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A secret identity finally revealed
Toronto Sun ^ | September 1, 2002 | Peter Worthington

Posted on 09/01/2002 7:09:17 AM PDT by Clive

All their time in Canada, Igor and Anna Gouzenko lived vigilantly, under false identities, secretly and ever watchful for their own security.

To many who didn't know, it seemed bizarre to the point of neurotic. Yet it kept them alive - certainly Igor, who until his death by heart attack in 1982 was an implacable foe of the Soviet system and the one who exposed its subversive malignancy to the West after World War II.

By the time Igor's wife, Svetlana, died in 2001 there was likely no danger, but a lifetime of caution was hard to shake. The Gouzenkos lived under the false name "Krysac," with their eight children born in Canada bearing that name.

This Thursday, a public memorial service will be held at their gravesite in Springcreek Cemetery on Mississauga's Clarkson Rd. For the first time since 1945, their real name - Gouzenko - will be identified with them, inscribed on their headstone.

Theirs is a story like no other.

In 1945, Gouzenko, an officer in Soviet military intelligence (GRU), worked as a cipher clerk in the Soviet embassy in Ottawa, encoding and decoding messages to Moscow. He "escaped" with 109 documents that exposed a massive spy ring in Canada.

At first his efforts to defect were rejected. No one was interested. Prime Minister W.L. Mackenzie King was reluctant to believe "Mr. Stalin" would condone espionage. When Soviet officials invaded Gouzenko's Ottawa apartment, police realized something unusual was afoot and moved in.

Sir William Stephenson, the spy guru known as "Intrepid," persuaded the government Gouzenko was important and must be protected. Igor and his pregnant wife were hidden at Camp "X" - a spy training centre near Oshawa that is slated to become a museum of clandestine operations.

Extensive spy network

The documents Gouzenko turned over to the RCMP resulted in a royal commission inquiry and some 20 Canadians were charged with espionage-related offences. The spy network was so extensive that all the individuals involved weren't prosecuted. Some cover names were never explored. Treason reached into the halls of government bureaucracy.

Gouzenko's revelations shocked the western world, and led to exposing the atomic spies in the U.S. and Britain: Harry Gold, Alger Hiss, Harry Dexter White, Klaus Fuchs, Alan Nunn May, Bruno Pontecarvo and, eventually, Sir Anthony Blunt.

Justices Robert Taschereau and R.L Kellock concluded their royal commission report: "In our opinion Gouzenko, by what he has done, had rendered great public service to the people of this country, and thereby has placed Canada in his debt." Peaceniks and the lib-left never ceased denigrating Gouzenko. They didn't believe Soviet subversion existed, and campaigned ceaselessly against those who did.

During his 37 years in Canada, Gouzenko was hounded by myths. It was widely accepted that he existed by suing those who criticized him. Untrue. He sued those who told lies about him - and then only for token amounts.

"If I don't defend my name, no one else will," he once told me.

When I opened the Moscow bureau for the old Toronto Telegram, Gouzenko was surprised that one could be critical of the system yet not be overtly punished. Times were changing, and we became friends.

But caution remained his creed. He rarely made appointments, and liked to just appear. His caution was justified when a KGB "sleeper" agent was ordered to kill him in the late 1960s - but defected to the RCMP instead. Corrupted by the good life, the Soviets said.

It was also claimed Gouzenko was an alcoholic, was always subsidized by the government, that he had no useful information. All untrue. He was a diabetic in later years, blind but uncomplaining and relentlessly working to protect Canada from its wilful naivete.

For his first 15 years in Canada, Gouzenko got no income from the government, but lived off the sale of books, articles, appearances and his paintings, which are surprisingly good. His Fall of a Titan won a Governor General's Award for Literature. The movie rights were sold, but no movie was ever made.

The Diefenbaker government granted him a modest pension, since for his own security he couldn't hold a steady, predictable job. He came out of hiding to oppose Pierre Trudeau as Liberal leader in 1968, and considered him a possible Castro of Canada. He documented his theory with impressive documentation and analysis. Wrong - but courageous.

The Gouzenkos became passionate Canadians. When asked if he ever regretted his "choice" of defecting when besieged by problems, Gouzenko would respond instantly and indignantly: "How could I regret choosing 'freedom' for me and my family?" His kids weren't told their family history until they were old enough to understand. None learned Russian, and today all are "Canadian" to the core. In fact, they alone are justification for the Gouzenkos' choice.

Unpublished novel

Igor could not have survived so resolutely had not Anna possessed such grit, humour, intelligence and spirit. In abeyance is an unpublished Gouzenko novel, Oceans of Time, waiting for an imaginative publisher.

The Gouzenkos even had foes inside the RCMP. At his death, Gouzenko had five suits pending against writers who quoted unnamed RCMP sources saying he was alcoholic, unreliable and provided no useful information.

Odd for the RCMP - and 100% wrong.

The government of Canada has designated the "Gouzenko Affair" as an event of national significance, and plans a monument or plaque to this effect. Some feel the marker should be in the park across from the Ottawa apartment the Gouzenkos lived in when the story of his escape began. Others think Camp "X" would be an appropriate site.

