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Near and Distant Neighbours - A New History of Soviet Intelligence (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R592
Discovery Miles 5 920
You Save: R121
(17%)
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Near and Distant Neighbours - A New History of Soviet Intelligence (Hardcover)
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List price R713
Loot Price R592
Discovery Miles 5 920
You Save R121 (17%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Near and Distant Neighbours is the first ever substantiated and
complete history of Soviet intelligence. Based on a mass of newly
declassified Russian secret intelligence documentation, it reveals
the true story of Soviet intelligence from its very beginnings in
1917 right through to the end of the Cold War. Covering both main
branches of Soviet espionage - civilian and military - Jonathan
Haslam charts the full range of the Soviet intelligence effort and
the story of its development: in cryptography, disinformation,
special forces, and counter-intelligence. In a tragic irony, an
organization that so casually disposed of others critically
depended upon the human factor. Due to their lack of expertise and
technological know-how, from early on the Soviets were forced to
rely heavily on secret agents instead of the more sophisticated
code-breaking techniques of other intelligence agencies. But in
this they were highly successful, recruiting spy rings such as the
infamous 'Cambridge Five' in the 1930s. Had it not been for Soviet
espionage against Britain's code-breaking effort during the Second
World War, Stalin might never have won the victory that later
enabled him to dominate half of Europe. Similarly, espionage
directed at his allies enabled the Soviets to build an atomic bomb
earlier than expected and to take calculated risks in post-war
diplomacy, such as his audacious blockade of Berlin which led to
the Berlin Airlift. Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin in 1956
alienated many of the foreign 'friends' so valued by the Soviet
intelligence services. It also made new recruitment of foreign
agents much more difficult, as the USSR rapidly lost its glamour
and ideological appeal to potential supporters in the West during
the 1950s. However, the gap was finally bridged through exploiting
greedy and disloyal Western intelligence officers, using blackmail
and bribery - and with great success. In fact, it was the ultimate
irony that the KGB and GRU had never been more effective than when
the Soviet Union began to collapse from within.
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