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21
Even if Nosenko was a fake defector (and they didn't know that with certainty), even if he was directly taking directions from Khrushchev through a implanted device in his damned head (to exaggerate my point), you *cannot* treat a person like he was treated. The denial of basic rights, of due process, the isolation, the mistreatment: all intended to break him down. That's unacceptable.

No fair minded American can defend that. That is, fair minded Americans who aren't deranged. I would think even a Joe McCarthy would say this was unacceptable. It seems to me that Bagley later recognized this and tried to cover his tracks (as Angleton did). But continued approving the mistreatment despite any contrary evidence showing he was wrong.

Just to note: Hoover thought Nosenko was a legitimate defector. Is the claim now that Hoover was a Soviet agent? Or he was surrounded by KGB agents in the FBI who manipulated him? How insane is this going to get?

At this point, as is usually the case with this conspiracy nonsense, it's useless. You are trying to reason with unreasonable people.

Dear Steve M.,

1) If you'd read Bagley's Spy Wars, and/or John M. Newman's Uncovering Popov's Mole (which he dedicated to Bagley), you'd realize that Nosenko was sent by KGB General Oleg Gribanov to the CIA in Geneva in June 1962 to discredit what recent true defector Anatoliy Golitsyn was telling James Angleton about possible KGB penetrations of the CIA, the FBI, and the intelligence services of our NATO allies. One of the things that convinced Bagley of this was the fact that, even though Nosenko had (supposedly) worked in a different part of the highly compartmentalized KGB than Golitsyn, the cases he told Bagley and Kisevalter about were exactly the same ones that Golitsyn had told Angleton about a few months earlier, and Nosenko's telling of them contradicted Golitsyn's telling of them in every respect. And they all minimized the possibility that the Agency had been penetrated.

Bagley believed Nosenko was protecting Edward Ellis Smith, Pyotr Popov's incompetent and honey-trapped dead drop setter-upper in Moscow who was fired by the CIA in late 1956 and whom Bagley believed had betrayed Popov to KGB General Vladislav Kovshuk in Washington, D.C., movie houses in January 1957, and perhaps had helped Kovshuk recruit another unknown CIA officer.

Newman, on the other hand, believes Nosenko was protecting CIA's primary mole hunter, Bruce Solie, and that Solie had not only betrayed Popov to Kovshuk in those movie houses but had given him the specifications of the U-2 spy plane, as well, and had done so with logistical support from James McCord of future Watergate notoriety and the aforementioned Edward Ellis Smith.

Newman believes Angleton naively shared what Golitsyn was telling him with Solie, and that Solie was able to relay this intel back to Gribanov in Moscow through some high-level moles in French Intelligence and a travelling KGB officer by the name of Mikhail Tsymbal so that Gribanov could tailor Nosenko's "legend" right before he "walked in" to Bagley and (probable mole, imho) George Kisevalter in Geneva in June 1962.

2) Did you know that when Nosenko was caught in a couple of legend-destroying lies in 1964, he nearly "broke"?

Bagley recounts it in Spy Wars:

“You recently told about tailing Embassy security officer John Abidian and observing him setting up a dead drop on Pushkin Street.”

“Yes, we staked out the place but no one came. I was getting the reports week after week.”

“When was that?”

“I remember exactly. At the end of 1960.”

"And you left the American Embassy section at the very end of 1961?”
 
“Yes, I’ve told you that.”

“But in 1962 you were telling us about your systematic coverage of Abidian. Why didn’t you tell us then about seeing him set up a dead drop?”

Nosenko looked blank, speechless.

We resumed. “Are you absolutely sure of the date?”

"Absolutely.”

“But you’re wrong, and so is your story. Abidian went to that drop at the end of 1961, not 1960. How could you be getting the stakeout reports if you were no longer in the American Embassy Section?”

"That’s not true. I know it was 1960.”

"No. We know. It was our dead drop.”

Nosenko was flabbergasted. He fell into a sullen silence.

“Your job was to watch over John Abidian. Would you know of any trips he took outside Moscow?”

“Of course. We had him under full-time surveillance. Any travel by Embassy staff was reported in advance to us. In the case of Abidian, and of the code clerks, I would be told and we would prepare coverage where they were going.”

“Did Abidian make any trips outside Moscow?”

"None.”

"Think hard.”

"Of course I would have to know.”

"He made a very big trip. Where did he go?”

"He did not travel.”

"Not only did he travel, but he traveled to the land of his Armenian ancestors, to Armenia itself.”

"Impossible. That would be big news to us. It would offer opportunities.”

Silence. Nosenko, morose, remained sunken in thought. We waited. Suddenly we heard him muttering, as if talking to himself. "If I admit I wasn’t watching Abidian, then I’d have to admit that I’m not George, that I wasn’t born in Nikolayev, and that I’m not married.”

That strange sentence — recorded on tape — might have been nothing more than rhetoric, but to all evidence Nosenko was not serving in the American Embassy Section and of course was not watching Abidian. Such were the contradictions in his life story and his seeming forgetfulness of wife and children that we doubted he was telling the truth about them. His odd reaction suggested that now, for some reason, we had struck a chord that might impel him to confess.

