Monday, August 3, 2020

Novaya Gazeta: Interview of Nikita Petrov, Soviet Intelligence Historian

On December 29, 2017, the liberal, anti-regime Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta published an interview of Nikita Petrov, a libertarian scholar of Soviet state security system. Petrov is the author of several books on Soviet state security, including the biographies of Nikolay Yezhov and Ivan Serov. He is a deputy board chairman of the Moscow-based human rights organization Memorial. Below is my English translation available only on this blog.

Elena Racheva: Intelligence Historian Nikita Petrov on Anachronism and Legal Nihilism in the FSB
Novaya Gazeta December 29, 2017
 
Nikita Petrov, an expert in the history of the Soviet state security and intelligence services, comments on the interview of the director of the Federal Security Service (FSB) Alexander Bortnikov. In the interview, he finds old myths, fake statistics, and non-existent documents and explains why one should not take it seriously.

The FSB officers boisterously celebrated their professional holiday: on the eve of the centenary of the formation of the VChK-a on December 20, 1917, the current director of the Russian FSB, General of the Army Alexander Bortnikov, gave a  programmatic interview to the editor-in-chief of Rossiyskaya Gazeta. Entitled in the Soviet manner “What the FSB Emphasizes,” it traced the century-old history of the struggle of the state security against spies, terrorists and “white emigres,” depicted Russia as a fortress surrounded by enemies, transparently hinted at the guilt of many who were repressed under Stalin, deplored the collapse of the Soviet Union, and looked like a gigantic FSB press release published across two pages by a leading state newspaper.
The interview caused a public outrage. A group of academicians and corresponding members of the Russian Academy of Sciences published an open letter criticizing the interview and stating that “for the first time since the 20th Congress of the CPSU [Communist Party of the Soviet Union], one of the highest officials of our state justified the mass repressions of the 1930s-1940s.” [The letter] also noted that [during that time] “a large number of remarkable scientists were killed in the prime of their work.” The Congress of the Intelligentsia [a civil society organization] demanded the immediate resignation of Alexander Bortnikov who “made a number of outrageous statements discrediting the legal foundations of our country.” The statement of the Congress was signed, in particular, by Lyudmila Alekseyeva, Lev Gudkov, Irina Prokhorova, Lev Shlosberg, Svetlana Gannushkina, and Lev Ponomarev.
In particular, the outrage was caused by the fact that Alexander Bortnikov proudly derived the history of the current FSB from the VChK-a of the 1920s and the NKVD of the 1930s. We asked Nikita Petrov, a historian and a well-known expert in the history of Soviet state security organizations, to comment on the interview. [The interview was conducted by Elena Racheva]

-Let’s start from the beginning. What do you find problematic in Bortnikov’s interview?

- The first thing that sickened me was the statement that there was something objective behind the Moscow trials of 1937-1938.

- Here’s the quote [from the interview]: “The archival materials testify to the presence of an objective side in the significant number of the prosecuted cases, including those that formed the basis of the [Moscow] trials. The plans of L. Trotsky’s supporters to remove or even liquidate I. Stalin and his supporters in the leadership of the VKP(b) [the All-Union Communist Party - Bolsheviks] are by no means an invention, and neither are the links of the conspirators with foreign intelligence services.”

- In fact, Bortnikov is repeating A Short Course on the History of the VKP(b), which clearly states that the [anti-Stalin] opposition is the vanguard of the world [capitalist] reaction, that these are the villains who “took the path of organizing acts of sabotage and the path of espionage.” To repeat this today is not just an anachronism. It goes against all historical research. It runs counter to the policy of the current Russian government, which has erected a monument to the repressed. And it is contrary to the previously adopted legal decisions. I think that Bortnikov is aware that all the people who went through these court processes - with the exception of Genrikh Yagoda - were rehabilitated. To argue that there was something [objective] in the charges is not just retrograde obscurantism but is also legal nihilism. This is the first thing. The second thing that surprised me was the statistics of the repressed.

- Bortnikov says: “Already in the late 1980s, the 1954 document from the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) was declassified about the number of people convicted of counter-revolutionary and other especially dangerous state crimes, including banditry and military espionage from the period from 1921 to 1953. The number is 4,060,306 people. Out of this number, 642,980 were sentenced to capital punishment and 765,180 to exile and deportation.”

- These figures are an arbitrary quote from an archival source. Here is the document on the work of the VChK-OGPU-NKVD-MGB, signed by the acting head of the first special department of the Soviet Ministry of Internal Affairs, Colonel Pavlov in December 1953. It indicates that just from 1921 to 1938, the state security authorities arrested 4,835,937 people and by 1953, 6 million people. The document does state that the number of the conviction from 1921 to 1953 was 4,060,306 as pointed out by Bortnikov. But, at the same time, the number of those sentenced to death was 799,455. In addition to that, the document does not include the number of people repressed by the SMERSH and other significant cases, such as the “Katyn case.” According to Memorial [a human rights organization], the total number of those executed during that period of time is about one million. Any smaller numbers are an attempt to obscure the issue. Although, if you think about it, 4 million is also a huge number. In general, the state did not lift a finger to make public the official and verified number of the victims of Soviet terror. In addition, Bortnikov says: “765,180 people were sentenced to exile and deportation.” But where are the mass-deported ethnic minorities? Where are the former kulaks who were also deported? Here we are talking about those who were sentenced to deportation and exile [by the courts], and not about those deported through administrative measures. Bortnikov does not elaborate on this.

