THE LOOKING-GLASS SPIES

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000807500042-9
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
42
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 26, 1981
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807500042-9 ARTICLE APPS :::D ON PAGE Looking -lass S p *1 e s-__~. 1,'L4,SHL%1GTON POST 26 July 1981 THE KG& Tb. Eyes. of Russia. By Harry Rositske. Doubleday. 295-ppo $14.95 ~La.- s??:_By DAVID WISE CWMESTRSi M mentalitp;""foinoer:' s tatio thief Harry Rositzkenote ' s rooted in a. conspiratorial vi iir of the world someone out there- is= plotting againsC mar Since the world it a threatening place, only secretoamter-action can guarantee survival"'' Reeitzke is writing about. the KGB, the- Soviet secret service, but whethwunconsciously or not; his words could also provide the rationale for the CIA's own. covert opera- tions around the lobe. It is, in fact;' precisely the rationale Reagan and to increase its covert activities- (although not,. To some extent, the KGB and the CIA are reflections of- each other. The minor image shimmees throughout The? KGB The Eyes of Russia. For example; theKGB has an "Executive Actioa"-'department is charge of assassinate tions. When the: CIA.. set up. its- assassiriation unit . in- 1961, it was- called=Executive Action?' That same year, the CIA moved-from Washington across the Poto mac to Langley, Virginia. Later, the KGB moved the headquarters of its First Chief -Direcorate, which ban-. dies all foreign operations; from the Soviet capital to a r ew building near the Moscow beltway. A pict re of t building appears in John Barion's ' book;.-KCB, (1974) and as the caption notes; the building's architecture un- cannily resembli;e that of the CIX-- '7-1``,4'_ There are ces .oo course :=The:. KGB is: dearly the instrsmteatrof tulitana erely~authontar ran) goveram c{in or espionage andtov_ ert action but fo to `tte Soviet'people cally them.lovingl',ydetailed 6j Rsitz?ie,,The KGB; for exam ple, places -much' greater- emphasis. than any westernser ? their; spies to; steal. documents..Ak-C vice-on- gettiiigi man, by contrasC-prefers--to dedrwith written "or o: spaces; the sitbp be r the= countryside 4w here they spot cocmtersTuveillance--lather -than iindoois. TFie. KGB has better language skills than the CIA and Rosi-: tike says the KGB's- assassin st (unlike CIA's) have' not gone after paliticai leaders of other countries and have not targetedanyoneahroad a incx 2962~^' DAVID .WS ieritesfi+equently abat; o =n-ge"c- _ _ _ Jr most recent-book: is+Spectr un, mnoveLabout.a. staugl for power inside thS CIA- 3T r .;:t 1.i "- b1fJ@MPFrvrco:.MI for The wdjpp Pew Yet, it is the similarities between .the ? clandestine agencies of the two- superpowers that stand out more f' than the differences As-Rositzke points out, theyspend a great deal of time trying- to recruit each other. (The KGB's going price-for'an attempted recruitment of a CIA agent, according to Rositzke; is in the neighborhood of a quarter of a million dollars. Inflation is everywhere.) Rositzke knows a good deal about the-KGB's agents because he- has operated against them. 116-is a veteran CIA man, now retired, who ran penetration operations against the Soviets from Munich during the- height of the Cold War; when Germany was?-the center of espio-I nage activity.-Rositzke's job was to send. agents into the Soviet Union by parachute.- From 1957 to. 1962, he was chief of station in New Delhi; where he lunched once a month with one of his opposite numbeia;.the resident of thef GRU, thSoviet military iatelligence`arm::Is the: late 1960s .he was chief of the "U S: 'statfon," which had the task of r'ecnuting` Soviet diplomats=in-Washington and New York. -- ' `Having served is the front lines of the Cold War, as it were, Rositzke.ought to be able-to reveal-tfie'secrets' of the KGB, but of course he cannot.. As he freely admits? much-of'the'good stuff rein-gin lockedup is the KGB's vaults in Moscow:`Howemany Soviet "illegals". Iagents. -operaL#i g_without_diplomati cover). are- there in the United States? How many Soviet `-`moles," if any, ride the CIA? We can only guess.. - z. Nor is! the. CIA-which=leaks information -about:- the KGB when it suits its-purpose-likely to reveal very muchi of the really, significant.knowledge it: possesses:: about .Soviet intelligence, -As-a. former. operative, Roeitzke_wasl obliged to. dear: his, book with- the. agency, lest-he stiffen Snepp-like penalties-and-be-forced to turn over his royal- ties tar the' government