Selmer Nilsen

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Selmer Nilsen (1931 – 1991) was a Norwegian fisherman spying for KGB during the cold war. He was active in Bodø from 1956 to 1963, and reported Bodø landings and take-offs of the American espionage plane Lockheed U-2 to the Soviet Union. These operations culminated with the U-2 Crisis of 1960, when one of the U-2 planes was forced down over Soviet Union on May 1, 1960.

Nilsen, originally from Bakfjord, Finnmark, was recruited in 1948[1] after threats from Soviet agents towards his family. The 17 year old boy was sent for training in the Soviet Union. He returned seven months later, with a radio transmitter and knowledge of telegraphy. After twenty years as foreign agent he was arrested in 1967, and sentenced to seven and a half years imprisonment in a trial held behind closed doors in the court of Bodø. He was however pardoned from further imprisonment after 3 years. The disclosure shocked Norway, as well as its NATO allies, as the espionage had been carried out through the peak of the "cold war". After the arrest, and the subsequent premature release, Nilsen told openly about his activities as an agent for the Soviet regime.

A TV documentary about Nilsen, featuring himself as the main story-teller, was shot in 1971, but was not broadcast on Norwegian television until December 2007. The documentary was originally stopped following discussions in the press, as well as between representatives from the broadcasting company (NRK) and the National Defense Administration.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Dømt og fordømt" Nordlys, 2007-05-08 (Norwegian) (Retrieved on December 9, 2007)