-Does the document Bortnikov referred to really exist?

- Yes, it is kept in the State Archive of the Russian Federation (GARF) and has been published several times, for example, in the document collection GULAG in 2000. But it was not declassified in the late 1980s, as Bortnikov says. It remained classified as “top secret” even during the years of perestroika. During the Gorbachev period, quite a lot was written about the fact that there were mass repressions, and the process of rehabilitation was underway. But the numbers began to surface only after August 1991. Statistics always contradicted the official line. Bortnikov could go to the FSB archive, open the document fund No. 8, and sit for a month with those papers. Then he would come up with different numbers. But, in general, the interview creates a harmonious picture and is silent about the tragic pages. For example, we do not learn from it that all the people’s commissars [ministers] of state security, starting with Yagoda and ending with Beria, were shot and have not been rehabilitated to this day. How should we understand this fact? Did they shoot them correctly or not? Was Beria good or bad?

- Good, of course. The quote: “Under L. Beria, some of them [the repressed Chekists] were returned to work in the state security institutions.”

- Yes, and then comes a deception. The quote: “In total, from 1933 to 1939, 22,618 NKVD officers were subjected to repression.” Is this true? Yes, of course, there is such a document in the FSB archive. But it is clear that among these 22 thousand, there were mainly regular police officers, the employees of registry offices, firemen, border guards, and internal security personnel. And in the document, where this figure is given, it is indicated that they were convicted, including some with suspended sentences, for general violations and abuse: money issues, professional neglect, inability to properly organize counterintelligence work.

- That is, among those 22 thousand, there is probably a border guard who lost his rifle.

- … And Karatsupa when his dog ran away [Karatsupa was a well-known Soviet border guard known for the use of trained dogs; Petrov  is being sarcastic]. And on the counterrevolutionary charges, which is what Bortnikov is talking about, only a couple of thousand Chekists were repressed in 1937 and 1938. Let me remind you that at the beginning of 1937, only about 25 thousand people worked in the state security system (UGB–GUGB NKVD).

- It turns out that Bortnikov wants to create a myth that the Chekists themselves suffered from mass repression, and then Beria came around and put things in order.

- Beria did return some of these people into the state security institutions in 1941. The war began and there was no one to work in the military counterintelligence. And the Chekists, who had previously been arrested for violating Soviet laws, for beating up those under investigation, began to be assigned to the Special Departments of the NKVD, from where they were transferred to SMERSH in 1943, bringing along with them their habitual methods of work. Bortnikov could have said: “For a long time, the state security institutions were commanded by a handful of political adventurers who infiltrated their ranks.” That’s what they wrote in the history textbook of the CPSU, and even now everyone would understand it.
- But it would also cast a shadow on the state security system.

- Certainly. And therefore he decided it was best not to say anything about it at all.

- The director of the FSB says that the VChK-a was tasked with intelligence and counterintelligence but does not mention its role within the country itself.

- Yes. Why didn’t he say anything about the “Special Bureau for the Administrative Expulsion of the Anti-Soviet Elements of the Intelligentsia” created in 1922 in the Secret- Operational Directorate of the GPU? Or, in general, about the suppression of any forms of resistance [opposition] to Soviet power by the state security? It’s easy to hide behind the struggle against foreign intelligence services. And how about the fact that the state security institutions became an instrument of the Communist Party in the struggle against its own people? Or that, starting in 1937, the torture and beatings of those under investigation were widely used?

- There is only one place in the interview where there is the word “excesses”: “The brutal methods used by the state gave rise to the opposition within the Soviet public. Even within the OGPU, a conflict arose between the chairman G. Yagoda and his deputy S. Messing, who in 1931, together with a group of like-minded associates, spoke out against the mass arrests. The “purges” [within the OGPU] began and intensified even more after the murder of S. Kirov in December 1934. At the slightest suspicion of “unreliability,” highly skilled officers were transferred to the periphery, fired, or arrested. Their place was taken by people without any experience in operational and investigative work, but ready to carry out any [top-level] instructions for the sake of their careers. This partly led to the ‘excesses’ in the work of the OGPU – NKVD.”

- The conflict ended with the fact that Messing and several leading officers were indeed removed from the OGPU. But these people, who accused Yagoda of violating the law, violated the law themselves. For example, they fabricated the case of microbiologists, the case of bacteriological sabotage. They fought against Yagoda, not for the [ethical] purity of their work, and they kicked them out not because they violated the law, but because they violated the monolithic unity in the ranks of the OGPU. In Bortnikov’s account, all this is presented as the fight of the good state security officers against the bad ones. The same goes for the period under Andropov. Was this period good or bad?

