Thomas,
You cite nothing, and even if you did, it would be from one who was writing an apologia for his own failings, and who was in charge of torturing a later-exonerated victim. That is how the record reads. I can’t do anything about that. You claim that all of your CIA superhero’s were suckers except for one: the author of (apparently) the only book you have read in the last three years.
Thomas, you cite nothing, and even if you did, it would be from one [Tennent H. Bagley] who was writing an apologia for his own failings, and who was in charge of torturing a later-exonerated victim. That is how the record reads. I can’t do anything about that. You claim that all of your CIA superhero’s were suckers except for one: the author of (apparently) the only book you have read in the last three years.Michael,
Are you afraid to read Bagley's
Spy Wars,and/or
Spymaster, and/or
Ghosts of the Spy Wars, and Mark Riebling's
Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and CIA, and Pyotr Deriabin's book about Oleg Penkovsky,
The Spy Who Saved The World, and Golitsyn's
New Lies For Old and/or
The Perestroika Deception, etc, etc, etc, and/or oodles and gobs of other books and Internet articles (e.g., by Emma Best at Muckrock), etc, etc, etc?
Are you afraid to watch Newman's two-part youtube presentation "Spy Wars" (yep, based on the book by the same name by ... gasp ... Tennent H. Bagley) from March 3, 2018, again (if you ever did, that is), especially the part near the end of Part 2 where PDS confesses that Newman has just convinced him that ... gasp ... Nosenko was a false defector?
If so, Why?
And what do you mean by "cite" in the context of this forum and the basic subject matter I'm talking about -- the fact that the "KGB" has been running circles around our intelligence agencies since day one?
Which KGB or GRU "illegal," triple-agent or false defector would you like to have more information about, Michael?
George de Mohrenschildt?
Aleksei Kulak?
Dimitri Polyakov (who, after he left the U.S. and really did start working with the CIA, was then uncovered in Moscow a few years after he'd retired, arrested, "tried," and executed)?
Yuri Loginov?
Edward Ellis Smith?
Regardless, the ball's in your court.
My standing challenge to you:Name one KGB (or GRU) agent who was "uncovered" by your hero, Nosenko, who wasn't already under suspicion by FBI or CIA, or who was still actively working for the KGB (or GRU), and/or still had access to classified materials.
LOL
-- MWT
Edited a teensy-weensy bit and bumped for MICHAEL CLARK, or anyone else who'd like to take a shot at it. The standing challenge, that is.
-- MWT