Showing posts with label Illegal agents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illegal agents. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 June 2007

Red Orchestra, a Soviet operation during World War II.

Die Rote Kapelle (the Red Orchestra) was the name given by the Gestapo to two resistance rings, partially with Communist backgrounds, in Nazi-occupied Europe during World War II.

The Gestapo used the name Red Orchestra to refer to the Schulze-Boysen / Harnack group, an anti-Hitler resistance movement in Germany with international connections to countries like the USA, the Soviet Union and others. The Gestapo also used the same name to refer to Communist spy groups, including the Soviet NKVD-controlled Trepper espionage group. Though the Berlin resistance network was not Soviet-operated, the Trepper ring was, and the Gestapo's generalized use of the term was continued in most postwar history books.

The name "Rote Kapelle" or "Red Orchestra" came from German counterintelligence's practice of referring to spies' radio transmitters as "music boxes," and calling their agents "musicians". "Red" stood for Communism. Thus, the German counterintelligence called the perceived Soviet covert network die Rote Kapelle, the "Red Orchestra".

The Nazi government set up the Gestapo's "Red Orchestra Special Detachment" (Sonderkommando Rote Kapelle) with the intention of destroying the Berlin resistance network and Trepper's group.

The Trepper group

An actual Soviet espionage group was coordinated by then-NKVD agent Leopold Trepper. Anatoli Gurewitsch alias KENT, an agent of Trepper's network, went to Berlin on October 29th 1941 to seek contact with the Schulze-Boysen / Harnack resistance movement. It was the only time that a contact was made. Trepper never went to Berlin or met any of the conspirators there.

The Trepper ring made reports to the Soviet Union on German troop concentrations in German-occupied areas of the Soviet Union, air attacks on Germany, German aircraft production, and German fuel shipments. In France, they worked with the underground French Communist Party. Agents of this spy ring even succeeded in tapping the phone lines of the Abwehr in Paris.

Belgian-born socialite Suzanne Spaak joined the Parisian network of the Trepper Group after being appalled by the conduct of the Nazi occupiers in her country.

Eventually the Abwehr triangulated the radio transmissions of Johann Wenzel, an agent of the Trepper organization in Belgium, and arrested him. Wenzel agreed to turn double agent and then informed on the leaders of the network.

Based on Wenzel's information, German Counterespionage was also able to decode a Morse transmission from 1941 that had sent KENT to Berlin. They arrested Schulze-Boysen and his wife on August 30, 1942, and Arvid Harnack and his wife in September of that year, along with 106 fellow resisters (see below). It was through this incident that the erroneous connection between the two groups came into existence.

Some persons are believed to have broken under torture and almost all persons accused of having been members of the so-called "Red Orchestra" were sentenced to death and executed. Trepper was captured however he managed to convince his captors that he would serve them by supporting a policy of an independent peace settlement between the USSR and Germany, he managed to smuggle out an explanation of his activity to the Soviets and thus the Soviets were able to extract information which served their purposes from the Nazis themselves. Trepper escaped and joined the French underground, where he worked until the liberation of Paris. On return to the USSR he was arrested and spent years in prison, under Kruschev Trepper was rehabilitated.

Operations by the Trepper ring had been entirely eliminated by the spring of 1943. Most agents were executed, including Suzanne Spaak at Fresnes Prison just thirteen days before liberation in 1944.

The Schulze-Boysen / Harnack Organization

German counterintelligence also used the name "Red Orchestra" to denote a group engaged in pure resistance to the Nazi regime. This group was a friendship network centred around Harro Schulze-Boysen an intelligence officer for the German Air Ministry and Arvid Harnack in the German Ministry of Economics. Running the gamut of German society, it contained Communists and political conservatives, Jews, Catholics and atheists united in to fight the Nazis and their human rights violations. Unusual for that time and unique within the forms of German resistance, this group contained 40% women, working equally alongside the men. The oldest person arrested was 86, the youngest 16. Among the arrested were theatre producer Adam Kuckhoff and his wife Greta Kuckhoff, Horst Heilmann codebreaker in the Wehrmacht communications division, Günther Weisenborn German author, the journalist John Graudenz who had previously been expelled from the Soviet Union for reporting negatively about their famine, the potter Cato Bontjes van Beek, the pianist Helmut Roloff and others.