-It was good. The quote: “A direction was taken towards the greater public openness about the KGB and the results of its activities (...) The emphasis shifted to preventive and administrative measures.”

- First, the greater openness did not begin under Andropov, but under Khrushchev. Secondly, the focus on “preventive measures” was announced as a component of Khrushchev’s general policies in 1959. It was now believed that a person was not so bad that the collective couldn’t re-educate him, and so there was no need to drag to prison everyone who, thoughtlessly, carried on anti-Soviet conversations, it was enough to do so with several dozen people a year and the rest would live in fear. This approach was later developed under Andropov, but Andropov did not invent it. Where in Bortnikov’s interview is the account of the fact that, under Andropov, the KGB enforced ideological control by repressing people who expressed critical judgments about the Soviet regime? That they were condemned to be under the supervision of the KGB, to sit in a psychiatric hospital, to undergo “preventive” measures, or to be sent to prison or forced to emigrate? How could you write about Andropov without writing anything about Sakharov and Solzhenitsyn?

- In the interview, the emphasis was placed on the struggle against “foreign,” as they say now, “partners.” Bortnikov describes how, during the entire hundred-year period, the state security fought against espionage and external enemies, but its domestic activities are left in the shadows. How unexpected is this for you?

- The pathos of the glorification of the KGB under Brezhnev consisted in this: we have our own unique line of historical development, we are developing a new socialist society for the first time, and therefore we are surrounded by the  “ideological enemies” while the ideological struggle is intensifying. In Stalin’s time, this concept of a “besieged fortress” was brought to a logical perfection, which is, apparently, admired by the current leadership of the FSB. The pathos of the struggle against foreign intelligence services and the suspicion of everyone of working for them is a common place in the Stalinist system of repression. Now we see the reflected light of the Stalinist era: we have again become hostile to the whole world, and it appears hostile to us. But Bortnikov’s ideological postulates about who we are, where we are, and who our enemies are – they are the reincarnation of Stalin’s A Short Course on the History of the VKP(b). But the most surprising thing for me in the interview is the real Chekist paranoia focused on the concept of “agent of influence.” Bortnikov is asked: is an agent of influence a modern slang? “No, this term was first used by Yu. Andropov in a report for the Politburo back in 1977 entitled ‘On the Hostile Activities of the U.S. CIA on Breaking Down the Soviet Society and Disorganizing the Socialist Economy Through the Agents of Influence.’”

- Was there such a report?

- There was no such report! And that’s the crux of the matter! In the summer of 1991, at a closed meeting of the Supreme Council of the Soviet Union, the chairman of the KGB, Vladimir Kryuchkov, extensively quoted from a note allegedly from Andropov, which was allegedly submitted to the Central Committee of the CPSU. The term “agents of influence” appeared in it. They [the agents of influence] were trained and supported by the West, they sat in the Kremlin already under Andropov and ruined the country. Kryuchkov even stated the date of this note - January 24, 1977, but he never published it anywhere, indicating its source. That’s because he wrote it himself. In 1977, Kryuchkov was the head of the First Main Directorate of the KGB and, I believe, he himself prepared that note. Maybe he even handed it over to Andropov, but he was unlikely to send it to the Central Committee - that would have invited ridicule from others. “Agents of influence” is simply Kryuchkov's invention. I have read his text. That’s nonsense. That’s paranoia. Even in 1977, it was not possible to send something like this to the Central Committee of the CPSU. And now Bortnikov is trying to ascribe Kryuchkov’s invention to Andropov and states his belief in the “agents of influence”. Well, some also believe in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. When the FSB cannot understand the motives behind the actions of this or that democratically minded person, it declares him an “agent of influence.” It’s convenient, you don’t need to prove anything. This way of thinking should be rejected by the head of an institution, which, among other things, is responsible for ensuring the compliance with the law.

- The interview lists several cases of the foreign spies being caught by the VChK-a. For example: “The first significant success of the Soviet counterintelligence was the exposure of the “Conspiracy of Ambassadors” of the Entente countries under the leadership of the head of the British diplomatic mission R. Lockhart in September 1918.” Was there such a conspiracy?

- The conspiracy of the Entente countries is a provocation of the VChK-a. It was done in a very simple way: several Chekists disguised as Latvian riflemen guarding the Kremlin came to the head of the British mission and said that there was an opportunity to overthrow the Bolshevik government. They were not driven out, but allegedly even given some money, which became the basis for discrediting the diplomatic corps. Other provocative operations, such as Operation Trust, were also carried out, and Bortnikov mentions them. Since then, the Soviet state security has become very fond of what we call the method of provocation. It was believed that using this method, one can control the actions of the enemy and distract him with a made-up story, with an invented organization. And, at the same time, one can show to the public that the opponents are in fact conspirators, enemies of the state.

-Does Bortnikov understand that it was a provocation?

