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Was Angleton Right?
WALL STREET JOURNAL ^ | December 30, 2004 | Edward Jay Epstein

Posted on 01/03/2005 1:15:44 PM PST by TapTheSource

Was Angleton Right?

WALL STREET JOURNAL December 30, 2004

by Edward Jay Epstein

Recently a number of former CIA officers received an invitation from the Spy Museum in Washington to attend a luncheon for former KGB Col. Victor Cherkashin. The event, as the invitation said, would afford "a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to dine and dish with an extraordinary spymaster." In the heyday of the Cold War, such an offer, delivered with slightly more discretion, might have been the prelude to a KGB recruitment operation. Now it's merely the notice for a book party celebrating yet another memoir by a former KGB officer recounting how the KGB duped the CIA.

In this case, there is a great deal to tell. Victor Cherkashin served in the KGB from 1952, when Stalin was still in power, until the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991. During most of that time his mission was to organize KGB operations aimed at undermining the integrity, confidence and morale of the CIA. He seems to have been good at his job. His big opportunity came when he was the deputy KGB chief at the Soviet Embassy in Washington between 1979 and 1985.

Those years were the height of a ferocious spy war within the Cold War. In "Spy Handler" Mr. Cherkashin describes in detail how he helped convert two American counterintelligence officers -- one well-placed in the CIA's Soviet Russia Division, the other in the FBI -- into moles. Their names are notorious now, but over the course of a decade Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen operated with anonymous stealth, compromising most of the CIA's and FBI's espionage efforts in the Soviet Union.

But that wasn't the end of Mr. Cherkashin's glory. Returning to Moscow, he helped run "dangle" operations in which KGB-controlled diplomats feigned a willingness to be recruited by their American counterparts, only to hand over disinformation when they were finally "recruited." Thus when the CIA came around to investigating why its agents were being compromised in Russia, the KGB sent the CIA a disinformation agent, for example, to paint false tracks away from its moles. This agent -- "Mr. X" -- offered to betray the Soviet Union for $5,000. When the CIA snapped up the bait, Mr. X pointed it to its own secret communication center in Warrenton, Va., falsely claiming that the KGB was electronically intercepting data from its computers. The purpose, of course, was to divert the agency away from the mole, who continued betraying CIA secrets for eight more years.

Told from the KGB's vantage point, Mr. Cherkashin's story provides a gripping account of its successes in the spy war. He shows Mr. Hanssen to have been an easily managed and highly productive "penetration" who operated via the unusual tradecraft of dead drops, leaving material at designated locations where it could be transferred without spy and handler ever meeting. (Indeed, the KGB never knew Mr. Hanssen's identity.) Mr. Ames, for his part, was a more complex case, since he had come under suspicion and the KGB had to concern itself with throwing the CIA off his trail. That America's counterespionage apparatus allowed both men to operate as long as they did is a testament to its complacency as much as to the KGB's cleverness. And indeed, Mr. Cherkashin skillfully torments his former adversary, the CIA, by attributing a large part of the KGB's success to the incompetence of the CIA leadership, or its madness. He asserts, in particular, that the CIA had been "all but paralyzed" by the "paranoia" of James Jesus Angleton, the CIA's longtime counterintelligence chief, who suspected that the KGB had planted a mole in the CIA's Soviet Russia division.

Mr. Cherkashin is right that Mr. Angleton's concern retarded, if not "paralyzed," CIA operations in Russia. After all, if the CIA was indeed vulnerable to KGB penetration, as Mr. Angleton believed, it had to assume that its agents in Russia would be compromised and used for disinformation. This suspicion would recommend a certain caution or tentativeness, to say the least. Mr. Cherkashin's taunt about Mr. Angleton's "paranoia" echoed what was said by Mr. Angleton's critics in the CIA, who resented his influence, believing that polygraph tests and other security measures immunized the CIA against such long-term penetration.

But of course Mr. Angleton was right, too. On Feb. 21, 1994, Mr. Ames, the CIA officer who had served in the Soviet Russia division, was arrested by the FBI. He confessed that he had been a KGB mole for almost a decade and had provided the KGB with secrets that compromised more than 100 CIA operations in Russia. Mr. Hanssen was caught seven years later.

Since Mr. Cherkashin had managed the recruitment of Mr. Ames and helped with that of Mr. Hanssen, his accusation that Mr. Angleton was paranoid for suspecting the possibility of a mole has the exquisite irony of a stalker following his victim in order to tell him that he is not being followed. Mr. Cherkashin adds a further twist by suggesting that Mr. Angleton's "paranoia" made it easier for the KGB to recruit demoralized CIA officers as moles. According to this tortured logic, if the CIA -- and its counterintelligence staff -- had acted more ostrich-like, by denying the existence of moles in its ranks, the KGB would never have found Aldrich Ames or penetrated the agency in other ways.

Mr. Cherkashin, who received the Order of Lenin for his work against the CIA, now runs a security company in Moscow. Because his side lost the Cold War, he is free to travel to Washington to toast his former adversaries (and present them with autographed copies of "Spy Handler"). The unauthorized revealing of KGB secrets is against the law in Vladimir Putin's Russia, and Mr. Cherkashin says that he does not plan to bring out an edition there. But why not? It's hard to imagine that the authorities would find much to object to.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: ames; angleton; cherkashin; espionage; intelligence; kgb; spying
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1 posted on 01/03/2005 1:15:45 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...

!!!


