CIA INVESTIGATORS FOUND SPIES IN U.N.

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 12, 2014
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 12, 1965
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5.pdf395.08 KB
Body: 
STAT ? 1C" ^DT TIII)CDO L?T 'A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5 . AI ANZosJia i m. 21,976 S.1 22,788 Fro4t Edit Other ? Page Page Page . JUL. 1 2 i^65 ,., ., _..... , A ,. _....,,, - '-i The committee co-nsisted en- Y.' ' 1/Placing agentSi stiate-1 ' : : . .............. ?: jamin M. McKelway, James H. 'gip U. S. installations. i..? ' ) ' Sheild. They eventually report- 'tions facilities for agents ? to j ?.. ? - Rowe, .Jr.; and Marcellus C. ', V Establishing communica'-; . ,. I ' ed back ' that they did not find ? , transmit material, one facet of) several hundred persons,'or ev. which is the system of seamen1 :* ? . en 'one person, abusing Amer- . couriers. ica's hospitality under UN ati,s, : 1.' Checking on Soviet per- 1 pices by spying or conspiring sonnel in this country to,gt ard %...! cin espionage. The\committee de- . against defection: ' ' \ clared ' itself '"shocked by the . ? 1,.Dissemination of..Com nu- , fist propaganda and gathering of adverse bats about the Unit- ed States. . . V Through U. S. immigrant remittances of U. S. currency - to kin in Russia, where it aggre- . - J m 7:4 i'75.* -77,--.- ,. m?:?5?5.1-,, Date: manner in which these serious ! . charges were made." It point- ed out that the "irresponsible" statements "produced serious ? repercussions on the foreign pol= i? icy of the United States." 1, Although the committee fail- ed to find any 'documentation of the three State Department of- ficials' charges, the Central In- telligence Agency conducted its own investigation and reported back to the Senate ?Judiciary ourc e os,,V - :Committee, headed by Senator ' Specific cases of espionage .? Nevertheless,. a Subcommittee.... .Pat McCarran (D.-Nev.), that',., ,agents of Soviet Russia and of the - Senate ,Judiciary Corn-,, '-'.'Communist terrorists, wholesale.. . Red satellite countries w Ii 0, mittee opened .an investigation.- . killers, spies and . subversive : cloaked themselves with U.N. 1I. Three. subordinates in the State agents did; in fact, hold -jobs e er ,WaialUalgIAig=aii=4 gates a considerable income for Russian intelligence operations abroad. g/Maintenance of liaison be- tween Communists in the Unit- ed States and Russian head- quarters. ? V Organization of pressure - diplomatic immunity while op.:: Department, :William McGrath. with the United Nations and its groups to oppose American leg-i i erating against the United 61,Harlow, Robert G. Alexander . subsidiary organizations. islation adverse to Communists. -States are the subject of an ' i I., and k,C1.yde Larkin, save tes- . k.ri in arresting new book, Red Spies : 1 i..,' timoir; 7?.:.1115.! e r a 1 ,' iifect that Findings Revealed The concern over Red spies . in the U. N., by Pierre Huss .:! h ,the UN headquarters was being and George Carpozi, Jr. Fused by Communist countries : ? The Ledger continues ,today..% ! ? ' an exclusive newspaper ser-: '1 i r lalization of ? the hook as a - I *matter of public' interest. The {! authors reveal in this instal--11 'r ment the :dramatic story. of 411. 1 the spy link between 40 Amer.; . ;. as a' "gateway" to slip hun- dreds. of 'subversive agents into the ? United States, under dip- lomatic 'immunity. Mr. Harlow, chief of, the. Department's Dip-,, lomatic Visa Section, ? expressed... the belief ? that "every represen- Rear Admiral...T-7r Hillen- koeifer, direct-OVOT-tite-CTA;Wfio haa.-.Ttivestizate.d:i7lIgi7-Or one 'hundred _nAmes.,of UN employes, submitted thesIfindin,, 1,00 Thirty-two of the employes the UN eventually diminished, but with the Valentin Gubitchete icase in 1949-50 there was sPe.-, :cific ground for apprehensions about the world organization.1 ? Valentin Gubitchev was convict; were engaged in active work for ; ed in a Federal Court of espien. , : ? the intelligence agencies of their age for Russia, suspended by respective countries. the U. N. Secretary-General; 1 icans in the U.