- I am not so sure. In the official KGB textbook published in 1977 (in our country, it is still considered top secret, but it is available on the website of the U.S. Library of Congress) Lockhart’s conspiracy is presented as a glorious page in its history. Likewise, Operations Trust and Syndicate. There is no word “provocation,” it is stated that this was the modus operandi. Bortnikov believes that the method was a great success and presents it as such.

- It turns out that the director of the FSB does not just list Soviet myths, but that he believes in them, too?

- We can classify the features we see in the interview. First, the old [Soviet] myths “about the main thing,” which contemporary Chekists also believe in. Secondly, a statement of facts about something that really took place, which is either not presented completely, or is interpreted incorrectly. Somebody may say to me: “How do you know how to interpret correctly?” Well, if there was a mass rehabilitation of the victims of political repression, then it is not necessary to cast a shadow on it and call those who were rehabilitated guilty. Otherwise, this is not just an anachronism, but also legal nihilism. Third, there is the construction of a new ideology. According to this ideology, the state security institutions have always guarded the state and its sovereignty but the [Communist] party sometimes made wrong decisions and forbade them to do their work. According to the way that the KGB was positioned in the Soviet system, the state security officers were an armed detachment of the Communist Party and always subordinated to it. Now the director of the FSB is constructing a myth that the KGB has always been on the forefront of the protection of the state, but the state was ruled by an incompetent organization such as the CPSU. But then the question arises: if they have protected the state so well, why did it collapse? Bortnikov promotes a new myth that the disintegration of the KGB began during the years of Perestroika. The blame is attributed to Gorbachev who allegedly destroyed the Soviet Union.

- In the interview, there is a hint that the state security institutions fought for the preservation of the USSR but that they were not successful.

- Their main battle was the putsch in August 1991. The coup failed because the population did not support the KGB. In the Gorbachev era, the KGB was an extremely anachronistic organization that resisted the reforms. That is not stated in the interview.

- Nevertheless, Bortnikov derives the continuity of the FSB from the KGB.

- Yes, and I have a completely childish question: why? Wasn’t it easier to cast aside the past and say: “We must critically analyze the history of state security institutions and condemn their crimes”? Yeltsin proposed a new founding date for the FSB - January 24, 1992, the creation of the Russian Ministry of Security. They didn't like it. So, since 1995, the FSB returned to the old [Soviet] founding date - December 20, 1917. And now it has found itself under constant criticism only because it cannot cope with this past.

- I wonder what the director of the FSB was trying to achieve with this interview.

- We have the officially adopted documents, for example, “The State Policy for Perpetuating the Memory of Victims of Political Repression,” we have a monument, The Wall of Grief. At its unveiling, President Putin said that there can be no excuse for mass repressions. These words represent the turning point.There are always such turning points in history: for example, Khrushchev’s report on the cult of personality, or Gorbachev’s speech on the 70th anniversary of the October Revolution, where he said: “Stalin’s guilt is enormous and unforgivable.” These words signified a new step in relation to the past. But suddenly there is an interview with one of the top figures of the regime, which is completely contrary to the articulations of the state policy and, moreover, returns us to the ideological system of Stalin’s times. And the question arises: why? As soon as the interview came out, a claim appeared that this was a trial balloon, an attempt to see how the public would react. The public did not like this interview, there were numerous critical and negative responses. I don’t believe in conspiracy theories and I don’t believe that the Kremlin told Bortnikov: come on, be uncompromising, and let’s see the reaction, since we made too many concessions when unveiling the Wall of Grief. Of course, this would be neat, because it would mean that our country is governed according to a plan from the Center, which knows how to mix a bit of severity with a bit of meekness [Petrov is sarcastic here]. But we have a state where every top-level official can say what he wants. Bortnikov is no exception and he can freely broadcast his anachronistic views. I suspect he got this material from the FSB Center for Public Relations. They crammed a report with all the glorious successes of the state security institutions [sarcasm, again], and it sounded fine to Bortnikov. But, if he did not anticipate that society would be critical of this material, then he is cut off from social reality. And, you know, that often happens.

- To summarize then, it turns out that Bortnikov just wanted to add some flare to the celebration of the Chekist holiday. The piece in Rossiyskaya Gazeta is like a concert dedicated to the day of the Chekist with a military orchestra and Oleg Gazmanov [a pop singer].

- Yes, although the FSB, just like the Gazprom, could afford to invite Deep Purple, too. I see in this interview, first, a very symptomatic attempt to justify a century-long history of terror against our own people. Secondly, I see the futility and ultimate failure of these justifications, since Bortnikov’s material itself goes against them. Thirdly, I see that the freedom of opinion still exists in our country. It would surprise me if the Kremlin reprimands Bortnikov for this interview. This interview will hardly be remembered, the way few people remember what Kryuchkov said in his speech on the anniversary of October Revolution in 1989. Bortnikov’s attempt to create a positive and coherent history of state security institutions failed: the pieces of the interview are not logically connected and the plot is falling apart. This institution [FSB] does not have a convincing and thoughtful understanding of the Soviet past, just as there is no general understanding of how to study history in Russia today. The direction that the Kremlin would like to pursue is untenable because it contradicts the history itself. And the public knows well what the state security system is all about and why one should be afraid of it.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