2 posted on 01/03/2005 1:17:16 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource

Also see:

http://edjayepstein.blogspot.com/


3 posted on 01/03/2005 1:18:43 PM PST by TapTheSource
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To: TapTheSource

"Mr. Cherkashin, who received the Order of Lenin for his work against the CIA, now runs a security company in Moscow"

ROTFLMAO


4 posted on 01/03/2005 1:23:20 PM PST by international american ((Pray for the millions of lives disrupted by tsunami.))
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To: TapTheSource

But, as I understand it, both Ames and Hansen were pretty obvious moles who could have been uncovered rather easily. Angleton's suspicions were directed against loyal operatives against whom there was no evidence.


5 posted on 01/03/2005 1:26:04 PM PST by proxy_user
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To: TapTheSource

No surprise here, The CIA is nothing but a bunch of WORTHLESS toads.


6 posted on 01/03/2005 1:30:56 PM PST by zzen01
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To: proxy_user
...until the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991....

An operation is measured by its success, not the memoirs of the losing side (or winning side either.)

7 posted on 01/03/2005 1:32:32 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: TapTheSource
Please tell me again why Ames and Hansen are sucking our precious air, and have not been strapped to the exhaust nozzles of an F-16?
8 posted on 01/03/2005 1:36:19 PM PST by Sthitch
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To: Doctor Stochastic

Touche. The proof is in the pudding. The CIA may have problems, but the KGB and the nation it stood for no longer exist!


9 posted on 01/03/2005 1:38:22 PM PST by VRWCisme
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To: VRWCisme
"The CIA may have problems, but the KGB and the nation it stood for no longer exist!"

Ahhhhh! But there is, still, a huge, untouched, 60-year-old cesspool of fellow-travelers on C Street in DC happily undermining everything the U.S. stands for.

10 posted on 01/03/2005 1:52:18 PM PST by SuperLuminal
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To: Sthitch

They both were part of the worthless Washington DC "inner cicle".


11 posted on 01/03/2005 1:54:56 PM PST by zzen01
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To: TapTheSource
Wow. This commie spy's book sounds like some real propaganda.

Here's some excerpts from a Newsweek interview:

Cherkashin: ...at the end of the day, an American is a person. The only way to stop there being any more Ameses or Hanssens is to stop relying on people. Imagine you hire someone as an officer who just graduated from a good university and does well in his intelligence training. He gets married, has a child. Everything is fine, then one day he falls for some girl. That's it. He's got a conflict. He's not so loyal to work anymore. Maybe he needs money now to buy her a present, and so on.

Q: What makes someone a good candidate for switching sides?

Cherkashin: A person doesn't become a spy just because someone offers him $100,000 to do something. A person must be in the right frame of mind. It helps if a person has convictions, if he feels like his government is doing evil, if he feels his religious principles are being violated. Look at today's Islamic extremists. Why are they so effective? Because they believe.

Q: Do you see a Russian leader today who can take the country in that direction?

Cherkashin: No. Russia needs Stalin. We need a tough person. There's no one like that right now.

Q: As U.S. intelligence agencies are restructured, do you have any advice for your old adversaries?

Cherkashin: America is now at the center of a unipolar world. The danger in this is that the American government will start to believe it can ignore the interests of the rest of the world. That would be a disaster. If the American intelligence agencies start dictating their terms to everyone else, you will get the opposite reaction. Look at what happened in Iraq...


12 posted on 01/03/2005 1:59:26 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe (Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people.)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
The Last Word: Viktor Cherkashin
13 posted on 01/03/2005 2:00:26 PM PST by Tailgunner Joe (Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people.)
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To: TapTheSource

Another Angleton / Golitsyn bash fest. I wonder what the combined budgets are for the SVR, ErBu, ISI and the like, for operations to discredit these two?


14 posted on 01/03/2005 2:11:04 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: VRWCisme

>Touche. The proof is in the pudding. The CIA may have problems, but the KGB and the nation it stood for no longer exist!<

A fleeting thought....Our problem with the CIA may be it's infiltration by the KGB. And another....the bear is coming out of hybernation.


15 posted on 01/03/2005 2:12:43 PM PST by Paperdoll
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To: VRWCisme

Actually, most of the infrastructure and personnel of the KGB were miraculously retained by the emergent SVR and FSB. Only the name changed but much remained the same. Of course, the opportunity for a good purge was taken. Those ejected mostly ended up in the Russian Mafiya. I will take that at face value for now, but do not discount the possibility that the purge was also, itself, and operation to create a "Mafiya" with plausible deniability.


16 posted on 01/03/2005 2:14:20 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
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To: Tailgunner Joe
IIRC most traitors in the U.S. "intelligence community" were motivated strictly by money (or sex).
17 posted on 01/03/2005 2:14:22 PM PST by BenLurkin (Big government is still a big problem.)
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To: proxy_user
But, as I understand it, both Ames and Hansen were pretty obvious moles who could have been uncovered rather easily.

You are correct. Staggeringly, gross incompetence allowed them to operate for as long as they did.

18 posted on 01/03/2005 2:23:13 PM PST by AmericaUnited
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To: AmericaUnited

Both Ames and Hansen were evil but a recent book on Hansen reveals him to be one of the most morally repugnant humanoids ever. The Rosenbergs were executed. Why are these two steal stealing our oxygen?


19 posted on 01/03/2005 3:27:15 PM PST by Shisan ("The law is the true embodiment of everything that's excellent...")
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To: TapTheSource; Calpernia; Velveeta; Revel; Alabama MOM; DAVEY CROCKETT; liberallyconservative

Interesting, thanks for posting this one.


20 posted on 01/03/2005 4:30:39 PM PST by nw_arizona_granny (Today, please pray for God's miracle, we are not going to make it without him.)
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