COUNTERPOINT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 12, 2011
Sequence Number: 
24
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 1, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2.pdf463.03 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 SERVICE A of the FIRST CHIEF DIRECTORATE of the KGB The term Active Measures is explained in the introductory letter to the first number of COUNTERPOINT. It is impor- tant to distinguish between the two distinct categories of such Soviet measures, i.e. between a) Overt Active Measures, and b) Covert Active Measures. The responsibility for the planning and directing of covert Active Measures lies with Service A of the First Chief Direc- torate of the KGB. Service A closely cooperates with the International Depart- ment/International Information Depart- ment of the CPSU via the Secretariat of the Politburo, where all important measures are cleared and where specific executive responsibility is allocated. Service A directs and supports opera- tions carried out overseas by the so-called PR Lines of the KGB Residencies overseas. Service A has been allocated more and more staff since the late 70s and early 80s and now constitutes a large section of the First Chief Drrectorate (FCD), employing some 200 officers and supporting staff, including keen young intellectual officers who see in this work a chance of rapid recognition and promotion. It is the one field where the Kremlin (the Instantsyia) can see real results. The current head of the Service is Vladimir Petrovich Ivanov, a former KGB operator under TASS cover in Vienna. He has several area and functional Deputies. The Service now occupies more than half of the third floor of the FCD building at Yasenevo near Moscow. 1 r~hnrques regularly employed by the minions of Service A overseas include: covert manipulation of the media of foreign countries both capitalist and 'Socialist', the widespread use of so-called 'Agents of Influence' in all walks of the target country's life; the selective use of forged documents and of faked photo-montages and tapes; the systematic spreading of rumours and of material calculated to cause doubts and uncertainty; the systematic harassment of target indivi- duals, institutions and ~~rganizatiuns~ the transmission of false intelligence through 'double agents' to other hostile intelligence srrvices. The larger part of the evidence of these activities has recently come from the Third World where Soviets find that they can "still get away with it". ~ Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 ACTIVE MEASURES SCENARIO The following scenario shows how Active Measures are used in support of a foreign policy objective: The Soviet Union has become interested in the little island republic of Ruritania. The island's economy, built upon fishing and tourism, has recently received a boost. Ruritania has been granted a World Bank loan to upgrade its Erne natural harbour to accommodate deep-draught ocean-going ships. Because of Ruritania's unique location, the Soviets would like to have access to its new port facilities. The matter is brought to the attention of the Politburo who decide that a priority effort should be made to persuade Ruritania to change its pro Western stance. The decision having been made, the Central Committee's International and International Information Departments and the KGB will plan the influence cam- paign. Although a multitude of disparate elements will be involved, these three departments will make sure that the campaign is on target and well coordinated. Each element in the field will receive its marching orders tailored to its indivi- dual capabilities and without reference to the total effort involved. For example, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will notify its diplomatic staff that there is a plan to influence the Ruritanian government to allow use of the new port. Although the diplomats can probably guess that the KGB officers among them will receive their own orders on this topic, they do not receive any official notice of the KGB plans for the operation. ^ The campaign begins: The Commercial Attache approaches Ruritanian Ministry of Transport officials with veiled hints of Soviet aid if the port should be opened to Soviet ships. A KGB officer meets his agent in the Ministry of Trade to tell him to start advertising the advantages of allowing the Soviets access to the port. An International Department official stops the Vice-Chairman of the Ruritanian- Soviet Friendship Society after a meeting to ask him to extol the advantages of Soviet trade relations whenever and wherever possible. The TASS correspondent prepares an article, first in a series, on the long-standing friendly cooperation of the Ruritanian and Soviet peoples. An undercover KGB officer asks a member of the staff of the New Ruritanian Worker to write an article