The silence continued. Finally, perceptibly, he shook himself out of his near-trance and refused to answer any more questions. He tucked himself into a sort of crouch on his chair, his face closed and grim.


3) No, J. Edgar Hoover wasn’t a KGB agent, but his psychological makeup was such that it was easy for the KGB to manipulate him into unwittingly helping it take control of his beloved Bureau and the hated CIA. For more on that, google "wedge" "riebling" and "archive" simultaneously" and read Mark Riebling’s 1994 book, Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and CIA.

https://archive.org/details/WedgeFromPearlHarborTo911HowTheSecretWarBetweenTheFBIAndCIAHasEndangeredNationalSecurity


4) Mistreatment? You mean the barbarous torture that John L. Hart described in great detail in 1978 in a successful effort to deflect the HSCA's attention away from Nosenko's lies and contradictions?

Bagley in Spy Wars:

Nosenko’s defenders presented his case as essentially "a human phenomenon” and that the "human factors involved have a direct bearing on some of the contradictions which have appeared in the case.” As one put it, any questions of Nosenko’s truthfulness are “poignantly overshadowed by Nosenko’s personal tragedy, arising from CIA’s handling of his defection.” "We may not allow ourselves to forget," he wrote, “that this story deals with a living person.” 

The central issue of the case, they were implying, was CIA’s mistreatment of Nosenko. They expressed outrage that “duplicity” had been practiced against Nosenko and that the polygraph machine had been used more as an instrument of interrogation than as a fair test of Nosenko ’s truth. They misrepresented the reason Nosenko was incarcerated. They raised a horrifying vision of his being thrown into a “torture vault," as one put it, or a “dungeon,” in another’s words. By 1989 the former CIA senior officer John Hart had so lost touch with the truth that he asserted in writing that the interrogators had deprived Nosenko of sensory stimuli for more than three years, and another told an investigative reporter that Nosenko had been starving and close to death. 30 They must have been aware that Nosenko had regular (as I remember, weekly) visits by a doctor to ascertain his health and the adequacy of his diet. He was never ill, much less "close to death.”

They were contradicting the documented record. CIA director Richard Helms and Nosenko’s former handlers testified under oath that Nosenko had been incarcerated only to prevent him from evading questions about contradictions and anomalies in his stories. (These were the ones that touched upon Oswald, the possible breaking of American ciphers, and penetration of American Intelligence.) We were preventing what happened in 1985, when the later defector Vitaly Yurchenko walked out and back to the KGB.

Whereas this case had damning interconnections with other cases like that of Kulak/“Fedora,” Nosenko’s defenders avoided this subject. One mentioned the cases of Cherepanov and Loginov only to imply that they, like Nosenko, were innocent individuals whom CIA had stupidly misunderstood. 31


-- Tom
22
Even if Nosenko was a fake defector (and they didn't know that with certainty), even if he was directly taking directions from Khrushchev through a implanted device in his damned head (to exaggerate my point), you *cannot* treat a person like he was treated. The denial of basic rights, of due process, the isolation, the mistreatment: all intended to break him down. That's unacceptable.

No fair minded American can defend that. That is, fair minded Americans who aren't deranged. I would think even a Joe McCarthy would say this was unacceptable. It seems to me that Bagley later recognized this and tried to cover his tracks (as Angleton did). But continued approving the mistreatment despite any contrary evidence showing he was wrong.

Just to note: Hoover thought Nosenko was a legitimate defector. Is the claim now that Hoover was a Soviet agent? Or he was surrounded by KGB agents in the FBI who manipulated him? How insane is this going to get?

At this point, as is usually the case with this conspiracy nonsense, it's useless. You are trying to reason with unreasonable people.
23

Wrong. Osborn only mentions Solie in connection with the fact that the Security Division - "(Bruce Solie)" - had followed up and found to be valid leads provided by Nosenko that the Soviet Russia Division had failed to follow up at all.

Since Solie and his team, all of whom worked for Osborn, had issued the report exonerating Nosenko in 1968 ... well, yeah, I would assume by the time Osborn wrote his 1970 memo that he had received a rather large amount of "feedback" from Solie. Duh.

You're not only getting spittle all over your keyboard, but you're starting to pee on yourself as well. You're living in a lunatic fantasy world.

Dear Fancy Pants Rants,

You left two words out of your otherwise excellent sentence.

I've inserted them for you in brackets:

Since Solie and his team, all of whom worked for Osborn, had issued the report exonerating Nosenko in 1968, I would assume by the time Osborn wrote his 1970 memo that he had received a rather large amount of "feedback" from [probable mole] Solie.


"Solie and his team"?

You mean it wasn't just Bruce and Yuri smoking stogies, playing billiards, and rehearsing what Yuri should say?


ME: Other than the polygrapher, when Bruce Solie was interviewing Yuri Nosenko for nine months in 1967 and 1968 and writing a report about his case, did he have helpers or a "team," or did he do it by himself?