Regardless, it is recognition long overdue. This Thursday, Igor and Anna's children will be at the graves of their parents, seeing for the first time the Gouzenko name openly honoured, with no concern about security.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs
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1 posted on 09/01/2002 7:09:17 AM PDT by Clive
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To: Great Dane; liliana; Alberta's Child; Entropy Squared; Rightwing Canuck; Loyalist; canuckwest; ...
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2 posted on 09/01/2002 7:10:24 AM PDT by Clive
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To: Clive
" Peaceniks and the lib-left never ceased denigrating Gouzenko. They didn't believe Soviet subversion existed, and campaigned ceaselessly against those who did. "

Almost the same thing here. The lefties and the media KNEW subversion existed in the US (hell, they were part of it!) and they campaigned ceaselessly against those who tried to stop it. To this day, the latter-day-commies have made Senator McCarthy to be a bad guy, rather than the hero-patriot he was, and the weasel traitors who refused to testify, to be good guys.

The US traitors refused to testify against their co-workers who they knew to be Soviet/commie spies, in effect, saying, "our obligation to our co-conspirators is greater than our obligation to our country," and were made heroes by the Hollywood co-conspirators they were protecting.

3 posted on 09/01/2002 7:25:20 AM PDT by Tacis
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To: Clive
His caution was justified when a KGB "sleeper" agent was ordered to kill him in the late 1960s - but defected to the RCMP instead. Corrupted by the good life, the Soviets said.

Sounds like something a modern Liberal Democrat would say.

4 posted on 09/01/2002 8:13:37 AM PDT by IncPen
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To: Clive
to protect Canada from its wilful naivete.

Yah. We got that sort down here. Not just willfuly naive, but relentlessly and viciously naive.

5 posted on 09/01/2002 8:21:07 AM PDT by Eala
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To: Clive
It is this kind of person that has founded Western civilization on this continent. I am sorry to see that, despite being in debt to this gentleman, the Canadian government found no way to provide properly for him and his family.

His story reminded me of what Nixon said about his wife: "Whe is no longer popular because her virtues are no loner in fashion." I guess, by the time Guzenko tried to save Canada from her enemies, it was no longer en vogue to be a Canadian.

6 posted on 09/01/2002 9:38:56 AM PDT by TopQuark
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To: Clive
I had a friend who used to meet Gouezenko from time to time back in the '70's and early '80's when he would walk into the newsroom of the Toronto Sun or, in my friend's case, his bookstore, and sit down for a chat and have a coffee.Then he, and a couple others, would go out for a drink and have a merry old time.
7 posted on 09/01/2002 9:43:52 AM PDT by habs4ever
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To: Clive
I always thought he lived in Port Credit,and have passed that cemetary many times going up Clarkson Rd.Small world it is :-)
8 posted on 09/01/2002 9:47:12 AM PDT by habs4ever
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To: Clive
The movie rights were sold, but no movie was ever made

There are no communists in Hollywood, are there? </sarcasm off>Does this meean no one can now tell this story of anti-communism using the movie media?

9 posted on 09/01/2002 9:53:47 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: habs4ever
I remember Gouzenko appearing on "Front Page Challenge" likely in the mid sixties. He had, if I remember correctly , a black hood over his head to hide his face.
10 posted on 09/01/2002 9:57:18 AM PDT by Snowyman
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To: Clive
Quidam: a nameless passer-by, a solitary figure lingering on a street corner, a person
rushing past. ... This is the "quidam" that Cirque du Soleil is celebrating. ...
11 posted on 09/01/2002 9:57:45 AM PDT by revolted
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To: Clive
Prime Minister W.L. Mackenzie King was reluctant to believe "Mr. Stalin" would condone espionage.

This is the same P.M. that talked to his dog and dead mother for advice. I wonder who Chretien talks to?

12 posted on 09/01/2002 10:06:33 AM PDT by Snowyman
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To: Snowyman
Yes, he did.Pierre Berton didn't think much of him, as I recall.The people in the newsroom at the Toronto Sun all knew who he was, they just didn't talk about it, or to him, when he was sitting at Worthington's desk.
13 posted on 09/01/2002 10:09:13 AM PDT by habs4ever
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To: Clive
Those that denied the spying, would have been the first "liquidated" had Canada ever become communist. Socialists always rid themselves of kneepad people when they have total control.
14 posted on 09/01/2002 10:18:44 AM PDT by cynicom
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: Clive
A true hero.
16 posted on 09/01/2002 12:03:43 PM PDT by swarthyguy
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To: Snowyman
"This is the same P.M. that talked to his dog and dead mother for advice. "

Well, at least his wife didn't 'run off' with Mic Jagger.

17 posted on 09/01/2002 12:19:23 PM PDT by blam
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To: CWRWinger
The Iron Curtain (1948) starring Dana Andrews as Igor Gouzenko.
18 posted on 09/01/2002 12:41:46 PM PDT by Snowyman
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To: belmont_mark; Askel5
BUMP
19 posted on 09/01/2002 4:03:38 PM PDT by Orion78
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To: IncPen
Sounds like something a modern Liberal Democrat would say.

The Russian and Chinese leaders are still committed to their objective of world domination and believe that, disguised as 'democrats', in accordance with Leninist teaching, they will be able to achieve it...

20 posted on 09/01/2002 4:07:25 PM PDT by Orion78
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