The World Was Going Our Way

Home > Other > The World Was Going Our Way > Page 87
The World Was Going Our Way Page 87

by Christopher Andrew


  economy, Soviet

  failure of command model

  foreign aid as drain

  USA blamed for problems

  Ecuador

  Eden, Sir Anthony

  education see universities Egypt

  Communist Party ; absorbed into Arab Socialist Union

  intelligence services

  Egypt - cont.

  and Israel: hostilities ; peace process

  KGB operations: active measures ; agents and confidential contacts

  Leonov assesses as unreliable

  under Nasser

  National Progressive Unionist Party

  under Sadat

  Soviet aid; advisers ; arms

  Soviet-Egyptian Treaty of Friendship and Co-operation

  US special relationship

  see also al-Sadat, Anwar; Suez Canal; Syria

  Eisenhower, Dwight D.

  EKSPRESS, operation

  El Al airline

  El Alamein

  ELDAR (Egyptian KGB agent)

  electronics, intelligence on Japanese

  ELEKTRON (KGB agent in Israel)

  El Salvador

  El-Sa‘id, Rifa‘at

  EMMA (Japanese KGB agent)

  Encyclopedia, Great Soviet

  Engels, Friedrich

  Entebbe, hijacking to

  entrapment of agents

  EPLF (Eritrean Peoples’ Liberation Front)

  Ethiopia

  active measures

  arms supplies

  Cuban presence

  Derg junta

  East German support

  Haile Selassie régime;

  overthrow

  Mengistu régime

  Somali war

  and USSR; military intervention

  Euphrates Dam

  European Community and PLO

  Exxon corporation

  EYR (Japanese Line agent)

  Fadeykin, Ivan Anisimovich

  failure of intelligence

  KGB: and Arab-Israeli Six-Day War; and Indian elections ()

  US/UK, over Yom Kippur War

  Faisal, Yusuf

  FAKEL, operation

  Fam Hung

  Farah Diba

  FARES (Syrian KGB contact)

  FARID (Syrian Communist)

  Faure, Edgar

  Fawaz, Ahmad Ali (pseud. of Carlos the Jackal)

  Fawzi, Muhammad

  FCD (First Chief Directorate (Foreign Intelligence), KGB)

  archives

  evolution

  heads

  organization

  Red Banner (later Andropov) Institute

  Work Plan ()

  DIRECTORATES

  K (Counter-Intelligence)

  S (Illegals);

  Department Eight (Special Actions)

  T (Scientific and Technical Espionage)

  V (Special Actions)

  SERVICES

  (Intelligence Analysis)

  A (Disinformation; Covert Action) ; see also forgery, KGB

  DEPARTMENTS

  Second

  Fifth

  Sixth

  Seventh

  Eighth

  Ninth

  Tenth

  Seventeenth

  Eighteenth

  see also individual officers

  Fedayin

  FEDOR (Egyptian KGB agent)

  Fedorchuk, Vitali Vasilyevich

  FEMIDA, operation

  FEN (Japanese KGB agent)

  FENIKS (North Korean diplomat)

  FET (or FOT, Japanese KGB agent)

  Fetisov, Boris Pavlovich

  Figueiredo, General Joäo Batista

  Figueres Ferrer, José (KASIK)

  filtering of intelligence for leadership

  Finland

  First Chief Directorate (Foreign Intelligence) of KGB see FCD

  Fischer, Bram

  Fitzgerald, Frances

  FLN (Front de Libération Nationale), Algeria

  Flower, Ken

  FMLN (Farabundo Martí de Liberación), El Salvador

  FNLA (National Front for the Liberation of Angola)

  Fonseca Amador, Carlos (GIDROLOG)

  Ford, Gerald R.

  Foreign Intelligence Directorate, KGB see FCD

  Foreign Ministry, Soviet

  and Angola

  and Latin America

  and Middle East

  see also Gromyko, Andrei Andreyevich

  forests, Mitrokhin’s love of

  forgery, Hungarian AVH

  forgery, KGB

  and Afghanistan

  and Africa

  Asad influenced by

  and Bangladesh

  and Chile

  and China

  CIA implicated by

  and India

  and Iran

  and Japan

  and Middle East

  mis-spellings

  and Pakistan

  and US racism

  US State Department documents

  World Jewish Congress documents

  France

  and Africa

  Communist Party

  DST security service

  S & T intelligence

  Frank, Katherine

  FRAP (Frente de Acción Popular), Chile

  Freeman, John

  Freemasonry

  FRELIMO (Frente de Libertação de Moçambique)

