KGB MAJOR GENERAL OLEG KALUGIN:’RED HERRING’ ACROSS THE ‘P.O.W.-GATE’ TRAIL?
(Washington, D.C.): In testimony this
week before the Senate Select Committee
on POW/MIA Affairs, the KGB’s former head
of counter-intelligence, Major General
Oleg Kalugin, delivered extraordinary
testimony. He reaffirmed under oath
statements made earlier to the effect
that, at his direction, a KGB officer
travelled to Hanoi to interview several
American POWs well after all
U.S. prisoners of war were supposed to
have been repatriated.
It is impossible at present to
establish the truth of this claim. The
man General Kalugin purports to have sent
on this mission, a Mr. Nechiporenko,
denies having undertaken it. There is
reason to believe he said so under orders
from his present employer — the Russian
successor to the KGB. The government in
Hanoi has denounced Kalugin as a liar and
the Bush Administration maintains it has
no reason to believe that there were U.S.
POWs in Vietnam when the general says his
operative interrogated them.
The Whole Truth?
Even so, General Kalugin may well be
telling the truth. Indeed, he made a
number of revelations in his testimony
that confirm what has long been believed
(e.g., subversive Soviet covert
activities, assassinations, the power of
the KGB and the important role of the GRU
— the USSR’s military intelligence
organization) but what has heretofore
generally been steadfastly denied by
officials of the former Soviet Union.
Interestingly, at one point in his
testimony, Gen. Kalugin explicitly
pointed to the truth of several
statements he had made to lend authority
to his contention about the POW
interviews in Vietnam.
On the other hand, it is quite
possible that the General is merely
engaging in one of the oldest
tricks in counter-intelligence tradecraft:
liberally salting disinformation with
truth so as to encourage acceptance of
what is not true. To paraphrase Whittaker
Chambers — a man who knew Soviet
communists and their practices intimately
— it is a matter of protecting a central
lie with a bodyguard of truth.
This is not to say that the Soviets
held no interrogations of U.S.
POWs in Vietnam after 1973; certainly it
is not to suggest that there were no such
Americans incarcerated in Vietnamese
prisons after the Paris peace accords
went into effect. Rather, it is
to say that General Kalugin’s
testimony was calculated to divert
attention from the far more important
story — that of U.S. POWs and MIAs who
were reportedly taken to the Soviet Union
and held there long after the war ended.
Certainly, the central (if implicit)
thrust of the general’s contention that KGB
operatives went to Hanoi to extract
information from American prisoners was
that they had to do so because Moscow
lacked any other access to them.
The “Moscow
Bound” Testimony
In that respect, Gen. Kalugin’s
testimony runs counter to recent
statements from other sources — sources
whose motivations are substantially less
suspect. For example, two former U.S.
intelligence analysts, Jerry Mooney and
Terrell Minarcin, appeared before the
Select Committee the day after Kalugin
did. They painted a very different
picture: Not only were Americans
still held by communist Vietnam after all
such prisoners were supposed to have been
returned. There were also, according to
some radio intercepts, an undetermined
(but seemingly significant) number of
U.S. POW/MIAs spirited away to the former
USSR, where their captivity continued.
There are reportedly a number of other
American intelligence officials who are
prepared to confirm these assertions.
Although Gen. Kalugin’s testimony in
effect confirms the validity of
the first of Messers. Mooney and
Minarcin’s charges, his denial of the
second — far more explosive —
allegation should be viewed with some
skepticism. After all, the successors to
the KGB and the old Soviet guard would
presumably still have a powerful interest
in concealing the existence of a program
which, according to Mr. Mooney was well
known by U.S. intelligence under the code
name “Moscow-bound.”
For one thing, its revelation would
complicate present relations between
Moscow and Washington. Perhaps more
importantly, it might even oblige the
United States to insist on a wholesale
dismantling of the KGB apparatus as
a quid pro quo for desperately
needed aid. Interestingly, a number of
American officials who were allegedly
aware of the Soviets’ transfer of U.S.
POW/MIAs, but kept it secret, may have a
similar interest in seeing the truth
suppressed.
Flaws in Kalugin’s
Testimony
The Center for Security Policy
believes that before General Kalugin’s
testimony is accorded sufficient weight
to impeach that provided by Messers.