GROK: Bruce Solie conducted the nine-month reinvestigation and interviews of Yuri Nosenko (starting late October 1967 and culminating in his October 1968 report) largely by himself, with no formal "team" or named assistants/helpers documented in declassified records or historical accounts.  [emphasis in original]

Key details from CIA files and related sources:

Declassified memos (e.g., from the National Archives JFK releases, such as 104-10150-10004 and similar documents) explicitly state that since 30 October 1967, interviews with Yuriy Ivanovich Nosenko have been conducted by one individual not previously known personally to Nosenko. This refers to Solie himself, emphasizing the shift to a single, fresh handler from the Office of Security (OS) to avoid bias from prior Soviet Russia/Soviet Bloc Division involvement (e.g., Tennent Bagley, David Murphy).

Solie, as the primary OS officer assigned by DCI Richard Helms (via DDCI Rufus Taylor oversight), handled the friendly reinterrogations, polygraph (in August 1968), file reviews, and drafting of the ~400-page (or sometimes cited as 263-page core) report concluding Nosenko was bona fide.

No sources mention Solie having a dedicated team, co-interrogators, research assistants, or support staff specifically for this effort. Accounts describe it as Solie's personal reinvestigation, focusing on obtaining more information from Nosenko (rather than trapping him) and evaluating anomalies with plausible explanations.

The polygrapher (separate from Solie) administered the 1968 exam, but this was a technical support role, not part of the ongoing interviews or report-writing.

Solie relied on existing files, consultations with other officers (e.g., possibly FBI inputs or prior defector insights), and Nosenko's cooperation, but the process was portrayed as solitary to maintain independence from the skeptical "Angleton camp."

Skeptics like Bagley (in Spy Wars) criticized Solie's report as "specious" and based on shallow KGB knowledge, but even they frame it as Solie's individual work—not a collaborative team effort.

Later reviews (e.g., John Hart's 1976 "Monster Plot" report, HSCA testimony) reference Solie's conclusions but do not indicate he had helpers during the 1967–1968 phase.

This solo approach aligned with the goal of a fresh, unbiased look amid ethical concerns over prior harsh handling. While Solie may have had routine OS administrative support (e.g., logistics, security), no evidence points to a formal team aiding his interviews or report. The clearance and resettlement followed directly from Solie's findings.

ME: Bagley wrote that some FBI agents like Elbert Turner were privy to Solie's and Nosenko's conversations.

GROK: Yes, in his 2007 book Spy Wars: Moles, Mysteries, and Deadly Games, Tennent H. "Pete" Bagley wrote that FBI Special Agent Elbert Turner (sometimes referred to as "Bert Turner") was privy to Bruce Solie's conversations and interviews with Yuri Nosenko during the 1967–1968 reinvestigation phase.

Bagley described this as part of the process after the case shifted to Solie in the CIA's Office of Security (late October 1967 onward). He noted that Solie, starting in late 1967, sometimes conducted interviews accompanied by FBI Special Agent Turner. This joint involvement allowed the FBI to participate in debriefings, obtain leads (particularly counterespionage/serial information from Nosenko), and contribute to the assessment of his credibility.

Key points from Bagley's account and supporting declassified records:

The FBI had been involved in the Nosenko case since his 1964 defection (sharing info with the Warren Commission and later HSCA), but the 1967–1968 phase marked closer collaboration under DCI Richard Helms' push for resolution.
Turner, from the FBI's Washington Field Office, was one of the key Bureau representatives. Copies of interview transcripts and related memoranda were disseminated to the FBI and CIA's Counterintelligence Staff.

In October 1968, Turner authored a Top Secret working paper (disseminated to CIA) citing "significant confirmatory information" from the FBI's interrogations/debriefings with Solie. He concluded there was "no substantial basis to conclude that Nosenko was not a bona fide defector," aligning with Solie's exonerating report.

Bagley portrayed this FBI access critically, seeing it as contributing to the "whitewash" (his term for Nosenko's clearance). He argued the focus shifted to utility (Nosenko's leads identifying KGB officers) rather than resolving inconsistencies (e.g., rank lies, procedural gaps, Oswald claims). Turner and Solie emphasized new leads as proof of authenticity, which Bagley dismissed as insufficient.

This joint Solie-Turner handling was also referenced in later contexts (e.g., the 1970s Nicholas Shadrin/Igor Kochnov operation, where Solie and Turner teamed up again). Bagley viewed the FBI's role—via Turner—as enabling the pragmatic acceptance of Nosenko despite skepticism from the Soviet Bloc Division (himself, David Murphy) and Counterintelligence (James Angleton).

Declassified CIA files (e.g., from National Archives JFK releases) confirm Turner's involvement, including dissemination of transcripts and his 1968 paper supporting bona fides. Bagley used this to argue the clearance was influenced by interagency dynamics and a desire to end the controversy, not rigorous proof.

ME: In this context, would Turner be considered part of Solie's "team"?

GROK: No, in the context of the Yuri Nosenko case and Tennent H. "Pete" Bagley's descriptions in Spy Wars, FBI Special Agent Elbert Turner would not be considered part of Bruce Solie's "team."

