Book Description
"A career special agent of the FBI concentrating on Eastern European counter-espionage investigations, Edward Gazur was selected for one of the most fascinating assignments of the cold war - to protect, befriend and debrief the highest-ranking KGB defector of all time, General Alexander Orlov. Despite their different backgrounds, Orlov and Gazur became firm friends, and the old Bolshevik, who had finally settled in Cleveland, Ohio, entrusted many secrets to his FBI confidant." "Orlov was a senior KGB officer who was the Soviet representative in Spain during the Civil War and in charge of guerrilla warfare training there. Horrified by the great purges taking place in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, in which hundreds of his colleagues and friends were executed on Stalin's orders, and ultimately in fear for his life, Orlov defected in 1938 with his wife and daughter and went into hiding in the United States. Worried about the safety of his relatives still in the USSR, he was not able to reveal to the world the true nature of Stalin's crimes until 1953, with the publication of a series of articles in Life magazine. Still in danger from KGB revenge squads - especially after two attempts to contact him in 1969 and 1971 - he maintained secrecy on a number of KGB operations, which he later revealed to his friend Gazur." "During their remarkable conversations, Orlov cast new light on many well-known cases - including the removal of gold from the Spanish Treasury to the Soviet Union during the Civil War, Stalin's 'terrible secret', the assassination of Trotsky and the kidnapping of General Miller. Gazur describes these as well as detailing Orlov's career in the Spanish Civil War, the background to Orlov's defection and his flight to the US, and Orlov's many years in hiding - and on the move - during which tragedy hit his family. The story that emerges is a truly authentic insider's account of Stalin's brutal regime, how the KGB waged its war on the West, and the courage of one man's stand against dictatorship." "Only rarely had the FBI allowed one of its counter-intelligence experts to write his memoirs, and alongside Orlov's story Gazur also reveals details of his FBI career, describes his close relationship with the General, and puts forward his own conspiracy theory regarding Orlov's death in 1973."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved