Font
Large
Medium
Small
Night
Prev Index    Favorite Next

Chapter 448: Trotskyites

Of course, Fujita did not work hard. As the head of a company's representative office in the Soviet Union, this kind of thing is very fair. It is more motivated to do as much work as possible. In a sense, it is more motivated than the Soviet Union forcibly pulling various work into a class by administrative means. The world is always so contradictory. To be equal, it is necessary to limit the personal abilities of some people. The full reflection of personal abilities will lead to the lack of collision between people, etc. In some cases, one can only choose one of them.

People everywhere have hierarchies. Although the Soviet Union has been committed to eliminating the existence of hierarchies in its administration and system, it is still different from the treatment received by a senior cadre and an ordinary citizen. The social status and influence are like this. The cadres in the 1960s were not as arrogant as they were twenty years later. Now, the honest and responsible Soviet cadres are not because of the high awareness of the Soviets, but another reason. In the environment of the great purge and the emphasis on class, the KGB closed the entire Soviet Union's external channels of exchange. After the great purge, the Soviet Union's cadres were relatively simple and did not learn how to use semi-legal means to seek benefits. In addition, the cadre class was unstable during the period of Stalin and Khrushchev, and they had no time to think about these problems.

The Brezhnev period was different. The stability of the cadre class allowed cadres from all over the country to have plenty of time to find ways to bypass and other rules and regulations to plan for their lives. Anyway, they have time to plan, so there is no need to worry that Moscow ordered them to withdraw.

However, this difference will still be revealed during contact. It was beyond the ability of the Japanese to ask Fujita, the head of an office, to come to the chairman of the Soviet National Security Council for negotiations. After coming out of the local party committee building in the coastal kerb, Fujita sent a telegram to Tokyo, and received a reply call starting with Baga, strictly ordered Fujita to solve this problem, ignoring the price reduction proposal that was originally recognized by the Tokyo headquarters. The sad fate of the workers comes from this, and capitalism does not care about emotions.

When Fujita was plyzed and was about to go to Moscow, after consulting for this year's dormitory expansion plan, Selov ordered that the foundation must be made before September, and the housing problems of all subordinates must be solved next year. This is because the remaining time this year is only enough to lay the foundation. Due to the latitude of the Soviet Union, a bungalow must be laid with a foundation of less than one meter deep. To build a collective dormitory building, it is necessary to examine the local conditions and dig out the foundation with a depth of ten to twenty meters. This process is essential and is completely common sense.

If this step is omitted, it is likely that the new home is in the second year of the dilapidated house. Unlike the general public who thinks that the Soviet Union is very cold all year round, the summer in the Soviet Union still exists, and the temperature is enough to make the permafrost clear. If the foundation is omitted, the basic principle of thermal expansion and contraction is not a joke. If the Americans learn to build houses with wooden boards, it is estimated that the Soviets in Siberia need the KGB to send troops to collect the bodies in the second year.

When laying the foundation, you also need to consider the problem of groundwater infiltration and local geological problems. It cannot be solved by just a single word by Selov. If Selov, who became the chairman of the KGB, learned Khrushchev's theory of will, it is probably another corn movement. The first secretary can withstand it does not mean that he can withstand it.

In the office of the KGB Chairman at No. 11, Rubiy Yangka Square, this is a sacred place for the cadres at the headquarters. At least now, this is true. After the Ministry of Internal Affairs was dismantled for many years, the KGB Chairman finally became his own person in the usual sense. Serov's appointment will not lead an outsider in the leadership of an expert, which will make all security cadres very satisfied, and after the housing order is issued, they will become even more satisfied.

Before Brezhnev completely consolidated his position, it was of course difficult for the entire Soviet Union to provide everything he had experienced, but it was not difficult to implement it alone in one department. The cadres of the provincial security system were attracted by others and firmly grasped their basic foundation and were thinking about something else.

Of course, the job of this job is still to be done. The head of the intelligence department still needs to carry out intelligence work. Distributing benefits to comrades in this department is just an extra work. If the United Kingdom and the United States are strong opponents of the Soviet KGB, then the camp on the opposite side is not without weaknesses. The location of this weak place is the proud French.

