KGB history amid sex traps and murders

KGB history amid sex traps and murders

On December 20, 1917, C is founded ECA, first Soviet secret police force; The Czecha (automatically signed for the emergency committee) was created by a decree issued by Vladimir Lenin, and was then directed by Felix Gerzynsky, a renegated communist aristcrat. At the end of 1918, hundreds of committees C THE earth was created in cities [...]

On December 20, 1917, C is founded ECA, first Soviet secret police force; The Czecha (automatically signed for the emergency committee) was created by a decree issued by Vladimir Lenin, and was then directed by Felix Gerzynsky, a renegated communist aristcrat.

At the end of 1918, hundreds of committees C THE earth had been created in various cities.

Over the years, many thousands of dissidents, deserters, or other people were arrested, tortured, executed by hammers.

After 1922, WHAT WAS undergone a series of reorganizing and changing names. Czech troops were the response to labour camps; management of the Gulag system; approved lists with the names of political opponents; conducted arrests, investigations, torture, executions and oppression of any possible discontent or rebellion. Ceka also became the model of organising the state security weapon in the countries of the communist bloc.

Mr. Gerjinsky's death in 1926, the organisation spread faster to retain and reinforce the power of Joseph Stalin, the Soviet dictator.

Until and in the collectiveisation of the USSR, this organization intervened, with dire consequences to millions of Russians who opposed it. They were executed by OGPU assassination teams.

In 1934 the name of the organization was changed again, this time to the NKVD (The People's Commentary on Internal Affairs, 1934-1946), directed by Jenrik Jagoda, a man chosen by Stalin himself.

Under the leadership of Jagoda, NKVD received a total control of industry, various professions, workers, co-operatives, all means of public information and police forces. In one word, he controlled the lives of every living thing in Soviet Russia.

Jagoda had become the most frightening figure in the Soviet Union after Stalin, powerful and frightening.

He executed all those who Stalin wanted to eliminate, until one day the paranoid Stalin looked everywhere at <x0 enemy of the people” and “agens of imperialists” accused him of subversive activities and executed him.

Yagoda was actually killed in his office. He drowned at the hands of his deputy, Nicolai Yehov, who was as barbarian as Jagoda. Jézhov was historically known and dubbed me the Blood Jouji”.

But like all the lemons that are crushed, they are thrown into the trash can, and Jezov was executed on Stalin's orders in 1938.

Then there came a certain man at the head of the NKVD with Stalin, the penrent Berya, who was in charge of NKVD until after Stalin's death.

During Berya's time, NKVD was named MVD (Inner Affairs Ministry, 1946-1954), and one year after its death that Stalin was named in the KGB.

KGB's central offices are known and, in addition, are under way and GRU (the Red Army Central Intelligence Director), which was taken with military intelligence and counterintelligence. All of this was under KGB supervision.

The KGB was all-powerful and its operations were without legal restrictions and regulations and are directed and directed against the Russian people and against its <x0-strong foreign enemies”.

The most frightening and powerful KGB branch was SMERSH. SMERSH is a special armed section of the KGB that was dealt with the sentences and executions of any Russian named “trandary<1>, of any informant or agent who defected in the West, of any communist who did not follow the party line, and a large number of victims outside Russia (Sovies or citizens of other states).

The KGB's favorite game was the introduction to its trap of foreign diplomats, and in most cases it was through sex.

The KGB thus compromised British Ambassador to Moscow Sir Geoffrey Harrison in 1968.

The ambassador fell in love with a beautiful Russian woman who worked as a servant at the British Embassy named Galya. She was probably involved with a KGB mission. After the couple finished working in a Leningrad apartment, Harrison was shown pictures of him in Gallian having sex.

Harrison was reminded that if he didn't give the KGB the information she was looking for, his photos and connections to Gallian would be made public.

Instead of cooperating, Harrison returned to London, where he confirmed his connection to MI5 (British Revelation) officers. He retired immediately.

Although this type of trap failed this time, many traps in front of Harrison were successful.

Such success was the compromise of French Ambassador to Moscow Maurice Dejan. The Dejan couple arrived in Moscow from Paris to 1955 ready to make high - ranking Soviet friends. They were received by many who claimed to be Soviet leaders, but they were actually either KGB officers or spies. One of them was Lieutenant General Oleg Mihailovic Gribanov, who appeared to the couple by the name of Gorbunov.

