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{{short description|Soviet engineer and CIA spy (1927–1986)}}
'''Adolf Georgievich Tolkachev''' Адольф Георгиевич Толкачёв (1927, [[Aqtöbe|Aktyubinsk]], [[Kazakhstan]] September 24, 1986) was a [[Soviet Union]] [[electronics engineering|electronics engineer]] who provided key documents to the U.S. [[Central Intelligence Agency]] (CIA) over the years between 1979 and 1985. Working at the Soviet [[radar]] design house [[Phazotron]] as one of the chief designers, Tolkachev gave the CIA complete information about such projects as the [[Vympel R-23|R-23]], R-24, [[Vympel R-33|R-33]], [[Vympel R-27|R-27]], and [[Molniya R-60|R-60]], [[S-300 (missile)|S-300]]; fighter-interceptor aircraft radars used on the [[MiG-29]], [[MiG-31]], and [[Su-27]]; and other [[avionics]]. The [[United States]] considered the most advanced airborne radar among the systems Tolkachev compromised was the passive [[phased array]] radar used by the [[Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-31|MiG-31 Foxhound]] fighter. He was executed as a spy in 1986.
{{Infobox person
| name = Adolf Tolkachev
| image =
| native_name =
| other_names = Adik, CKSPHERE, CKVANQUISH
| birth_name = Adolf Georgiyevich Tolkachev
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1927|1|6|df=y}}
| birth_place = [[Aktyubinsk]], [[Aktobe Region]], [[Kazakh SSR]], [[USSR]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1986|9|24|1927|1|6|df=y}}
| death_place = [[Soviet Union]]
| death_cause = [[Execution by shooting]]
| citizenship = [[Soviet Union|USSR]]
| education = [[Kharkiv Polytechnic Institute]]
| occupation = Electronic engineer, spy
| spouse = Natalia Tolkacheva
| children = 1
}}
'''Adolf Georgiyevich Tolkachev''' ({{langx|ru|Адольф Георгиевич Толкачёв}}; 6 January 1927 – 24 September 1986)<ref>The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal by David E. Hoffman, pg. 214</ref> was a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[Electronic engineering|electronics engineer]]. He provided vital documents to the United States [[Central Intelligence Agency]] (CIA) between 1979 and 1985. Working at the Soviet [[radar]] [[OKB|design bureau]] [[Phazotron-NIIR|Phazotron]] as one of the chief designers, Adolf Tolkachev gave the CIA complete detailed information about projects such as the [[R-23 (missile)|R-23]], R-24, [[R-33 (missile)|R-33]], [[R-27 (air-to-air missile)|R-27]], and [[R-60 (missile)|R-60]], [[S-300 missile system|S-300]] missile systems; fighter-interceptor aircraft radars used on the [[Mikoyan MiG-29|MiG-29]], [[Mikoyan MiG-31|MiG-31]], and [[Sukhoi Su-27|Su-27]]; and other [[avionics]]. KGB Police executed him in Moscow for being a spy in 1986.


==Career==
His distrust of the communist government seemed to spring from persecution his wife's parents had suffered under [[Joseph Stalin]]. He told the CIA he was inspired by [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]] and [[Andrei Sakharov]].
Tolkachev claimed his distrust of the Soviet government arose from the persecution of his wife's parents, who had suffered under [[Joseph Stalin]]. He told the CIA he was inspired by [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]] and [[Andrei Sakharov]].{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=36}}


