mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-26 15:59:29 -05:00
257 lines
12 KiB
XML
257 lines
12 KiB
XML
<xml>
|
|
|
|
<p> ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
|
OF
|
|
BOOKS CONCERNING SOVIET STATE SECURITY
|
|
by Charles Trew Burke, Virginia </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The following is a short collection of books concerning,
|
|
either directly or indirectly, the Soviet Committee for State
|
|
Security (Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti, or KGB).
|
|
All of the books were written during the 1980's and are
|
|
arranged alphabetically by author or editor.
|
|
The list is not intended to be comprehensive. The list
|
|
contains a wide range of authors. Among the group are scholars,
|
|
government officials (active and retired), Soviet bloc defectors,
|
|
and other people in positions that afford them the ability to
|
|
provide information on the Soviet state security apparatus. Some
|
|
of the works deal only with the KGB. Others deal primarily
|
|
with other topics yet, still provide insightful commentary on a
|
|
specific topic concerning the KGB. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> INTRODUCTION</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> During the late spring of 1989, at the Soviet Congress of
|
|
People's Deputies, former weight lifter Yuri Vlasov made one of
|
|
the harshest attacks on the Soviet Committee for State Security
|
|
(KGB) in recent memory.
|
|
Vlasov, whose father disappeared in 1953, stated live on
|
|
Soviet television: "This service sowed grief, cries, torture on
|
|
its native land...The democratic renewal in the country has not
|
|
changed the position of the KGB in the political system." Vlasov
|
|
also made a number of other emotional and dramatic charges during
|
|
his speech. At the conclusion of his remarks, the hall gave him
|
|
an extended ovation.
|
|
The incident is, indeed, evidence of how far political
|
|
changes have come to the Soviet Union. A very short time ago,
|
|
Vlasov's comments would have placed him in very serious trouble.
|
|
Yet, Vlasov is quite correct that the KGB has retained its power
|
|
and privileged postion in the USSR.
|
|
The organization that is now the KGB has undergone a
|
|
number of reorganizations and name changes since the inception of
|
|
the Cheka on December 7 (or 20), 1917. Although the organization
|
|
was supposed to be temporary, the Cheka and its successors (the
|
|
GPU, OGPU, GUGB, NKVD, NKGB, MGB, and now the KGB) have remained
|
|
a key element in the administration of internal and external
|
|
policies of the USSR. Interestingly, members of the KGB still
|
|
call themselves Chekists in recognition of a hallowed tradition.
|
|
Despite the widespread public recognition of the
|
|
organization's existence, few, even in the Soviet field,
|
|
comprehend the full role of the KGB in Soviet society. Most
|
|
frequently the KGB is compared to the American Central
|
|
Intelligence Agency (CIA). However, the scope of activities
|
|
carried out by the KGB include the functions that are carried out
|
|
in the United States by at least a dozen Federal agencies.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
|
OF
|
|
BOOKS CONCERNING SOVIET STATE SECURITY
|
|
by Charles Trew Burke, Virginia</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Barron, John. KGB Today. New York: Reader's Digest, 1983. 489 pp.
|
|
Contains photographs and index. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Barron, an editor at Reader's Digest, has written a number
|
|
of articles and books on the KGB. He has benefitted enormously
|
|
from CIA cooperation on his books. His access to government
|
|
officials and documents, and a number of Soviet defectors, has
|
|
allowed him to put together two of the best-selling works ever on
|
|
the KGB (his previous work was KGB published in 1974 by Reader's
|
|
Digest).
|
|
Aside from providing a wealth of information, Barron
|
|
writes in a style that is to easy read. He dosen't get too
|
|
technical for the non-specialist or place footnotes everywhere.
|
|
For this work, Barron worked extensively with Stanislav
|
|
Levchenko, a former KGB Major who defected while on operational
|
|
assignment in Japan in the late 1970's (Levchenko has also been
|
|
involved in two other works that will be discussed further on). </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Corson, William R. and Robert T. Crowley. The New KGB. New York:
|
|
William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1985. Contains index and
|
|
photographs. 560 pp.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Both authors are retired American intelligence officers.
|
|
This work is a very well researched piece which covers many
|
|
different periods of Soviet state security.