RIA Novosti: Interview of Vladimir Antonov, Soviet Intelligence Historian and Veteran KGB Intelligence Officer, on Women in Soviet Intelligence

On March 5, 2020, the Russian state-owned news agency RIA Novosti published an interview of Vladimir Antonov, a former KGB officer and historian. After retiring from active service at the rank of colonel, Antonov became one of the most prolific official SVR historians. He was the author of the book-length biographies of “legendary” Soviet intelligence officers, such as Pavel Sudoplatov, Neum Eytingon, Yakov Serebryansky, Konon Molody, and the “Cambridge Five.” Antonov died in May 2020 at the age of 76. Below is my English translation available only on this blog.
 
SVR Historian Vladimir Antonov: The Female Radio Operator Kät Had a Real-Life Prototype

 RIA Novosti March 5, 2020

Women and intelligence - the place of the fairer sex in this difficult profession is a topic that will probably always attract the attention of both specialists and ordinary people. This year the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) will celebrate its centenary. In the annals of the SVR, the names of many female intelligence officers are inscribed in golden letters. In difficult conditions, often risking their lives, they protected the security and interests of their homeland. The heroic pages in the history of intelligence tell of the participation of women in the operations that helped bring closer the victory in the Great Patriotic War. Why women are sometimes indispensable in intelligence, what specific abilities give them the advantage over men and who was the prototype of the female radio operator Kät in the famous [Soviet] TV series “Seventeen Moments of Spring” are among the questions answered by a leading expert from the SVR History Hall [Museum], retired colonel Vladimir Antonov,

- Vladimir Sergeyevich, the discussions about the role of women in intelligence have been going on for a long time. It is understandable: the fairer half of humanity and intelligence services, the combination of mystery and secrecy with the female qualities - this [theme] is unlikely to become boring any time soon. So, can intelligence be woman’s business?

- There is no reason to hide that most ordinary people, far removed from intelligence business, believe that this is not an occupation for women, that intelligence is a male-only profession requiring self-control, courage, willingness to take risks, and even to sacrifice oneself in order to achieve a goal.

But in such a unique area of ​​human activity as intelligence, women are in no way inferior to men, and in some ways even surpass them. As the history of the world’s intelligence services testifies, the fairer sex copes with its demands perfectly, being a worthy and, sometimes, even a formidable rival of men in terms of the extraction of other people’s secrets.

- And yet - a formidable rival - no more and no less?

“Female intelligence officers are the most dangerous adversaries and they are the most difficult to expose,” said one of the leading American counterintelligence officials Charles Rossel in his lecture nearly a century ago.

- Well, that’s the assessment of an American. But what is the opinion of Russian intelligence officers on this score?

- They perceive the expression “intelligence officers are not born, they are made” as a truth that does not require any proof. The fact is that intelligence, due to the nature of its tasks, requires a unique person with the necessary personal and professional qualities and life experiences who can be trusted to do the job in a particular region of the world.

Of course, various paths lead women to intelligence profession. However, choosing them as operatives or agents is certainly not accidental. This is especially true in illegal intelligence. It is not enough to be fluent in foreign languages ​​and in the basics of the art of intelligence. An illegal must be a kind of an artist, so that one day, for example, he can impersonate somebody from the aristocratic circles, and the next day, say, a minister or a priest. Needless to say, more women are capable of this kind of transformation than men.

Those female intelligence officers who worked abroad as illegals always had to deal with the increased demands on their physical and psychological endurance. In addition, they may not always have had the opportunity to work only with the people they liked. Often, the situation was exactly the opposite, and therefore they had to be able to keep their feelings under control.

Here is what the remarkable Soviet illegal intelligence officer Galina Ivanovna Fyodorova, who has worked abroad for more than twenty years, said: “Some believe that intelligence is not the most suitable activity for a woman. In contrast to the stronger sex, a woman is more sensitive, fragile, more easily vulnerable, more closely tied to the family and the home, more prone to nostalgia. By nature, she is destined to be a mother, so the absence of children or the long separation from them is especially difficult for her. All this is true, but these same little weaknesses give a woman powerful leverage and influence in the sphere of human relationships.”

- What are the main character traits of women which make their work in intelligence productive?

- Experts agree that a woman is more observant than a man, and, also, her intuition is more developed. Representatives of the fairer sex love to delve into details - well, as you know, the devil himself is hidden in them. In addition, women are more methodical, assiduous, and patient than men.

Moreover, female intelligence officers are entrusted with organizing meetings with agents when the appearance of men happens to be undesirable.

And, if you add their physical appearance to all this, then any skeptic will have to admit that women rightfully occupy a worthy place in the ranks of the intelligence service of any country and are its genuine amplifier.

-But from the non-professionals, you can often hear that if beautiful women are used in intelligence, it’s only as “honey traps” for the carriers of the secrets which are sought after. Here, the famous Mata Hari is usually considered the standard. What do you say to that?

