Authors: Sandra V. Grimes
Returning to the positive side, it is not generally known that the FBI let the CIA disseminate reporting from FBI cases to the U.S. intelligence community. Those with a jaundiced view of the FBI might emphasize that the FBI is not an intelligence organization and has never been able to produce polished reporting to pertinent U.S. customers so they had no choice. Those with a more charitable outlook would focus on the fact that the FBI was thereby losing credit for its operational successes, but that in so doing it was adding to the security of its sensitive assets. Although there were a few notable exceptions, in the main the CIA disseminated all of the counterintelligence reporting from both its own and the FBI's sources. With all the reporting lumped together this way, it was much easier to disguise how many sources existed and just what their access was.
On another level, there is a final but difficult story that must be told. Ames has acknowledged the impact of his crime on his own family, and has spoken candidly about his other direct victims including those who lost their lives or were imprisoned. However, there exists yet another group of innocents whose personal losses were enormous and whose futures were irrevocably changed because of Ames' treachery. Who were these people? They were, first of all, the spouses of the condemned, their parents, and their sons and daughters. As is only right, the CIA has made every effort to resettle the families in the United States when they have so wished. We have met some of the sons and daughters. While each victim's story is unique to his father's case, many shared common tragic elements. In several cases their mothers died prematurely and as one son has so poignantly described it, “After the arrest of my father, my mother never smiled again.” Yet some of the younger generation have not only survived, but because of their courage and strength of character have succeeded in their new lives to an astonishing extent.
In the course of the post-arrest investigations, immediate family members were separately interrogated for extended periods at Lefortovo prison. KGB surveillance teams were assigned to each. The KGB conducted numerous and lengthy searches of their homes and apartments. Personal belongings were confiscated and never returned. Repeated requests for visitation were repeatedly denied or were put off for extended periods. Family members were not permitted to attend the trials and were denied any details of the case against their loved one. No pardons were granted. The families were unaware that sentencing had been carried out
until a notice of death arrived in the mailbox. The men were buried in unmarked graves whose location is unknown. One family member was told to consider changing his last name and warned that his life would never be the same. “Some important people will never, ever trust you. Like father, like son, you know.”
The Ames story is only a part of this book. In a broader sense, we feel that we were lucky in that we lived and worked in a simpler world. In the Cold War environment, there was only one main enemy who could harm usâthe Soviet Union. Moral ambiguities as to the necessity of neutralizing the USSR to the best of our ability simply did not exist. The target was not amorphous, discrete, or widely scattered. We could concentrate our efforts on one country and one government. Alas, the colleagues who have come after us do not have that luxury.
T
HE FOLLOWING IS OUR HONOR ROLL
of Agency employees either with whom we worked closely over the years or who had a significant impact on our careers. We would like to acknowledge publicly their commitment to the mission. Some rose to high-level positions; some did not; some were maligned; some left the Agency under a cloud; and some died before they could bring their careers to fruition. Some were more intellectually gifted than others; some had more common sense; some were better case officers; some were better analysts; some were better leaders; and some were better teachers. But they all had one thing in common. They were men and women of honor, courage, integrity, and talent. Their names are presented alphabetically. Unfortunately, a few retired under cover or are still active in the Agency. We have had to omit those names.
Pauline Brown | Walt Lomac |
Dick Corbin | Len McCoy |
Cleve Cram | John McMahon |
Paul D | Ruth Olsen |
John Winthrop Edwards | Dan Payne |
Jim F | Ben Pepper |
Joe F | Paul Redmond |
Jack Fieldhouse | Sheri Riedl |
Myrna Fitzgerald | Fran Smith |
Frank Friberg | Dick Stolz |
Burton Gerber | Ruth Ellen Thomas |
Dottie Hanson | Don Vogel |
Gus Hathaway | Freddie Woodruff |
Dick Kovich | Diana Worthen |
26 May 1941âAldrich Hazen “Rick” Ames born in River Falls, Wisconsin
18 Apr 1944âRobert Philip Hanssen born in Chicago, Illinois
Dec 1954âJames Jesus Angleton becomes chief of CIA's newly created Counterintelligence Staff
Nov 1961âGRU officer Dmitriy Fedorovich Polyakov volunteers to the U.S. military in New York City. Later backs off, but is brought to recruitment by the FBI.