|
|
The objective of the work is to present the reader a
|
|
"fresh way of looking at the current operations and global
|
|
strategies of the new KGB." The authors argue that the KGB has
|
|
taken on a more active role in Soviet government and has
|
|
increased its dominance in the Communist Party of the USSR. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Dzhirkvelov, Ilya. Secret Servant. New York: Harper & Row,
|
|
Publishers, 1987. 398 pp. Contains index. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A fascinating account by a former member of the KGB who
|
|
defected to the West in 1980. Dzhirkvelov, who participated in
|
|
many "direct action" operations, is particularly interesting
|
|
because he defected for personal reasons and remains unrepentant
|
|
for many of his activities. He is still an admirer of Joseph
|
|
Stalin, for example, and some of the extermination operations he
|
|
participated in against nationalist minorities in the USSR after
|
|
WWII. A very unusual autobiography. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Dziak, John J. Chekisty. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1988.
|
|
234 pp. Contains index. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A very well written historical account by a senior
|
|
intelligence official with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA).
|
|
The extensive documentation, frequently using Soviet materials,
|
|
is invaluable. The bibliography is also quite useful.
|
|
This hard-hitting work has many classic quotes and
|
|
comments including the infamous comment on the Soviet secret
|
|
police by Felix Dzerzhinski, its founder: "We represent in
|
|
ourselves organized terror --- this must be said very clearly..."
|
|
(interview with B. Rossov, "From Our Moscow Correspondent,"
|
|
Novaya Zhizhin,' June 9, 1918, p. 4). Highly recommended work. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Knight, Amy W. The KGB. Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1988. 348 pp.
|
|
Contains index.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> An excellent scholarly work by a senior analyst with the
|
|
Congrssional Research Service of the Library of Congress.
|
|
The focus of the work is the politcal role of the KGB in
|
|
the government of the USSR. This work is very rich in
|
|
documentation and detail and is definately more for a specialist.
|
|
Other readers may find the work rough going. Researchers will
|
|
find this work invaluable and very well balanced. Highly
|
|
recommended work. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Leggett, George. The Cheka: Lenin's Political Police. Oxford:
|
|
Clarendon Press, 1981 (reprinted with corrections as
|
|
paperback, 1986). 514 pp. With index.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This piece is a masterwork of research by a British
|
|
scholar. This book is one of the best works ever on the Soviet
|
|
secret police, certainly on the Cheka. Totally comprehensive and
|
|
"must reading" for information on the beginnings of Soviet state
|
|
security.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Levchenko, Stanislav. On the Wrong Side. Washington: Pergammon-
|
|
Brassey's, 1988. 244 pp. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Levchenko was a member of the First Chief Directorate of
|
|
the KGB (Foreign Operations) working in Japan. This book is his
|
|
autobiography and covers the early years of his life and career
|
|
up to his defection to the United States in 1979.
|
|
This work is very Russian and emotional in style. While
|
|
telling the reader about his life and career, Levchenko
|
|
effectively illustrates the difficuly and strains of conflicting
|
|
loyalties and beliefs. </p>
|
|
|
|
<div> </div>
|
|
|
|
<p>Pacepa, Ion Mihai. Red Horizons. Washington: Regnery Gateway,
|
|
1987. 446 pp. With index and photographs.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> A controversial work by a Romanian spymaster who defected
|
|
to the United States in 1978. Pacepa had held a number of
|
|
exteremely sensitive positions in the Romanian Securitate. One of
|
|
his duties included directing the personal security of Romanian
|
|
President Nicolae Ceusescu. His defection accelerated a massive
|
|
purge being conducted in the Romanian Communist Party by
|
|
President Ceusescu. Pacepa was debriefed by the CIA on a full-
|
|
time basis for three years following his defection.
|
|
His remarks on the turbulent Romanian-Soviet relationship
|
|
and Soviet control mechanisms over Warsaw Pact allies are
|
|
insightful.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Richelson, Jeffrey T. Sword and Shield. Cambridge, MA: Ballinger
|
|
Publishing Co., 1986. 279 pp.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> The author, a professor from the Washington DC area, has
|
|
written a number of works on intelligence matters.
