Authors: Gordon Corera
33
 Meeting #1, p. 22
34
 Meeting #5, 24 April 1961
35
 Professor Stephen Kotkin, âSoviet Capitulation', lecture at the London School of Economics, 20 May 2010
36
 Meeting #5
37
 Meeting #7
38
 Meeting #12
39
 Meeting #13
40
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, p. 272
41
 Ibid., p. 275
42
 The fact that it had never been done before was mentioned by MI6 station chief Gervase Cowell in âThe Role of the Intelligence Services in the Second World War', seminar held 9 November 1994, Institute of Contemporary British History, 2003,
http://www.ccbh.ac.uk/witness_intelligence_index.php, p.45
43
 Interview with Baroness Park
44
 âBaroness Park of Monmouth: Lives Remembered',
The Times
, 3 April 2010
45
 Ashley,
CIA Spymaster
, p. 197
46
 Penkovsky Operation, Parts 3 and 4, Tapes 22 October 1966
47
 Meeting #16
48
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 175
49
 Ibid., p. 178
50
 Obituary of Janet Chisholm,
Daily Telegraph,
6 August 2004
51
Â
Gordon Barrass,
The Great Cold War
, Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2009, p. 132
52
 Christopher Moran, âFleming and CIA Director Allen Dulles' in Robert G. Weiner, B. Lynn Whitfield and Jack Becker (eds),
James Bond and Popular Culture
, Cambridge Schools Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2010; Andrew Lycett,
Ian Fleming
, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1995, pp. 383 and 367
53
Â
http://www.jfklibrary.org/Historical+Resources/Archives/Reference+Desk/Speeches/JFK/003P0F03BerlinCrisis07251961.htm
54
 ASSESSMENT OF [BLANK], 13 July 1961, declassified and available at
www.cia.gov
55
 Richard Deacon,
C: A Biography of Sir Maurice Oldfield
, Macdonald, London, 1984, p. 131
56
 Meeting #15
57
 Ashley,
CIA Spymaster
, p. 224
58
 Meeting #19
59
 Penkovsky Operation, Parts 3 and 4, Tapes 22 October 1966
60
 Ibid.
61
 Hart,
CIA's Russians
, p. 99
62
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 217
63
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, pp. 272 and 277
64
 Wynne,
Wynne and Penkovsky
, pp. 128 and 131
65
 Ibid., p. 76
66
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 221; Wynne,
Wynne and Penkovsky
, p. 140
67
 Penkovsky Operation, Parts 3 and 4, Tapes 22 October 1966
68
 See Chapter 7
69
 Penkovsky Operation, Parts 3 and 4, Tapes 22 October 1966
70
 Ashley,
CIA Spymaster
, p. 212
71
 Ibid., p. 211
72
 Ibid., p. 212; Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 262
73
 See, for instance, Meeting #4, p. 6
74
 Meeting #15, p. 5
75
 Meeting #35
76
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 257. Wynne would receive $213,700 jointly from the CIA and MI6 after he was released from prison
77
Â
There is a note in the transcript reading: âThere is no question that subject both wittingly and unwittingly can be most trying in his often capricious demands and handling him on the part of all concerned requires great patience even if understanding is not always possible.' This appears to refer to Wynne, although it might refer to Penkovsky
78
 Meeting #36
79
 Peter Hennessy,
The Secret State
, Penguin, London, 2002, pp. 6â7
80
 Michael Herman quoted in ibid., p. 12
81
 National Archives CAB 159/34, Minutes of meeting of 29 September 1960
82
 Meeting #37
83
 Meetings #1 and #33 include discussions
84
 Meeting #33
85
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, p. 281
86
 Memorandum for the record, 11 January 1962 (misdated at top 1961), declassified and available at
www.cia.gov
87
 See, for instance, CIA memo âDiscussion between SR/COP, CSR/9, DCSR/9, (blank) Re: SR/COP's European Trip February', 6 February 1962
88
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 292
89
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, pp. 398â9
90
 Translation of letter dated 10 April 1962, declassified by CIA and available at
www.cia.gov
91
 Gervase Cowell in âThe Role of the Intelligence Services in the Second World War' seminar, p. 45
92
 Ibid.
93
 Ibid.
94
 Hart,
CIA's Russians
, p. 119
95
 Ibid.