Tolkachev attempted five times from January 1977 to February 1978 to approach cars with U.S. diplomatic license plates in Moscow,<ref name="wapo20080419">{{cite news| url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/19/AR2008041902071_pf.html | work=The Washington Post | title=Cold War Spy Tale Came to Life on the Streets of Moscow | first=Matt | last=Schudel | accessdate=2010-04-23}}</ref> coincidentally approaching the CIA Moscow bureau chief at a gas station, but the CIA was wary of [[counterintelligence]] operations by the KGB. On his fifth attempt the CIA assigned a Russian-speaking officer named [[John I. Guilsher]]<ref name="wapo20080419" /> to make contact with him. Eventually Tolkachev established his [[bona fides]] with intelligence data that proved to be of "incalculable" usefulness to US experts. The [[United States Air Force|U.S. Air Force]] completely reversed direction on a $70 million dollar electronics package for the [[F-15 Eagle]] as a result of Tolkachev's intelligence.<ref>{{cite book |last= Bearden |first= Milton |coauthors= James Risen |title= [[The Main Enemy: The CIA's battle with the Soviet Union]] |publisher= Century |isbn= 0-7126-8151-5}}</ref>
A story whose plausibility has been questioned tells how Tolkachev began his spy career.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=31}} From January 1977 to February 1978, Tolkachev attempted to approach cars with U.S. diplomatic license plates in Moscow five times,<ref name="wapo20080419">{{cite news| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/19/AR2008041902071_pf.html | newspaper=The Washington Post | title=Cold War Spy Tale Came to Life on the Streets of Moscow | first=Matt | last=Schudel | access-date=2010-04-23}}</ref> coincidentally approaching the CIA Moscow bureau chief [[Gardner Hathaway]] at a gas station, but the CIA was wary of [[counterintelligence]] operations by the [[KGB]]. On his fifth attempt, the CIA assigned a Russian-speaking officer named [[John I. Guilsher]]<ref name="wapo20080419" /> to contact him. Eventually, Tolkachev established his [[Good faith|bona fides]] with intelligence data that proved to be of "incalculable" value to US experts. The [[United States Air Force|U.S. Air Force]] completely reversed direction on a $70 million electronics package for the [[F-15 Eagle]] due to Tolkachev's intelligence, although historian [[Benjamin Fischer (historian)|Benjamin B. Fischer]] says that this was "the projected overall cost, not a cost savings".{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=53}}


Tolkachev resisted the use of traditional CIA methods, including [[dead drop]]s and radios. He preferred personal meetings, as he enjoyed meeting with agents. During visits, he was also given medicine and medical checkups. A KGB-linked newspaper later wrote that the CIA showed a great deal of care for Tolkachev and that the way they treated him was "touching."
Because Tolkachev resisted the use of traditional CIA methods including [[dead drop]]s, preferring personal meetings; he was able to transfer a much larger volume of classified data, much of it collected using various matchbox-sized cameras. The need for these meetings necessitated several innovations in CIA [[tradecraft]] such as signals and concealment.<ref> ''Spycraft'', Robert Wallace and H. Keith Melton, Dutton, 2008</ref> Although he demanded money for his cooperation, he seemed to insist that he only wanted payment as proof of the value of his effort and risk. He was eventually paid a salary "equivalent" to the [[President of the United States|U.S. President]], [[President of the United States#Salary|at the time $200,000]] annually, most of which was to be held in escrow until he defected.


Tolkachev found that many of the procedures provided by the CIA were ineffective and risked giving him away. Tolkachev developed many different ways to bypass Soviet security despite routine changes that interfered with his activities. He repeatedly found holes in security, finding ways to check out documents without leaving a record and finding ways to take documents home or to areas of the facility where he had access to better light and more privacy. When the CIA-provided cameras failed to work, Tolkachev devised a way to use a civilian camera instead. He developed his own procedures that greatly increased the output and quality of his work. In one meeting alone, he provided almost 200 rolls of film and over 150 rolls in another meeting. He also included detailed notes and explanations of the information within the photos to assist in understanding the documents.<ref name="ReferenceA">Tolkachev, A Worthy Successor to Penkovsky, An Exceptional Espionage Operation, Barry G. Royden 2007</ref>
At some point in 1985, Tolkachev was compromised. While attempting to meet him, a CIA officer was arrested and questioned at the [[Lubyanka (KGB)|Lubyanka]] KGB headquarters and prison, and incriminating materials including spy equipment such as cameras was seized from him, but he was soon released into US custody and later ejected from the USSR. The source of the exposure is believed to have been [[Edward Lee Howard]], an ex-CIA officer who fled to [[Moscow]] to avoid [[treason]] charges.<ref name="wapo20080419" /> [[Aldrich Ames]] apparently also passed his name to the Soviets.