denouncing US plans to use the new port for warships armed with nuclear weapons. A KGB officer notes that there has been ;r rash of poisonings due to the ingestion of diseased fish. This fact is passed to an independent journalist who is in fact, an agent of the KGB. ^ The campaign builds up: The Ruritanian Ministry of Trade, which has already supported Soviet port access for financial reasons, are constantly wined, dined and applauded by Soviet diplomats for their perceptive stand. The Ruritanian-Soviet Friendship- Society holds a series of lectures, accom- panied by a free buffet, to extol the virtues of non-alignment and an open trade policy. TASS brings to the attention of the entire world, via their wire service, the news (reported in a reputable journal) that the United States has conducted tests of biological weapons in the ocean near Ruritania. This testing has led to the deaths of hundreds by contaminating their food supply. A New Times correspondent informs the Prime Minister that the magazine would like to do a feature on him in his role as a future leader of the non-aligned Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 movement . The ,'~'rw Ruru~natw te4ivAtr announces that a demunstratian wU bs held to cutt- dentn efforts to turn Rurttaau uitu a US military base The spcrtyary of the dcnwn? stratiun are The Runtanum fur Nea.e and Social )wtke and Tht island ('hnstun Associa t run . New Tunur+-rn-?, the theoretr;al fuurrul of the Ruritanun Canmwuyt Party, prints a purpvrtcd U5 lE:rnbaysy ducumrnt that outlure: ltS piarsy (? a as-al base ut Ruritania. The U5 proasptl~ declares the `document' ? forgery, powtrng out any number of errury tali tlrle format and language. A Member ul Arlsaai+sseett wbmits the questi~m, "lbw wt{) tfbe fwverrrrrtrnt deny that the Wp{~ ~ {~ Maa made on condtttun that t+r! kart tacattttn fur ? US naval base'" The Cabinet with an eye to the next elcctiun, fears the image of toady to .the US and softens the government's pro- Wcstcrn stand. Privately, however, they are uick to assure the US Ambassador that their feelings are unchanged. ? The result: A news item by "World Wire Service": "T'he Prime Minister of Ruritania an- nounced today that the new port facilities will be made available to ships under the Sunet flag. At a luncheon at the Ruri- tartian?Soviet Friendship Society the Prime Minister reiterated his nation's open door policy." A pro-Western country has become 'non-aligned'. ~ ? The campr~tt ileaitt- unit: The Prune Mrorrtar dsdua n a .~"~w Times inurview tlsat the tgrtrttaewa peupk have tradniunally sPw~ed a~an.es in favour ul an ir-depeadtwr mtr of rorld power r~l~tiunships Do~turs at the he.r Hrnprtal is the capital deny that recsrlt poss.iwirij deaths were the result of bw.~loiscal warfart In response to hundreds of wines, the doctors state slut the deatftu ha?s bccn directly cunnectcd w?ttlt toe wwWride outbreak ul" ftcd (:~/ da>'rere The Ministry of Trade ptsyeots us pro. posal to the ('abtnet for wa:+urditwwl trade relations wttji arty aril ap awotnp The demonstntwa ~ US mdr? tansm and tmpsrWtens r. tetsaY flwt .,,,ty A leading Rwuaatw alggw firwe grey the dentunytratruti tratwtt 0y appearteig and malung a (tw brad Marta The Mmutty of Trattrprxt uwerls its plans fur Iht r~ port factW~es, nduday cranes of S.-syet rnaerlactrur e.ailabie to them below mut~tt cwU TRUTH -MADE TO MEASURE This actual case?history (in six chapters) illustrates how Joviet or soviet-inspired media manipulate Western news-items. Ctrapter I The ,Yrw? Y~,rk Times (August 3, 1982) reports that Brasil plans to use defoliants to clur vcgctation for a dam: "Brazil is considering the use of `toxic deic,asants' to clear a wide swath of the Amuun Jungle for a large hydroelectric pruJect, and the country's environmental ~href u warning that the move could create a disastrous precedent. Protest is directed a1 ulftctsls overseeing the construction of the rnarnmWh Tucurui Uam, on one of thr Ansauxi trtbutariey, that requires flooding an tl3~?sywre?mile arcs, creating, body of water nearly twke the size of lake Champ? larrt. The vegetation must be stripped in the afkcled tract to prevent decompo- utlun of underwater plant from corroding the lacihty's turbines." Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Chapter 2 United Press International (December 15, 1983) reports that because of the negli- gent use of the defoliant between 17 and 42 veople died: "At least 17 people died in a remote Amazon region after contractors working for a government utility used a defoliant similar to Agent Orange used by US forces in Vietnam. An official of the Para State Agriculture Department, Avellino do Vale, said, `We have evidence that as many as 42 people may have died from the effects of Tordon-155 poisoning.' " Chapter 3 Reuters (October 5, 1984) mentions the activities of a Brazilian lawyer who pro- vides fuel for the eventual Active Measures operation: "A Brazilian lawyer has arrived in Kenya to seek United Nations support to stop an Amazonian dam project which, she says, could mean death by poison for thousands of people living there. Sonia Regina de Brito Pereira met the head of the Nairobi- based United Nations Environment Pro- gramme (UNEP), in an eleventh hour attempt to stop the flooding of land at Turcui (sic) in Para State." Chapter 4 Three weeks later the Soviets step in. The disinformation effort begins (TABS, October 27, 1984): "Whole tribes of Brazilian Indians have fallen victim to another act of genocide by Washington, Vitaliy Kobysh, a publicist, has said in a televised speech. The orga- nisers of secret tests of that weapon of mass destruction did everything to conceal the traces of the crime. The huge territory where the defoliants had been tested was submerged. But the horrible crime came to light. Experts who surveyed the area maintain that poisoned earth there resembles a zone of nuclear explosion and that the consequences of that .turK UN impossible to foretell." Chapter 5 The tom of New Times (M~-..h-~, No. 45, 1984; more grand durc~.ed 1w reality: "On the pretext of clearing uhw.~1- .I 2,400 square kilometres of luutlc t.~? types of chemicals, very much .-:r~ a.~ dioxin, were tested along the banh- ut tl+r Tocantins, a tributary of the Amu,m tlaW flows through Brazil. At least 7,OuU t....~- died in the area of Tucurui. Two (r-daar tribes were all but wiped out and in,,cJ-bie damage inflicted upon local fl~~ra a~r0 fauna. The Pentagon hoped to c:aucat r~ traces of its crimes, and on Septerat+ea d the contaminated sector was flooded " Chapter 6 The World Peace Council (Hdut~bl introduces a Japanese dimenswn IPr~w+ Courier, November 1984): "In 1981 a number of US, Japancx u.d Brazilian chemicals firms carr-ed cwt rr series of defoliation experimcnu ur rte Brazilian Amazon basin which resulteJ -a the liquidation of entire villagc- ae.3 communities through the extennur.tn~:, .a some 7,000 people." ? KGB RENEWS KAL ACCUSATIUhS The current literary sensation fir ltl,~- cow is a book entitled The C'rirne~ ~ ~~ rh. President. Attributed to a Japancx p~~r nalist, the book reiterates the thcs+- that Moscow has been trying to pune~ t.. ? sceptical world: that the South Ku:c.u au liner in which 269 people died was, tr: t.,t performing an espionage mission tau tAe United States. ~pproved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Uwe Al.w Takahashi is named as the s+r~ ul the book, translated and pub- ~d t,y 1UVOSTI News Agency. Curi- +r-wt1 th~,sc well acquainted with the ~rrre press have never heard of such a w~srr S~xne time ago, however, Akio tamrla, a gentleman long suspected of ~ rn the pay of the KGB, published an rivs+.lr ur :+ Japanese magazine making ~RM,irri) the same points about the KAL ~r,rur as the Takahashi book, i.e. that US ~,cttu~ ratJter than Soviet ruthlessness ~ rrslx,nstble for the tragedy. M.r-.uw's efforts to shift to others, wtably tttc US, the responsibility for its w>A a.uuns have met with little success. 1.u a.rnt attempts have in fact backfired the KGB. I Vu summer, the British publication QKJrAir Attachl~ carried a story suggesting s~M Uce atrliner, shot down by Soviet it~-ur planes after it strayed off course tt,c North Pacific, has really been on r~ ppwnage mission for the US. It was ?aScfy believed that the authors, using the ~ty,l orlym P. Q. Mann, had used material ,rc,i,r,ally supplied by the KGB. Defence ~ru~ht, uself a victim of this disinfor- wur,vn, agreed in a London courtroom to tp lrbel damages to Korean Airlines atur ,un~eding that there was no basis for sire atJc~tiun. On November 19th, Korean Aui,ncs accepted their public apology. t orally in the summer of 1984 Soviet arntu prominently featured, and the KGB npia>cd around the world, a report ~...~ung a retired American diplomat as ~a~urg that the airliner had been blown up ~ mid?atr by adelayed-action bomb after rte tarlure of the espionage mission. The Arrcr-..n, John Keppel, promptly denied esa-rrrg any such statement. He explained csut to indeed believed the plane had W~r,.n up, but as the result of a kerosene tuc u. one of its wings set off by the rocket 1,;ed by the Soviet fighter. ? MOSCOW AND THE GANDHI ASSASSIIVATION The illustration above purports to be a negative of an official US Department of State telegram. It first appeared in the Indian press on January 25, 1983, in the pro-Soviet journal Patriot (New Delhi). The telegram contains a speech supposedly given by US Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick in 1982 which outlined an aggressive, often vicious US policy towards Third World countries, including India. In reality Ambassador Kirkpatrick nev, r rnade any such statement. The `speech' is an out-and- out fabrication to which numerous tech- nical and linguistic mistakes bear witness. This