The main activity of the Schulze-Boysen group was collecting information about Nazi atrocities and distributing leaflets against Hitler rather than espionage. Part of their information campaign included the communication of Nazi secrets to foreign countries, specifically through personal contacts with the US embassy and a less direct connection to the Soviet government. A problem arose when, in addition to Kent, Soviet agents were parachuted into Germany to contact the resisters. Their arrival was observed and interspersed by the Gestapo. Before the German invasion of the Soviet Union, Schulze-Boysen had made contact with the Soviet Embassy. However, when the Soviets tried to enlist the resistance group in their service, the resisters refused. They wanted to maintain their political independence and were wary of Stalin.

German intelligence chose to label the Schulze-Boysen group as the Red Orchestra, in order to justify their persecution of anti-Nazi Germans. Many different people were arrested and listed under that name. Rudolf von Scheliha, who was in charge of countering foreign press reports about Nazi atrocities at the German Foreign Office, had irritated Gestapo officials by requesting details about actual atrocities, and became a target for annihilation because of his activities. The Gestapo claimed to have intercepted a message about NKVD agents coming to help von Scheliha and arrested him. Von Scheliha was sentenced to death and executed by hanging on December 22, 1942 together with resistance fighters of the group around Harnack and Schulze-Boysen. Hilde Coppi's execution was delayed until her son was weaned, and she was executed immediately thereafter.

After the war, Helmut Roeder, the Prosecutor in the trial against the Red Orchestra, was charged because of his role in that trial, and as a defense, invented the story of the Red Orchestra as an important Soviet espionage ring. Roeder became an informant for the Counter Intelligence Corps.

Miscellaneous

Hitler ordered the traitors hanged to make an example of them. Berlin however contained no gallows by which to do this since executions were usually carried out with an axe. To get around this the executioners fabricated a crude garrote using a meat hook and pieces of rope by which each traitor was suspended until dead by strangulation. This meat hook method became the standard for all traitors until the end of Nazi Germany except in the case of the July 20 plotters who were strangled using piano wire instead of rope.

The First Residentura (PGU) - KGB (Soviet Union), the Committee for State Security, Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti.

In the first years of existence Soviet Russia did not have many foreign missions that could provide official camouflage for legal outpost of intelligence called residentura, so, foreign department (INO) relied mainly on illegals, officers assigned to foreign countries under false identities. Later when official Soviet embassies, diplomatic offices and foreign missions have been created in major cities around the world, they were used to built legal intelligence post called residentura. It was led by resident his real identity was known only to the ambassador.

First operations of Soviet intelligence concentrated mainly on Russian military and political emigration organizations. According to Lenin directions foreign intelligence department has choose as his main target the White Guard people (White movement), which the largest groups were in Berlin, Paris and Warsaw. Intelligence and counter-intelligence department led long so called intelligence games, against Russian emigration, as a result of those games main representatives of Russian emigration like Boris Savinkov were

arrested and sent for many years to prisons. Another well known action against Russian emigration conducted in the 1920s was Operation Trust (Trust Operation). "Trest" was an operation to set up a fake anti-Bolshevik underground organization, "Monarchist Union of Central Russia", MUCR (Монархическое объединение Центральной России, МОЦР). The "head" of the MUCR was Alexander Yakushev (Александр Александрович Якушев), a former bureaucrat of Ministry of Communications of Imperial Russia, who after the Russian Revolution joined the Narkomat of External Trade (Наркомат внешней торговли), when the Soviets had to allow the former specialists (called "specs", "спецы") to take positions of their expertise. This position allowed him to travel abroad and contact Russian emigrants. MUCR kept the monarchist general Alexander Kutepov (Александр Кутепов), head of a major emigrant force, Russian All-Military Union (Русский общевоинский союз), from active actions, who was convinced to wait for the development of the internal anti-Bolshevik forces.

