The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the the Third World - Newly Revealed Secrets from the Mitrokhin Archive
D**M
Great buy on a book.
I ordered a book from Chaparral Books and the book arrived, at once, and packaged extremely securely. The book's condition was much better than listed. This is a great seller. Fair in his/her pricing, and very user friendly.
J**D
The Finest Account of Soviet Activities in the Third World
My first recommendation to readers is to watch the superb Youtube video presentation at the International Spy Museum by Christopher Andrew in 2005 when this book was published. This is the best introduction. This is part of the Mitrokhin series and Vasili Mitrokhin should be credited as a co-author as is done on the title page. The book is dedicated to the late Mitrokhin and his late wife. Mitrohkin was the archivist of the KGB secret files and risked his life and probably that of his wife in smuggling his extensive notes out of Moscow to the newly free Baltic states. The first book in the series "The Sword and the Shield" published in 1999 should be read first and covers the entire history of Soviet intelligence. This book focuses on Soviet activities in the third world and will be of special interest to present and former residents of third world countries and scholars of modern third world history. I am passing this book on to a colleague born in Pakistan who will have a hard time putting down the parts describing KGB activities in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India. In this series, Cambridge historian Christopher Andrew points out that many previous works that claim to be based upon the release of previously secret KGB were actually accounts that were hand fed to authors by the current Russian Intelligence Service and are sanitized versions of KGB history. This is the real unsanitized history and is probably the most complete picture of any intelligence agency the world will ever see. It is must reading for anyone wanting to understand the cold war, the era of decolonization and the failure of the Soviet Union. Ronald Reagan had it exactly right--this was indeed the "Evil Empire."
H**S
Excellent :better than prequel
This book is even better than the first one (in my own opinion).For years,we were told that the front lines of the cold war were in Europe with the third world serving as a battlefield where the superpowers can fight proxy wars.Before this book came out we were very familiar with the CIA's role in Iran,Guatemala,Guyana,indonesia,Chile and other places using dirty tricks and covert operations to promote american interests.This book details the KGB 's equivalent operations.We learn that the KGB sponsored a "Hostile takeover " of india;that it was in close contact with Salvador Allende and Fidel Castro and that it was the main support for the ANC during the apartheid struggle.The book shows that although the KGB had numerous tactical successes ,in the long run this could not help the Soviet system as communism was a flawed ideology and doomed anyway.
A**R
well
A rather dry examination for my admittedly somewhat superficial taste for spy stuff, but good to pick up and check out the nefarious exploits of this sinister organization.
J**K
Mitrokhin Files Continued
In the same vein as their earlier book, "The Sword and The Shield", premier espionage historian Christopher Andrew and ex-KGB archivist Vasili Mitrokhin use Mitrokhin's vast stash of information culled from the KGB itself to shine a harsh but illuminating light on the activities of the USSR and its intelligence operations. These two books, along with Romerstein and Beindel's "The Venona Files", superbly document these activities. All three are definitely "must haves" for anyone interested in this part of the Cold War and the lead-up to it.
M**E
Time to Re Write the History Books
With a paltry budget of $3bil a year, the CIA's counter intelligence operation had to fight a KGB/GRU monstrosity 20 times its size, one wonders how the West won the Cold war. For far to long, any time the KGB was implicated in a situation it was dismissed by the press as some kind of "right wing hyperventilation". Many of the cold war martyrs canonized by the left, i.e. Allende, turned out to be on the KGB's payroll. Simply put, this book has the potential to change the history of the Cold War as we know it.
A**R
Interesting cold war book
Excellent book if you are interested in the cold war. Particularly from the perspective of the Soviet KGB. Hearing the unfilitered facts of thier operations was very interesting for one who lived through this period. Not a book that was a real page turner but one where you would read and go "never knew that".
O**N
For anyone who is interested in how the intelligence community operates this is a good book to read
I am half way through the book but it is an interesting read. It describes the failures and successes of the KGB in the third world after WWII. For anyone who is interested in how the intelligence community operates this is a good book to read.
K**K
Great reference book for history in the lense of Russia then USSR
K**I
The overestimated role of the KGB in the 3rd world.
A revelation for all those who over estimated the role of the KGB in diffrent political developments, upheavels and change of adherences most specially in the middle east.The documents show that the KGB was not able to fill in the space left empty by American stupidity and stubbernness to keep atatus quo at every price unable to grasp new tendencies.It is also a set back for conspirationalists who always assume a hand behind the hands or a mastermind à la 007!The situation has certainly changed in the 21st century. But many perceptions of the abilities of espionage have unfortunately remained unchanged. A brightening light is also shed on the similarity of autocratic leaders in the 3rd world which left me baffeled.
S**N
worthwhile read
very interesting book on the history of KGB involvements in the unaligned countries during the cold war. unfortunately much of the mitrokhin archive is still classified so the information is limited but a decent summary of their experience (as far as you can trust a summary from the archivist of the british mi5/mi6 on the KGB)
I**I
The world really is a theater with a high voltage drama being played ...
Well, fancy covert operations, forged documents, poisoning ears etc. were all very movie like to me. And then I read this book !What is written is very difficult to believe and yet you know that all these are true. It is unfathomable to see the extent to which a country could go and did go for its expansion of ideology and for it's eternal belief on a single policy. Everyone should read this book to understand that most of the 1st & 2nd world countries are in one way or the other related to the catastrophes happening around in this era. The blame can't ever go to only CIA or KGB.All the more alarming was how such a vast and diverse country in India was infiltrated so much and so easily, promoting it to be the biggest base of operations for KGB during Cold War. How we were completely played by KGB and how the leaders, ministers, intelligence officers and even the leader of the nation were absolutely none but mere puppets.In short, nations were risked, citizens were betrayed, news medias were bought and madness ruled, as much in India as in Pakistan and Bangladesh.Would have rated it 5 but for the code names in the book.
S**A
Highly recommended
Awesome book..! Its like reading brhind-the-scenes of history..!!
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