forgery was part of the Soviet propaganda groundwork which strove to 'prove' that there exists a longstanding US policy to destabilise India. When Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two of her Sikh bodyguards on October 31 1984, the Kremlin immediately sought to exploit the tragedy by trying to implicate fictitious `imperialist forces', i.e. the Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 -~ Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 United States. Although the identity of the assassins and their motives were never in doubt, the Soviet Active Measures net- work was quickly mobilised to disseminate the theme of US complicity. Analysis of media coverage alleging US complicity demonstrates conclusively the coordinated nature of the effort to blame the United Srates. ? First, Moscow states the theme: "So far it is not known who concretely instructed them and put the guns in their hands, but it is known ?.vhere the terrorists received their ideological inspiration. The address is also known: the suburbs of Washington, Langley, CIA headquarters." (Moscow Radio in English, October 31, 1984) ? Then old friends provide the chorus: "Leftist circles are convinced that the assassination could not have taken place without deep-laid foreign inspiration, backed by agencies like the CIA." (Patriot November 1, 1984) ? A slight variation on the theme.? "The Third World, the millions of the poor of the earth, received a fatal blow in the heart yesterday when murderous hands armed by the darkest circles of the international reaction gunned down Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi." (To Cthnos, Athens, Navember 1, 1984) ~ The audience is an integral part of every performance: "An overwhelming majority of supreme court advocates declared today their `conviction' that foreign powers were behind the murder of Mrs Indira Gandhi. Advocates belonging to the Congress openly blamed the C?IA of the United States." (The Hindustan Times, November 1,1984) ? Moscow returns to the stage: "There is no doubt that Washington is ready to pay any price to remove from power those political forces of India that are at the helm of government in the country today." (Svetskaya Rossiya, November 10, 1984) ? Fina/e: Only after official US protests did Pravda publish un November 24 a convoluted denial ("editarial article") of any Soviet charges of US involvement in the Gandhi assassination. NEW T/MES: A SOVIET `FRONT LINE' PROPAGANDA ORGAN The foreign affairs weekly, New Times, holds a special place among Soviet publi- cations because of its numerous ties to Soviet intelligence and Active Measures. All but two of its foreign correspon- dents are full-time career KGB intelligence afiicers running a variety of information collecting, disinformation, and influence operations. The two `clean' correspon- dents, in New York and Bann, are actually emissaries of the Central Cantmittee's International Department (ID), a unit that plans and oversees Active Measures world? wide. Editor-in-chief Mikhail Fyodorov, former TASS correspondent, is closely connected with bath the IU and the KGB. The three deputy editors have inter- esting backgrounds as well. Mr V. Chern- yavsky is a former KGB senior officer, Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 once the KGB resident (chief) in Sweden. Mr B. Pishchik was once a KGB party committee secretary in Soviet Lithuania. Mr S. Golyakov, representative of the younger generation of New Times writers, spends most of his time in the ID and Central Committee Propaganda Depart- ment. The KGB often uses the `false flag' of New Times in recruiting foreign journalists. For example, in the 1970s in Japan and elsewhere, Soviet intelligence officers recruited several journalists by persuading them to cooperate with a `special confi- dential bulletin published by New Times for reading by the Soviet leaders.' In fact, such a bulletin never existed. New Times is one of very few Soviet publications that publish `letters from foreign readers'. Such letters are seldom, in fact, from foreign readers but are generally invented by New Times staff writers as an excuse to criticise the West's political, economic and military actions. FOR THE RECORD: The official pub- lisher of New Times is the newspaper Trud (Labour) which represents the All-Union Council of Trade Unions. Actually, New Times has nothing to do with the trade unions and only uses them as a cover, a smoke screen, that allows the real publisher, the International Department, to claim that New Times does not represent the Kremlin's official viewpoint. The magazine was founded in 1943 for intelli- gence purposes. During World War I[ and in the late 1940s New Times was a conduit for instructions to communist parties in non-socialist countries. Since then it has been used extensively by the KGB's external intelligence units as a ~?