WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE FROM DATA BASE SEARCH. 'SPYING IN THE TWILIGHT ZONE'
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96-00791R000200230010-1
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date:
December 7, 1998
Sequence Number:
10
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 26, 1987
Content Type:
NOTES
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CIA-RDP96-00791R000200230010-1.pdf | 60.82 KB |
Body:
PAGE 6
Approves or Release 2~O6U16hN0':'C) -`kb069t00791 RO 002 001 q-1
Copyright 198 The Washington Post
e' hrgton Post
April 26,(-1987, Suyiday, Final Edition
LENGTH: 814 words
HEADLINE: Spying in the Twilight Zone
BYLINE: Rory Quirk
BODY:
... pp. $ 16.95
YOU'VE GOT TO hand it to anyone who can create a readable novel out of
U.S.-Soviet research into the paranormal, which is what David Wise has done in
The Samarkand Dimension, an arresting and engaging spy thriller in which blind
... for the launch site at Vandenberg Air Force Base, the CIA literally gets
some very bad vibes, namely that the Soviets have sabotaged the project through
telekinesis -- the ability to move objects through mental concentration. The
agency taps one of its most tried and trusted agents, Markham, to penetrate the
Soviet parapsychology facility at Samarkand, deep in Soviet Central Asia. His
orders are simple: Report back on the state of Soviet research into the
paranormal. And, in the event that his cover is blown and he elects not to kill
himself, he has the agency's blessing to cooperate with his captors rather than
... It's a surreal journey into a world of experiments where documents in
remote locations are accessed by psychics through "remote viewing," thoughts are
"implanted" in unrealizing humans, and laboratory animals are zombieized with
doses of "psychic energy." "You've turned a rabbit into ...
Markham. "True," sniffs a research honcho, "but it's a far cry from being
able to zap a Soviet leader in the Kremlin from a distance of 4,800 miles. In
terms of practical application, we have a long way to go." ...
... Kansas, on the Denver-Chicago run.
AFTER this lengthy lull, Wise gets things rolling as Markham/Weaver is
"dangled to the Soviets as a vulnerable, alcoholic, in-debt American scientist
with access to secret research into the military and intelligence applications
of parapsychology." The KGB bites, and Markham is whisked off to Samarkand to
try to finesse his double agent high wire act for some very skeptical Soviet
interrogators. When his seemingly airtight cover is unexpectedly shredded, the
Soviets start demanding hard answers, and the whole operation unravels with
riveting grimness.
Markham's interrogation and torture are convincingly nightmarish -- "Ludmilla
Approved For Release 2000/08/10 : CIA-RDP96-00791 R000200230010-1