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Hardcover The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB Book

ISBN: 0465003109

ISBN13: 9780465003105

The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB

(Book #1 in the Mitrokhin Archive Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

The Sword and the Shield is based on one of the most extraordinary intelligence coups of recent times: a secret archive of top-level KGB documents smuggled out of the Soviet Union which the FBI has... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Intelligence Bible

Prof. Andrew and Vissily Mitrokhin's book became an Intelligence Bible since the first day of publication and is an absolute MUST for every professional or anyone interested in the history of Soviet Intelligence Services. You never know when we get a chance to welcome Mitrokhin-2, real life is tuffer than Hollywood, and to get out of Russia with such an archive is a very big deal. I hear the authors are finalising part II. Will be as hot and bestselling as this one, no doubt.

Dangers of Secret Police Directly Taken from KGB Archives

Anyone who is seriously interested in how to conduct government is the most responsible way should read this book. In addition, those who love spy stories, histories, and novels will be rewarded with many new details and perspectives on Soviet and Russian foreign intelligence activities since the Russian Revolution at the beginning of the 20th century.This book surprised me in several ways. First, I did not expect to learn that the KGB did not have a lot of important successes that were not already known publicly. Second, the KGB's effectiveness was more related to Western mistakes than to KGB brilliance. Third, the Soviet perceptions of the United States and Britain seem to have come from Fantasyland. The Soviet state made very poor use of terrific foreign intelligence because its leaders were such poor thinkers and the system did not encourage free discussion. Fourth, helping the dissidents inside the Soviet Union could have helped undo Communism much sooner. What makes this book unique is the combination of having had access to almost all of the foreign intelligence archives of the KGB for 12 years and having those archives interpreted by someone in the KGB who was interested in the need to reform Soviet socialism. By having Christpher Andrew join Vasili Mitrokhin in authoring this book, you do get a Western overlay but the fundamental Russian perspective is still there. I found the "big picture" aspects of the book far more rewarding than the specific examples. The rise of fascism clearly was Moscow's greatest resource in getting information from the West. The most effective spies (like Kim Philby and the other Magnficent Five in Britain) were as much motivated by anti-fascism as they were by helping the U.S.S.R. Although some are always willing to sell out for money or sex, idealism is the most dangerous motivation for traitors.Interestingly, leaks from the United States about the atomic and hydrogen bombs related again to idealism -- concern about avoiding a world in which those bombs might be used. How might future offensive and defensive technology breakthroughs create similar actions? It's a chilling thought. At the same time, the failure of the Soviet system eventually limited its ability to gain new traitors. The human rights abuses of the Soviets made Communism seem as dangerous to many idealists as fascism had earlier. Stalin doomed the Soviet system as much as its structural flaws did.On the other hand, Lenin was just as committed to controlling through secret police and intelligence gathering as Stalin was. Clearly, the Communist hand at the tiller in Moscow would have slipped much sooner if severe repression and fear had not been used.I also wondered how many of the problems that Western democracies had with the KGB could have been eliminated by having focused on proper security earlier. The shocking lapses of the British foreign service prior to World War II and in the Roosevelt administration clearly allow

A great Cold War history

This book is a very clearly and interestingly written history of that part of the Cold War that does not normally appear in the media. There is a wealth of detail that will come as a surprise to many who have witnessed the events of the last half-century and wondered why some events have transpired.
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