- N. and the ,.I talive of an Iron Curtain cou,n- ?Twenty-nine others we re and declared by ,the Federa pro ?. chief assistant to. the Secre- try" attached to the UN ."is a ? .bigh-ranking : C9'mmunist- . Party Judge. who presided over the . . . , tary General, the Russian "i threat to the security of the ? trial to have violated "Your, ? I K I ti Zi k United S t " ? ons an n nchen 0. ?States." es. ,. ,? There was angry 'denial from , CHAPTER TWOI i,: 'the staff 'committee of the UN; ? ? ' which unanimously passed a By PIERRE HUSS re,solution , in behalf of their, And GORGE CARPOZI JR. ,I! more than 3,000 employes. The i The United Nations was only '1 ? resolution stated that the- "un- r ? three years old when individuals !,'.:. i substantiated charges which - ! in the United States Senate and have been made, and the man- ., t House Of Representatives rais- ',. ? ;ler in which they were pub- . ed, the question if the U. N. I4'.- licized, unjustly, cause damage. ' had been made a cover for or-1, to ?the United, Nations in - gen? , : ganized espionage 'against the ' eral and the Secretariat in par- t United States. They were de- ? : . 1, ticular." ' ? ? nOunced by emotional-defenders,' The ten U. . S. Secretary of. 1.. ? of ?the U. -N.. as ."incredibly ii?-? .? ;-. atate Geo c rMarsl f : orm; *\,. ? ? . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5 ed co a mige, mittee of 'iallprivate cid-. , zens ,W look into;-..0)e.'1Patter4: voTwenty-one more were en- gaged in active Communist or-, ganization wink of an under- i ground or subversive nature out- side their native homelands. ve Fifteen others were not in the CIA's "derogatory informa- tion file." . V The -remaining three--had definite pro-American -sympa- thies or' had shown disaffection ? with Communist ideology. ? \ : Another part of Hillenkoet- ter's _letter te . the Senators de- scribed .the 'pattern of Commu-,. fist espionage and subversive.;t oath of office to the Secretariat of the United Nations. Have by your acts attempted to destroy the hopes of the millions? who would avoid war and es. tablish peace ?' . The Senate' Internal. Security Committee in Washington touch= ed off a full drive against 'still.I. versives and Communists in the :?. Secretariat in mid-summer 1951. ?:, An investigation linked at least forty Americans in the , UN 'tci espionage, The. probe )ed.tn'thi Cotrrinu,a , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release al Americans and the suspen.untii late I:14U wnen me. uumi.- sion of eleven others. Severa?chey case had exposed Russia's. of the latter group turned iiespionage activity in the UN , their resignations before t he and brought widespread. critij:. could be given hearings. ' I cism of the Soviets: Soboloy was'! , 0 highlight of the Senate 11.1'1 then , 4.eca lied to Moscow. and The . from there had sent word back I Woman Testifies . ternal Security Cor1initteehea6 that "illness" prevented his re- jag came in early December', turn. Zinchenko had been as-, ? ! when Evelyn Thaler, secretarylsigned to Sobolov s job when he ?? to the Russian Konstantin E returned to the UN with a re- 'tinchenko, head of the UN's De &iced rank in the Soviet Dele- i :partment of ,Security CounciLApg,ation. ? . . lairs, testified. ,. . !; Another -?element of mystery Miss Thaler told the probers cloaked the case because, along that she had been a Communist with Zinchenko, one of his chief at one tithe, but quit of bore aides; Nicola' Skvortsov, also _ dom. Miss Thaler's testimony was :among the missing.. He had helped, focus attention on a!takea; home leave In April and strange vacancy that ' had de..., returned to Moscow. ? Skvortsov :yeloped in the august councils.i.then applied for an 'extension of the United Nations. Her owlet' leave on, the plea his wife boss had. suddenly- dropped ?out: wad sick.' The request was Of sight. ' ?? ' Igrunted and -he 'waS'; continued Actually, Zinchenko had beenl .on the payroll, drawing a tax- conspicuous by his absence andlfree $8,000-a-year salary with it was a matter that had coniifull retirement benefits. : cerned Secretary General' ..._. . _ _ .... . ...... _. the. ,.. scene ,,The fact. waS the Iwo Russian m ipl . Trygve Lie. Around mid-Septe- omats had left ber of 1952, Lie decided to make just when the congressional in yestigation had linked the forty it his business to find out ,whaj . ilAmericans in the UN to espion- h d become of Zinchenke' 50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5 nreatsp to witnoraw from fur- ther participation in the world body, Molotov then named So- bolov for the job. ? Even before Secretary Gen- eral' Lie suspected what was happening in his own Secretar- iat, General Douglas MacAr- thur, who headed the U. S. forc- es as well as those' of other nations under the UN banner on the Korean front, had begun to realize what