Mooney and Minarcin on the
“Moscow-bound” program, the
self-serving and/or implausible quality
of some other aspects of his
representations before the Select
Committee should be carefully assessed.
For example:
- Extolling Primakov’s
Virtues: Yevgeny
Primakov is one of the most
prominent of the Soviet Union’s
unreconstructed communist thugs
to retain a powerful position in
the Russian government. (Before
he became head of the former
KGB’s foreign intelligence
organization, he was a senior
Middle East specialist to whom
Mikhail Gorbachev entrusted the
job of saving Saddam Hussein. Due
to Primakov’s eleventh hour
machinations, the U.S.-led ground
war was very nearly derailed.) - Extolling Gorbachev’s
Virtues: Gen. Kalugin
actually made with a straight
face the preposterous contention
that nothing like a
“Moscow-bound” program
could have occurred in Mikhail
Gorbachev’s Soviet Union —
thanks to glasnost and perestroika.
As he put it: “There are no
secrets today in the USSR.
Anything that happens,
particularly when it concerns a
foreign person, would be known
all over the world….Can you
imagine an American, or a British
or a French citizen kept in the
Soviet Union with(Washington, D.C.): In testimony this
week before the Senate Select Committee
on POW/MIA Affairs, the KGB’s former head
of counter-intelligence, Major General
Oleg Kalugin, delivered extraordinary
testimony. He reaffirmed under oath
statements made earlier to the effect
that, at his direction, a KGB officer
travelled to Hanoi to interview several
American POWs well after all
U.S. prisoners of war were supposed to
have been repatriated.It is impossible at present to
establish the truth of this claim. The
man General Kalugin purports to have sent
on this mission, a Mr. Nechiporenko,
denies having undertaken it. There is
reason to believe he said so under orders
from his present employer — the Russian
successor to the KGB. The government in
Hanoi has denounced Kalugin as a liar and
the Bush Administration maintains it has
no reason to believe that there were U.S.
POWs in Vietnam when the general says his
operative interrogated them.The Whole Truth?
Even so, General Kalugin may well be
telling the truth. Indeed, he made a
number of revelations in his testimony
that confirm what has long been believed
(e.g., subversive Soviet covert
activities, assassinations, the power of
the KGB and the important role of the GRU
— the USSR’s military intelligence
organization) but what has heretofore
generally been steadfastly denied by
officials of the former Soviet Union.
Interestingly, at one point in his
testimony, Gen. Kalugin explicitly
pointed to the truth of several
statements he had made to lend authority
to his contention about the POW
interviews in Vietnam.On the other hand, it is quite
possible that the General is merely
engaging in one of the oldest
tricks in counter-intelligence tradecraft:
liberally salting disinformation with
truth so as to encourage acceptance of
what is not true. To paraphrase Whittaker
Chambers — a man who knew Soviet
communists and their practices intimately
— it is a matter of protecting a central
lie with a bodyguard of truth.This is not to say that the Soviets
held no interrogations of U.S.
POWs in Vietnam after 1973; certainly it
is not to suggest that there were no such
Americans incarcerated in Vietnamese
prisons after the Paris peace accords
went into effect. Rather, it is
to say that General Kalugin’s
testimony was calculated to divert
attention from the far more important
story — that of U.S. POWs and MIAs who
were reportedly taken to the Soviet Union
and held there long after the war ended.
Certainly, the central (if implicit)
thrust of the general’s contention that KGB
operatives went to Hanoi to extract
information from American prisoners was
that they had to do so because Moscow
lacked any other access to them.The “Moscow
Bound” TestimonyIn that respect, Gen. Kalugin’s
testimony runs counter to recent
statements from other sources — sources
whose motivations are substantially less
suspect. For example, two former U.S.
intelligence analysts, Jerry Mooney and
Terrell Minarcin, appeared before the
Select Committee the day after Kalugin
did. They painted a very different
picture: Not only were Americans
still held by communist Vietnam after all
such prisoners were supposed to have been
returned. There were also, according to
some radio intercepts, an undetermined
(but seemingly significant) number of
U.S. POW/MIAs spirited away to the former
USSR, where their captivity continued.