Tolkachev initially refused any payments for his service, knowing they would draw suspicion. He requested art supplies, music, and other items for his son. Because he would not take payments himself, token payments were deposited in an overseas account as a sign of gratitude. Tolkachev refused to leave the Soviet Union because his wife believed she would become homesick. He eventually requested that the interest from his accounts be paid to him in rubles so that he could attempt to bribe any coworkers who might discover his activity. In case he could not bribe his way out of a situation, Tolkachev requested a [[cyanide pill]] to commit suicide in case he was captured and to limit the information the KGB could acquire from interrogating him. The payments were made despite Tolkachev knowing that he would never be able to access the remaining funds. He went beyond anything required by his payment agreement and provided information any time it became available to him, not only when he was scheduled to receive compensation or care.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
Though Tolkachev was executed, he had carefully compartmentalized his spy work and his family, so they were not punished. His son Oleg Tolkachev is now a prominent architect.{{fact|date=November 2011}}


==Compromise and arrest==
The case was discussed at a 1999 post-war intellignece conference. KGB General Oleg Kalugin said that Tolkachev's wife worked with him and was put in prison, but later released under Gorbachev or Yeltsin. When she tried to contact a US embassy, Kalugin says she was ignored. Panelist Paul Redmond doubted this story, and said that the CIA had gone to "<u>''incredible''</u> lengths to find the son, to get money to him and help him out." <ref name=cia99/>
At some point in 1985, Tolkachev was compromised. While attempting to meet with Tolkachev, a CIA officer was arrested and questioned at the [[Lubyanka Building|Lubyanka]] KGB headquarters and prison, and incriminating materials, including spy equipment such as cameras, were seized from him. The source of the exposure is believed to have been [[Edward Lee Howard]], an ex-CIA officer who fled to [[Moscow]] to avoid [[treason]] charges.<ref name="wapo20080419" /> [[Aldrich Ames]] apparently also passed his name to the Soviets.{{sfn |Royden|2003}}


Tolkachev was arrested by the KGB while returning to Moscow from the countryside and was later put on trial and executed. With much planning over the years, Tolkachev had carefully compartmentalized his spy work from his family; however, his wife Natalia was also imprisoned for three years in 1986 on charges of supporting high treason.
== References ==
{{reflist|refs =


The arrest of Tolkachev, commanded by KGB Lt. Colonel Vladimir Zaitsev, was carried out by the KGB's [[Alpha Group|Alpha]] ''[[spetsnaz]]'' group. Zaitsev also says that the KGB kept Tolkachev's arrest secret in order to feed the CIA misinformation over the course of 10 months.<ref>{{Cite web |title = The Downfall of Agent Sphere|url = http://espionagehistoryarchive.com/2015/08/14/tolkachev-cia-kgb-counterintelligence/|website = Espionage History Archive|access-date = 2015-08-24|first = Mark|last = Hackard|authorlink= Mark Hackard|date = 2015-08-14}}</ref>
<ref name=cia99>
from http://foia.cia.gov and [https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/summer00/art02.html CIA's Center for the Student of Intelligence page]
US Intelligence and the End of the Cold War
Conference in Texas
Henry R. Appelbaum and John H. Hedley
Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas, 18-20 November 1999.
Panel III, Espionage and Counterintelligence, James Olsen, Chair; Oleg Kalugin, Paul Redmond, and Allen Weinstein
</ref>


