contest continued. ~?' ta ,:e says, is an insult to ti-;~?; I?a'irat Amend- An isipor,aa: Flee erect of the c . will ment and jeopardized the yout-:'s repu- i'-i how pti':!ishb'g firms will react in tatlon as a responsible ?t..c'.ciici+tl body. the future wren ilre ented with a simi- It was a failure of their Jr man u.Tript. The puNieh r, Alfred. c?o11: