Stephen Roy Posted January 23, 2007 Share Posted January 23, 2007 I know this is not directly on topic, but this battle formed the underpinning of the era of the JFK assassination. Does anyone who has studied this "defector war" have any strong opinions as to who was right: Golytsin or Nosenko? I can see cases for and against either. While it is striking that the Golysin side still has its defenders - Scott Miler being one of them - there is also a contingent who came out against Golytsin, like Kisevalter and Bulik. And a whole raft of undecideds, like Helms, McCone and others. I'm re-reading the interesting "Spy Who Saved The World" about Penkovskiy, by Schecter and Deraibin, and the authors note that when Angleton took aside Bulik (one of those who ran Penkovskiy) and told him about Golytsin's "false defector" scenario, Bulik left the office in a huff and never spoke with Angleton again. And Kisevalter, a true cold-warrior, simply never believed that Golytsin was anything more than a defector who had already disgorged all of his useful stuff, and was now trying to justify CIA interest in him. BTW, there are some interesting pictures in this book: Bulik and Kisevalter meeting with P, P in US and Brit military uniforms, KGB pictures of all the principals in the case like Alexis Davison and D/COS Hugh Montgomery, KGB films of P and Mrs Chisholm meeting, etc. Schecter was allowed to go to Lubiyanka to get the official KGB take on the case. His co-author Deriabin, a former KGB officer who defected to the west, wisely declined the offer! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Roy Posted January 23, 2007 Author Share Posted January 23, 2007 I can't get in to edit the above, but I forgot to mention... Ther's an interesting group shot of CIA officials with some rarely-photographed people, such as Sheff Edwards and Jack Maury. Angleton is looking down, trying to hide his face. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
William Kelly Posted January 23, 2007 Share Posted January 23, 2007 I know this is not directly on topic, but this battle formed the underpinning of the era of the JFK assassination.Does anyone who has studied this "defector war" have any strong opinions as to who was right: Golytsin or Nosenko? I can see cases for and against either. While it is striking that the Golysin side still has its defenders - Scott Miler being one of them - there is also a contingent who came out against Golytsin, like Kisevalter and Bulik. And a whole raft of undecideds, like Helms, McCone and others. I'm re-reading the interesting "Spy Who Saved The World" about Penkovskiy, by Schecter and Deraibin, and the authors note that when Angleton took aside Bulik (one of those who ran Penkovskiy) and told him about Golytsin's "false defector" scenario, Bulik left the office in a huff and never spoke with Angleton again. And Kisevalter, a true cold-warrior, simply never believed that Golytsin was anything more than a defector who had already disgorged all of his useful stuff, and was now trying to justify CIA interest in him. BTW, there are some interesting pictures in this book: Bulik and Kisevalter meeting with P, P in US and Brit military uniforms, KGB pictures of all the principals in the case like Alexis Davison and D/COS Hugh Montgomery, KGB films of P and Mrs Chisholm meeting, etc. Schecter was allowed to go to Lubiyanka to get the official KGB take on the case. His co-author Deriabin, a former KGB officer who defected to the west, wisely declined the offer! SR, The CIA did five different studies of Nosenko, not all with the same conclusion. An analysis of the five studies and their different approaches and conclusions was publshed in the CIA's inhouse magazine - Studies In Intelligence and contained in an anthology of some twenty or so articles that appeared there. The different studies went from regular debriefing to year long isolation and tourture, with the final analysis being the application of the total amount of damage done by the revelation of all he knew - x ballanced against z , what he says about the assassination of JFK, concluding he was a bonifide defector. The whole Angleton end of it played the joker card, and is still a major influence in JFK assassination research and still an active disinformation campaign - witness Russo, Mitrokin, etc. BK Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Roy Posted January 23, 2007 Author Share Posted January 23, 2007 SR, The CIA did five different studies of Nosenko, not all with the same conclusion. An analysis of the five studies and their different approaches and conclusions was publshed in the CIA's inhouse magazine - Studies In Intelligence and contained in an anthology of some twenty or so articles that appeared there. The different studies went from regular debriefing to year long isolation and tourture, with the final analysis being the application of the total amount of damage done by the revelation of all he knew - x ballanced against z , what he says about the assassination of JFK, concluding he was a bonifide defector. The whole Angleton end of it played the joker card, and is still a major influence in JFK assassination research and still an active disinformation campaign - witness Russo, Mitrokin, etc. BK I'm more inclined to side with Nosenko being legit, but he DID admit lying about a few things. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Graves Posted January 27, 2018 Share Posted January 27, 2018 (edited) On 1/23/2007 at 10:24 AM, William Kelly said: Steven Roy, The CIA did five different studies of Nosenko, not all with the same conclusion. An analysis of the five studies and their different approaches and conclusions was publshed in the CIA's inhouse magazine - Studies In Intelligence and contained in an anthology of some twenty or so articles that appeared there. The different studies went from regular debriefing to year long isolation and tourture, with the final analysis being the application of the total amount of damage done by the revelation of all he knew - x ballanced against z , what he says about the assassination of JFK, concluding he was a bonifide defector. The whole Angleton end of it played the joker card, and is still a major influence in JFK assassination research and still an active disinformation campaign - witness Russo, Mitrokin, etc. BK On 1/23/07 William Kelly said: Steven Roy, The CIA did five different studies of Nosenko, not all with the same conclusion. An analysis of the five studies and their different approaches and conclusions was publshed in the CIA's inhouse magazine - Studies In Intelligence and contained in an anthology of some twenty or so articles that appeared there. The different studies went from regular debriefing to year long isolation and tourture, with the final analysis being the application of the total amount of damage done by the revelation of all he knew - x ballanced against z , what he says about the assassination of JFK, concluding he was a bonifide defector. The whole Angleton end of it played the joker card, and is still a major influence in JFK assassination research and still an active disinformation campaign - witness Russo, Mitrokin, etc. BK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bill Kelly, If you'll read Tennent H. Bagley's 2007 book "Spy Wars," and his 2015 pdf flollow-up "Ghosts of the Spy Wars," you'll learn that the five(?) CIA studies (from 1967 on, iirc) to which you refer were intellectually dishonest, and were done by unqualified people "to rid the CIA of this incubus," as Helms so succinctly referred to The Nosenko Problem. Both are free to read on the internet. -- TG Edited April 18, 2018 by Thomas Graves Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Thomas Graves Posted January 28, 2018 Share Posted January 28, 2018 (edited) On 1/26/2018 at 6:50 PM, Thomas Graves said: On 1/23/07 William Kelly said: Steven Roy, The CIA did five different studies of Nosenko, not all with the same conclusion. An analysis of the five studies and their different approaches and conclusions was publshed in the CIA's inhouse magazine - Studies In Intelligence and contained in an anthology of some twenty or so articles that appeared there. The different studies went from regular debriefing to year long isolation and tourture, with the final analysis being the application of the total amount of damage done by the revelation of all he knew - x ballanced against z , what he says about the assassination of JFK, concluding he was a bonifide defector. The whole Angleton end of it played the joker card, and is still a major influence in JFK assassination research and still an active disinformation campaign - witness Russo, Mitrokin, etc. BK ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bill, With all due respect, if you'll read Tennent H. Bagley's 2007 book "Spy Wars," and his 2015 pdf flollow-up "Ghosts of the Spy Wars," you'll learn that the five(?) CIA studies (from 1967 on, iirc) to which you refer were intellectually dishonest, and were done by unqualified people "to rid the CIA of this incubus," as Helms so succinctly referred to The Nosenko Problem. Both are free to read on the internet. -- Tommy bumped Edited January 28, 2018 by Thomas Graves Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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