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The Soviet Union's Cutthroat Soldiers
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10345 |
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Current Issues
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12 / 1986 |
4,108 Words |
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Lawrence B. Sulc Lawrence B. Sulc is president of the Nathan Hale Institute. |
In 1971 Oleg Adolfovich Lyalin--"a man from the darkest core of the KGB," as John Barron, a foremost expert on Soviet intelligence, called him--defected from Department V, or the "wet affairs" section, of the Soviet intelligence agency. Great Britain expelled 105 Soviet intelligence officers in the wake of Lyalin's revelations and the KGB itself called home many more from around the world before other nations could react.
"The tracks left by various Department V officers flushed into the open were revealing," Barron explained. "They showed that Department V was active on all continents, surveying both physical and human targets for destruction. Partial reconstruction of such operations...indicated that the Kremlin contemplated sabotage not only in case of war but in certain peacetime circumstances.
"Threatening as these preparations were, the mentality they mirrored was even more disturbing. For the existence and worldwide deployment of an outfit such as Department V revealed a continuing Soviet commitment to the principle of clandestine violence."
Soviet special purpose forces--Spetsnaz, as the military version is called in the Soviet Union, when these forces are mentioned at all--pose a serious threat to the security interests of the United States and the Free World. Although in peacetime these forces are dedicated largely to the maintenance of internal security in the Soviet Union, their sensitive peacetime missions include foreign political action and the projection of Soviet power abroad. In wartime, certain of these forces would operate in foreign territory independently of their parent units, conducting reconnaissance, carrying
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