ABSTRACT

During the decade that preceded Mr Gorbachev's era of glasnost and perestroika, the KGB headquarters in Moscow was putting out a constant stream of instructions to its Residencies abroad. Unknown to the KGB, however, many of these highly classified documents were being secretly copied by Oleg Gordievsky, at that time not only a high-ranking KGB officer based in London but also a long-serving undercover agent for the British. The selected documents in this volume, translated and analysed by the editors with a commentary by Christopher Andrew to set them in context, offer a revealing insight into the attitudes, prejudices and fears of the KGB during what were to prove its declining years.

chapter |11 pages

Military Priorities

chapter |12 pages

Residency Priorities

The Case of Denmark

chapter |5 pages

Albania

chapter |7 pages

The Vatican

chapter |2 pages

Africa

chapter |14 pages

Asia

chapter |7 pages

The Middle East

chapter |10 pages

Zionism and Israel