There are reportedly a number of other
American intelligence officials who are
prepared to confirm these assertions.Although Gen. Kalugin’s testimony in
effect confirms the validity of
the first of Messers. Mooney and
Minarcin’s charges, his denial of the
second — far more explosive —
allegation should be viewed with some
skepticism. After all, the successors to
the KGB and the old Soviet guard would
presumably still have a powerful interest
in concealing the existence of a program
which, according to Mr. Mooney was well
known by U.S. intelligence under the code
name “Moscow-bound.”For one thing, its revelation would
complicate present relations between
Moscow and Washington. Perhaps more
importantly, it might even oblige the
United States to insist on a wholesale
dismantling of the KGB apparatus as
a quid pro quo for desperately
needed aid. Interestingly, a number of
American officials who were allegedly
aware of the Soviets’ transfer of U.S.
POW/MIAs, but kept it secret, may have a
similar interest in seeing the truth
suppressed.Flaws in Kalugin’s
TestimonyThe Center for Security Policy
believes that before General Kalugin’s
testimony is accorded sufficient weight
to impeach that provided by Messers.
Mooney and Minarcin on the
“Moscow-bound” program, the
self-serving and/or implausible quality
of some other aspects of his
representations before the Select
Committee should be carefully assessed.
For example:- Extolling Primakov’s
Virtues: Yevgeny
Primakov is one of the most
prominent of the Soviet Union’s
unreconstructed communist thugs
to retain a powerful position in
the Russian government. (Before
he became head of the former
KGB’s foreign intelligence
organization, he was a senior
Middle East specialist to whom
Mikhail Gorbachev entrusted the
job of saving Saddam Hussein. Due
to Primakov’s eleventh hour
machinations, the U.S.-led ground
war was very nearly derailed.) - Extolling Gorbachev’s
Virtues: Gen. Kalugin
actually made with a straight
face the preposterous contention
that nothing like a
“Moscow-bound” program
could have occurred in Mikhail
Gorbachev’s Soviet Union —
thanks to glasnost and perestroika.
As he put it: “There are no
secrets today in the USSR.
Anything that happens,
particularly when it concerns a
foreign person, would be known
all over the world….Can you
imagine an Ameriout that
[becoming] public knowledge?
That’s impossible today. It was
possible in Stalin’s times,
yes…but not in the past ten
years, at least, or probably not
ten, seven years, let’s put it
more correctly…the perestroika
period, so to speak.” - Laos: Gen.
Kalugin’s categorical denials
that American prisoners could
have been brought to the Soviet
Union from Vietnam without his
knowledge stands in peculiar
contrast to his position with
respect to the possibility that
U.S. POW/MIAs might have been
relocated from Laos, unbeknownst
to him. When asked by Senator
Kerry whether “It is
possible that Soviet military
intelligence could have conducted
interrogations of downed pilots
in Laos without you knowing
it,” Kalugin responded
“Oh yes, I would not know
about it.” - Current Status of the KGB:
While on several occasions,
General Kalugin painted a picture
of a new reformed KGB, which had
withdrawn all of its agents from
the United States, he
contradicted himself by stating
that “Soviet intelligence,
unfortunately — despite the new
chief, Mr. Primakov appointed
recently — has not changed in
substance. It’s just the
organization, which for years and
years lied, and if necessary,
destroyed documents.” - The GRU’s Autonomy:
Similarly, the general conceded
that the GRU was the lead agency
for handling the interrogations
of prisoners of war for
military-related information. He
also acknowledged under
cross-examination that the GRU
could have undertaken certain
activities through compartmented
channels to which he did not have
access. These remarks, too, would
appear to belie the categorical
assurance Kalugin gave the
committee that
“Moscow-bound” never
happened.