 - In general, in addition to Mata Hari, Marthe Richard, the star of the French military intelligence during the First World War, is also well-known in this respect. She was the mistress of the German naval attaché in Spain, Major von Krohn, and was able not only to find out the important secrets of German military intelligence, but also to paralyze the work of the agent network von Krohn created in the country.

Yet, this exotic method of using women in intelligence is the exception rather than the rule. However, the intelligence services of some countries, primarily Israel and the United States, are actively using this approach to obtain classified information. But such things are typically used by the counterintelligence services of these states rather than their intelligence services.

- Vladimir Sergeyevich, you spoke about special feminine qualities that are invaluable from the point of view of intelligence. In what way can they help when a woman and a man work together in the field?

- Of course, the combination of the best psychological qualities of both men and women, especially those working in illegal intelligence positions, represents the strong point in any intelligence service. And, in reality, such intelligence tandems as Goar and Gevork Vartanyan, Anna and Mikhail Filonenko, Leontina and Morris Cohen, Elizaveta and Mikhail Mukasey, Galina and Mikhail Fyodorov and many others, are inscribed in golden letters in the history of Russian foreign intelligence.

- More recently, the names of the spouses, prominent illegal intelligence agents Lyudmila and Vitaly Nuykin, as well as Tamara and Vitaly Netyksa, have also been declassified.

- Yes. In general, the history of the intelligence service of our country was written by thousands of its officers, and many of them can be called not just very good, but exceptional. In the Hall [Museum] of Foreign Intelligence History at the SVR headquarters, there is a memorial plaque on which the names of many of the SVR officers are inscribed - the best of the best among the  intelligence officers in more than a century of its activity. And the most prominent place among them is occupied by female intelligence officers.

- If you conduct a survey on which woman is considered a symbol not just of a female intelligence officer, but also of female fortitude in this profession, then surely and deservedly the first place will be taken by the fictional radio operator Kät from the [Soviet] TV series “Seventeen Moments of Spring.” It is known that the director Tatiana Lioznova imported a lot of lyrical details into the series. The dramatic scene of Katya Kozlova - Kät’s giving birth was originally in the book by Yulian Semenov, and he, as is well known, used materials from the Soviet intelligence services for his novels. Therefore, the question arises - was there a real-life prototype of the radio operator Kät?

- I will answer in the affirmative. The prototype of Kät was the Soviet intelligence officer Anna Fyodorovna Kamayeva. And Vyacheslav Tikhonov, who played the role of Stierlitz [the series’ main character], in turn, learned a lot from her husband, also an illegal intelligence officer Mikhail Ivanovich Filonenko. They were good friends until the death of the couple.

Anna Kamayeva came into the intelligence service in the late thirties. From the first days of the Great Patriotic War, she was included in the Special Group under the People’s Commissar of Internal Affairs of the USSR (NKVD). It was a top secret group, directly subordinated to the head of the NKVD, Lavrenty Beria, and, in fact, dealt with foreign intelligence, parallel with the intelligence department of the NKVD. Later, on the basis of this group, the 4th Directorate of the NKVD was created, which was engaged in collecting intelligence and performing the acts of sabotage behind the enemy lines.

- What did the Special Group do?

- The officers of the Special Group were trained to wage a secret war on our own territory. They began to prepare and implement a sabotage plan in the case of the capture of Moscow by Nazi troops. Where could Hitler and his associates arrange the celebrations to mark the fall of the Soviet capital? There were very few options - either in the Kremlin or in the Bolshoy Theater. Therefore, the NKVD decided that it was necessary to prepare the sabotage of these objects. At the same time, the leadership of the NKVD proceeded from the fact that Hitler and other leaders of the Third Reich would definitely take a personal part in the planned celebrations.

Anna Kamayeva was assigned a crucial role - to attempt to assassinate Hitler. Various scenarios for completing this task were being worked out, but all of them clearly indicated: the assassin had no chance of surviving. Giving such a task, the leadership of the NKVD knew that they were sending the girl to certain death, but they were sure that Anna would carry out the order successfully.

Fortunately, the whole plan remained on paper. Moscow withstood the offensive of the Nazis. The troops of the Western Front, commanded by General of the Army Georgy Zhukov managed to stop and then push the Wehrmacht troops away from the capital.

Later, it was in Zhukov’s reception room, having arrived there to receive a medal for the participation in the large-scale sabotage actions against the Nazis, that Anna Kamayeva met her future husband Mikhail. He, in turn, received an order from Zhukov to head a reconnaissance and sabotage detachment, which [later] carried out an unprecedented raid on the enemy’s rear in the Moscow region.

- And ever since then they have worked together?

- No, their paths immediately parted, and for many months. Anna continued her service as a radio operator in one of the partisan detachments operating in the Moscow region, and Mikhail was appointed a commissar in a partisan detachment that fought deep behind the Nazi lines.