|
|
Compared to some of the other works available on the KGB,
|
|
this work has pretty shallow research behind it. In a number of
|
|
areas, up to 20 footnotes will be taken up using only two, maybe
|
|
three different sources. Non-specialists may, however, find the
|
|
work an easier read than some of the more thoroughly researched
|
|
books. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Rocca, Raymond G. and John J. Dziak. Bibliography of Soviet
|
|
Intelligence and Security Services. Boulder, CO: Westview
|
|
Press, 1985. 203 pp. With index. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> An indispensible tool for researching the KGB and its
|
|
cousins. The work covers other bibliographies, Soviet accounts,
|
|
Defector/First Hand accounts, Second Hand accounts, and
|
|
government materials. This is another "must have" work. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Rommerstein, Herbert and Stanislav Levchenko. The KGB Against
|
|
Main Enemy. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 1989. 369 pp.
|
|
With index.
|
|
|
|
Rommerstein was recently director of the Office to Counter
|
|
Soviet Active Measures and Disinformation at the US Information
|
|
Agency. This work, by two intelligence professionals, traces the
|
|
history of Soviet intelligence operations against the Glavny
|
|
Vrag, or Main Enemy, as the US is called in Soviet intelligence
|
|
literature.
|
|
The work covers both old and new ground. The authors were
|
|
able to successfully dig up some new information on past events
|
|
through the Freedom of Information Act. The book also includes
|
|
material on events in the late 1980's.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sharansky, Natan (Anatoly). Fear No Evil. New York: Random House,
|
|
1988. 437 pp. Contains index and photographs. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p> This is the memior from one of the most well-known of the
|
|
Soviet refuseniks and dissidents. Sharansky's dislike of the KGB
|
|
is matched only by the dislike of the KGB toward him. The book is
|
|
a dramatic testament from an intense, determined man.
|
|
The work is useful because of the unique view it gives of
|
|
some of the KGB's internal roles. Sharansky also has a very
|
|
articulate and effective writing style.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Shevchenko, Arkady. Breaking With Moscow. New York: Alfred A.
|
|
Knopf, 1985. 378 pp. With index.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Shevchenko was serving as under Secretary-General of the
|
|
United Nations during the 1970's when he agreed to spy for the
|
|
United States. He later defected.
|
|
Because of Shevchenko's senior diplomatic position, he has
|
|
information to provide in a number of areas. One area is Soviet
|
|
intelligence operations. Shevchenko, and most other Soviet
|
|
employees at the UN, had to preform duties for the KGB. Because
|
|
of his senior position, Shevchenko had regular contact with the
|
|
top Soviet security personnel in New York and Washington. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Wise, David. The Spy Who Got Away. New York: Random House, 1988.
|
|
288 pp. With index and photographs.</p>
|
|
|
|
<p> Wise is a journalist with a number of articles and books
|
|
on intelligence matters to his credit. In this book Wise analyzes
|
|
the Edward Lee Howard affair. Howard was an employee of the CIA
|
|
being trained to run US agents in Moscow. The CIA discovered that
|
|
Howard had lied about his personal life, specifically his drug
|
|
use and past thefts. Howard was fired and then retaliated by
|
|
passing information to the Soviets. He later made a rare US
|
|
defection to the Soviet Union shortly before he was to be
|
|
arrested by the FBI.
|
|
Wise was actually able, with KGB permission, to interview
|
|
Howard in Budapest, Hungary (around the same time British
|
|
espionage journalist Phillip Knightly was allowed to interview
|
|
Kim Philby in Moscow). Wise also reveals very interesting details
|
|
of FBI and CIA counterintelligence operations. A good story. </p>
|
|
|
|
<p>Wright, Peter. Spy Catcher. New York: Viking Penguin, Inc., 1987.
|
|
392 pp. With index and photographs.
|
|
|
|
The highly controversial memior from a former MI5 official
|
|
that the British government tried desperately (and
|
|
unsuccessfully) to prevent from being published. The book is a
|
|
treasure trove of accounts of American, British, and Soviet
|
|
intelligence operations. The intrigues and conspiricies run wild
|
|
in this one. </p></xml> |