EX-SPY, IN HUB, TELLS ABOUT THE KGB

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000403660001-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 18, 2010
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 17, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000403660001-3.pdf113.04 KB
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/18: CIA-RDP90-00552R000403660001-3 By Gloria Negri Globe Staff ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE He is not the suave, steely eyed man central casting would choose to play a Soviet spy in a James Bond movie. Fiftyish and graying, avun-, cular in manner and pudgy around the -waist i line, Imants Lesinskis looks more like a prosper ous businessman than the spy with the Soviet KGB he once was For survival purposes, Lesinskis discarded his.old name with his old life. That chapter. he , tells you iri-heavily accented English, ended in 1978 when, while a senior official with the Rus-' scan delegation to the United Nations, he defect ed and was given asylum in the United States. He says he had been a spy for the KGB, the Soviet secret police, for more than 20 years and. at the time of his defection was a KGB lieuten-. ant colonel getting paid, he said, an annual sal- ary of $30,000 by the United Nations Secretar tat. "My job." he said, "was to build up an espio- nage and intelligence network on the basis of, ethnicity." During his KGB incarnation. he said he was also sent on spy missions to the Olympic: games in Italy in 1960, in Austria in 1964 and in Munich in 1972. "leading a so-called delega-: tion of Soviet cultural workers." Lesinskis was in Boston recently to address the Latvian community and in Auburn to talk,'`' to the New England Society of Newspaper Edi- tors. He told them the KGB sends spies into po- litical emigre communities in the noncommun 1st world in the guise of scientific and intellectu- al exchanges or as peace emissaries to thwart efforts of the exiles to work to free their home- lands from Russian rule. He said church groups are similarly misled by Soviet peace groups. ' . The Baltic countries. of Latvia. Estonia and'-' .Lithuania were annexed. by the -Soviet Union - Lesinskis said well meaning 'but naive groups and Individuals In the US high-tech and''. scientific communities invite counterpart Rus- sian groups here and that a KGB agent is al ways among them for purposes of industrial es BOSTON GLOBE 17 June 1984 He said he knows how KGB front groups work from experience. In 1956 he got a job with the Latvian Friendship Society in Riga. "It's a branch of the Latvian KGB and my work there ?? was to spy on western friendship delegations," he said Might not have graduated ? A student at Moscow State Institute for For- eign Relations at the time, Lesinskis said he was blackmailed into becoming a spy when the KGB found out he had concealed the fact on his academic record that his father had served in The German army. The knowledge would have prevented him from graduating, he said. In 1970, Lesinskis was chairman of the Com- mittee for Relations with Latvians Abroad, "an- other KGB front organization whose aim was to infiltrate and then subvert exiled communities- in Europe and America." While spying by the KGB is done on a world- wide basis, Lesinskis said the United States and Canada are "principal targets, based on their ethnic communities. There were documents in my safe in Riga signed by Yuri Andropov [the late Soviet premier and former head of the KGB). Identifying the-two countries that way," Lesinskis said. - An example of the KGB's ethnic espionage, Lesinskis said, was the Armenian KGB officers from the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic be- ing "extremely active" among the large Arme- nian community In Beirut. "I suspect that part of.that mess In Lebanon is probably a result of those cultural ties between the Armenian KGB and.the Armenian community there,". he said.... L,'T'heie `was no` dodbt In. his mind, he said, that the RGB was active in Central America. - Latvian by birth, Le.a,zskis was accompa- nied in Boston by Arisi.ids Lambergs vice r i , p es - dent of the American-Latvian Assn. in the Unit- ed States and di t rec or of the Baltic-American iona a, information about America's. p g gaining .: Freedom L_-ague. Because Lesinskis has as- prog It was "common ress in those fields. , sumed a new identity as a United States citizen Ri a, the capital of Latvi a 1 and he scow , tliin ' he refused to be photographed, nor would he say g [ ) where he and his wife Rasma live or what work the Soviet Union was behind the West in laser' he does. and computer technology, and so espionage was He was, he said, aware of the dangers of his considered the best way to narrow the gap." Le- defection but said he did not live In constant' sinskis thinks the Soviet Union has developed fear of the KGB tracking him down. "I am a fa-- ..serious military capabilities" in antis?atellite talist as is my wife. We feel there is a danger; weaponry "while the US is doing nothintnow I OK, but I don't feel frightened or paranoid. We but talking about it." live a full and generally successful-life in this coun'try," he said. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/18: CIA-RDP90-00552R000403660001-3