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  2. Valery Martinov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valery_Martinov

    Valery Martynov was a double agent working as a Soviet KGB officer as well as an intelligence asset for the US. While serving as a Lieutenant Colonel in the KGB, he was stationed in 1980 at the Soviet official offices in Washington, D.C. By 1982, he had become a double agent and was passing intelligence to the CIA and FBI under the code name ...

  3. Operation Gladio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Gladio

    Operation Gladio was the codename for clandestine "stay-behind" operations of armed resistance that were organized by the Western Union (WU) (founded in 1948), and subsequently by NATO (formed in 1949) and by the CIA (established in 1947), [1] [2] in collaboration with several European intelligence agencies during the Cold War. [3]

  4. Cold War espionage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War_espionage

    Klaus Fuchs, exposed in 1950, is considered to have been the most valuable of the atomic spies during the Manhattan Project.. Cold War espionage describes the intelligence gathering activities during the Cold War (c. 1947–1991) between the Western allies (primarily the US and Western Europe) and the Eastern Bloc (primarily the Soviet Union and allied countries of the Warsaw Pact). [1]

  5. In the years that followed, Greenagel would become what's known as an "access agent" — working secretly on behalf of the agency to bait KGB officers attempting to infiltrate the fledgling Reagan ...

  6. KGB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KGB

    In the late Cold War, the KGB was successful with intelligence coups in the cases of the mercenary walk-in recruits FBI counterspy Robert Hanssen (1979–2001) and CIA Soviet Division officer Aldrich Ames (1985–1994). [14]

  7. List of CIA controversies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_CIA_controversies

    In 2014, The New York Times reported that "In the decades after World War II, the C.I.A. and other United States agencies employed at least a thousand Nazis as Cold War spies and informants and, as recently as the 1990s, concealed the government's ties to some still living in America, newly disclosed records and interviews show."

  8. Red Cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Cell

    On March 20, 1986, Red Cell team members kidnapped Ronald D. Sheridan, a civilian security guard who worked at Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach in Southern California, as part of an exercise to test the defenses of the base. They took him to a nearby hotel, where he was held for 30 hours and tortured: stripped, kicked, beaten, and repeatedly ...

  9. Russian espionage in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_espionage_in_the...

    Active measures have continued in the post-Soviet era in the Russian Federation and are in many ways based on Cold War schematics. [3] [13] Active measures, as first formulated in the Soviet KGB, were a form of political warfare, offensive programs such as disinformation, propaganda, deception, sabotage, destabilization and espionage.