Among the successes of "Trest" was the luring of Boris Savinkov and Sidney Reilly into the Soviet Union to be arrested. In Soviet intelligence history 1930's have proceeded as a so called Era of the Great Illegals. Among others Arnold Deutsch and Yuri Modin, were officers leading Cambridge Five case.

One of the biggest successes of Soviet foreign intelligence was the penetration of the American Manhattan Project, it was the code name for the effort during World War II to develop the first nuclear weapons of the United States with assistance from the United Kingdom and Canada. Information gathered in United States, Great Britain and Canada, especially in USA, by NKVD and NKGB agents then supplied to Soviet physicists, allowed them to carry out first nuclear explosion already in 1949.

The First Chief Directorate (PGU) - KGB (Soviet Union), the Committee for State Security, Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti.

The First Chief Directorate (in Russian: Первое Главное Управление - PGU) of the Committee for State Security (KGB), was the organization responsible for foreign operations and intelligence collection activities by the training and management of covert agents, intelligence collection management, and the collection of political, scientific and technical intelligence.

PGU was formed with in KGB structures in 1954. After the collapse of the Soviet Union it was reformed into Central Intelligence Service, and later - to Foreign Intelligence Service or SVR (Служба Внешней Разведки in Russian).

History of PGU

From the beginning foreign intelligence played an important role in Soviet Union foreign policy. In Soviet Union foreign intelligence was formally formed in 1920, as a foreign department of Cheka (Inostrannyj Otdiel—INO). In december 19, 1918, The Central Committee Bureau of the RKP(b) had decided to combine front formations of Cheka and the Military Control Units, which were controlled by the Military Revolutionary Committee, and responsible for counter-intelligence activities, into one organ which was named Special Section (department) of Cheka. The head of Special Section (department) was Mikhail Sergeyevich Kedrov. The task of the Special Section was to run human intelligence: to gather political and military intelligence behind enemy lines, and expose and neutralize counter-revolutionary elements in the Red Army. At the beginning of 1920, in Cheka's Special Section there was an under section named War Information Bureau (WIB) which conducted political, military, scientific and technical intelligence in surrounding countries. WIB headquarter was located in Kharkiv and was divided in two sections: Western and Southern. Each Section had six groups: 1st—registration; 2nd—personal; 3rd—technical; 4th—finance; 5th—law; and 6th—organization. WIB had its own internal stations, one in Kiev and one in Odessa. The first one had so the called national section—Polish, Jewish, German and Czech Republic.

The Soviet defeat in the Polish-Bolshevik War, was the main reason for the formation of a large independent intelligence department in Cheka structures. On December 20, 1920, Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky, created the Foreign Department (Innostranny Otdel—INO), made up of the Management office (INO chief and two deputies), chancellery, agents department, visas bureau and foreign sections. In 1922 after the creation of the State Political Directorate (GPU) and connecting it with People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs of the RSFSR, foreign intelligence was conducted by the GPU Foreign Department, and between December 1923 and July 1934 by the Foreign Department of Joint State Political Administration or OGPU. In July 1934, OGPU was reincorporated into NKVD of the Soviet Union, and renamed The Main Directorate of State Security or GUGB. Till October 9, 1936 INO was operated inside the GUGB organization as a one of its departments. Then, for conspiracy purposes, People's Commissar of Internal Affairs Nikolai Yezhov, in his order #00362 had introduced a numeration of departments in the GUGB organization, hence Foreign Department or INO of the GUGB became GUGB's Department 7, and later Department 5. By 1941 foreign intelligence was given the highest status and from department it was enlarged to directorate. The name too was change from INO (Innostranny Otdiel), to INU—Inostrannoye Upravleniye, Foreign Directorate. During the following years Soviet security and intelligence organs went through frequent organizational changes. From February to July 1941 foreign intelligence was the responsibility of the recently created new administration The People's Commissariat of State Security (NKGB) and was working in its structure as a 1st Directorate and, after the July 1941 organizational changes, as a 1st Directorate of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD).