The most successful KGB operation in France during the Cold War was to attack France's foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies. The KGB's foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies were operating a group code-named "Sapphire". Alexander Sakhatovsky, the leader of the First General Administration, has a complete plan for the foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies, which was formulated by General Pole Grolin, the head of the foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies.

Sakhatovsky also regularly received copies of the agency's report. Golitzen also provided some materials that would help arrest and trial George Parker, which made his testimony sound more credible. He also revealed that the KGB already knew that the foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies were ready to set up a branch that collects scientific intelligence in the United States. The department began its operation in 1962. But Golitzen only had some intermittent information about the KGB's operations in France, and most of the information did not involve specific issues. Even the news that led to the arrest of Parker actually narrowed the initial suspicion to seven people, and Parker was found after surveillance of the seven people.

Golitzen's frankness was well known to foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies, so it was impossible to conduct long-term secret surveillance on Parker as he did. After Golitzen made the above statement, a conspiracy theory was spread, further hindering the investigation. Similar theories in the United States made James Engleton doubt David Melf, the leader of the CIA's "Socialist State" Division.

In the UK, it led to Peter White and others' suspicion of Sir Roger Hollis, Director of the 5th Military Intelligence Department. Similar to Britain and the United States, the inventor of the French "conspiracy" theory made wrong judgments in many cases. Foreign intelligence and reconnaissance agencies' literature shows that although the "sapphire" team was finally found, the "big fish still slipped away", so the court did not conduct further investigations on this.

During the war, France did not publicly reveal a Soviet spy, but this does not mean that the Soviet spies' activities in France were not active, but just shows that the French counter-espionage agency was weak and powerless. The reason for the lack of anti-espionage was partly because France did not decipher the code of the Venona marking the end of the "Five Great Masters" and the atomic spy era. After the Parker case, in the mid-1960s, the United States and Britain re-analysed all the materials that appeared in the "Vinona" liaison, and the results of the analysis were transferred to the French Homeland Security Agency (French counter-espionage agency).

These materials show that before the war, a Soviet spy team was active in the French Ministry of Aviation, whose members were recruited in the 1930s. In the years before the fall of France, they worked under the control of Henry Robinson, a spy from the General Administration of Intelligence. As a scholar, Andre Rabat, one of the team members, began to preside over several national research laboratories. He was one of the first members to join the "Free France" association, which was established in London. In a few months, he served as the chief of General Charles de Gaulle's weapons reserve department.

But because of his disagreement with Charles de Gaulle's close ministers, he later withdrew from the "Free France" Association and founded the "Free France" monthly magazine in London. Later, he was also responsible for BBC's work on radio France. He sent political and military intelligence to a Soviet man named Albert in London. Rabat served as the Minister of Information of the Provisional Government of "Free France" in Algiers, and George Parker led the political journalism of the "Free France" Radio at that time. After the war, Bart mainly relied on journalism to make a living.

The password of Winona has long been replaced by Selov. All spies recruited by the Soviet Union in the 1930s are dormant. On the one hand, this is because these spies have made outstanding achievements. Selov does not want these people to be exposed. On the other hand, it is because these people are already very old and the KGB needs a new batch of spies.

France is very rebellious in terms of nationality, which can be seen from the Paris Commune and various movements. The Soviet Union's work to absorb spies in France was never difficult, and the blockage was far less than that of Britain and the United States.

This kind of work is to prepare for another well-known event in history. In France, a few years later, the May storm, Selov's greatest wish is of course to be the socialist party to take office. Of course, this is unlikely, so it is also feasible to stuff a few Trojan horses into it.

On the Internet of later generations, some people believe that Chinese factors influenced the occurrence of the May storm in France, but according to the Soviet documents, the greatest force of the May storm in France was actually Trotsky's Fourth International. The Fourth International was not publicly suppressed during the Khrushchev period, not to mention that Brezhnev had already come to power during the May storm. You can imagine what attitude he was towards the May storm in France.
Chapter completed!
Prev Index    Favorite Next