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
File:
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Body:
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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-