Rasitzko did . submit-his manu- script'to the CIA;-although?that fad appears nowhere in .the preface or.the_contents-of his-book, Both:the author ,- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807500042-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807500042-9 and Doubleday would have been more forthcoming to have shared this information with-the-reader (Doubleday is not unworldly or-naive about such matters; it published The Penkovskiy Papers for the CIA in 1965.) Rositzke has said subsequently that the CIA made only three changes in his~book, all dealing with:references to non- Soviet foreign intelligence agencies. - The KGB: The Eyes of Russia offers-little that-has not appeared. before in other books on Soviet espionage, including accounts by Soviet defectors;-and lit congres- sional'-liearings. Nor is Rositzke's.book: meant as enter- tainment; those-looking' for summer hammock reading or suspense will have to look elsewhere; or go, to the la- test James"Bondmovie. At the same time, the. book is neither substantial enough nor long enough to qualify as a comprehensive, academic study of.Sovietintelligence. There are no chapter notes or bibliography On the other=hand; Rositzke~has.producedra?-service- able primer on the'KGB; usefur for. anyone.wbo is. inter- ested in. the operations' of the=Soviet. spy . service,..but whose interest does not extend to plowing through a lot of individual books, oa=the' subject:; Forrsuch a, reader, Rositzke has pulled enough-material togetfier o:give?at least a good general portrait o?th&KGR, -- And Rositzke manages to avoid a good deal (although not all) . of. thvcustomary bombast,:-rid-baiting,. and ideological - point-scoring that 'characteria - most.-other works?aboutthe~KGB Aiormer assistaatp-rofessor of English, he writes,_for the most part with a:cool; reason. ably detached tone, one professionaisizing up another. And he o same in teresting opinions: that f;ee Harvey Oswald was not a KGB 'agent- (the- Russians would have used-& professional); th$tYuri.Nosenko, the controversial -Soviet defector, was mbablly i a aced- not a KGB "plant"-an- argument that. stri rages inside the i CIA and was the subject- of- David- C -Martin's- recent book, Wilderness of Mirrors; that the KGB does not di- rect international- terrorism; and . that the primary con- cern of both KGB and CIA- officers-Is-to protect not their own identities but the identities: of their agents. (Congress, please note.) But there is an subtle problem facing anyone `who writes about the KGB, from which Rositzke does not es- cape. If the KGB's agents are 10 feet tall,. each.a.Super- man It, then wein the-Free_Worldmust indeed: be ever vigilant agai nsttheisnefarious plots Tfie jacket' of Rosi tzke's- bookztrompets:_ The secret: 6peratiom'of 'the world's bestintelligence-organzzati'oiK": -(Italics added.). Is this just publisher jacket hype we are dealing with here, or does Rositzke really mean the Soviets-are better than the CIA? Aren't our guys just as good? (In fairness to Rositzke, in the book itself he says the KGB provides "the best professional training of any intelligence serv- ice in the world," but he does not go as far as the jacket line.) On the other hand, Rosttzke also tells- us that often the KGB are bumblers. But if so, we-needn't worry much about them a - - - And therein lies the catch-22. Only by painting the Soviets as superspies can we really getfolks exercised about KGB "agents of influence" in, the. media and... the government, about sinister KGB- disinformation that is brainwashing our unsuspecting citizenryand- all the rest of the piddling package - of paranoia- being peddled to the public; as our old friend Spiro Agnew' might-have -put it: But to the extent that-the power of the KGB is magnified, the worth of the. CIA is. downgraded: -leis a trap from which there is no exit: , `-aj Rositzke does have- one. cheerful note about-the KGB' Soviet espionage' "reduces- apprehension= int. -Moscow." The Russians ]mow so much about NATQ plans --from their spying that they don't worry. -sue ~? _ ' As-Rosrt ke ba3 earn , an s with us, 'A spy is, like any man, unique and complicated." And' spies must sometimes wonder if it- is- all worth it. When Rositzke was parachuting agents into the Soviet Union- out of Munich -in the 1950x, most- of them were -caught' But one, he assures us, did eventually become. a- Soviet-offi- cial, a successful mole. Where? In the Moscow sanitaT tion department. -. ~~. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807500042-9