was going on. The North Koreans ?seemed to have an almost Uncanny ability to an- ticipate MacA'rthur's battle plans. The General began to limit his reports to the UN to infor- ntation on 'general matters of a non-in ilitary nature. ; MacArthur had a seCondary reason :for holding ? back. On more than one Occasion he had found ,the UN Security Council had censored his reports on the course of the war in . the: Far East. It :was ah, Unfoitunate posi- tkin for MacArthur., But it soon made; trouble for; Zinchenkil who, as the 'UN's Minister of As Assistant Secretary A.age. The UN's Department of War, Communication and Infor- eral Of the UN Zinchenko was , tie 11Security. Council Affairs, where ma tion,,notified MacArthur that .1 l!the accused Americans .11 ad he' was failing in his obligation the highest ranking Russian ' Lie's Secretariat and the poi?fi.l'ed'... was headed, by Zin- to the UN. ? Zinchenko was no cial who sat in for the Secre-i - c1 ienko. ? longer able to :transmit neut.. : Action Significant p ate. warfront information to the tory General when he was away I, .?? :.p ? I Kremlin because of MacAr- from the UN. Zinchenko had !? Thererwas significance to the thur s ;holdout. In anger oyer gone back- to Moscow in June, ael-.ion Lie had taken against _ 4inClienko's 'abuse, MacArthur then vanished into silence. ?. !Zinchen.ko, early in 1952, deny- whipped off a blistering coin- Lie asked a Soviet Delegation!ing him access to any reports plaint to Secretari. General Lie. member, Arkady. . A., Sobolov,, coming in from the Korean war The General did not accuse Zin- "What has happened to Konstan- !front Zinchenko had been chenlio of espionage; he ? mere tin?"? :`caught making unauthorized di- IY charged that his reports were Sobolov was. evasive. ,"I have versions of ? documents dealing being censored by the Security been wondering myself why kon- ?with strategy, troop movements Council. ? stantin has not. come back. f and other military matters con- had heard he was ill, poor fel.: cerning UN forces in ,Korea. low. Maybe he ????is still. indis. There can. be little doubt that posed. . ." ' Zinthenko ,was feeding the in- Stock Reply ? formation ,to those in Moscowl ell ? without Zinchenko. It was This is 'practically the stock', who.. were directing the Red apparent that Lie, too, 'had be- reply one gets from Riissian gov-. forces fighting against the UN, Come aware of Zinchenko's real aims 'in demanding. filll battle- field reports. Within a.few short weeks the secretary .General di- eight Assistant Secretaries Gen- rected that henceforth reports eral. When the Korean War from .MacArthur must not cross! but like other diplomats wise in came in effect the UN Minis-. Zinchenko's desk; they were to the ways of reported Soviet, ail- broke out in 1950, Zinchenko be- go ctireetly to Lie. ? l? 'ments, the 'Secretary General, ter of War; Communication, and Thus Zinchenko was reduced, ,concluded the illness was mostly Information. That put him in for all intents and purposes, to diplomatic; and that Zinchenko charge of all legal, military and.'the level of a liaison or courier had, seen he last of his days ,in judicial affairs relating to 'the' between ; the' Secretariat and the service; of the UN.. : subsequent UN operation's ? in, the. Soviet UN Mission. In sub- . , If anyone should have known Korea. This . prize': poSition had sequent months Zinchenko was ?hat became of Zinchenko,- ii,b,een ..delegOteeto:' the. RusSiansi seen ; more and more in 'the Sobolov. Soboloir himse1114,the4945. Char- coinpanY s his aide. . Nicolal- -.11ad' held' Zinchenkies 422 000,aj Reports Go Direct Not Idng afterward :Lie be- gan holding closed door confer- ences with the Security Coun- eminent officials at the UN af:. ter 'one of their number drops out of sight suddenly. . Lie had heard rumors ,that pZinchenko was ill in Moscow, divisions On the battle lines. Zinchenko had come into his post in 1949 as one of the UN's auu guisags tugeuier uuuita -not go unnoticed. Eventually Secretary General Lie was informed by the State Department :that Skvortsov had been trying to subvert. a num- ber of Amerioans into obtaining secrets' about America's East- ern .Seaboard defenses. It was evident then w h y Zinchenko and Skvortsov had !taken their. leave so suddenly p without explanation and why both Were delaying their re- ; , torn to the UN. , Natiirally, the . Soviet Union Was aware of the probe into the activities of the forty Ameri- cans in the UN suspected