==Legacy==
}}


A painting of Tolkachev by [[Kathy Krantz Fieramosca]] hangs in the CIA's [[George Bush Center for Intelligence|Langley headquarters]].<ref name="Hoffman">{{cite news|last1=Hoffman|first1=David|title=How the CIA ran a 'billion dollar spy' in Moscow|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/how-the-cia-ran-a-billion-dollar-spy-in-soviet-era-moscow/2015/07/02/3f9734f8-1050-11e5-9726-49d6fa26a8c6_story.html|newspaper=The Washington Post|access-date=4 May 2016}}</ref> Writer [[David E. Hoffman]] published ''[[The Billion Dollar Spy]]'', about Tolkachev's life, in 2015.
==External links==

*[https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol47no3/article02.html CIA historical study of Tolkachev]
==Skepticism==

[[Benjamin Fischer (historian)|Benjamin B. Fischer]], the former chief historian of the CIA, has presented a contrary view of the Tolkachev case. He argues that:
*Since Tolkachev "made no less than six or seven attempts to contact the [CIA] Moscow Station," including senior CIA officials, it is implausible that the KGB did not detect him.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=31}} This ignores that he only asked if agents were American, then dropped notes for them.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
*Tolkachev claimed that he took documents home to photograph them during lunch, but traveling by means of public transit would have taken about an hour.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|pp=40-42}} This ignores both that it was standard procedure for employees to leave during lunch to carry out errands and that Tolkachev was unable to continue using his home to collect intelligence, instead finding bathrooms and other locations in the facility where he could take pictures in privacy.<ref name="ReferenceB">Tolkachev, A Worthy Successor to Penkovsky
, Exceptional Espionage Operation, Barry G. Royden</ref>
*Since Tolkachev claimed to be asking for documents that were outside his area of work or security clearance, then he would not be able to obtain them without arousing suspicion in the secure, KGB-guarded facility.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|pp=43-44}} This ignores that Tolkachev raised these concerns and that Tolkachev replaced the card used for keeping records of his book withdrawals, and that no system existed for the KGB to filter document withdrawals by subject.<ref name="ReferenceB"/>

Fischer also questions the value of the intelligence furnished by Tolkachev, asserting that since CIA [[Human intelligence (intelligence gathering)|HUMINT]] only constituted "one small ingredient" of the [[The Pentagon|Pentagon]]'s decision-making process, Tolkachev cannot be credited with saving billions of dollars.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=53}} He concludes that Tolkachev was a "[[Dangle (espionage)|dangle]]" agent run by the KGB to obtain CIA technical equipment such as spy cameras, project a false image of Soviet military and economic vitality, and absorb the CIA in a resource- and time-consuming operation.{{sfn|Fischer|2008|p=49}}

However, contradicting Fischer's assertions, the Soviet [[Politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Politburo]] discussed Tolkachev on 25 September 1986, and top Soviet officials stated that he "was caught with two million rubles" and "handed over very important military-technical secrets to the enemy". The conversation transcript states that Tolkachev had been executed the previous day for his espionage on behalf of the U.S.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Blanton|first1=Tom|last2=Savranskaya|first2=Svetlana|title=Soviet Politburo Discussed Billion-Dollar Spy|url=http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB540-Soviet-Politburo-Discussed-CIA-Billion-Dollar-Spy-Adolf-Tolkachev/|website=National Security Archive|publisher=The George Washington University|access-date=4 May 2016}}</ref> Historian Nicholas Dujmovic criticized Fischer's article as "speculative," saying that he makes "few factual statements".<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Dujmovic|first1=Nicholas|title=The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal|journal=Studies in Intelligence|date=March 2016|volume=60|issue=1|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol-60-no-1/the-billion-dollar-spy.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160630020959/https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol-60-no-1/the-billion-dollar-spy.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 30, 2016}}</ref> Hoffman rebutted Fischer's theory, reasserting that Tolkachev furnished genuine technical information.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hoffman|first1=David|title=Tolkachev's Bona Fides|journal=International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence|date=Fall 2016|volume=29|issue=3|pages=639–640|doi=10.1080/08850607.2016.1148511|s2cid=156233086}}</ref> Fischer responded that the CIA had not released the intelligence provided by Tolkachev; that the Politburo transcript is "suspicious" and possibly falsified; and that the KGB, which ran other "dangles" providing intelligence on Soviet weapons technologies, was also in control of Tolkachev.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Fischer|first1=Benjamin B.|title=Tolkachev Evidence Still Skimpy|journal=International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence|date=Winter 2016|volume=29|issue=4|pages=846–848|doi=10.1080/08850607.2016.1177413|s2cid=156593068}}</ref>

