Read Circle of Treason Online

Authors: Sandra V. Grimes

Circle of Treason (41 page)

TIEBREAKER,
78

Tolkachev, Adolf Grigoryevich,
23
,
75–77
,
92
,
96

Turner, Stansfield,
50
,
59
,
60
,
76

Unique communication system,
46–47
,
48–49

University of Washington,
10
“unsub Dick” case,
108

U.S. Congress,
149–51
,
152
,
154
,
189

U.S. Embassy in Moscow,
110

U.S. intelligence community: CIA/FBI cooperation in product dissemination to,
191
; counterintelligence products dissemination to,
7–8
,
15
; MORINE leads dissemination to,
64

U.S. military: leaks of military plans from,
83
; servicemen spying for Soviets,
18
,
27
,
95
,
99
,
108–11
,
184

Varenik, Gennadiy Grigoryevich,
91–92
,
98
,
103

Vasilyev, Vladimir Mikhaylovich,
83–86
,
84
,
96
,
99
,
113

Vertefeuille, Jeanne,
67
,
81
,
114
,
116
; on Ames,
178–79
,
181
,
186–87
; Ames' attempt to scapegoat,
158
; in Ames' debriefing,
155–56
,
157
; in Ames mole hunt,
146
,
148
; as author of
The GRU Today
,
7
; briefing of senior management by,
151
; as chief in Libreville,
8–9
; as chief of Biographics Branch,
6
; on CIA inspector general's report,
152
; in CI/STF,
104
,
105
; Congressional testimony by,
150–51
; in Counterintelligence Group,
7–8
,
15
; doubts concerning FBI role in mole hunt,
131–32
; as duty officer for Directorate of Operations,
6–7
; in “false flag” investigation,
115
; on GTPROLOGUE case,
118
,
119
; at Helsinki,
3–4
; in mole hunt,
113
,
121
,
123
,
127
,
131
,
134
,
136
,
144
; official recognition of,
153
,
159
; post-mole hunt career,
183
; recruitment of,
1
; study of GRU officers,
24–25
; in West Africa,
2–3

Vetrov, Vladimir Ippolitovich,
6
,
80–82

Vogel, Don,
16

Vorontsov, Sergey,
92–94
,
104

Wade, Bob,
107
,
127
,
129

Walker, John Anthony, Jr.,
95
,
99
,
184

Wallenberg, Raoul,
94

Watson, Pat,
123

Webster, William,
115
,
151

Wesolik, Ken,
100

Whalen, William,
27

wire tap operations,
97

Wise, David,
160

Wiser, Les, Jr.,
145
,
153
,
190

Woolsey, James,
150

Worthen, Diana,
18
,
19
,
41
,
87
,
111
,
120
,
121
,
153
,
154
,
159
,
171

“Year of the Spy,”
95

Yefimov, Aleksey,
109

Yegorov, Aleksey,
108–9

Yeltsin, Boris,
72

Yurchenko, Vitaliy Sergeyevich,
21
,
71
,
77
,
82
,
84
,
89
,
95
,
96
,
97
,
98
,
171

Yuzhin, Boris Nikolayevich,
15
,
71–72
,
96–97
,
114
,
190

Zavaliy, Mikhail,
73

Zhomov, Alexsandr Vasilyevich,
117–19
,
123
,
124

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Sandra Grimes
is a twenty-six-year veteran of the CIA's clandestine service who spent the majority of her career working against the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Born in New York State, she spent her childhood and formative years in Colorado. She joined the CIA in July 1967, shortly after graduating from the University of Washington with a degree in Russian. A mother of two daughters and grandmother of four, she lives in Great Falls, Virginia, with her husband of forty-three years.

Jeanne Vertefeuille
was a CIA officer from 1954 to 1992, specializing in the Soviet target during the Cold War, particularly in the counterintelligence area. Born in Connecticut, she holds a BA in history from the University of Connecticut and an MA from George Mason University. A veteran of five overseas tours, she led the small task force that resulted in the 1994 arrest of Soviet mole Aldrich Ames. She has served on contract as an analyst since 1993.

The Naval Institute Press
is the book-publishing arm of the U.S. Naval Institute, a private, nonprofit, membership society for sea service professionals and others who share an interest in naval and maritime affairs. Established in 1873 at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, where its offices remain today, the Naval Institute has members worldwide.

Members of the Naval Institute support the education programs of the society and receive the influential monthly magazine
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or the colorful bimonthly magazine
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and discounts on fine nautical prints and on ship and aircraft photos. They also have access to the transcripts of the Institute's Oral History Program and get discounted admission to any of the Institute-sponsored seminars offered around the country.

The Naval Institute's book-publishing program, begun in 1898 with basic guides to naval practices, has broadened its scope to include books of more general interest. Now the Naval Institute Press publishes about seventy titles each year, ranging from how-to books on boating and navigation to battle histories, biographies, ship and aircraft guides, and novels. Institute members receive significant discounts on the Press's more than eight hundred books in print.

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