as Communist sympathizers or -spies. They could anticipate the involvement of Zinehenko 'and Skvortsov in the intjuiry of the Senate Internal Security. Com- mittee. The Committee had 'al- ready been told in priiAate hear- ings that the two Soviet emis saries were behind the whole plot. , - Plot Fails But the, plot never got fitr. Alerted by SkyortsOv's and Zin- chenko's unusual comings and goings, the FBI put a tail on them. They already had reason for suspicions. Skvortsov 11 a d been stationed with the Soviet Embassy in Ottawa at the time the notorious Sergei M. Kudry- avtsev operated. in Canada As head of the spy ring which stole atomic secrets. ? Before long, the FBI's sur- misses regarding the two receiv- ed validating support. Trailing Skvortsov, agents had witness- ed his surreptitious meetings with various American 'UN em- ployes. When these meetings be- gan to attract Zinchenko also, the FBI moved in' quickly and grabbed off the Americans, one by one, questioned them, and learned what the Russians were after. The FBI said Zinchenko and Skvortsov were out to get any information dealing with mili- tary and seaport facilities on our Atlantic 'Coast: the capa- city of our naval shipyards in 'Brooklyn, Norfolk' and 'Ports- mouth; data On the Electric Boat Company yards at Groton, Connecticut,. where the United States was about to launch its nuclear sub construction ? pro-, gram; statistics about Air Force landing strips at Mitchell Field, Long Island; Andover. Massa- chusetts; and Maguire Air Foree .00riff. met ? , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release- @ 50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5 \\_ Base in New Jersey?;, and nu- As suspected, Zinchenko had merous other top-secret data. fallen out of the good graces of Only When the plot crystalliz- the Stalinist regime and had, ed and the FBI had proof of been shipped off to a prison' Skvortsov's and Zinchenko's at- camp in one of the last purge! tempts to subvert the killed- campaigns before Stalin's death.1 cans in hand did FBI Director He remained a political prison- , S. Edgar Hoover notify the er until the post-Stalin rehabili-. State Department, which in turn tation procedures enacted byl alerted Lie. the new government. Of course, there was little Lie As this was written Konstan- could do then against Skvortsov tin Zinchenko serves as head and Zinchenko. The FBI wanted of press service on a newly Lie to do nothing. Both Skvort- formed State Committee for Cul-' soy and Zinchenko had notified tural Relations with .Foreign. the Secretary General of their Countries. intentions to return as soon as TOMORROW: The Ledger they had conquered their re- publishes the story of the hero; spective bouts with "illness." ism of a patriotic American en. The United States wanted them gineer who served as a counter- again to pick up the strings of.qnv to nrevent the theft by Rus-, s their espionage activities withian agents of one of America's t the hope they would lead the top secrets ? details of the revolutionary Sperry bombsight. authorities to other spy con- Read it exclusively in minor- tacts. So Lie went along with row's instalment. of "Red Spiei the plan. ? . . But When months passed and?in the U ? 44." Skvortsov and Zinchenko both continued to stall about their re- turn, Lie was convinced the So- viet Government had gotten wind of what was suspected of the two diplomats. 'Incident' Avoided Early in November, Lie fi- nally sent a note to Skvortsov in Moscow, informing him he had been dismissed. No note was sent to Zinchenko. Inas- much as he enjoyed high diplo- matic status,. Lie wanted to avoid an "incident." It wasn't until Dec. 13 that an announcement of the UN spy scandal was made to the pub- lic. The United States Delega- tion at the UN broke the news with this statement: "The Unit- ed States Government has no- tified the United Nations that Mr. Nicolai Skvortsbv has at- tempted5 espionage activities. The United States has also in- dicated to the United Nations that such conduct is in its opin- ion a clear violation .of his status as an international civil i ser- vant. Pending UN action, the U. S. 'Government has taken steps to deny a is to Mr. Skvortsov,, who is now on home leave." The public was never told un- til our book was published that there Was a?direct tie between Zinchenko and Skvortsov a n d the forty ?Americana in espion- age.. ? . ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/06/12 : CIA-RDP68-00046R000200090004-5