Solie's 1967–1968 reinvestigation was explicitly designed as a solo, independent effort by a single CIA officer (Solie himself) from the Office of Security, with no prior personal knowledge of Nosenko, to provide a fresh and unbiased review after years of skeptical handling by the Soviet Russia/Soviet Bloc Division (including Bagley). Declassified CIA documents (e.g., summaries from October 1968 and related memos) repeatedly emphasize that "since 30 October 1967, interviews with Yuriy Ivanovich NOSENKO have been conducted by one individual"—Solie—without mention of co-interrogators or a dedicated support team from within the CIA.

Turner's involvement was limited and external:

As an FBI representative (from the Washington Field Office), he sometimes accompanied Solie during interviews or had access to transcripts/memoranda disseminated to the FBI and CIA's Counterintelligence Staff.

This allowed the FBI to gain leads (e.g., counterespionage/serial info from Nosenko) and contribute assessments, such as Turner's October 1968 working paper citing "significant confirmatory information" and concluding no substantial basis to doubt Nosenko's bona fides.
Bagley noted this joint aspect critically, portraying it as part of the process that helped enable the "whitewash" (Solie's exonerating report and clearance). However, Bagley framed Turner as an FBI collaborator or participant in specific sessions—not as a core member of Solie's internal CIA team.

The arrangement was interagency cooperation for debriefing utility and credibility checks, not a formal CIA team under Solie. No sources describe Turner (or any other FBI personnel like James Wooten, occasionally mentioned) as assistants, helpers, or integrated into Solie's solitary review/report-writing process. Solie handled the primary interviews, polygraph coordination, file analysis, and drafting alone, while Turner provided Bureau input as needed.

This distinction matters in Bagley's narrative: he saw the FBI's role (via Turner) as tilting toward acceptance of Nosenko for operational value, contrasting with the CIA skeptics' focus on inconsistencies. Turner was a key external ally/facilitator, but not "part of Solie's team" in the sense of being a CIA colleague or subordinate on the reinvestigation.


-- Tom
24
Dear Fancy Pants Rants,

Please note that in his Bagley-attacking memo, Howard Osborn mentions that he’s “getting feedback on the Nosenko situation from [probable mole] Bruce Solie” — or words to that effect.

Wrong. Osborn only mentions Solie in connection with the fact that the Security Division - "(Bruce Solie)" - had followed up and found to be valid leads provided by Nosenko that the Soviet Russia Division had failed to follow up at all.

Since Solie and his team, all of whom worked for Osborn, had issued the report exonerating Nosenko in 1968 ... well, yeah, I would assume by the time Osborn wrote his 1970 memo that he had received a rather large amount of "feedback" from Solie. Duh.

You're not only getting spittle all over your keyboard, but you're starting to pee on yourself as well. You're living in a lunatic fantasy world.
25
The US is not really a class-conscious society; I am sure there are exceptions. But Shaw in the company of Ferrie? Why not?

Benjamin, because, as Fred Litwin has shown here, there is literally no evidence to support such a claim.. and, people who knew both of them and have no reason to distort the truth insist they never knew each other.
26
To repeat: After all of the abuse Nosenko went through - mental and physical, the denial of fundamental rights, the utter lawless treatment of him, he came out later after all of this and became an American citizen. He said he loved America, he was proud to be one. Again, even after all of that mistreatment.

A Soviet agent, a fake defector, simply doesn't do that. He sues the CIA, takes them to court and exposes what they did to the world. To hurt them and the US. That's exactly what a fake defector working for Moscow does. To help the Soviet cause and hurt the US.

Not only did Nosenko not do this, he did the opposite. He defended the US.

Dear Steve M.,

You're full of high-fructose beans and KGB disinformation whether you realize it or not.

(And I suspect that you do)

https://archive.org/details/SpyWarsMolesMysteriesAndDeadlyGames


-- Tom
27
To repeat: After all of the abuse Nosenko went through - mental and physical, the denial of fundamental rights, the utter lawless treatment of him - he came out later and became an American citizen. He said he loved America, he was proud to be one, and continued to work with the CIA in helping them defeat the KGB. Again, even after all of that mistreatment.

A Soviet agent, a fake defector, simply doesn't do that. What would he do? It seems to me it's obvious: he sues the CIA, takes them to court and exposes to the world what they did to him. To hurt them and the US. The KGB would have loved to promote that story. And that's exactly what a fake defector working for Moscow is supposed to do: help the Soviet cause and hurt the US.

Not only did Nosenko not do this, he did the opposite. He defended the US.
28
[...]

Dear Fancy Pants Rants,

Please note that in his Bagley-attacking memo, Howard Osborn mentions that he’s “getting feedback on the Nosenko situation from [probable mole] Bruce Solie” — or words to that effect.

One of your big problems, FPR, is that you can't seem to grasp the idea that the person who "cleared" Yuri Nosenko via a bogus polygraph exam (one of the worse that polygraph expert Richard O. Arther had ever seen, according to what he told the HSCA) and a coached and specious report was none other than probable mole Bruce Leonard Solie (look him up).

Bagley's primary source from 1994 to 2007 was former KGB General Sergey Kondrashev (look him up) who was still living when Bagley's Yale University Press book, Spy Wars, was published. Do you think he should have revealed the name of still-living Kondrashev?

