Talk:Vladimir Vetrov
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[edit] Organization?
I thought Vetrov was GRU? nobs 19:21, 16 August 2005 (UTC)
- Both "Storm Birds" and "Mitrokhin Archive" have him as KGB (FCD). I'll keep an eye out, though. Noel (talk) 05:33, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Date of execution
Cherkashin states in Spyhandler on p 254 that Vetrov was executed in 1984. In the same sentence he alludes to Bearden and Rise The Main Enemy: The Inside Story of the CIA's Final Showdown with the KGB. I've not read Bearden's work, so I'm not sure what the source of the date was in that book.--Rank01 01:46, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
Both Gordievsky (KGB) and Brook-Shepherd agree that he was executed in '83, although Gordievsky has a bit of uncertainty, and says that news of his execution was not made widely known in the KGB until '85. Noel (talk) 06:31, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
- According to the well-researched book Bonjour Farewell by Sergeï Kostine, Vetrov was executed in early 1985. He was in jail since early 1982 after attempting to kill his mistress, an action during which he killed a policeman. Obviously the French had missed all information about arrestation of Vetrov for murder and believed he had been discovered. They began to use Vetrov material, probably leading the Soviets to understand they had a mole among them. It was only late 83 or early 84 that Soviets charged Vetrov for treason. His wife visited him several times until late 1984. She received a paper saying her husband had been executed early 1985.
:The exact way Vetrov was identified as the mole is unknown, but the most probable is related to the expellation of 47 Soviets "diplomats" by France mid-83 as retaliation after it was discovered that French embassy "Myosotis" communications systems had been bugged by KGB. The Soviet Ambassador came to protest to the President, which replied by showing a copy of a Farewell material (some said it identified many Soviets as spies, other says it was non-directly related and it was just showing that French knew very much about KGB activities). It probably helped Soviet CI to understand they had a mole, and to limit the suspects to the some who had access to such a highly-classified document. Many other possible sources can be imagined. Bearden and Risen think it was the fourth 1985 mole in the CIA (also thought to be responsible for the losses of Oleg Gordievsky, Sergei Bokhan and Leonid Polishtchuk) after Edward Lee Howard, Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen, but I found strange that a US mole may be responsible for leaking officers from so different posts (Gordievsky was in UK, Bokhan in Greece, Polishtchuk in Nigeria, and Vetrov was then in KGB HQ in Moscow and working for the French). It may also be possible that a French case officer had sent a message related to Farewell through the bugged Myosotis, that the French businessman met Farewell's wife in 1982 or 83 trying to get more informatio about Farewell's fate... Vitaly Yurchenko said that Vetrov had send carelessly letters to his wife, but hard to believe from a experienced case officer. Rob1bureau (talk) 17:06, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] What is "Line X"?
This is gonna be an interesting article. Next year is 20 yesrs since Chernobyl, and there will be further declassification of documents. I'd like to work on it, but when I started the Venona project, I thought it would take 2 or 3 months; now it looks more like 2 or 3 years (minimum). nobs 17:12, 1 September 2005 (UTC)
What is "Line X"?
- Let me restate the question: "What is GRU Line X?"; I beleive "technical line", but it may also be refered to as "scientific technical". Also one must pay attention to the date of sourcing and the context of the timeframe it references etc. nobs 16:57, 10 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Another source to mine for this article
Here's another source to mine; I may get to it, but in case I don't anyone should feel free to have at it. It also cites a book that I intend to look for at the library that will undoubtedly provide a lot more information for this article.
It's an MSNBC article from the Washington Post: CIA slipped bugs to Soviets