96
 See, for instance, Meeting #11,1 May 1961
97
 Dino Brugioni,
Eyeball to Eyeball
, Random House, New York, 1992
98
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, pp. 334â6
99
 Ibid., p. 336
100
 Len Scott, âEspionage and the Cold War: Oleg Penkovsky and the Cuban Missile Crisis',
Intelligence and National Security
, vol. 14, no. 3, Autumn 1999
101
Â
Profession of Intelligence
, BBC Radio 4, 23 August 1981
102
 Hennessy,
Secret State
, p. 44
103
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 341
104
 Tape No. 4, Friday afternoon 9 November 1962, declassified by CIA and available at
www.cia.gov
105
 Ashley,
CIA Spymaster
, p. 234
106
 Joe Bulik in a 1998 interview published on the website of the National Security Archive, George Washington University
107
 Penkovsky case memorandum, 16 June 1963, declassified by CIA and available at
www.cia.gov
108
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, p. 278
109
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 409
110
 Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky,
KGB: The Inside Story of its Foreign Operations from Lenin to Gorbachev
, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1990, pp. 393â4
111
Â
Fatal Encounter
, BBC TV, 1991
112
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy who Saved the World
, p. 410
113
 2 November 1962, from Wynne,
Wynne and Penkovsky
, p. 9
114
 Ibid., p. 13
115
 Ibid., p. 41
116
 National Archives FO 181/1155; private information
117
 Memorandum for Chief SR Division from Joe Bulik, 10 May 1963, declassified by CIA and available at
www.cia.gov
118
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, p. 286
119
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy who Saved the World
, p. 35
120
 Ibid., p. 361
121
 Frank Gibney (ed.),
The Penkovsky Papers
, Collins, London, 1965, p. 283
122
 Ibid., p. 110
123
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 356
124
 Ibid., p. 358
125
 Gibney (ed.),
Penkovsky Papers
, p. 125
126
 Schecter and Deriabin,
Spy Who Saved the World
, p. 414
127
 Interview with Sir Gerry Warner for BBC Radio 4, 2009
128
 S-jak SZPIEG Case of Radio Operator Adam Kaczmarzyk, Polish TV documentary, 2004;
The Times
, 10 January 1969 and 8 August 1967, and additional private information
129
 Details of the Freed case and Dearlove's role come from the
Czech archives and the work of Prokop Tomek. The issue of the payments to Freed is covered in Chapter 9
130
 Martin L. Brabourne, âMore on the Recruitment of Soviets',
Studies in Intelligence
, vol. 9, Winter 1965, originally classified secret, declassified and available at
www.cia.gov
131
 Wilhelm Marbes, âThe Psychology of Treason', in H. Bradford Westerfield (ed.),
Inside CIA's Private World
, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1995, p. 71
132
 Interview with Sir Colin McColl for BBC Radio 4, 2009
CHAPTER 5: THE WILDERNESS OF MIRRORS
1
 The account of Golitsyn's defection comes from the first volume of his unpublished memoir. It concurs closely with the account provided from the American side â for instance in David Wise,
Molehunt
, Random House, New York, 1992
2
 Friberg's reaction is recounted in Wise,
Molehunt
, p. 3, and Tom Mangold,
Cold Warrior
, Simon & Schuster, London, 1991, p. 50
3
 Wise,
Molehunt
, p. 5
4
 Wise, ibid., says there was a security alert regarding a bomb and that Golitsyn was allowed to remain on the plane at his request
5
 Jerry D. Ennis, âAnatoli Golitsyn: Long Time CIA Agent?',
Intelligence and National Security
, vol. 21, no. 1, February 2006, p. 32
6
 Richard Deacon,
C: A Biography of Sir Maurice Oldfield
, Macdonald, London, 1984, pp. 121 and 167
7
 Obituary of the Reverend Vivian Green,
Daily Telegraph
, 26 January 2005,
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/ 1481995/The-Reverend- Vivian-Green.html
8
 Interview with Charles Allen for BBC Radio 4, 2009
9
 National Archives PREM 11/4463
10
 Mangold,
Cold Warrior
, p. 68
11
 Christopher Andrew and Oleg Gordievsky,
KGB: The Inside Story of its Foreign Operations from Lenin to Gorbachev
, Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1990, p. 490
12
 Peter Wright in
Spycatcher
, Heinemann, Melbourne, 1987, and Tennent Bagley in
Spy Wars: Moles, Mysteries, and Deadly Games,
Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2007, are both of this view
13
Â
Deacon,
C: A Biography of Sir Maurice Oldfield,
p. 190; Chapman Pincher,
Treachery
, Random House, New York, 2009, p. 571
14
 Christopher Andrew,
The Defence of the Realm: The Authorized History of MI5
, Allen Lane, London, 2009, p. 435
15
 Miranda Carter,
Anthony Blunt: His Lives
, Macmillan, London, 2001, p. 451
16
 Anthony Blunt in his unpublished memoir held in the British Library and opened to the public in 2009
17
 Andrew,
Defence of the Realm
, p. 438
18
 Yuri Modin,
My Five Cambridge Friends
, Headline, London, 1994, p. 43; Genrikh Borovik,
The Philby Files
, Little, Brown, London, 1994, p. 365
19
 Unless otherwise indicated, material regarding Stephen de Mowbray is drawn from an interview by the author
20
 Andrew Boyle,
The Climate of Treason
, Coronet, London, 1980, pp. 210 and 323
21
 Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 54
22
 Ibid.
23
 Ibid., p. 243
24
 Ibid., p. 264
25
 Michael Shelden,
Graham Greene: The Man Within
, Heinemann, London, 1994, p. 41
26
 Tom Bower,
The Perfect English Spy
, Heinemann, London, 1995, pp. 314â15
27
 Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 170
28
 Andrew,
Defence of the Realm
, p. 506
29
 Bower,
Perfect English Spy
, p. 316
30
 Andrew,
Defence of the Realm
, p. 507
31
 Golitsyn unpublished memoir
32
 Jerrold L. Schecter and Peter S. Deriabin,
The Spy Who Saved the World
, Macmillan, New York, 1992, p. 379
33
 Ibid., p. 390
34
 Wright,
Spycatcher
, p. 208
35
 Golitsyn, unpublished memoir
36
 Golitsyn,
New Lies for Old
, Dodd, Mead & Co., New York, 1984, goes into more detail on this
37
 Yuri Nosenko speech to the CIA in 1998. Previously available as
a podcast by the Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies, Alexandria. Also Bagley,
Spy Wars
38
 John Limond Hart,
The CIA's Russians
, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 2003, p. 129
39
 Bagley,
Spy Wars
, p. 14
40
 Ibid., p. 88
41
 Ibid., p. 18
42
 Clarence Ashley,
CIA Spymaster
, Pelican, Gretna, 2004, p. 271
43
 Mangold,
Cold Warrior
, p. 147
44
 Ibid., p. 149
45
 Richards J. Heuer, âNosenko: Five Paths to Judgment', in H. Bradford Westerfield (ed.),
Inside CIA's Private World
, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1995, p. 398