As far as your boy Royden's and Bagley's not exchanging haymakers, the latter was always diplomatic, he was 86 years old, he was dying of cancer, and he was calling in from Brussels (where he'd chosen to be COS in 1967, and where he retired to in 1972).

You keep bringing up HSCA perjurer John Limond Hart.

Evidently you don't have the cajones to read Bagley's 170-page HSCA testimony in which he rips him "a new one."

What's the matter?

Won't your wife let you?

https://www.archives.gov/files/research/jfk/releases/docid-32273600.pdf

Note: "Mr. X" is KGB Major Anatoliy Golitsyn.


The following is from Tennent H. Bagley's 2007 book, Spy Wars: Moles, Mysteries, and Deadly Games. You can read it for free by googling “spy wars” and “archive” simultaneously.

Read it and weep.


A signal success of the KGB’s operation with [Kremlin-loyal triple agent Igor] Kochnov — in addition to eliminating the defector Nikolay Artamonov [aka Nicholas Shadrin] — was the restoration of Yuri Nosenko’s fortunes in the West. Although I knew none of this at the time, I sensed in the second half of 1966 the CIA leadership’s growing skepticism, not just impatience, concerning our case against Nosenko. It was evident that some unknown factor was influencing them. This became clearer at the end of that year when they ordered a fresh review of the case — not so much to get new insights as to find ways to rationalize the doubts and to whitewash Nosenko to prepare his release.

Deputy Director Rufus Taylor called in Gordon Stewart, a CIA veteran and old friend of Helms, to take a fresh, detached look at this forbidding can of worms. Stewart enjoyed a reputation for integrity and had the added quality of knowing nothing of the Nosenko case and little about KGB deception.

To simplify Stewart’s review I organized the essential file materials (including my “1000-page” file summary) with an explanatory table of contents, and turned them over to Stewart in early 1967. This was my parting shot, for I was already preparing my assignment abroad.

After my departure the Soviet Bloc Division — without telling me — condensed this huge file summary into some 440 pages, lumping together many separate points of doubt into broad categories, each category to support a “conclusion.” In effect, they transformed justifiable points of doubt into debatable (and unnecessary) conclusions, making a case against Nosenko. He did not have the naval service he claimed, it said, adding that he did not join the KGB when or how he said, did not serve in the KGB’s American Embassy Section, and had not been deputy chief of its Tourist Department.

Stewart thus found himself faced with a mass of material loaded with indications of Nosenko’s bad faith and lacking any innocent explanation. To his professorial eye, these papers looked “unscholarly” (as he said to associates) and “more like a prosecutor’s brief.” Indeed, a file summary is not an academic dissertation, and the SB report’s conclusions were unproven. So, he called for a critique of the SB report. In mid-1967 Helms selected for this task the same Bruce Solie who had learned from Kochnov, the KGB volunteer, that Nosenko was a genuine defector. Solie submitted eighteen pages of critique of the 440-page SB report and of the previous handling of Nosenko. He recommended a new and “untainted” questioning in a friendlier, less confrontational, and “more objective” atmosphere. So, Helms and Taylor picked him to do the job himself. 

Solie was a taciturn, cigar-smoking man whose lean features gave him an air of the American farmlands. He had sat in on some of our interrogations of Nosenko prior to Kochnov’s advent, not contributing but maintaining a generally approving, if reserved, demeanor. Now, with Nosenko’s earlier interrogators removed from the scene and being himself convinced by Kochnov of Nosenko’s genuineness, Solie set out to prove that we had been wrong.

Behind Solie’s effort lay the hopes of CIA leaders that he would find ways to believe in Nosenko and rid the Agency of what Director Richard Helms later called this “incubus,” this “bone in the throat.”

They had picked the right man: Solie delivered the goods. Starting in late 1967, sometimes accompanied by FBI Special Agent Turner, Solie talked in a friendly manner for nine months with Nosenko and together they worked out ways things might — somehow — be made to look plausible. One who read the transcripts of these interviews described to me the way they were conducted:

Solie: “Wouldn’t you put it this way, Yuri?”

Nosenko: “Yup, yup.”

On another sticking point, Solie: “But you really meant to say it differently, didn’t you?”

Nosenko: "Sure.”

Solie: “Wouldn’t it be more correct to say, for example, that . . . ?”

Nosenko: “Yup, yup.”

Solie submitted his report on 1 October 1968. That whitewash had been the purpose from the outset was revealed by the speed with which the CIA leadership adopted its conclusions. They could not have studied it and had perhaps not even read it before, three days later, Deputy Director Taylor informed Director Helms that

“I am now convinced that there is no reason to conclude that Nosenko is other than what he has claimed to be, that he has not knowingly and willfully withheld information from us, that there is no conflict between what we have learned from him and what we have learned from other defectors or informants that would cast any doubts on his bona fides. Most particularly I perceive no significant conflict between the information Nosenko has provided and the information and opinions Golitsyn has provided. Thus, I conclude that Nosenko should be accepted as a bona fide defector. 6

So well had Solie done the job that CIA gave him a medal for his travails. One can only concur in their assessment of him as a “true hero.” 7  The task he performed was truly Herculean and required tricks as cunning as those of Hercules himself. Solie seems to have hidden from Taylor facts that flatly contradicted the deputy director’s conclusions. In reality there were significant “conflicts” between what Nosenko reported and “the information and opinions Golitsyn . . . provided.” And an "other defector,” Peter Deriabin, had cast an indelible stain of doubt on Nosenko’s bona fides. Deriabin was outraged by Taylor’s statement.