==Citations==
{{reflist}}

==References==
*{{cite journal|last1=Fischer|first1=Benjamin|title=The Spy Who Came in for the Gold: A Skeptical View of the GTVANQUISH Case|journal= Journal of Intelligence History|date=2008|volume=8|issue=1|pages= 29–54|doi=10.1080/16161262.2008.10555148|s2cid=155965016}}
*{{cite book|last1=Hoffman|first1=David|title=The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal|date=2015|publisher=Doubleday|location=New York|isbn=978-0-38553760-5}}
*{{cite journal|last1=Royden|first1=Barry|title=Tolkachev, A Worthy Successor to Penkovsky|journal=Studies in Intelligence|date= 2003 |volume=47|issue=3|url=https://www.cia.gov/enwiki/static/f56a68befd4e5a4bb676dde0fed17ca9/Tolkachev-Successor-Penkovsky.pdf}}

{{authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Tolkachev, Adolf
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1927
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 1986
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tolkachev, Adolf}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tolkachev, Adolf}}
[[Category:1927 births]]
[[Category:1927 births]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:1986 deaths]]
[[Category:CIA agents convicted of crimes]]
[[Category:Soviet anti-communists]]
[[Category:Soviet engineers]]
[[Category:Soviet engineers]]
[[Category:Soviet people executed for spying for the United States]]
[[Category:Soviet people executed for spying for the United States]]
[[Category:People executed by the Soviet Union by firearm]]

[[Category:People from Aktobe]]

[[Category:Executed Soviet people from Kazakhstan]]
[[et:Adolf Tolkatšov]]
[[fr:Adolf Tolkatchev]]
[[pl:Adolf Tołkaczew]]
[[ru:Толкачёв, Адольф Георгиевич]]

Latest revision as of 10:18, 1 November 2024

Adolf Tolkachev
Born
Adolf Georgiyevich Tolkachev

(1927-01-06)6 January 1927
Died24 September 1986(1986-09-24) (aged 59)
Cause of deathExecution by shooting
Other namesAdik, CKSPHERE, CKVANQUISH
CitizenshipUSSR
EducationKharkiv Polytechnic Institute
Occupation(s)Electronic engineer, spy
SpouseNatalia Tolkacheva
Children1

Adolf Georgiyevich Tolkachev (Russian: Адольф Георгиевич Толкачёв; 6 January 1927 – 24 September 1986)[1] was a Soviet electronics engineer. He provided vital documents to the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) between 1979 and 1985. Working at the Soviet radar design bureau Phazotron as one of the chief designers, Adolf Tolkachev gave the CIA complete detailed information about projects such as the R-23, R-24, R-33, R-27, and R-60, S-300 missile systems; fighter-interceptor aircraft radars used on the MiG-29, MiG-31, and Su-27; and other avionics. KGB Police executed him in Moscow for being a spy in 1986.