Mikhail Ivanovich fought in Ukraine. In the Nazi-occupied Kiev, he led a reconnaissance and sabotage group of the special section “Olymp” of the 4th Directorate of the NKVD. Later, while performing a sabotage operation in Poland, Mikhail was seriously wounded. Doctors were able to save his life, but he became permanently disabled. Mikhail Ivanovich left the hospital with a cane, which he never parted with for the rest of his life. He met with Anna again only after the war.

- And what did Anna Fyodorovna do after the defeat of the Germans in the Moscow region?

- When the immediate threat of the capture of the capital passed, she was recalled to Moscow and she began to work again in the central office of the 4th Directorate. Then she was sent to foreign language courses at the Higher School of the NKVD. She improved her knowledge of Spanish and studied Portuguese and Czech languages. The intelligence leadership planned to send her to do illegal intelligence work abroad.

- After the war, Anna and Mikhail got married. Soon their son was born. But they could hardly enjoy a quiet family life. They went through intense training for illegal intelligence work in Latin America. At the same time, their young son also studied Czech and Spanish. The leadership decided that he also had to go with his parents in order to provide a confirmation for one of the points of the cover story which was developed for them.

The trial run of the Filonenkos as illegal intelligence officers before they were sent on a long-term mission took place in difficult conditions. To start with, they had to pose as refugees from Czechoslovakia and attain legal status in Shanghai, China where many Europeans settled after the war. The Filonenkos, together with their little son, crossed the Soviet-Chinese border through an “opening” specially prepared for them, at night, in a blizzard and in snow that was waist-deep.

Moreover, Anna Fyodorovna was then pregnant again. However, they made it safely to Harbin, where the first and most dangerous stage of their legalization took place. Their daughter was born in Harbin. According to legend, the “refugees from Czechoslovakia” were zealous Catholics, therefore, in accordance with European traditions, the newborn was baptized in a local Catholic cathedral.

- Well, did Anna Fyodorovna scream in Russian like the radio operator Kät when she gave birth abroad?

- No, she didn’t. But, in all other respects, Anna Kamayeva is the prototype of the female radio operator from “Seventeen Moments of Spring.”

- How did the Filonenkos' work proceed from there?

- The journey to Latin America took them several years. Once they settled there, they began to carry out the intelligence assignments of the Center. Their main task was to identify the plans of the United States, primarily dealing with the military and political matters in relation to the Soviet Union. Such information was easier to obtain in Latin America than in the United States. The fact is that the Americans shared their plans with their Latin American partners because they counted on them in a potential future war against the USSR.

- Very soon we will all celebrate the 75th anniversary of the [Allied] Victory in Europe. How did the intelligence officers help the Victory, what important information did they gain?

- Female intelligence officers who were active in Europe on the eve of the war, and on the territory of the Soviet Union temporarily occupied by Nazi Germany, wrote glorious pages in the chronicle of the heroic achievements of Soviet foreign intelligence. The war years have proven that women are no less capable than men of carrying out important intelligence missions.

Already on the eve of World War II, a Russian emigrant, the famous opera singer Nadezhda Plevitskaya, whose singing was admired by Fyodor Shalyapin, Alexander Vertinsky and Leonid Sobinov, was actively working for Soviet intelligence in Paris.

Together with her husband, General of the White Army, the commander of the Kornilov division, Nikolay Skoblin, Plevitskaya helped expose the anti-Soviet work of the Russian All-Military Union (ROVS), which carried out terrorist attacks against Soviet Russia. Thanks to the information received from these Russian patriots, the Soviet counterintelligence arrested over a dozen agents of the ROVS operating in the USSR and discovered the safe houses for terrorists in Moscow, Leningrad, and the Caucasus region.

Moreover, thanks to these efforts, including those by Plevitskaya and Skoblin, the foreign intelligence of the USSR was able to disorganize the activities of the ROVS in the pre-war years, thereby depriving Hitler of the opportunity to actively use over 20 thousand members of this organization in the war against the USSR.

The pre-war period and the Second World War radically changed the approach to intelligence in general and to the role of the female intelligence officers in particular. The people of goodwill in Europe, Asia and America were acutely aware of the danger that Nazism posed to all mankind. And so, during the war, hundreds of these people from different countries voluntarily offered their services to Soviet foreign intelligence, carrying out its assignments in different regions of the world.

For example, on the eve of the war, Fyodor Parparov, a resident [station chief] of the Soviet illegal intelligence service in Berlin, maintained operational contact with the source codenamed “Marta” - the wife of a prominent German diplomat. She regularly received information about the negotiations of the German Foreign Office with the diplomatic representatives of England and France. From these documents, it appeared that London and Paris were more concerned about the fight against communism than about the establishment of the system of collective security in Europe and the joint pushback against the fascist aggression.

“Marta” was also able to obtain information about a German intelligence agent in the General Staff of Czechoslovakia who regularly sent to Berlin top secret materials about the state and combat readiness of the Czechoslovak army. Thanks to this information, Soviet intelligence took measures to expose this German agent and get him arrested by the Czech counterintelligence.