~ver for their officers. In the late 1960s, a secret Politburo directive designated ~~ew Times as a `frontline propaganda organ' charged with influencing foreign public opinion in ways most beneficial to the Kremlin. As such, New Times routinely takes the lead in Soviet disinformation campaigns. ~ [This is the first in a series of reports on Soviet front line' Active Measures organs. Future articles will look at Literatumaya Gazeta, NOVOSTI, PROGRESS Publishing House, and other such conduits for Soviet disinformation. ] . BOOK NOTES As the arena of Active Measures is largely the open press, we will be re- viewing new books and articles on Active Measures as they appear. The following are some of the standard texts on the subject. The Deception Game by Ladislav Rittman. (New York, Ballantine Books, 1981) One of the first books published on the topic, this is an uneven but fascinating account of Active Measures as conducted by the Czechs. Mr Bittman's account of the Black Lake Operation Neptune is admirably instructive on the use of forgery in an Active Measures campaign. Dezinformatsiya: Active Measures in Soviet Strategy by Richard H. Shultz and Roy Godson. (Washington, Oxford: Pergamon- Brassey's, 1984) Although sometimes slow, this is a clear exposition of the Soviet Active Measures threat, particularly against the United States and NATO. Chapter IV on Soviet covert political techniques is especially good. Includes a short but excellent glossary of terms. KCB: The Secret Work of Soviet Secret Agents by John Barron. (New York, Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2 Bantam Books, 1974) As well as a good for peace and of the fear of nuclear general primer on the KGB, the book weapons. Another has been the failure of includes a useful chapter on Active some Western governments to perceive the Measures. There are a number of examples dangers. The term 'adversaries' was delibe- of Active Measures campaigns (referred to rately selected to denote those whose in this book as disinformation) which cover efforts have been directed, under CSPU/ the history of Soviet power. In the chatty KGB control, to undermining the security Reader's Digest st~?le, it is certainly the and stability of the West. In addition to most readable of the books on the subject. discussing the `critics', the role of 'dupes', KGB Today: The Hidden Hand by John Barron. (New York: Reader's Digest Press, 1983) This book should be read as a supplement to Baryon's earlier book on the KGB. There are some strong chapters on Active Measures, especially in the first half of the book. Soviet Active Measures; Hearings before the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, House of Representatives, July 13 and 14, 1982. (Washington, D.C., U.S. Government Printing Office, 1982) A good reference work on Active Measures; the hearings include exhaustive, and exhausting, reports on all aspects of the subject. Not a fun reading experience but an informative one. Campaigns against Western Defence: NATO's Adversaries and Critics by Sir Clive Rose. (London, Macmillan, 1985) This scholarly book, written by the former UK Ambassador to NATO, examines the pressures and influences which have been applied in order to erode public support for NATO policy. One cause of such erosion has been the exploitation by Soviet and Communist propaganda of the desire of whom there are many thousands, is clinically exposed, based on hard infor- mation from the East. t Soviet Active Measures: The Propaganda War by David Rees. (London, The Institute for the Study of Conflict, Con- flict Studies Number 169). An excellent introduction, clear language and short. It stresses the inability or unwillingness of the West to appreciate the scale or the implications of this highly developed Soviet weapon. Rees cites two veteran communists: "We must penetrate every conceivable milieu, get hold of artists and professors, make use of theatres and cinemas, and spread abroad the doctrine that Russia is prepared to sacrifice everything to keep the world at peace." Willi Munzenberg, Comintern propaganda chief before World War II "One sympathizer is generally worth more than a dozen militant Communists. A writer of reputation, or a retired general, is worth more than 500 poor .devils who don't know any better than to get them- selves beaten up by the police." Georgi Dimitrov, Chairman of the Seventh Comintern Congress, 1935 Subscription Rates for 1 year (12 issues) first class inland, airmail overseas: ?25 or $35 Editors: Stanislav Levchenko and Peter Deriabin. Research Assistants: Brian Campbell and Shelly Blumen. Publisher: Walter Spiegel, Ickham Publications Limited, Westonhanger, Ickham, Canterbury CT3 1QN, England. Telephone: 0227 721783. Produced by Fordwich Typesetting and J & F Lockwood, Bridge, Canterbury Q Copyright reserved Approved For Release 2011/08/12 :CIA-RDP87M00539R000700950024-2