A question inevitably arises in the mind of anyone who knows of the accumulated doubts described in previous chapters. How, in the face of all that, could CIA have ever believed in Nosenko?

The answer must lie partly in the human psyche — our incurable penchant to believe what we want to believe and to reject what we don’t. (I discuss that general problem in Appendix C.)

So desperately did CIA’s leaders desire to be rid of the ugly implications that underlay the Nosenko affair — KGB penetration of CIA and perhaps breaking of American ciphers — that they embraced a shaky, corrupt, and unsubstantial report— offered by an ill-qualified investigator — that fed that desire. Solie’s report would deserve attention if for no other reason than to illustrate the power of desire over reason. But it is no mere curiosity; the Solie report led to CIA’s final conclusion on the Nosenko case. It was crucial; its impact was permanent. Only through this corrupt gateway would future CIA officers gain access to the Nosenko case. It was declassified to make its wisdom accessible to trainees in counterintelligence. This is all that later CIA officers came to know, which is why they repeat its nonsense as fact in their memoirs today.

So, it merits attention.

Solie began by adopting the (dubious) position that all he needed to do to prove Nosenko’s innocence was to discredit the general conclusions of the SB report. Then he carefully selected the questions he would deal with, sidestepped some major anomalies as if they had never existed, and falsely assured his readers, in the passive voice, that "all areas of major significance have been examined .” 8

Despite its bulk, Solie’s report presented no significant new information, though he and Nosenko had adjusted some details. It amounted essentially to a fresh interpretation of selected parts of the old data — an interpretation based on credulity rather than skepticism. Inevitably, the way Solie chose to explain one contradiction would conflict with the way he would explain a different one, but he did not call attention to this. And if he could not find any way to explain an oddity, he would fall back on this comforting thought: if the KGB had dispatched Nosenko, they would have surely prepared him better— ipso facto, the KGB had not dis- patched him.

Among the “areas of major significance”— all of which Solie claimed to have examined — was how Nosenko’s reporting touched on the case of Oleg Penkovsky. In this one case, aside from all the others, Nosenko had twice exposed the KGB’s blundering hand on him — first in erring by a whole significant year about Abidian’s visit to Penkovsky ’s dead drop, and second by mentioning (and later forgetting) “Zepp.” How did Solie manage these hurdles? He simply ran around Zepp — didn’t mention it at all. He struggled desperately to explain the dead drop visit and Nosenko’s failure to mention it in 1962, exposing the absurd quality of this whole whitewash:

• Solie accepted as "not implausible” Nosenko’s preposterous suggestion (to Solie, never to us earlier) that he had failed to tell us in 1962 because “the stakeout had long been dropped”— so long that he had forgotten all about it. But only a couple of paragraphs earlier Solie had recognized that Abidian’s visit actually occurred only at the end of 1961. Thus, Nosenko’s stakeout, by his own account, would have been still active when he departed for Geneva in March 1962 and would be fresh in his mind when, in June, he told us about Abidian and Moscow surveillance.

• Or maybe, Solie and Nosenko agreed, Nosenko had somehow got confused and only imagined that he had been getting stakeout reports.

• Perhaps, instead, he had only “been advised” of the stakeout by other KGB officers. And maybe only after he had met CIA in 1962 — perhaps at the time of the Penkovsky publicity. (How then could Nosenko have failed to relate the drop to Penkovsky when he told of it?)

• Or possibly Nosenko “consciously exaggerated his involvement with the visit and its aftermath.” (How then did he know the details?)

• Or maybe “the evident distortions arose from honest confusion” — without explaining how.

• Anyway, Nosenko’s errors and contradictions prove that he is genuine. "If dispatched, Nosenko presumably would have had the date right.”

• Then Solie had one wonderful, final argument: it wasn’t Nosenko’s fault, but the fault of his CIA interrogators who had “confused matters to the point where complete clarification appears impossible.” 9 In pushing out such nonsense, Solie must have assumed that his readers would not know that Nosenko had given, and repeated in detail, his stories of Abidian, of the drop, and of the stakeout long before any interrogation began.

Solie then exposed his intent — whitewash, not professional assessment: he dismissed the whole issue. The fact "that Nosenko is not able to properly date the visit of Abidian to Pushkin Street is in no way indicative of KGB dispatch.”

Aside from its nonsense, the very structure of Solie’s report amounted to a trick. By focusing on the SB report’s (unproven) conclusions it skirted the impossible task of explaining the specific inconsistencies, contradictions, and lies that had led to those conclusions. The uninformed reader would never know they had existed.

