But
the Soviets didn’t get all their own way, by any means. Briefly, here are two
defectors of note.
Penkovsky
GRU
Colonel Oleg Penkovsky first approached the Americans in 1960, but they dallied
too long, so he approached the British the following year.
The Penkovsky
Papers
are reputed to have been written by the CIA, and some disinformation has been
bandied about that Penkovsky wasn’t actually shot as a traitor or committed
suicide in his cell (1963); the message was that he actually lived in retirement,
having fooled the West into believing that the Cuban missiles were important to
Kruschev, rather than in effect protecting Castro from US invasion – part of the
deal struck at the height of the 1962 crisis. Yet the perceived repercussions
in Moscow and within the echelons of the GRU and the KGB suggest that Penkovsky’s
information, passed on at risk of his life did indeed damage the Soviet spy
machine.
Lyalin
In
September 1971, the mass expulsion of 105 Russian diplomats and trade officials
by Britain caused a storm. While MI6 and the CIA were aware of most of the
individuals’ true purpose, the defection of Oleg Adolfovitch Lyalin revealed
that their espionage activities were much worse than thought. Lyalin was an
officer in the KGB’s Department V, responsible for sabotage and assassination.
PM Heath and Foreign Secretary Douglas Home warned Moscow that if any reprisals
against Western envoys followed the expulsions, even more Soviets would be sent
back to the USSR.
Lyalin
had arrived in London in 1969 and enjoyed the life there as a Soviet trade
delegate. He was conducting an affair with his secretary, though he was a
married man with a family in Russia. He was stopped for a drink driving offence
and was persuaded that any subsequent disgrace would ruin him, so he agreed to
cooperate with the authorities. He revealed that teams of saboteurs had been
prepared to exact maximum damage on British radar stations, communications
centres and other important complexes 24 hours before any surprise attack by
the Soviet Union. Lyalin’s specific target was to blow up the Fylingdales early
warning system in Yorkshire; he had plans and maps to link up with Russian
commandos on the coast. Other plans entailed blocking the Clyde estuary, thus
trapping the nuclear submarine fleet at Holy Loch, the London Underground system
to be flooded, and indeed to employ British traitors to attack air bases using
weapons from arms caches. This was some of the background to the expulsion of
those 105 Soviets, and shows how serious and sinister the Cold War had become.
Britain
lodged a formal protest to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and advised
friendly countries about the details of the expulsions. By doing this, they
effectively pulled the teeth from the mouths of the Soviet planners. Foreknowledge
is power, after all.
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