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EMBED for wordpress. Want more? Advanced embedding details, examples, and help! Please read the Notes on Sources for information on the nature and limitations of these documents. The students stated that the Central Committee required fundamental reform in order to keep students united and active in political life. According to Mitrokhin, most students from all MGU faculties agreed with the statements made by the activists from the faculty of geography.
They demanded to elect Varuschenko to the executive board of the Central Committee and also proposed to organize an independent organization to discuss issues that concerned most youths. Mitrokhin states that the KGB was extremely concerned about these circumstances. The administration feared that they had lost control over the youth. The KGB stated that the reason for this opposition was foreign propaganda brought to the Soviet Union by foreign students.
As a result, the KGB quickly disbanded the new club and the new executive board of the Central Committee. Varuschenko was expelled from the university.
The note recounts that Ginsburg was a repeat offender for promoting opposition to the Soviet regime and the head of the Russian Social Fund and Solzhenitsyn Fund.
His position allowed him to receive financial and material aid from different foreign institutions—something that was prohibited by Soviet law. Ginsburg had been supplying these funds to many organizations promoting anti-socialist propaganda including Ukrainian nationalist clubs, Jewish extremists, and Orthodox activists.
According to Mitrokhin, Ginsburg received , rubles of foreign aid in the s. He also had been passing on important information about major anti-Soviet activities held in the Soviet Union to American correspondents Thomas Kent, Alfred Short, and others. After the exchange, Alexander Ginzburg was tried, but was not convicted because all witnesses refused to give evidence.
This gave Soviet dissidents and westerners leverage in demanding that the USSR end persecution on the basis of religious or political beliefs. This operation included active measures to discredit Soviet dissidents Andrei Sakharov, Yelena Bonner, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn, measures designed to drive a wedge between the US and its democratic allies, and measures intended to convince the US government that continued support for the dissident movement did nothing to harm the position of the USSR.
Once More about Radio Liberty. Folder The Chekist Anthology. Following this activity, the Spanish leadership decided not to extend its agreement with the US which allowed Radio Liberty to broadcast from Spain. The memo discussed ways in which the US could exploit this tendency to its advantage. In July the KGB residency in Singapore spied on Chess Grandmaster Boris Spassky during his visit to Singapore, and noted in its report that he spent much of his free time on the tennis court.
In March , the newspaper of the Austrian Communist Party printed a translation of a secret Chilean document in which the Chilean secret police asked Gen.
Augusto Pinochet for additional funds to carry out undercover operations abroad. Mitrokhin did not mention where the document came from, nor did he state whether it was authentic or a forgery. Counter-Intelligence Protection, Information on KGB counter-intelligence surveillance of Soviet tourists vacationing in other socialist countries who had contact with foreigners. Mirokhin regrets that the KGB underestimated the strengths and methodology of Western intelligence services.
He concludes that the KGB should have adopted some of the same methods, and targeted Western tourists visiting socialist countries.
Rozanov, Russian writer and philosopher, describes the creation of the early police agencies that emerged between and These agencies aimed to bring anti-Soviet newspapers and publications under government control.
All bourgeois and Menshevik publications were to be shut down. According to Mitrokhin, Rozanov also indicates that in Lenin viewed freedom of speech as a political tool of bourgeois.
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