Vitaly Yurchenko

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Vitaly Sergeyevich Yurchenko
Виталий Сергеевич Юрченко
USSR
AwardsOrder of the Red Star

Vitaly Sergeyevich Yurchenko (Russian: Виталий Сергеевич Юрченко; born May 2, 1936) is a former high-ranking KGB disinformation officer in the Soviet Union. After 25 years of service in the KGB, he defected to the United States during an assignment in Rome.[1] After providing the names of two U.S. intelligence officers as KGB agents and claiming that Lee Harvey Oswald was never recruited by the KGB, Yurchenko slipped from the Americans and returned to the Soviets. It is clear that his initial defection was illegitimate, because Yurchenko was awarded the Order of the Red Star from the Soviet government for the successful "infiltration operation."[1]

Background

A plaque formerly displayed in a Washington, D.C. restaurant commemorated Vitaly Yurchenko's last meal in the United States.

Upon his defection to the United States, Yurchenko identified two American intelligence officers as KGB agents: Ronald Pelton and Edward Lee Howard. Pelton was later convicted, while Howard fled to the Soviet Union before he could be questioned.

Disappearance

In November 1985, before eating a meal at Au Pied de Cochon, a French restaurant in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C., Yurchenko told his CIA guard, "I'm going for a walk.[2] If I don't come back, it's not your fault."[3] Yurchenko did not return.[4]

The building, located at 1335 Wisconsin Avenue NW has a plaque commemorating the event that was once displayed in one of Au Pied de Cochon's booths.

Return to the Soviet Union

Several days later, the Soviet Embassy called a press conference, at which Yurchenko announced he had been kidnapped and drugged by the Americans. It is possible that his defection was staged to fool the CIA with wrong leads, to protect

truth drug, to ensure he had not been recruited by the CIA as a double agent.[1]

Theories

At a 1999

Texas A&M conference attended by several CIA intelligence professionals, as well as KGB General Oleg Danilovich Kalugin
, the question of Yurchenko's defection came up. Kalugin stated that Yurchenko started as a real defector, then changed his mind and redefected. Kalugin gave several points:

  • The KGB typically did not use 'fake defectors' because the defection would be a propaganda problem for the Soviet government. ("People were not supposed to run from paradise")
  • Yurchenko was in love with a woman married to a Soviet official and thought that they could be together in the US. This did not work out as planned.
  • Yurchenko had a
    stomach ulcer
    that worried him greatly and thought it could be cured in the US. It was not.
  • Yurchenko's defection was leaked to the media after he had been promised it would not be.
  • Yurchenko "felt his freedom to move around was sort of limited by the CIA".
  • Yurchenko apparently thought the KGB might treat him well because of the cases of recent redefectors like Betov and Chebatriov.

Another panelist also believed he was a legitimate defector. James Olson of the George Bush School of Government and Public Service said "I think he was a very disturbed individual and he redefected out of psychological problems that he had." Paul Redmond said that Sandra Grimes and Jeanne Vertefeuille (of the Aldrich Ames case) also believed Yurchenko was genuine. However, Redmond thought it possible that Yurchenko might have been sent by the KGB as a "starburst".[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ , page 107
  2. ^ "Remember Au Pied de Cochon?". Ghosts of DC. 2012-01-23. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
  3. ^ "The Spy Who Returned to the Cold". TIME.com. 18 April 2005. Archived from the original on March 14, 2007.
  4. ^ "An Obituary: Yurchenko's Au Pied du Cochon". DCist. Archived from the original on 2013-04-24. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
  5. ^ "Panel III, Espionage and Counterintelligence" (PDF). foia.cia.gov. Retrieved 2022-09-23. from US Intelligence and the End of the Cold War, Conference at the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas, 18–20 November 1999.

External links