Dejan told Gribanov in confidence. Gobunov because he liked beautiful women, and after that in the ambassador's footsteps, “extant” listed women who could see fit to flirt with him.

These women were called “Tohqe” by KGB bosses and ambassador were offered by KGB agent Yuri Vasilevic Crotkov.

Crotkov introduced Dejan to a number of Russian film actors, one of whom was named “Lora”. When Dejan was making love to her, her imaginary husband came into the room, grabbed her flag and threatened to bring him to public court, an old KGB scenario.

Later that night, Dejan nervous again in confidence told Gribanov/ Gorbunov, who warmly assured him that he would use his influence to calm the angry husband”. He informed Dejan in a few days that his case was in line and that the ambassador should no longer be disturbed. Grateful, Dejan began at that time more gracious or reluctant to provide information to Griebanov

The KGB's game on this issue didn't stop. He tried to trap the ambassador's wife and wife without success. Having failed Mrs. Dejan, he compromised another French diplomat with one of the KGB prostitutes.

The world's scariest secret service, Soviet KGB has been known in its past by many names, but its beginnings are in the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

Colonel Louis Gibbo, the French air attaché, however, did not cooperate with the KGB. Instead of providing information and hiding the connection, he committed suicide. Agent Crotkov later visited London in 1963 as a companion of several Soviet writers. He cheated and surrendered to the English where he said his desertion occurred from remorse over the Gibbo case.

The same year, Griebanov was informed that a KGB spy had been apprehended in New York, U.S.A. Repressed to have an American spy, to exchange with that Soviet, the KGB bosses ordered Gribanov to find an American agent by orders.

What the officers could find was an American teacher, Frederick Bargun, a professor of Yale University, who was a tourist in Moscow. KGB agents told Gribanov that unfortunately the professor was not a spy. “spy” was shouted by Gribanov. Bargun was arrested, but later turned out to be a personal friend of President Kennedy, who sent a protest note to Khrushchev. Khrushchev, with his face red with shame and anger, fled to Gribanov and ordered him to release the professor immediately.

Diplomats, who the KGB could not sexually compromise to give her information, were subject to constant surveillance, both within and outside the embassy, following their feet at every step they took and surveiling them at the most sophisticated devices hidden in foreign embassies.

In 1975, the American Embassy in Moscow was at the top of the Soviet surveillance list.

Microphones were of a sophisticated system and were directed by commanding from outside the high-ray embassy through embassy windows. By noting these rays over and over again, it is suspected that KGB technicians unwittingly infected radiological poisoning with American Ambassador Walter Stossel.

Stossel returned to Washington, where he recovered from the overdosage of radiation, the conditions most diplomats in the USSR lived on, because KGB measures and counters for surveillance devices became more and more sophisticated. One of the reasons for branding Americans as spies was to show that spying against the Soviet Revolution continued and the revolution was in constant danger. Whether spies or not, it didn't matter, they were branded for terror.

One such case was the case of Martha Petersen, who was part of the American diplomatic body. KGB agents reportedly had found secret messages directed to her in a dead mailbox (The Dead Post in Spy Language were called secret locations where agents exchanged their written messages. These could be public bathrooms in a certain restaurant, a hole in a tree in a park, etc. In this way compromise and seizure were avoided. Petersen was expelled from the Soviet Union.

The same fate came to Richard Ozborn, the secretary of the American Embassy for Economic Affairs.

The KGB announced that Ozborn was arrested in May 1983, saying he was caught in the flagage while broadcasting messages from a radio to a communications satellite “Marishat”. When the embassy asked for proof of their messages or copies to prove Ozborn's guilt, the KGB said he had destroyed Ozborn's notes by digesting them into water. Ozborn, his wife, and two children were expelled from the Soviet Union.

Many of the KGB officials who had ordered to compromise diplomats and their arrests were very little sophisticated compared to those who developed KGB spying technology.

In most cases, they were killers, brutals, and arrogants who had committed the murders and executions on the account of Stalin, both in time of the Revolution and afterward. Having no more value to him, those who had escaped his sword were confined to the KGB office.