Career

[edit]

Tolkachev claimed his distrust of the Soviet government arose from the persecution of his wife's parents, who had suffered under Joseph Stalin. He told the CIA he was inspired by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Andrei Sakharov.[2]

A story whose plausibility has been questioned tells how Tolkachev began his spy career.[3] From January 1977 to February 1978, Tolkachev attempted to approach cars with U.S. diplomatic license plates in Moscow five times,[4] coincidentally approaching the CIA Moscow bureau chief Gardner Hathaway at a gas station, but the CIA was wary of counterintelligence operations by the KGB. On his fifth attempt, the CIA assigned a Russian-speaking officer named John I. Guilsher[4] to contact him. Eventually, Tolkachev established his bona fides with intelligence data that proved to be of "incalculable" value to US experts. The U.S. Air Force completely reversed direction on a $70 million electronics package for the F-15 Eagle due to Tolkachev's intelligence, although historian Benjamin B. Fischer says that this was "the projected overall cost, not a cost savings".[5]

Tolkachev resisted the use of traditional CIA methods, including dead drops and radios. He preferred personal meetings, as he enjoyed meeting with agents. During visits, he was also given medicine and medical checkups. A KGB-linked newspaper later wrote that the CIA showed a great deal of care for Tolkachev and that the way they treated him was "touching."

Tolkachev found that many of the procedures provided by the CIA were ineffective and risked giving him away. Tolkachev developed many different ways to bypass Soviet security despite routine changes that interfered with his activities. He repeatedly found holes in security, finding ways to check out documents without leaving a record and finding ways to take documents home or to areas of the facility where he had access to better light and more privacy. When the CIA-provided cameras failed to work, Tolkachev devised a way to use a civilian camera instead. He developed his own procedures that greatly increased the output and quality of his work. In one meeting alone, he provided almost 200 rolls of film and over 150 rolls in another meeting. He also included detailed notes and explanations of the information within the photos to assist in understanding the documents.[6]

Tolkachev initially refused any payments for his service, knowing they would draw suspicion. He requested art supplies, music, and other items for his son. Because he would not take payments himself, token payments were deposited in an overseas account as a sign of gratitude. Tolkachev refused to leave the Soviet Union because his wife believed she would become homesick. He eventually requested that the interest from his accounts be paid to him in rubles so that he could attempt to bribe any coworkers who might discover his activity. In case he could not bribe his way out of a situation, Tolkachev requested a cyanide pill to commit suicide in case he was captured and to limit the information the KGB could acquire from interrogating him. The payments were made despite Tolkachev knowing that he would never be able to access the remaining funds. He went beyond anything required by his payment agreement and provided information any time it became available to him, not only when he was scheduled to receive compensation or care.[6]

Compromise and arrest

[edit]

At some point in 1985, Tolkachev was compromised. While attempting to meet with Tolkachev, a CIA officer was arrested and questioned at the Lubyanka KGB headquarters and prison, and incriminating materials, including spy equipment such as cameras, were seized from him. The source of the exposure is believed to have been Edward Lee Howard, an ex-CIA officer who fled to Moscow to avoid treason charges.[4] Aldrich Ames apparently also passed his name to the Soviets.[7]

Tolkachev was arrested by the KGB while returning to Moscow from the countryside and was later put on trial and executed. With much planning over the years, Tolkachev had carefully compartmentalized his spy work from his family; however, his wife Natalia was also imprisoned for three years in 1986 on charges of supporting high treason.

The arrest of Tolkachev, commanded by KGB Lt. Colonel Vladimir Zaitsev, was carried out by the KGB's Alpha spetsnaz group. Zaitsev also says that the KGB kept Tolkachev's arrest secret in order to feed the CIA misinformation over the course of 10 months.[8]

Legacy

[edit]

A painting of Tolkachev by Kathy Krantz Fieramosca hangs in the CIA's Langley headquarters.[9] Writer David E. Hoffman published The Billion Dollar Spy, about Tolkachev's life, in 2015.