Other aspects of his report were similarly questionable:

• When giving Nosenko’s now "true” version of one story or another, Solie neglected to mention it was often a third or fourth version, nor did he describe the earlier, conflicting versions — or speculate on why there had been so many changes.

• Solie implied that thanks to his new, nonconfrontational manner
Nosenko had become cooperative, consistent, and "relaxed” as never before and that Nosenko’s “material assistance to the interviewer” (including writing reports) was a major departure from the past. In reality, Nosenko had invariably been cooperative except when cornered. He had written many reports for us. And his stories might have seemed consistent back then, too, had they not been challenged. Solie’s role was not to challenge or question, but with Nosenko’s help to shape some plausible explanation.

• Solie sought to discredit earlier investigations. At least ten times he referred to points he said had not been looked into or to situations in which he said his predecessors had misunderstood what Nosenko had been trying to say. Solie was wrong each time— but a reader with no access to the record would not know that.

• Again and again Solie made assertions as definitive as they were unfounded. He usually couched them impersonally, often in the passive voice, to hide the fact that they were nothing more than his own opinions. He proclaimed, for example, “The information Nosenko gave is commensurate with his claimed position.” 10 “Nosenko,” he wrote, “has furnished adequate information so that his claimed assignment during 1953-1955 is considered sufficiently substantiated.” 11 Nosenko’s knowledge of the office of the Military Attache supports his claim “that he was an officer of the First Section with the indicated assignment as related by him.” 12 Yet again: "The only unresolved problem considered of any significance in regard to the 1955-59 period is the [XYZ] case,” 13 whereas in fact that particular case posed only minor problems compared with others.

• Solie failed to mention most of the other Soviet sources whose bona fides were also doubted, or about their connections to Nosenko’s case.

Solie even administered a new polygraph test in 1968 and cited it as proof of Nosenko’s truth— though Nosenko had been polygraphed prior to detention with contrary findings. Solie was ignoring, too, the chief polygraph specialist of the Office of Security, who had decreed in 1966, after CIA had made extended use of the polygraph as an interrogation tool, that no polygraph test of Nosenko after his detention would be valid or could be presented as evidence one way or the other.

Solie accepted as true things Nosenko said that were actually unthinkable in the real Soviet and KGB world of which Solie knew so little. As he hacked away at the SB report’s conclusions, avoiding its details, Solie failed to clarify the new picture he was thus composing. If Nosenko were now telling Solie the whole truth, the reader would have to accept (as CIA did, in its desperation) things like these:

• that the KGB actually operated under procedures different than those reported by all earlier (and subsequent) defectors,

• that what Nosenko told Solie about his life was the final truth— even though it was a fourth or fifth version and still full of unlikely events and would later undergo further changes by Nosenko and contradiction even by Soviet sources,

• that a [putative] ten-year veteran staff officer of the KGB [Nosenko]  need not know or remember how to perform routine tasks he must have been doing daily, such as sending telegrams, distinguishing between different kinds of files, entering buildings, and using elevators,

• that a KGB operative need not remember any details of his own operations, not even the names of agents he had handled for years,

• that an officer responsible for the KGB’s coverage and knowledge of the American Embassy building needn’t himself know about it, or about his own service’s measures to counter the technical spying the Americans were doing from that building — or even that that technical spying was being done at all,

• that an English-speaking rising star in KGB operations against the American Embassy would never appear in any of the many approaches the KGB is known to have made to Embassy personnel during his time, nor even have heard of them,

• that a supervisor of operations against the American Embassy would be setting up homosexual compromises of visiting tourists, and giving low-level assistance to an officer of another department,

• that a newly appointed supervisor of KGB operations against tourists inside the USSR would be sent abroad — twice — for months’ long work ensuring the security of a conference delegation, work normally done by a department specifically set up for the purpose.

CIA was accepting Nosenko as genuine because this one man Solie would accept such nonsense and was unable (as he himself confessed) to “perceive any evidence of KGB deception or of any Soviet objective which might have justified their dispatching Nosenko.” Someone knowing a bit more:

• might have recalled KGB deceptions whose goals could not have been perceptible to their victims,

• would have noticed the signs of source protection in many of Nosenko’s reports, such as 1) his contradiction of Golitsyn’s pointers to KGB recruitment of American code clerks, 2) his misleading story about Kovshuk’s trip to Washington, and 3) his accounts of how Popov and Penkovsky were caught,

• would have recognized the many other signs of deception that smeared Nosenko’s reports, such as his probing about Zepp; his story of Penkovsky’s Pushkin Street dead drop; his unlikely multiplicity of contacts with the Lee Harvey Oswald case; and his claim of seeing a KGB file in Geneva showing they knew nothing about CIA there,

• would have seen that all of Nosenko’s major leads — “Andrey,” Sergeant Johnson of the Orly courier station, the British Admiralty source, Dejean, Gribanov’s French businessman agent Saar Demi- chel, the microphones in the American Embassy, and others — bore the marks of deceptive "chicken feed” in that 1 ) Nosenko could never get straight how he learned these hot items and 2) the KGB knew that all of them had previously been exposed or had lost their value to the KGB;

• might not have dismissed so offhandedly the only deceptive aim that Solie could envisage: that the KGB might be trying to saturate Western security services, busying them with leads to minor and useless KGB agents to keep them off more valuable ones. In fact, some FBI officers thought that at least in New York the anti-Soviet operatives had been saturated. More than fifty percent of their time, they later calculated, had been spent pursuing innocuous leads provided by Kulak and Polyakov. Solie never mentioned these sources or their connections with the Nosenko case.

