This blog provides analysis & English translation of the Russian-language sources reporting on the operations and personalities of the Soviet and Russian state security and intelligence organizations (VChK, OGPU, NKVD, KGB, FSB, SVR, and GRU). All analyses and translations are by Filip Kovacevic, PhD.
Thursday, July 16, 2020
Russian Weekly AiF: Interview of Mikhail Lyubimov, Spy Novelist and Veteran KGB Intelligence Officer
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Russian News Report: A Book Presentation of Elena Vavilova, Veteran KGB/SVR Illegal Intelligence Officer
Elena Vavilova (aka Tracey Foley) was a KGB/SVR illegal intelligence officer based in Canada, France, and the United States. Together with her husband Andrey Bezrukov (aka Donald Heathfield) and eight other Russian intelligence officers, she was arrested in the FBI Operation Ghost Stories in June 2010 and later exchanged in a prisoner swap between the U.S. and Russia.
This is a news report of Vavilova’s book presentation in Ufa, Russia published on December 8, 2019. Below is my English translation available only on this website.
The author of the book A Woman Who Can Keep Secrets and a veteran of the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Elena Vavilova visited Ufa, where she met with the students of Bashkir State University and also had a meeting with her readers and those interested in the SVR activities.
The U.S. and Russia, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin
“For Russia, the United States is the main enemy” said Elena Vavilova during her presentation to both students and faculty at Bashkir State University amphitheater [in Ufa]. A veteran of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service was exposed in 2010 after more than 20 years of illegal intelligence work in the U.S. under the name of Tracy Lee Ann Foley as a result of the betrayal of one of the supervisors of the illegal intelligence network. She also stated her opinion as to why the spy exchange took place. Together with other Russian illegal intelligence officers, she was exchanged for 4 [imprisoned] Russian citizens, including the scientist Igor Sutyagin and the former GRU colonel Sergey Skripal. Elena Vavilova said that, in her opinion, the United States wanted to help out Dmitry Medvedev so that he would remain the president of Russia as long as possible.
- We still feel a great deal of gratitude to our government and to Vladimir Vladimirovich [Putin] personally who took part in all of this, as we found out later, even though Medvedev was the president then. By the way, there is a view that the Americans let us go so easily, because they wanted to help out Medvedev, they wanted him to stay and be the president longer, [because] in their opinion, he was more pliable. And I think this is exactly what happened. As they say - to be in the right place at the right time - she explained.
According to Elena Vavilova, the U.S. is in a difficult internal political situation. “It could even come to a civil war — it’s so complicated,” she said.
- The Americans tried to be a global hegemon, as expressed in the phrase “unipolar world,” but that did not happen. The world is multipolar, you see that the different centers are forming - Asia, for example. And Europe is, I think, going down. In this context, of course, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin seems like a much more influential politician in terms of his understanding of events, his charisma. The Americans are generally in a difficult situation, now there is a great division [in the country]. There are even fears that there might be a civil war between Republicans and Democrats. Because the animosity is completely out in the open and is already beyond the scope of the rational. The impeachment of the president, the Russian threat - all this, it seems to me, has been elevated to the level of absurdity. Although Trump is seen as an influential figure, too, she said.
The Secrets Nobody Believed In
Although her activities in the U.S. are classified “top secret,” Elena Vavilova nevertheless revealed two secrets that she passed on to the Russian intelligence headquarters during her work as an illegal.
- There was one woman who was a member of the Democratic Party, she was very well-informed about everything. Long before the election of Barack Obama as president, she said that there was such a person, a candidate, he was then a Senator, and that he was quite influential in the party and that he was likely to be a presidential candidate. We naturally reported this to the Center and when we arrived - and we sometimes went on vacation, on small business trips through several countries, using different [identity] documents, to travel to Russia, because even after 20 years you have to be careful and can’t return just like that. When we discussed this information, not one of our superiors believed us, they said: “Are you crazy? How can a black man, an African become president of the United States? That’s impossible.” That is, they completely dismissed our information. And they told us to be more attentive [next time] before sending our reports. This is an example that any information can be obtained, but that the key issue is to know how to use it in a correct way. The same thing happened with Ukraine. I think that we were not alone, but that other [Russian] intelligence officers as well, and not only intelligence officers, expected that the [violent] events could take place in Ukraine. In general, the Americans worked on this in the post-Soviet space very actively - she said.
The Children
What happened in 2010 was for the two sons of Elena Vavilova and her husband Andrey Bezrukov (also an illegal intelligence officer, his cover name was Donald Howard Heathfield), Tim and Alex, a complete shock. According to Vavilova, their children at first thought that the FBI had made a mistake, that they would soon realize that, and that everything would go back to what it was before. Moreover, that ill-fated day was the birthday of one of the sons, and the other had just returned from a trip.
Elena Vavilova recalled that after seeing her sons at one of the court hearings, she told them to go to Russia, to Moscow, and that their father and mother’s friends would help them out. That is what the children did. And, after the exchange took place, the whole family lived in a safe house together. At this time, Tim and Alex are working in the financial sector - she said.
The Book
The first book of Elena Vavilova A Woman Who Can Keep Secrets has been a success. The print run was 11 thousand copies. The book’s plot is largely based on real events. Reflecting on it, Vavilova is confident that she managed to convey the heroine’s personal feelings as sincerely as possible. At this time, Elena Vavilova is working on her second book, which, she hopes, will be no less interesting and liked by her readers.
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Nikolay Dolgopolov: The Story of Mikhail and Elizabeth Mukasey, Veteran KGB Illegal Intelligence Officers
Nikolay Dolgopolov’s text was published in the November 22, 2017 issue of the joint Russia-Belarus weekly newspaper Soyuz. Belarus-Rossiya. Below is my English translation available only on this website.
