RUSSIA HAILS SECRET POLICE,PRAISES DOUBLE AGENT PHILBY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330008-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 21, 2000
Sequence Number: 
8
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 19, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000600330008-5.pdf107.65 KB
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n ? Approved For Release 2001/07/27: RR- OTM00600330008-5 0E019196'7 CPYRGHT' CLAIMS U.S. SPIES OUTSMARTED 0 Russia Hails Secret Police, CPYRi faIses Double Agent Philby MOSCOW (M-Preparing to cele- brate its 50th birthday, the Soviet secret police, the KGB, got praise Monday for recruiting master spy Harold A. R. (Kim) Philby and for allegedly outsmarting many U.S. spies. With the headline "Hello, Com- rade Philby" and a smiling photo of the former high official of British intelligence, the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia praised hitr, as a hero of communism and disclosed to the Soviet people for the-first time that he was in the Soviet Union. He fled to Moscow nearly five years The U.S. Embassy, reacting to the ctaim that 'U.S. agents had been 'outsmarted, said In a statement: "Apart from attempting to. glorify the Chekists (the old KGB) on, their 0 Approved anniversary, the article seems to b part of a series of Soviet fabrications regarding alleged Western and par. ticularly U.S. espionage." Since he came here after gaining access to many secrets of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, Philby told Izvestia, he has found his "second homeland." The former double agent said that from the -start of his career in British intelligence he obeyed the Soviet secret police-the KGB-and "I was happy that I had become a member of- Soviet intelligence." ? Philby boasted in the Izvestia article of his feats as a double agent and said he had completely fooled eirut, Lebanon, as corre- pondent for the London bserver. The. London Sunday Imes and the' Observer eported last September hat Philbyy was confront- d with the evidence gainst him In Beirut late in 1962 and In January, 1963, fled to Moscow. In separate praise, of the GB's 50th. anniversary Wednesday, Pr vda, the ewspaper of the -Soviet I Communist Party, said So- iet counterespionage was so successful that`it aused enemy agents to. complain: "We try, but the KGB. stops us." . Pravda also charged that two U.S. assistant military attaches were caught last year when they. "im- pudently peered" through a fence around.an uniden- tified Soviet "military ob- ject",about'.300 miles west Allen Dulles, then director of the CIA. "It was. my job to plan various operations against the Soviet Union ,and other. Socialist coun- orpedo them myself," he aid. As an example, he said he CIA planned a revolu- ion against the Commu .1st regime in a Balkan ountry - identified ear- ier in British newspaper tories on Philby as Alba- la. Philby took part In the lanning. Then 'the CIA gents were caught as hey crossed the border nto the country. Dulles analyzed every ossible reason for the allure, but he "could not uppose that a member of. oviet Intelligence was sit- ing at the table," Philby aid. T h e article disclosed hat Philby had been. giv., n one of the highest viet awards, 'the Order A the Red Banner. On Philby's Trail The, article ' seemed to onflrm London newspa ' er reports that the Brl ish had been closing in on hilby, who had quit the ritish Intelligence Ser- ice and had gone to of Moscow. Improperly Detained . In reply, the U.S. Em- bassy confirmed the in- cident but said the Ameri- cans were improperly de- tained and "the accusa- tions against them were without foundation." The two Navy Lt. Comdr. Robert B. Ba- thurst and Army Lt. Col. Robert E. Liichowwere arrested on the spot but were later released. They left the Soviet Union last spring at the end of nor- mel duty tours. The KGB said In Pravda that at one time it caught a spy named Afonov, who worked for U.S. Intel- ligence. Using his radio and secret dispatches, the KGB said, it tricked the United States for eight years with false ' informs tion about the Soviet mili- tary, especially its subma- rines. The KGB, whose initial stand for the R*u s s i a words for State 'Security Committee, also said i was able to arrest a con' tact man for U.S. espion age after. it. caught two American spies in Latvia and got them to double cross the CIA, by helping them find the contact n t man. For Release 20 1/07/27 C1ii-RD1575-0( 149R000600330008-5