In return to former state already in April 1943, NKGB dealt with foreign intelligence as a 1st Directorate of NKGB and that state remained until 1946, when all People's Commissariats were renamed to Ministries. NKVD was renamed to Ministry of Internal Affairs or MVD, and the NKGB was renamed into Ministry of State Security, or MGB. From 1946 to 1947 the 1st Directorate of the MGB was conducting foreign intelligence. In 1947 the GRU (military intelligence) and MGB's 1st Directorate was moved to the recently created foreign intelligence agency by the name of Committee of Information, or KI. In the summer of 1948 the military personnel in KI were returned to the Soviet military to reconstitute a foreign military intelligence arm of the GRU. KI sections dealing with the new East Bloc and Soviet emigres were returned to the MGB in late 1948. In 1951 the KI returned to the MGB, as a First Chief Directorate of the Ministry of State Security.

After the death of long time Soviet leader Joseph Stalin in March 1953, Lavrenty Beria took over control of the security and intelligence organs, disbanded the MGB and its existing tasks were given to the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) which he was in control of. In the MVD the foreign intelligence was conducted by the Second Chief Directorate and following the creation of KGB foreign intelligence was conduct by the First Chief Directorate of the Committee for State Security or KGB. After Lavrenty Beria was arrested along with his people in MVD, Aleksandr Panyushkin become the head of foreign intelligence.

In March 1954, Soviet state security underwent its last major postwar reorganization. The MGB was once again removed from the MVD, but downgraded from a ministry to the Committee for State Security or KGB, and formally attached to the Council of Ministers in an attempt to keep it under political control. The body responsible for foreign operations and intelligence collection activities was First Chief Directorate (FCD).

Heads of Soviet Intelligence 1920-1991

Yakov Davydov, foreign department of Cheka - 1920–1921

Solomon Mogilevsky, foreign department of Cheka - 1921–?

Mikhail Trilisser, foreign department of GPU/OGPU - 1921–1930

Artur Artuzov, foreign department of OGPU/GUGB-NKVD - 1930–1936

Abram Slutsky, 7th Department of GUGB-NKVD - 1936–1938

Zelman Passov, 7th Department of GUGB-NKVD - 1938

Sergey Spigelglas, 7th Department of GUGB-NKVD - 1938

Pavel Sudoplatov, 7th Department of GUGB-NKVD - 1938

Vladimir Dekanozov, 7th Department of GUGB-NKVD - 1938–1939

Pavel Fitin, 5th Department of GUGB-NKVD/1st directorate of NKVD/NKGB/MGB - 1939–1946

Pyotr Kubatkin, 1st Directorate of MGB - 1946

Pyotr Fedotov, 1st Directorate of MGB/Committee of Information - 1946–1949

Sergey Savchenko, Committee of Information - 1949–1951

Yevgeny Pitovranov, 1st Chief Directorate of MGB - 1952–1953

Vasili Ryasnoy, 2nd Chief Directorate of the MVD - 1953

Aleksandr Panyushkin, 2nd Chief Directorate of the MVD/1st Chief Directorate of KGB - 1953–1955

Aleksandr Sakharovsky, 1st Chief Directorate of KGB - 1956–1971

Fyodor Mortin, 1st Chief Directorate of KGB - 1971–1974

Vladimir Kryuchkov, 1st Chief Directorate of KGB - 1974–1988

Leonid Shebarshin, 1st Chief Directorate of KGB - 1988–1991


Organization of the PGU (click to enlarge)


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