Such was the case, for example, by Boris Nicolaevic Ponomorev, who has been a KGB official since her name was CHEKA. It was he who organised the betrayal and arrest of Czech President Alexander Dubcek in Prague in 1968. Pomomarev has been head of the international KGB department, which later passed into the hands of Yuri Androkov.

Similar to Ponimarevin has been Sergei Kruglov, one of Stalin's most trusted assassins and once SMERSH member. Kruglov was in Red Roy during Revolution. He stood up in the colonel's rank and was commander of the Kremlin Guard. From 1920 to 1930, Kruglov has been known as Stalin's <x0-footer”, executing every man who chose Stalin. He was one of the members of the CHEKA that survived five of her bosses, even said to have killed Jagoda and Yezovin by orders from Stalin, and was said to have caused the mysterious deaths of three other KGB chiefs.

It is known by all that Kruglov shot and personally killed Marshall Mihail Nikolajevic Tuhacevski, chief general of the Red Army staff, part of the Stalinan army sweep in 1937.

For this service, Kruglov became General “nder” and Deputy Internal Affairs Minister. He had hands on all major SWR operations as well as the murder of Trock, one of the revolution leaders Stalin hated so much as anyone else in the world.

Kruglov was so trusted in Stalin that during World War II, he was ordered by Stalin to handle security matters at the conferences of Yalta, Tehran, and Potsdam. For this action, Kruglov was decorated and by Western powers, he received “the Order of the Legion of Merita” by the US government and a cavalry title from the British Empire. After Stalin died, Kruglov became interior minister who at the time combined with the State Security Ministry.

KGB boss Lavrenti Berya, one of Kruglov's friends, initially supported him, but not trusting the old killer, he suggested that Kruglov had gathered many rifles around himself. In April 1954, the State Security Committee was cut off from Kruglov's ministry and put under the command of General Ivan Serov, later director of the KGB. So Kruglov was removed from Beria's quest for power. He retired in 1956 and disappeared from the political scene slowly.

KGB agents were the most trained spies in the world.

Although there are large numbers of deserters in the West among them, they have been able to penetrate fantasticly since 1925 in the administrations and secret services of many countries like: The U.S. (in the Roosevelt administration), the English secret services during and after World War II, in the administration and diplomats of Nazi Germany and later in West Germany, the communist or non-US political parties, Western Europe, etc., administration and French secret services, etc. have been able to recruit journalists, lawyers heard in the West, world personalities, etc.

Even in the international chess games held between Soviet and Russian players on the west, the KGB has intervened with its hypnotists.

Through their agents and informants, the KGB stole from Americans the entire plans and secrets of atomic bomb production since 1943-44.

In the Cold War years, KGB agents are responsible for stealing and taking Western technology to such a high degree that to achieve this technology, the Soviet state had to spend millions of hours working and people and billions of rubs on the field of research.

After the Soviet Army, the KGB has always had the largest budget estimated on billions of dollars each year to support its bureaucratic staff, tens of thousands of operatives and countless technology to support technology and equipment.

One of the CIA bosses, John McKhoon, reported to the U.S. Congress in 1982 that the KGB spent between $3 billion and $4 billion annually to create disinformation, propaganda and counterfeiting. One of these forgeries was the fake letters between US President Ronald Reagan and Spain's King Juan Carlos, in which Reagan opposed Spain's NATO accession, the KGB factory.

Another KGB factory and propaganda has been the spread of disinformation as the CIA was the one who killed President Kennedy and then in the '70s-80s, as if the CIA had fabricated and spread the AIDS virus. One of the newspapers spreading and writing such news has been and the Italian daily “Paese Sera”, which has received millions of KGB dollars during 1975-1986 to submit its dezinforms and black propaganda, broadcast the tyrantobserver.

Another victim of the KGB was Russian leader Boris Yeltsin, who was found drunk and wet in one of Moscow's police station basements by his aides in 1990. Yeltsin said KGB: “Ask him to put me down”.

Surprisingly, Yeltsin would spend several years later, the presidency of the Russian Federation, one of the KGB's chiefs, current Russian President Vladimir Putin, while for foreign minister or prime minister, he would appoint another KGB chief, Yevgeni Primakov. /tema/

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