The Sword and The Shield
- 700 páginas
- 25 horas de lectura
Describes a treasure trove of secret documents found by the FBI, and offers facts about every country in the world, as well as information that contributes to the history of the last century.
Esta serie se adentra en el apasionante mundo del espionaje y las operaciones encubiertas, basada en meticulosos archivos de la KGB. Los lectores son transportados al corazón de la Guerra Fría, descubriendo redes ocultas, agentes encubiertos y extensos esfuerzos de infiltración en naciones occidentales. Cada volumen ofrece una narrativa convincente de audaces deserciones y maniobras de alto riesgo que dieron forma a los asuntos globales. Proporciona una visión sin precedentes detrás del Telón de Acero, revelando la verdadera magnitud de las actividades de los servicios secretos.


Describes a treasure trove of secret documents found by the FBI, and offers facts about every country in the world, as well as information that contributes to the history of the last century.
The KGB and the World
In 1992, MI6 exfiltrated Vasili Mitrokhin, the most senior activist in the KGB, who had been responsible for running the KGB archives. He had noted thousands of documents, described by the FBI as the greatest single cache of intelligence ever received by the West.' This archive resulted in many prosecutions, some of which are still ongoing. of Modern History at Cambridge and the world's leading intelligence scholar. Their first volume, The KGB in Europe and the West, revealed the extent of KGB penetration of what they called The Main Adversary and the existence of a previously unknown nuclear spy, Melita Norwood. The second volume, The KGB and the World, continues the revelations from the sublime to the absurd - which Third World leaders were in the pay of the KGB, precisely how extensive KGB penetration of foreign governments was, and how KGB agents were instructed to assess the spread of the influence of rival Chinese communism (by going round African capitals trying to count the changing number of posters of Mao Tse-tung in shops and public buildings...)