The twisted and shaky edifice that Solie thus constructed would not stand up even to the gentlest breeze of skepticism, much less to professional or even scholarly appraisal. But it was never intended to endure either. It needed only seem solid to an uninformed and casual reader, for with few exceptions this was the only kind of reader it would ever reach. Future CIA officers would be taught its conclusion but would never see the data on which it was based.

Had it not been for Jim Angleton I might never have seen this "Solie report” and been left wondering what miracle had resuscitated Nosenko. Those who had salvaged Nosenko didn’t want me to see the flimsy and corrupt way they had done it, and my “need to know” could be said to have expired with my assignment abroad. But during my routine visit to Headquarters in late 1968 Angleton took the initiative of showing it to me, along with the SB report it attacked (which I then saw for the first time).

I was appalled. In the vain hope of resuscitating that fleeting chance we had had to dig behind Nosenko’s tales, I wrote a long rebuttal, containing the objections mentioned above and many more, and sent it to Angleton in January 1969 from my field station. My rebuttal was ignored, except in the Counterintelligence Staff, which was unable or unwilling to fight the case further. 14

As soon as Solie’s report and Taylor’s memo had cleared Nosenko, CIA moved him to the Washington area and soon took him in as a consultant for its and the FBI’s Soviet counterintelligence operations. 15 Eventually he began lecturing regularly at counterintelligence schools of the CIA, FBI, Air Force, and other agencies and from the mid-1970s often entered the CIA Headquarters building in Langley, Virginia.

Nosenko is said to have boosted CIA and FBI operations. He pointed to recruitment targets among Soviets in the United States, and in the 1970s one of them was successfully recruited. 16 As the director of Central Intelligence later described it to all CIA personnel, Nosenko had "conducted numerous special security reviews on Soviet subjects of specific intelligence interest, and . . . proven himself to be invaluable in exploring counterintelligence leads.” 17

In defending Nosenko later against the implication in a TV docudrama that there might be some substance to the old accusations that he was a phony, a CIA counterintelligence leader came to his defense. Among other things, Leonard McCoy expressed outrage that Nosenko’s "dignity, self-respect and honor are once again casually impugned by this him,” and that therefore “it is fitting that CIA recently called him in and ceremoniously bestowed a large check on him.” Speaking for all CIA officers past and present, McCoy concluded, "Any claim we may have left to having served in an honorable and dignified profession dictates that we accept the Agency’s judgment in this case— that Nosenko was always bona fide, and our colleagues made a terrible mistake. Thank you, Yuri Nosenko, for ourselves, for our Agency, and for our country.” 18

Nosenko had won — but voices continued to rise both against him and in his defense. The debate was decided, but not the truth.
29
Why not?

Because there is no evidence - would that be a reason?

Based on your goofy analysis, there are probably 2,000 people in my little town to whom I could be "plausibly connected" via innuendo but in fact have never met.

I forgot to mention that Shaw's housekeeper of 18 years said she had never seen Ferrie.
30
The KGB Virus suggestion seems to be that Bruce L. Solie was some towering CIA figure (in addition to being a KGB mole, of course) who stepped in to rescue his boy Nosenko. Uh, no. Both the Office of Security (the aforementioned Howard L. Osborn) and the Office of General Counsel had expressed to director Helms and his deputy Admiral Taylor concerns about the legal, ethical and organizational concerns raised by the SR Division's hostile treatment of Nosenko. The Office of Security was assigned to provide a fresh perspective on Nosenko. Solie was the Deputy Chief of the Security RESEARCH Staff - rather a logical choice, it might seem to those of us not suffering from the KGB Virus. Not to mention Solie's at least tangential involvement in the Nosenko case dating back to 1962, as described in his HSCA testimony. He explains his selection by Osborn and Taylor on pages 27-29 of his HSCA testimony. His 286-page report describes in detail the number of other CIA divisions and other agencies (including the FBI) involved in verifying Nosenko's bona fides after the transfer of the case on October 30, 1967; the report is scarcely some Solie fluff piece. In his HSCA testimony, he also makes clear the number of other professionals who assisted in the investigation and preparation of his report.

Good grief, read his 98-page HSCA testimony under fairly hostile questioning:

https://aarclibrary.org/publib/jfk/hsca/secclass/pdf/Solie_6-1-78.pdf

Does this REALLY sound to you like a KHB mole tap-dancing and dissembling? REALLY?

To be honest, I had long ago placed Newman in precisely the same box as John Armstrong of Harvey & Lee fame. My peek down the KGB rabbit hole only confirms this. And the KGB Virus seems to be every bit as potent as the H&L Virus.

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