Nikolay Dolgopolov: The People With A Cover Story
Soyuz. Belarus-Rossiya November 22, 2017
On various assignments for 22 years, illegal intelligence officers [codenamed] “Elsa” and “Zephyr” have never been exposed
Illegal intelligence officers, the husband and wife Mikhail (1907-2008) and Elizabeth Mukasey (1912-2009) worked for 22 years in the “special conditions” in Western Europe. "Elsa” and “Zephyr" - their operational pseudonyms - lived a long, happy life together and were never exposed.
Now, after their deaths, it is possible to say more about the extraordinary lives of Colonel and Lieutenant Colonel Mukasey. But, then, are there any illegal intelligence officers whose life one can call ordinary? I would never have met them if it were not for their family members. The son, cameraman Anatoly Mukasey and his wife, film actress and director Svetlana Druzhinina, who were greatly proud of them, suggested that the leadership of the Foreign Intelligence Service [SVR] reveal their identities.
In Mikhail’s native village of Zamostye, there were 350 houses. He was the son, the nephew, and the grandson of blacksmiths and from the time he was 10 years old, he assisted his elders in the forge. Then he went to St. Petersburg [Leningrad]. He dreamed of studying at the university and was hoping he would get admitted. He cleaned steamboat boilers – a hellish occupation, but then he enrolled at the workers’ university and became an engineer. He was soon recruited by the state security [NKVD]. In the late 1930s, nobody could turn that down.
After the war, the Mukaseys became illegal intelligence officers. They worked under false names in different countries. How did they get into Western Europe? Mukasey invented, as intelligence officers say, a cover story himself.
“That cover story was really difficult,” Mikhail Isaakovich told me. – I don’t want to brag, but I’ll say that not even every experienced intelligence officer could live it. In my [assumed] family, more than 30 people were killed during the Nazi occupation. There were very few people who survived, you could count them on your fingers. I was in that village, I knew it, I saw it. And before I started using that cover story, I found a man [from there]. He really went through hell. With his permission, I used his biography as my own. And with my help and the assistance of the authorities, he left for Israel. His father went there, too. But that’s all I can say.
Under this cover story, Michael and Elizabeth Mukasey, now called Michael and Betsy, settled in one of the countries of the Socialist bloc. And from there, they moved into Western Europe. They went through a lot. But the resident “Zephyr” and the radio operator “Elsa” coped well. They looked for illegal intelligence officers who suddenly stopped contacting the Center. They transmitted the information about the secret plans of NATO. They had Western European passports and used them to travel to nearly one hundred countries. They very often visited the countries with which the USSR did not have diplomatic relations. Yes, this could have been deadly, but was often done time and again. In the event of exposure, Michael and Betsy could hardly count on any help from their own.
And I would like to describe one of the episodes, which, in the language of intelligence professionals, would be called operational. A comparatively young illegal intelligence officer K., who had established himself in Paris, stopped all contact. And the Center ordered the Mukaseys: find out what happened by any means necessary.
This was one of Mikhail’s first trips from a new country of residence [in the Socialist bloc] to another country. A rather risky trip from Bern to Paris, where the traces of an unmarried - according to the KGB cover story - illegal intelligence officer K. were lost. And the discovery of a tragic explanation for the absence. The owner of a small store [the officer K.] had died. It was later that Mukasey learned that when K. went on a [long-awaited] vacation to the USSR, he was recommended to undergo a surgery. But because he had so many things waiting for him to do [in France], he did not follow through. Not without difficulty, Michael found his apartment and learned that Mr. K. had become ill and was taken to the hospital where he died.
No one could have imagined such a premature departure. And here Mukasey showed not just official, but also humane interest and care. He found out all the circumstances of the death of the officer who was completely unknown to him. The nurse at the Catholic hospital said: “Your friend died completely alone and fully conscious. He called the priest, kissed the Catholic cross, and before he died, a pure, dew-like tear rolled down from his eye, and [then] he fell silent forever."
Mukasey felt grief for his colleague. Even on his deathbed, he did not betray himself, and took away the secrets of his homeland to the grave. Until his last breath, he held firm to his cover story. Well, whoever remains faithful to the state oath can never fail, even when he is dead. The Russian man was buried under a foreign [Catholic] rite, having done everything to depart with dignity. Mikhail Isaakovich found his grave. It was in the place where the homeless and the dogs were buried. And Mukasey got the body to be re-buried in a different place.
In Paris, K. lived as a lonely man, but, in his homeland, in Moscow, he had a wife and two daughters. Close relatives and friends remember him. But the simple Russian family name of this illegal intelligence officer as well as his accomplishments are still classified under the stamp “top secret.”
In the memory of his deceased colleague in illegal intelligence, Mukasey erected a marble headstone on his grave. And, for more than 20 years that he lived on the other side of the “curtain,” he has taken care of the grave. On the headstone, there was a portrait of K. with his year of birth, according to the cover story, and the real year of death.
However, even in death, K. was of service to the Motherland. His grave served as a secret meeting place of other intelligence officers, both legal and illegal, and as a dead drop for secret documents. Doesn’t this sound like a plot for a spy thriller? And for many years after the couple returned to their homeland, someone – it’s no secret who - brought flowers to the grave with a false name on the headstone. What is its condition now? Did the headstone remain in its place or, as is often the case in France, was it already turned into the grave of another person? I do not know...
What is the most important to an intelligence officer? Glory? But glory, if it comes, is a result of exposure. So maybe the best reward is obscurity?