Dec 1961âKGB CI officer Anatoliy Mikhaylovich Golitsyn defects to CIA in Helsinki
Mar 1962âKGB S&T specialist Aleksey Isidorovich Kulak volunteers to the FBI in New York
Jun 1962âAmes joins the CIA, works part time while completing his college education at George Washington University
Jun 1962âKGB Second Chief Directorate (internal CI) officer Yuriy Ivanovich Nosenko, while on a trip to Bern, makes his first contact with the CIA
Early 1960sâGRU photo technician Nikolay Chernov volunteers to the FBI in New York. Shortly thereafter returns to the USSR. One further contact takes place in the early 1970s while he is on a short trip to the United States.
22 Nov 1963âassassination of U.S. president John F. Kennedy
Feb 1964âdefection of Nosenko
Nov 1965âSB reports officer Len McCoy writes his paper defending Nosenko
May 1966âthe East European (EE) Division and the Soviet Russian (SR) Division of the CIA's Directorate of Operations are combined into the Soviet Bloc (SB) Division
Dec 1967âafter completing college, Ames applies for the CIA Officer Training Program and is accepted
Summer 1968âRolfe Kingsley becomes chief, SB, replacing David Murphy
Sep 1969âAmes is assigned to Ankara
May/Jun 1970âRichard Stolz becomes chief, SB/CI
Jul 1970âBurton Gerber becomes chief, SB/CI/I. Cynthia Haussmann is his deputy.
Late spring 1971âDavid Blee becomes chief, SB, replacing Deputy Chief Stacy Hulse, who served for a short period as acting chief following the departure of Kingsley
Apr 1972âAmes leaves Ankara, is assigned to SE Division
1 May 1972âdeath of J. Edgar Hoover
1973âacademic researcher Sergey Petrovich Fedorenko recruited by the FBI/CIA in New York City. Ames later becomes one of his handlers, traveling from CIA headquarters.
Jan 1973âAmes begins a year of full-time Russian language studies
Summer 1973âJohn Horton becomes chief of SB Division, changes the name to the Soviet and East European (SE) Division
Dec 1973âAmes finishes Russian language studies, returns to SE Division
1974âSoviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs official Aleksandr Dmitriyevich Ogorodnik recruited by CIA in Bogota. (Ames was the desk officer responsible for this case.)
1974âKGB officer Leonid Georgiyevich Poleshchuk recruited by CIA in Kathmandu
1974âKGB officer Oleg Antonovich Gordievsky recruited by the British SIS in Copenhagen
31 Dec 1974âAngleton fired from his position as chief of the CI staff by DCI William Colby. Replaced by George Kalaris.
1975âPoleshchuk returns to Moscow with a communications plan, which he never implements
Spring 1975âStolz becomes chief, SE Division, replacing Horton
12 Jan 1976âHanssen joins the FBI. After training, he is assigned to Indianapolis/Gary, where he serves on a white-collar crime squad.
Spring 1976âGRU officer Sergey Ivanovich Bokhan recruited by CIA in Athens
Aug 1976âAmes is assigned to New York City. He continues to handle Fedorenko; also is one of the handlers for Soviet UN ambassador Arkadiy Nikolayevich Shevchenko.
Aug 1976âafter spending two separate tours in New York, Kulak returns to Moscow preparatory to retirement
1977âFedorenko returns to the USSR
Jan 1977âAdolf Grigoryevich Tolkachev, a scientific worker in an R&D institution, volunteers to the CIA in Moscow. Regular communications not established until 1979.
Mar 1977âAdmiral Stansfield Turner becomes CIA director, replacing George H. W. Bush
Jun 1977âCIA officer Gardner “Gus” Hathaway becomes COS, Moscow, replacing Robert Fulton
Summer 1977âOgorodnik arrested in Moscow and commits suicide
1978âShevchenko defects
1978âKGB officer Vladimir Mikhaylovich Piguzov volunteers to the CIA in Jakarta. The same year he returns to Moscow and we lose contact with him.
2 Aug 1978âHanssen is transferred to New York, where he initially works on accounting matters in the criminal division
Late summer 1978âBokhan returns to Moscow. He makes one “sign of life” signal, but otherwise we do not hear from him.