It speaks volumes about where
Kalugin believes his bread is
buttered that he gushed before
the Select Committee about
Primakov’s sophistication and
openness. “Mr. Primakov is
an intelligent, flexible, easily
adjustable gentleman who could
survive in various
circumstances….Mr. Primakov
would be more willing to talk and
disclose things which are of
public interest.”It strains credulity that a man
with his self-proclaimed
knowledge of the KGB’s power as a
“state within a state”
would maintain that it could not
have covertly run a sensitive,
compartmentalized operation — even
if the Soviet Union had been
perfectly transparent. In
fact, of course, Gorbachev’s USSR
was no such thing.Indeed, in Gorbachev’s USSR many
things that were not supposed to
happen routinely did. To name but
a few: It is now a matter of
record that illegal biological
warfare production occurred;
billions in Western aid and
credits were diverted to
Communist Party accounts and
subversion overseas; militarily
relevant high technology was
stolen from the West; and police
state surveillance and harassment
of innocent citizens persisted.
“Moscow-bound” could
just as easily have been
undertaken, glasnost —
such as it was —
notwithstanding.In fact, when challenged by Sen.
Hank Brown (R-CO), Kalugin
admitted that Americans with
technical knowledge were far more
valuable to the GRU than the KGB
and that he did not know the
extent of GRU involvement with
U.S. POWs. After the hearing,
Minarcin pressed Kalugin “As
one professional to another, tell
me the truth: The GRU took our
prisoners to the USSR, didn’t
they?” According to
Minarcin, Gen. Kalugin lowered
his head and replied,
“Yes.”Establish Gen. Kalugin’s Bona
FidesIn the absence
of such an admission by Gen. Kalugin on
the public record, however, an effort
must be made to shed additional light on
General Kalugin’s reliability as a
witness — and the completeness of his
break with his previous employer. Toward
these ends, the Select Committee should
ask him a straightforward question: Will
he reveal the names of those Americans
recruited by him or his subordinates
during his tenure with the KGB? In
particular, he should be willing
to disclose those enlisted during his
first operational assignment when he
posed as a student in the Columbia School
of Journalism during the late 1950s.Should he refuse to do so, it will be
clear that his professions of affection
for this country and his commitment to
the truth being told are insincere; it
would be reasonable to conclude that his
loyalties remain with a hostile
intelligence service that still operates
from the old Soviet Union. Should he say
he maintain that he recruited no one
during his time at Columbia, the Senate
would be well advised to be suspicious of
other aspects of his testimony. After
all, it seems most unlikely that a man
with his successful career in Soviet
intelligence href=”#N_1_”>(1)
could have utterly failed in the
principal task of his first mission. If,
on the other hand, he did choose
to come clean, it would be most
interesting to discover exactly who among
his contemporaries at Columbia have taken
up positions in the Fourth Estate while
being in the service of the KGB.What About the U.S.
Government’s Role?In addition, the Select Committee
would do well to examine as part of its
inquiry just what the U.S.
government knew and when it knew it
about a “Moscow-bound” program.
Clearly, some committee members are
unsettled by what appears to be a
chronically shifting party line.Sen. Bob Smith (R-NH), for example,
expressed his frustration after the
Kalugin hearing noting that “For
seven years, [the U.S. intelligence
agencies] said that no Americans
were ever interrogated by Soviets in
Vietnam. On the eve of Kalugin’s
testimony, they changed their
story.” Apparently, they did so only
after the Vietnamese changed theirs. The
CIA now acknowledges that two of its
employees were interrogated by Soviet
personnel in Vietnam, one in 1973 and one
in 1975.The Center for Security Policy has
found that even these reluctant
admissions are hiding the full truth.
By way of evidence, the Center has
obtained a recently declassified 1971 CIA
document offering detailed descriptions
of a Soviet-Chinese interrogation team
assigned to extract information from
captured U.S. pilots in the Lam Thao
district in North Vietnam in 1965, 1966
and 1967.As Senator David Boren (D-OK),
chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee recently stated, “The
truth [about American POW/MIAs left in
prison in 1973 and U.S. government
efforts to conceal their continued
detention] has to come out — and
it will.” The Select
Committee on POW/MIA Affairs must see to
it that the truth does come out.– 30 –
- Extolling Primakov’s
It speaks volumes about where
Kalugin believes his bread is
buttered that he gushed before
the Select Committee about
Primakov’s sophistication and
openness. “Mr. Primakov is
an intelligent, flexible, easily
adjustable gentleman who could
survive in various
circumstances….Mr. Primakov
would be more willing to talk and
disclose things which are of
public interest.”
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