Ilya Wolston
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Ilya Elliott Wolston was an American citizen who entered the U.S. Army in World War II and became a military intelligence officer. Allegedly, Wolston began reporting to Soviet intelligence. Wolston allegedly provided the Soviets with information about the organization, curriculum, and personnel at the Army's intelligence school at Fort Ritchie, Maryland.
After the war Wolston worked for the KGB network run by his uncle, Jack Soble, which included Soble's brother and Wolston's uncle Robert Soblen. Boris Morros wrote in his autobiography that Soble told him that Ilya, whose cover name Morros remembered as Slava, had done work for the Russians in Alaska.
There is a Slava in a 1945 message (Venona 325 KGB Moscow to New York, 5 April 1945); it clearly is not Wolston but someone connected to the Rosenberg spy ring. This also suggests that by that time Wolston had a different cover name.
[edit] Venona
Wolston is referenced in the following Venona project decrypts:
- 777–781 KGB New York to Moscow, 26 May 1943
- 893 KGB New York to Moscow, 10 June 1943
- 325 Moscow to New York, 5 April 1945. (It is not clear that the Glory in the 1945 message is "Glory"/Wolston as in 1943).
[edit] References
- Boris Morros, My Ten Years as a Counter-Spy, London: Werner Laurie (1959).
- John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, New Haven: Yale University Press (1999), pgs. 275–276. ISBN 0300077718