Skepticism

[edit]

Benjamin B. Fischer, the former chief historian of the CIA, has presented a contrary view of the Tolkachev case. He argues that:

  • Since Tolkachev "made no less than six or seven attempts to contact the [CIA] Moscow Station," including senior CIA officials, it is implausible that the KGB did not detect him.[3] This ignores that he only asked if agents were American, then dropped notes for them.[6]
  • Tolkachev claimed that he took documents home to photograph them during lunch, but traveling by means of public transit would have taken about an hour.[10] This ignores both that it was standard procedure for employees to leave during lunch to carry out errands and that Tolkachev was unable to continue using his home to collect intelligence, instead finding bathrooms and other locations in the facility where he could take pictures in privacy.[11]
  • Since Tolkachev claimed to be asking for documents that were outside his area of work or security clearance, then he would not be able to obtain them without arousing suspicion in the secure, KGB-guarded facility.[12] This ignores that Tolkachev raised these concerns and that Tolkachev replaced the card used for keeping records of his book withdrawals, and that no system existed for the KGB to filter document withdrawals by subject.[11]

Fischer also questions the value of the intelligence furnished by Tolkachev, asserting that since CIA HUMINT only constituted "one small ingredient" of the Pentagon's decision-making process, Tolkachev cannot be credited with saving billions of dollars.[5] He concludes that Tolkachev was a "dangle" agent run by the KGB to obtain CIA technical equipment such as spy cameras, project a false image of Soviet military and economic vitality, and absorb the CIA in a resource- and time-consuming operation.[13]

However, contradicting Fischer's assertions, the Soviet Politburo discussed Tolkachev on 25 September 1986, and top Soviet officials stated that he "was caught with two million rubles" and "handed over very important military-technical secrets to the enemy". The conversation transcript states that Tolkachev had been executed the previous day for his espionage on behalf of the U.S.[14] Historian Nicholas Dujmovic criticized Fischer's article as "speculative," saying that he makes "few factual statements".[15] Hoffman rebutted Fischer's theory, reasserting that Tolkachev furnished genuine technical information.[16] Fischer responded that the CIA had not released the intelligence provided by Tolkachev; that the Politburo transcript is "suspicious" and possibly falsified; and that the KGB, which ran other "dangles" providing intelligence on Soviet weapons technologies, was also in control of Tolkachev.[17]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal by David E. Hoffman, pg. 214
  2. ^ Fischer 2008, p. 36.
  3. ^ a b Fischer 2008, p. 31.
  4. ^ a b c Schudel, Matt. "Cold War Spy Tale Came to Life on the Streets of Moscow". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-04-23.
  5. ^ a b Fischer 2008, p. 53.
  6. ^ a b c Tolkachev, A Worthy Successor to Penkovsky, An Exceptional Espionage Operation, Barry G. Royden 2007
  7. ^ Royden 2003.
  8. ^ Hackard, Mark (2015-08-14). "The Downfall of Agent Sphere". Espionage History Archive. Retrieved 2015-08-24.
  9. ^ Hoffman, David. "How the CIA ran a 'billion dollar spy' in Moscow". The Washington Post. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  10. ^ Fischer 2008, pp. 40–42.
  11. ^ a b Tolkachev, A Worthy Successor to Penkovsky , Exceptional Espionage Operation, Barry G. Royden
  12. ^ Fischer 2008, pp. 43–44.
  13. ^ Fischer 2008, p. 49.
  14. ^ Blanton, Tom; Savranskaya, Svetlana. "Soviet Politburo Discussed Billion-Dollar Spy". National Security Archive. The George Washington University. Retrieved 4 May 2016.
  15. ^ Dujmovic, Nicholas (March 2016). "The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story of Cold War Espionage and Betrayal". Studies in Intelligence. 60 (1). Archived from the original on June 30, 2016.
  16. ^ Hoffman, David (Fall 2016). "Tolkachev's Bona Fides". International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence. 29 (3): 639–640. doi:10.1080/08850607.2016.1148511. S2CID 156233086.
  17. ^ Fischer, Benjamin B. (Winter 2016). "Tolkachev Evidence Still Skimpy". International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence. 29 (4): 846–848. doi:10.1080/08850607.2016.1177413. S2CID 156593068.

References

[edit]