SOVIET MAGAZINE SAYS CIA GHOSTED SVETLANA MEMOIRS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01350R000200680022-6
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 4, 2004
Sequence Number: 
22
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 4, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01350R000200680022-6.pdf73.96 KB
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MICAGO !;X, LL pTjq 4..L MCI I OL IL 016uu-?--d - ,~UJ.V ""i L17NiVd ~q ~~~~ Approved For Release 2gW0, /13ia R0 V220 80022-6 1400 QD, .E bo Mat- IN ,t !~ lY p_^"`l1 e!,'',,`} "`,fir ~'.'?1 r^ r1?`:' ;;?`?~~:; l' v. ~"':t ~: fl .:-v ( 1 , i , MOSCOW (AP) A So- viet 'magazine charged Sun- day that the Central Intel- ligence Agency ghost-wrote the memoirs of Stalin's daugh- ter and is backing a group to distribute "anti-Soviet" lit- .crature in Russia. It said imprisoned authors 'Andrei D. Sinyavsky :and Yuli M. Daniel were among those whose' banned works the group planned to ?' dis- tribute.. . The. monthly scic;ntific" and.. political -magazine, 7nterna-. bels" of Sinyavsky, who pub- lished under the name Abram Tertz, and Daniel, whose pen' name was Nikolai Ar-zhak. Both were imprisoned l a s t year and still are in jail, The magazine also 'charged. that U.S. "intelligence or- gans" recently have 'b e e n smuggling 'out of the Soviet Union,' and publishing, works of "some Soviet authors who defame our reality." It said the . CIA was plan- ning to use the memoirs of Stalin's daughter, Alliluyeva, as the highlight of a "flood" of "pulp literature" to_ be disseminated in Russia to spoil the 50th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution Nov. 7, (The memoirs of Svetlana Alliluyeysi are not to he con- fused with "Svctlana: ' The Incredible Story of Stalin's :I Daughter" by Martin Ebon!loa .I mcmbcr'of the faculty of the, l New School for Social Re- search.) 1 Mrs. Alliluyeva fled Rus- `1 sia earlier this year and is liv- ;I ing in the United States. .. Of her memmoirs, soon to be published in America, t h c magazine said: "Many press organs in the West suppose that they were ? fabricated by ghost writers from the CIA." Approved For Release 2005/01/13 : CIA-RDP88-0135OR000200680022-6 tional Life, made the charges in an article describing what it called anti-Soviet activities of the CIA and other U.S. groups. "A so-called `intct'n bona l literary co-operation,' headed by convicted anti-Soviets G. P. Struve and B. A. Filip- pov, has been founded with the active participation' of. the American intelligence ser- vice," the magazine said. It said the group's aim "is distribution of anti-Soviet" ii-