Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Thomas Graves's avatar

Unfortunately, Leonard V. McCoy-and Bruce Solie-influenced Grimes, Vertefeuille and Hausmann were instrumental in setting CIA's and FBI's current position on KGB Major Aleksei Kulak (J. Edgar Hoover's shielded-from-CIA FEDORA) at the Bureau's NYC field office, i.e., that he truly did spy for the former for fifteen years.

Bonus factoid: Kremlin-loyal Polyakov, like Kulak, was sent by General Oleg Gribanov in the Second Chief Directorate (today's FSB) to the FBI's NYC field office in late 1961 and early 1962, respectively, to "volunteer" to spy for it at the UN. Polyakov returned to Moscow at the end of 1962 and eventually "flipped" to his CIA handler in New Delhi. Retired KGB General Sergey Kondrashev told Tennent H. Bagley (look him up) in 1994 that Polyakov was uncovered by the KGB because "he was telling you more than he was supposed to."

Which begs the question: Who was privy to Polyakov's raw reports?

Answer: The aforementioned Leonard V. McCoy, who was a high-level officer in the Soviet Russia Division's Reports & Requirements department until 1975 (when he became Deputy Chief of CIA Counterintelligence).

Expand full comment

No posts

Ready for more?