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Book: Czech Spies Loved U.S. and Stayed
Associated Press ^ | May 11, 2003 | George Gedda

Posted on 05/11/2003 6:26:57 PM PDT by lump in the melting pot

WASHINGTON - Somewhere in the United States live a few former spies from the communist government of Czechoslovakia, which passed into history in 1989.

When officials of the new Czech Republic tried to recall them, they simply refused. They had grown accustomed to their lives in America, they said, and did not want to abandon their families.

The Czech government decided to leave them alone.

The spies were sleeper agents who had never been activated. The communist government, a hard-line treaty ally of the Soviet Union, had planned to order them to duty in the event of a crisis or a major war with the West.

After the spies refused to go home, the FBI and the CIA allowed them to stay since none had ever harmed U.S. interests.

The story is told by former CIA official Milt Bearden and New York Times reporter James Risen in their new book, "The Main Enemy," a chronicle of East-West spy activities during the waning years of the Cold War.

Bearden and Risen also tell of a Soviet colonel who was assigned to a Soviet base in East Germany, near Berlin, in 1990. They write that he was "ready to do anything he could to get out to the West." Time was of the essence because he was due to be shipped back to the Soviet Union soon.

The CIA officer handling the case told the colonel during a clandestine meeting that his value would be greatly enhanced if he were to defect with some Soviet weapons. The colonel promised to try to steal an SA-19 surface-to-air missile, an item coveted by the Pentagon.

The colonel made his move late one afternoon. He ordered a surprise muster of his battalion, and as his men lined up, he went to the base arms depot. He ordered clerks to load an SA-19 and several other items onto a truck.

"With virtually all of the base's personnel now standing in formation near the front gate, the colonel gunned the truck engine and barreled to the back of the base, crashing through the perimeter fence and out into the farmland beyond," the authors say.

After a rendezvous with his American contacts, the weapons were loaded onto a U.S. Army truck. Within 15 minutes they had crossed the border into West Germany.

"The colonel got out, pulled off his Soviet Army greatcoat, threw it on the ground and angrily stomped all over it in his Army boots," according to the book.

"He then got back into the truck and they sped on, making only one more stop before arriving at a U.S. Army base near Frankfurt: dinner at McDonald's."

Bearden and Risen raise the possibility that Robert Hanssen, sentenced to life imprisonment last year for working as a KGB spy, may have made financial contributions to the Republican Party.

Hanssen told his wife, according to the authors, that he had received invitations to Republican inaugural balls - possibly involving at least one of President Reagan's and the inaugural of the first President Bush.

Federal Election Commission records offer no evidence of any GOP contributions by Hanssen. But, as the book notes, inaugural invitations tend to be given to campaign supporters and donors.

The authors pose what they describe as an intriguing question: "Did some of Bob Hanssen's KGB money wind up in Republican coffers?"


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bookreview; coldwar; czech; czechoslovakia; czechrepublic; espionage; mainenemy; sovietunion; spy; turass

1 posted on 05/11/2003 6:26:57 PM PDT by lump in the melting pot
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To: lump in the melting pot
"The authors pose what they describe as an intriguing question: 'Did some of Bob Hanssen's KGB money wind up in Republican coffers?'"

Even in an article about defecting Commies, the AP and TNYT still find a way to knock Republicans.
2 posted on 05/11/2003 6:40:59 PM PDT by Terpfen
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To: Terpfen
There is no way Hansenn gave any money to any candidate. He was all about looking out for number 1.
3 posted on 05/11/2003 7:08:08 PM PDT by ConservativeMan55 (Boycott Smuckers Jelly ! ! ! ! !)
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To: ConservativeMan55
There is no way Hansenn gave any money to any candidate. He was all about looking out for number 1.

Agreed.

4 posted on 05/11/2003 7:28:02 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (Plus de fromage, s'il vous plait...)
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To: lump in the melting pot
Whar does Hannsen have to do with this?

I guess mentioning him detracts from the left wing view that behind the Iron Curtain was a paradise...free health care, equality and education for all.
5 posted on 05/11/2003 7:35:48 PM PDT by Guillermo (Sic 'Em!)
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To: lump in the melting pot
Bearden and Risen raise the possibility that Robert Hanssen may have made financial contributions to the Republican Party.

Pure speculation; just because he received invitations to dinners? As a student, I give no money to the RNC. I can't afford it. But because of my involvement in party-building activities, my name is on all of the lists. I get numerous invitations to things I couldn't afford to attend.
6 posted on 05/11/2003 7:57:19 PM PDT by July 4th
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To: lump in the melting pot
I read another story in the opposite direction. About an American agent who fell in love with Czechoslovakia and has since stayed.
7 posted on 05/11/2003 8:11:16 PM PDT by Tokhtamish
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