Cold War espionage
Cold War espionage describes the intelligence gathering activities during the Cold War between the United States (CIA, NSA, FBI, and DIA) and the Soviet Union (KGB and GRU).[1] Because each side was preparing to fight the other, intelligence on the opposing side's intentions, military, and technology was of paramount importance. To gather this information, the two relied on a wide variety of military and civilian agencies. While several such as the CIA and KGB became synonymous with Cold War espionage, many other organizations played key roles in the collection and protection of the section concerning detection of spying, and analysis of a wide host of intelligence disciplines.
Background
Soviet espionage in the United States during the Cold War was an outgrowth in World War II nuclear espionage, and Cold War espionage was depicted in works such as the James Bond and Matt Helm books and movies.
Chronology
Date | Topic | Event This list is incomplete; you can help by editing it. |
---|---|---|
1939 | Whittaker Chambers meets with Assistant Secretary of State Adolf Berle; names 18 current and former government employees as spies or Communist sympathizers including Alger Hiss, Donald Hiss, Laurence Duggan, and Lauchlin Currie. Berle notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) of Chambers's information in March 1940. | |
1941-08-10 | GRU reestablished contact with Klaus Fuchs, a German emigre scientist, who transferred from the British Tube Alloys nuclear research program to the US-led Manhattan Project in 1943.[2] | The Soviet|
1942 | Nuclear espionage | Jacob Golos put Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (and their associated communist cell) in direct contact with Soviet intelligence operatives in New York.[3] The Rosenberg cell provided information on newest developments in electrical and radio engineering to the XY Line of the NKGB foreign intelligence. | US communist
1944 | Nuclear espionage | Yuri Modin became the KGB controller of the "Cambridge Five" ring of atomic spies. |
1945 | Starting in November 1945, Elizabeth Bentley, under the code name 'Greogry', started naming almost 150 Union Spies; among those, at least 35 were in fact federal government employees. | |
1946-12-20 | Venona counter-intelligence program is first able to decode Soviet intelligence messages thereby discovering the Soviet spying activities within the Manhattan Project.[4] During the program's four decades, approximately 3,000 messages were at least partially decrypted and translated.[5] | The|
1949 | Nuclear espionage | Mossad agent assumed, seeing CIA agent James Jesus Angleton dining with Cambridge Five mole Kim Philby, that the former had turned the latter into a triple agent.[6] | A
1950 | Klaus Fuchs voluntarily confesses to MI5 that he has been spying for the USSR. Fuchs identifies Harry Gold who identifies David Greenglass which in turn leads to the arrest and trial of the Rosenbergs.[7] | |
1955 | Joint CIA/SIS Operation Gold puts a tunnel under the frontier in occupied Berlin to tap into Soviet army communications. Already aware of the plan through George Blake, the Soviets let the operation run rather than compromise their agent. | |
1959-06 | Corona (satellite) | Corona satellite missions start. | Under the covername Discoverer the camera-carrying
1959-10-15 | Active measures | Stepan Bandera was assassinated on KGB orders. | Ukrainian politician
1960 | 1960 U-2 incident | Francis Gary Powers' Lockheed U-2 spy plane was shot down by a Soviet surface-to-air missile. The US is forced to publicly admit that they were operating surveillance missions over the USSR. | Pilot
August 1960 | Discoverer 14 is the first Corona mission to successfully take reconnaissance pictures from orbit and return them to earth.[8] | |
1962 | Oleg Penkovsky provides information to SIS and CIA about Soviet missile capabilities and deployment to Cuba. The Soviets are aware of his activities through their own agent within the NSA. | |
1962-10-26 | Cuban Missile Crisis | Aleksandr Fomin, the KGB Station Chief in Washington proposed the crisis' diplomatic solution. | Under the pseudonym of
1964 | Operation Neptune | West Germany's spies remaining from World War II had been exposed. | A ruse was used to indicate
1985-03-23 | Military Liaison Missions | Arthur D. Nicholson was killed by a Soviet soldier. | On a mission to photograph a Soviet tank storage building, US intelligence officer Major
Footnotes
- ↑ "Cold War espionage". Alpha History. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
- ↑ Rhodes 1995, pp. 51, 57, 63.
- ↑ Radosh 1997, pp. 22.
- ↑ Benson 1996, pp. 5.
- ↑ Benson 1996, pp. 7.
- ↑ Littell, Robert. "A Cold War Mystery: Was the Soviet Mole Kim Philby a Double Agent...or a Triple Agent?". Indiebound. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
- ↑ Radosh 1997, pp. 16-19.
- ↑ Williams, David R. "Discoverer 14". NASA. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
References
- Benson, Robert Louis (1996). Venona: Soviet Espionage and the American Response 1939–1957. Aegean Park Press. ISBN 0-89412-265-7.
- Radosh, Ronald; Milton, Joyce (1997). The Rosenberg file (2 ed.). New Haven [u.a.]: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300072051.
- Rhodes, Richard (1995). Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-80400-X. OCLC 32509950.
Further reading
- Haynes, John Earl; Klehr, Harvey (2006). Early cold war spies: the espionage trials that shaped American politics. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 9780521674072.
- Sibley, Katherine A. (2007). Red spies in america : stolen secrets and the dawn of the cold war. Lawrence: University Press Of Kansas. ISBN 0700615555.
- Trahair, Richard C.S.; Miller, Robert L. (2009). Encyclopedia of Cold War espionage, spies, and secret operations (1st pbk. ed.). New York: Enigma Books. ISBN 1936274264.
- Wise, David; Ross, Thomas (1968). The Espionage Establishment. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0224613987.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cold War intelligence. |
- NOC by NicholasAnderson, eBook published 2008, traditional book published by Enigma Books 2009. Fictionalised (as stipulated by UK law) autobiography of a British SIS/MI6 intelligence officer's stories from the Cold War. Original non-fiction version vetoed in 2000 per UK Official Secrets Act and appeared in banned books listing in 2003 as seen at fatchuck.com
- The Literature of Intelligence: A Bibliography of Materials, with Essays, Reviews, and Comments. An extensive bibliography compounded by J. Ransom Clark.