
The Soviet Defector Who Did the Most Damage
During the past 30 years, extraordinary material released from American and Russian archives has enormously expanded our understanding about Soviet espionage directed at the United States and its allies during the 20th century. The Venona decryptions were the product of American decoding of KGB messages. The Vassiliev Notebooks were based on documents the KGB provided to a researcher as part of a negotiated book deal. The only material provided by a genuine spy was the Mitrokhin material, several thousand pages of notes made surreptitiously by a KGB archivist. While British historian Christopher Andrew collaborated with Vasili Mitrokhin to write two books based on his notes, Mitrokhin himself has not received the attention he merits. Venona and Vassiliev exposed a great deal about Soviet espionage from the 1930s and ’40s. Mitrokhin’s information covered more recent operations and did far more damage to Soviet intelligence than any other defector.
The post The Soviet Defector Who Did the Most Damage appeared first on .
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- When The Greatest Evil Returns January 25, 2026
- Why Canada’s Chinese EV bet is a big mistake January 25, 2026
- The reform every society needs: Stop mistaking shock for success January 25, 2026
- ‘PBB Collab 2.0″: Sofia, Joaquin, Eliza, Caprice, Carmelle, and Heath nominated for eviction January 25, 2026
- PBA: CJ Perez comes up clutch as San Miguel beats TNT for 2-1 lead in Philippine Cup finals January 25, 2026
- MLBB: Aurora Gaming silences Alter Ego to rule M7 January 25, 2026
- NCAA: Letran sweeps EAC to wrap Season 101 volleyball opening weekend January 25, 2026











Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.