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KGB Man - The Cold War's Most Notorious Soviet Agent and the First to be Exchanged at the Bridge of Spies (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R493
Discovery Miles 4 930
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KGB Man - The Cold War's Most Notorious Soviet Agent and the First to be Exchanged at the Bridge of Spies (Hardcover)
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Loot Price R493
Discovery Miles 4 930
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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A thin, balding, and reclusive middle-aged Russian by the name of
Rudolf Ivanovich Abel was one of the Soviet Union's most renowned
spies during the Cold War of the 1950s...until his cover was blown
by an incompetent colleague who wanted to defect to the United
States. This is the full account of Abel's espionage work, his
dramatic apprehension, his eventual conviction and its affirmation
by the United States Supreme Court, and finally, his surprising
release back to Russia. Rudolf Ivanovich Abel ran KGB operations in
the United States for nine years during the Cold War of the 1950s,
until one day his true identity was revealed by a lazy,
hard-drinking, womanizing colleague who decided to defect to the
United States before he was sent back to Russia-and presumably his
death-for incompetence in the field. As the authorities hunted down
Abel, the FBI had in hand his tools of trade-hollowed-out bolts and
coins used to send tiny coded messages and photographs back and
forth to the Soviet Union-but little else in the way of hard leads.
After Abel was located, his modest hotel in Manhattan was staked
out by the FBI for over a month before he was eventually arrested
and tried for espionage. After his conviction, Abel appealed his
case to the Second Court of Appeals, where he argued that the
search and seizure of his hotel room was unconstitutional because
they were made without a warrant. His conviction was affirmed, and
the case proceeded to the Supreme Court, which was sharply divided.
The cliffhanger facing Abel for the next several years was whether
he would face the electric chair, remain in prison for the rest of
his life, or be exchanged for an American spy held by the Russians.
His fate remained in the balance.
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