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Oleg Kalugin
The Spy on the Wall Tour: Washington's Cold War Monuments Byvernok Loeb Ifashington Stajfwriter
Organized Crime and the Russian State Challenges to U.S.-Russian Cooperation
The Growing Influence of the Russian Orthodox Church in Shaping Russia’S Policies Abroad
Bulletin
The Kgb's Image-Building Under
Beyond Propaganda: Soviet Active Measures in Putin's Russia
The Okhrana and the Cheka: Continuity and Change
February 13, 1976 Soviet Bloc Intelligence Services Take Joint Countermeasures Against Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty
I. F. Stone Encounters with Soviet Intelligence
Volume 3, Issue 2: November 2020 56 the Solzhenitsyn Affair: Yuri
The 1983 Nuclear War Scare
David Sheldon Boone Charging Him with Selling the Security Apparatus
Oleg Danilovich Kalugin
The Stasi at Home and Abroad the Stasi at Home and Abroad Domestic Order and Foreign Intelligence
A Cold War Conundrum: the 1983 Soviet War Scare
Active Measures the Russian Art of Disinformation
Defectors Betrayed Most Soviet Intelligence Secrets, KGB Ex-Official Says
Russia's Digital Awakening
Top View
Russian Spies Alma Mater: Brief History
12 Kalugin, Oleg, Major General
1983: the Most Dangerous Year
Revisitar La Gloriosa Revisitar La Gloriosa
64 Active Measures
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library and Museum Press Release
Chapter 14 Active Measures
A Counterintelligence Cold Case File
S:\FULLCO~1\HEARIN~1\Committee Print 2018\Henry\28
Moles, Defectors, and Deceptions: James Angleton and His Influence on US Counterintelligence,” Held at the Woodrow Wilson Center (Washington, D.C.) on 29 March 2012
Counterintelligence at the End of the 20Th Century
U.S. Department of Justice Federal Bureau of Investigation
The 1983 War Scare in US-Soviet Relations Document Number (FOIA)IESDN (CREST): 006122556
Who Could Have Imagined a Dozen Years Ago That the Soviet Union
The 1991 Soviet and 1917 Bolshevik Coups Compared
Soviet Espionage
From Ryan to Reykjavik: the Role of Nuclear Weapons in Ending the Cold War
New Findings on the Korean
Hostile Social Manipulation: Present Realities and Emerging Trends
The Changing Face of the KGB
Active Measures”; Or, How a KGB Spymaster Made Good in Post-9/11 America
TWENTY UNAVOIDABLE QUESTIONS ABOUT the NOSENKO CASE by Tennent “Pete” H