KGB BIGWIG : CIA DRUGGED, KIDNAPED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000302030016-0
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 8, 2012
Sequence Number: 
16
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 5, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000302030016-0.pdf79.63 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/08: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302030016-0 ARTICLE APff-MO ON PAQE KGB bigwig: CIA drugged, kidnaped me SOVIET defector Vitale Yurchenko the No. 5 man in the KGB who came to the West in a major intelligence coup, de- fected again yesterday - in reverse - and now claims he was drugged and kid- naped the The State Dept. immediately demanded to meet with Yurchen- ko, who is at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, on neu- tral ground. The department said the former agent will not be allowed to return to Moscow until the U.S, is satisfied that he has not been kidnaped by the KGB. His astonishing move. like a bizarre twist in a John LeCarre novel. jolted the Washington intelligence communi. ty, the Shultz delegation in Moscow, and the team preparing for the upcoming summit con- ference. - Yurchenko was one of two too vet de ectors who briefed CIA direr tor William Casey in preparation .1o 'for t he Re a fan-Gorba evthe Re He switched sides in Italy last August during a bewildering series of defections and cross-de- fections in West Ger- many and Britain. His defection and that of the KGB's London station chief, Oleg Gor- dievsky, were hailed as two of the most serious blows dealt Soviet intel. ligence in recent years. Yurchenko vanished last Saturday. to reap. pear yesterday in the Soviet Embassy claim. ing that he had never defected, but had been kidnaped. He appeared nervous and uncomfortable speaking in English and he quickly switched to Russian to tell reporters through a translator: "On a business trip to Italy, I was forcibly ab- ducted in Rome. "I was kept in isola. tion and forced to take some drugs and denied the opportunity to get in touch with official Soviet representatives." He said he was brought to the U.S. against his will and held in a safe house on Route 17, 22 miles from Fredericksburg, Va. NEW YORK POST 5 November 1985 He was offered $1 mil- lion tax-free, he said, plus salary and benefits totaling $180,000 a year for the rest of his life. The benefits, he said, were to include medical care and furniture. During a lapse in se- curity, he told the press, he escaped from the safe house and made contact with the Soviet Embassy. "At the moment my only wish is to return as soon as possible to my country, my family, my kin, and my friends in the Soviet Union," he said. Yurchenko appeared drawn after what he re- ferred to as "three hor- rible months for me." The spy said: "In the period when I was con- scious and in control of my behavior, I did not pass any secret infor- mation. "When I was drugged I don't know what I was doing or saying. I was threatened." He described the al- leged kidnaping by the GIA,as ''state-sponsored tertvritrm" But he found tine- to joke at thi' CIA's ex- pense. He r ud that an agent had -jid him that there had been a num- ber of reouests for inter- views from U.S. news- papers. "I now keep my prom- ise." he said, laughing. Sen. David Durenber- ger, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Yur- chenko went out to din- ner Saturday night and disappeared. He described the kid- nap story as "baloney." "At no time have any of the things he alleged . . . actually happened to him." Durenberger told a news conference. Yurchenko had been "given a certain amount of freedom" during his three months in the U.S. His re-defection may force intelligence ana- lysts to review every- thing they have learned from him during the last three months and to assess what he may have learned from their questions. His re-defection may also force the West to re-evaluate the sin- cerity of other defec. tors, including Gordler- sky. - The re-defection raises bewildering and complicated questions and possibilities. They include: ? Yurchenko was a deliberate plant by Mos- cow and came to the West to spread disinfor. mation and learn what he could from his inter- rogators. ? Yurchenko gave the U.S. genuine informa- tion that they must now doubt because of his re- turn to Soviet hands. ? His defection was genuine, but he was pressured to return or actually kidnaped by the Soviets to mitigate the damage he may have done under inter. rogation. ? The U.S. is dis- patching Yurchenko back to the USSR, either to spread disinforma. tion or because it does not believe him to be a genuine defector. The spy world Is so complex that the return of Yurchenko may raise as many dangerous complications for the Russians as it does for the U.S. It is even conceivable that Yurchenko no longer kno? whose side he Is on. ' Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/11/08: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302030016-0