Mar 1979âHanssen is transferred to New York's intelligence division to help establish the office's automated CI database. This was a classified database of information about foreign officials, including intelligence officers, assigned to the United States.
31 Oct 1979âKGB communications specialist Viktor Ivanovich Sheymov volunteers to the CIA in Warsaw
Nov 1979âHanssen volunteers (anonymously) to the GRU
1979âKGB officer Boris Nikolayevich Yuzhin recruited by the FBI in San Francisco
1980âbeginning of the GTTAW technical operation in Moscow. This operation involved CIA officers going down a manhole to tap into classified communications.
Jan 1980âBurton Gerber becomes COS, Moscow, replacing Gus Hathaway
Spring 1980âSheymov is exfiltrated from the Soviet Union
May 1980âPolyakov summoned to Moscow from New Delhi, ostensibly to attend a conference. He does not return to India and we never have contact with him again.
20 Oct 1980âHarold James Nicholson joins the CIA
Nov 1980âKGB S&T officer Vladimir Ippolitovich Vetrov (“Farewell”) makes his first overtures to a French businessman
Early 1980sâKulak dies of natural causes
1981âIUSAC official Vladimir Viktorovich Potashov volunteers to the U.S. defense secretary in Washington. Subsequently handled by the CIA and FBI.
Jan 1981âEdward Lee Howard joins the CIA
12 Jan 1981âHanssen is transferred to FBI headquarters. At first he is assigned to the budget unit of the intelligence division, which, per the affidavit issued at the time of his arrest, “had access to the full range of information concerning intelligence and counterintelligence activities involving FBI resources.”
28 Jan 1981âWilliam J. Casey becomes CIA director, replacing Turner
Spring 1981âHanssen drops contact with the GRU
14 Jul 1981âJohn H. Stein becomes DDO, replacing Max Hugel
Sep 1981âAmes transfers from New York to Mexico City
1982âGRU officer Vladimir Mikhaylovich Vasilyev volunteers to the U.S. military in Budapest. Subsequently handled by the CIA.
1982âYuzhin returns to Moscow
1982âBokhan returns to Athens for a second tour and resumes contact with the CIA
Feb 1982âHoward begins to work in SE Division
Early 1982âKGB officer Valeriy Fedorovich Martynov recruited by an FBI officer in Washington, DC. Subsequently handled as a joint FBI/CIA asset.
Sep 1982âCIA officer Carl G becomes COS, Moscow, replacing Burton Gerber
1983âthe GTABSORB technical operation is run by the CIA in the USSR. This operation involved the shipment of concealed sensors on the Trans-Siberian railroad.
Jan 1983âKGB officer Sergey Mikhaylovich Motorin recruited by the FBI in Washington, DC. The CIA apprised and disseminates his CI production.
Early 1983âVetrov tried for espionage and executed
2 May 1983âHoward is forced out of the CIA
Aug 1983âHanssen is transferred to the Soviet analytical unit, which supported FBI operations and investigations involving the Soviet intelligence services and provided analytical support to senior FBI management and the intelligence community. He also serves on the FBI's foreign CI technical committee, which was responsible for coordinating technical projects relating to FCI (foreign counterintelligence) operations.
Summer 1983âRod Carlson becomes chief of SE/ORP
Sep 1983âAmes leaves Mexico City and is assigned to SE/ORP Soviet Branch at headquarters, where his job is to monitor worldwide CIA operations against the Soviet target from a CI viewpoint
18 Sep 1983âEarl Edwin Pitts joins the FBI
Late 1983âGRU officer Gennadiy Aleksandrovich Smetanin volunteers to the CIA in Lisbon
1984âMoscow City Directorate KGB officer Sergey Yuryevich Vorontsov volunteers to the CIA in Moscow
1984âUSMC sergeant Clayton Lonetree arrives in Moscow to serve as a Marine guard at the U.S. embassy
1 Jul 1984âClair George becomes DDO, replacing Stein
16 Jul 1984âBurton Gerber becomes chief of SE Division, replacing Dave Forden. Gerber's deputy is Ken Wesolik.
Sep 1984âPaul Redmond becomes chief of SE/USSR
ca. Sep 1984âMurat N becomes COS, Moscow, replacing Carl G