  Friendship Associations

  Finnish-Chinese

  Indo-Soviet

  Parliamentary Japanese-Soviet

  Frunze Military Academy, Moscow

  FSB (Russian security and intelligence service)

  FSLN (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional) see Nicaragua (Sandinistas)

  FUDZIE (Japanese KGB agent)

  Fukuda, Takeo

  Fulbright, Senator William

  FURMAN (Afghan KGB agent)

  GABRIEL (Rigoberto Cruz Arguello)

  Gagarin, Yuri

  Gallegos Venero, General Enrique

  Gandhi, Feroze

  Gandhi, Indira (VANO)

  administrations

  assassination

  and conspiracy theories

  and Congress Syndicate

  corruption

  defeat atelections

  KGB and

  Non-Aligned Movement chairmanship

  visits to USSR

  Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand (Mahatma)

  Gandhi, Rajiv

  Gandhi, Sanjay

  García Almedo, Alfredo

  García Márquez, Gabriel

  GARGANYUA (Syrian KGB contact)

  al-Gashmi, Ahmad

  Gates, Robert

  Gaveire Kedie, Lieut-Colonel Salah (OPERATOR)

  GAVR (Seiichi Katsumata)

  Gaziev, Khamad

  GCHQ (UK Government Communications Headquarters)

  Geisel, Ernesto

  GEK (PFLP terrorist)

  Gelbard, José (BAKIN)

  GERALD (Egyptian military intelligence officer)

  GERDA (KGB illegal in Israel)

  Gerhardt, Dieter

  German Democratic Republic collapse

  HVA (foreign intelligence service)

  and Latin America

  and PLO

  and South African CP

  Stasi (Ministry of State Security) assistance to foreign security services: Angola; Cuba; Ethiopia ; Ghana; Guinea; Mozambique

  terrorists based in

  German Federal Republic and Middle East

  S & T intelligence

  Ghana

  GIDAR (Palestinian KGB agent)

  GIDROLOG (Carlos Fonseca Amador)

  Giscard ’Estaing, Valéry

  glasnost, opposition to

  GLAVNY see Muhammad, Aziz

  GLEN (General Ignatius Kutu Acheampong)

  GNOM (KGB agent in Israel)

  GNOM (Pakistani KGB agent)

  Golan Heights

  Golbery do Couto e Silva, General

  gold, inte
rnational market in

  Goldstein, Gordon

  Goldstein, Wolf (Ze’ev Avni, CHEKH)

  GOPAL (Indian KGB agent)

  Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeyevich, and administration

  and Afghanistan

  and Africa

  and Arafat

  Bakdash’s denunciation

  Castro’s disagreement with

  and China

  and conspiracy theories

  on distorted reporting

  and India

  and Iraq

  Gorbachev, Mikhail S. - cont.

  and Japan

  and Jewish emigration

  and Muslim states

  ‘new thinking’ in foreign policy

  and Nicaragua

  and USA

  Gordievsky, Oleg

  Gorelov, General Lev

  Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique

  GORSKY (KGB agent in Caucasus)

  Gosh, Ajoy

  Government Communications Headquarters, UK

  Gowon, General Yakubu ‘Jack’

  GPU (Soviet security and intelligence service)

  GRACE (Shigero Ito)

  grain supplies, Soviet

  GRANT (KGB agent in SWAPO)

  GRANT (KGB agent in Mapam) n

  Great Soviet Encyclopedia Grechin, N. K.

  Grechko, Marshal Andrei

  Greene, Graham

  GREM (Pakistani KGB agent)

  Grenada

  Griffin (US diplomat)

  Grigorenko, Grigori Fyodorovich

  Grigulevich, Iosif (pseud. Teodoro Castro)

  Grinchencko, Vladimir Vasilyevich (RON, KLOD)

  Gromyko, Andrei Andreyevich

  and Afghanistan

  and Agee

  and Andropov

  and China

  and India

  and Japan

  and Middle East; Egypt; Israel and Zionism ; Syria

  on Pakistan and West

  under-estimates importance of Third World

  Gross, Babette

  Grozny

  GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence)

  and Avni

  and Cuba

  operation RYAN

  Grushko, Viktor

  Guatemala

  Guevara, Ernesto ‘Che’

  aims to spread revolution

  death and martyr cult

  GUGB (Soviet security and intelligence service)

  Guinea

  Guinea-Bissau

  Gulabzoy, Sayed (MAMAD)

  Gulf War

  GULYAM (Abu Sayid Hasan)

  Gum’a, Sha’rawi

  Gumede, Josiah

  Guryanov, Oleg Aleksandrovich

  Guyana

  Habash, Dr George

 

‹ Prev