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  2. Russian espionage in the United States - Wikipedia

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

    The KGB was the main security agency for the Soviet Union from 1954 until its break-up in 1991. The main duties of the KGB were to gather intelligence in other nations, conduct counterintelligence, maintain the secret police, KGB military corps and the border guards, suppress internal resistance, and conduct electronic espionage.

  3. Soviet espionage in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_espionage_in_the...

    As early as the 1920s, the Soviet Union, through its GRU, OGPU, NKVD, and KGB intelligence agencies, used Russian and foreign-born nationals (resident spies), as well as Communists of American origin, to perform espionage activities in the United States, forming various spy rings.

  4. First Chief Directorate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Chief_Directorate

    'First Chief Directive') of the Committee for State Security under the USSR council of ministers (PGU KGB) was the organization responsible for foreign operations and intelligence activities by providing for the training and management of covert agents, intelligence collection administration, and the acquisition of foreign and domestic ...

  5. Lee Harvey Oswald called the KGB department in charge of ...

    www.aol.com/article/news/2017/10/27/lee-harvey...

    Newly released documents from the CIA show that the spy agency intercepted a phone call from Lee Harvey Oswald, John F. Kennedy's assassin, to the KGB department in Moscow that handled "sabotage ...

  6. Valery Martinov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valery_Martinov

    Martynov was a lieutenant colonel in the KGB who worked for the First Chief Directorate, responsible for foreign intelligence. He and his wife Natalia arrived in Washington in November, 1980, he under the guise as third secretary of the Soviet embassy. He was recruited in 1982 by an FBI-CIA program, and started to feed information to US ...

  7. Jack Barsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Barsky

    Photos and documents hidden in small canisters were delivered to the KGB via dead drops around New York. His assignments included tracking Nikolai Khokhlov, a Soviet defector living in California and a KGB spy gone rogue in Canada, and even writing an assessment of the American public's perception of the Soviet–Afghan War. [4]

  8. Super spy or paper pusher? How Putin's KGB years in East ...

    www.aol.com/news/super-spy-paper-pusher-putins...

    Meticulous. Reticent. Clever, but never showy about it. Ever the watcher. It was 1989. The young Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin was a KGB officer in the then-East German city of Dresden, and it was ...

  9. KGB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KGB

    The Committee for State Security (Russian: Комитет государственной безопасности, romanized: Komitet gosudarstvennoy bezopasnosti, IPA: [kəmʲɪˈtʲed ɡəsʊˈdarstvʲɪn(ː)əj bʲɪzɐˈpasnəsʲtʲɪ]), abbreviated as KGB (Russian: КГБ, IPA: [ˌkɛɡɛˈbɛ]; listen to both ⓘ) was the main security agency of the Soviet Union from 1954 to 1991.