In addition to Parparov, other Soviet intelligence officers also operated in Berlin before the war. Among them was the [Soviet] military intelligence agent Ilse Stöbe (operational codename “Alta”), a journalist whose contact was the German diplomat Rudolf von Sheliha (“Aryan”). He sent important materials to Moscow with warnings about the impending German attack on the USSR.

Already in February 1941, “Alta” reported the formation of three army groups of the German Wehrmacht and the direction of their main attacks on Moscow, Leningrad and Kiev. In early 1943, “Alta” and “Aryan” were arrested by the Gestapo and executed [They were arrested and executed in the fall of 1942].

Zoya Rybkina, who later became widely known as the children’s literature writer Zoya Voskresenskaya, Elizaveta Zarubina, Elena Modrzhinskaya, Leontina Cohen, Kitty Harris, all worked for Soviet intelligence on the eve and during the war. They did their work often risking their lives. But they were all driven by a sense of duty and true patriotism, the desire to protect the world from the Nazi aggression.

- But the most important information during the war did not come only from abroad?

- Indeed, it constantly came from the numerous reconnaissance and sabotage groups of the NKVD, operating near or far from the front lines in the temporarily occupied Soviet territory.

Without exaggeration, the female intelligence officers from the special-purpose detachment “Pobediteli” [Victors], as well as many other combat units of the 4th Directorate of the NKVD, who obtained very important information during the war years, made an indelible mark in the history of our country’s intelligence service.

The intelligence officer of the “Pobediteli” detachment, Lydia Lisovskaya, was the closest assistant of our legendary intelligence officer Nikolay Ivanovich Kuznetsov, who operated in the Nazi-occupied territory under the name of the German officer Paul Siebert. While working as a casino waitress at the headquarters of the occupation forces in Ukraine, she helped Kuznetsov make acquaintances with German officers and collect information about the high-ranking fascist officials in the city of Rovno in western Ukraine.

Lisovskaya recruited her first cousin Maria Mikota to work for Soviet intelligence. On the instructions of the Center, Mikota became an agent of the Gestapo and subsequently informed the partisans about all the punitive raids of the Nazis. It was through Mikota that Nikolay Kuznetsov met SS officer Ulrich von Ortel, who was a member of the group of the German commando Otto Skorzeny. From Ortel, Kuznetsov first received information that the Nazis were preparing an attempt on the life of the leaders of the USSR, the U.S. and Great Britain Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill during their meeting in Tehran in the fall of 1943.

Also, in 1943, on an assignment from Kuznetsov, Lisovskaya was able to get a job as a housekeeper for the commander of the Special Forces in the East, Major General Max Ilgen. With the direct participation of Lisovskaya, Ilgen was kidnapped in Rovno.

[Let’s also note] the legendary Africa de las Heras, a native of Spain, who began cooperating with Soviet foreign intelligence in 1937 during the civil war in her homeland. To this day, [many] operations in which she took part are classified. In 1942, Africa was sent to the “Pobediteli” detachment as a radio operator, but more than once she had to participate in the combat operations during which she demonstrated a great deal of courage and bravely performed command assignments.

In the summer of 1944, Africa returned to Moscow, where she was offered a position in the illegal intelligence section. She accepted it and, after the war, worked abroad for almost twenty years. Returning to the USSR, she took part in the education of the younger generation of illegal intelligence officers and passed on to them her truly invaluable experiences.

- Just recently in an interview [English translation provided here], our declassified illegal intelligence officer Tamara Ivanovna Netyksa very fondly recalled “Marya Pavlovna” - Africa de las Heras. She considered her second mother who taught Spanish to her and her husband Vitaly.

- The name of colonel Africa is immortalized in gold letters on the memorial plaque of the SVR. But many of her intelligence colleagues will remember her forever under her operational pseudonym “Patria” - which translated from Spanish means “Homeland.” And she did not choose this pseudonym by chance - after all, to her the Soviet Union really became the second homeland.

Africa de las Heras was on the forefront of intelligence combat for over 45 years. And, of course, to accomplish even a small part of that which she had done in illegal intelligence work is possible only if one serves the highest ideals. Sergey Yesenin once wrote the following lines: "I envy those who spent their lives in battle, who defended a great idea." These lines fit very well with Patria’s personality.

- In 1945, the war ended, but for Soviet foreign intelligence, including its female officers, the battle continued even after the Victory?

- Yes. The war years gave way to the long years of the Cold War. The United States of America did not hide its imperial plans and aspirations to destroy the Soviet Union with the help of atomic weapons. But in order to make the right decisions, the leadership of the Soviet Union needed reliable information about the real plans of the Americans. Female intelligence officers played an important role in obtaining the classified Pentagon documents. Among them are Anna Kamayeva-Filonenko, Irina Alimova, Galina Fyodorova, Elena Kosova, Elena Cheburashkina, and many others.

- The situation in the world now is also, unfortunately, far from calm and therefore new tasks arise for the Russian intelligence. Do you think that women will play a key role in their completion?

- I’ll put it this way. The century-long history of our foreign intelligence service has proven the importance of women’s participation in its work. And, therefore, of course, they will make a worthy contribution to protecting the security and interests of Russia in the future.