

Beschreibung
A pacy, character-driven history of the KGB's deepest cover spies in the West, a system that took decades to unravel In 2010, two decades after the Cold War, ten Russian spies were arrested in the US following a ten-year FBI operation. Among them were thr...A pacy, character-driven history of the KGB's deepest cover spies in the West, a system that took decades to unravel
In 2010, two decades after the Cold War, ten Russian spies were arrested in the US following a ten-year FBI operation. Among them were three couples who had lived as Americans for years, and one agent who had nearly forgotten Russian. They had hidden their true identities from their children, neighbours and even their partners. Moscow expert Shaun Walker captures the untold history of Russia''s deep cover spy programme, from the ''great illegals'' of the 1920s and 1930s to the twenty-first century, when agents maintained their fake identities and loyalties after the fall of the Soviet Union. Through hundreds of interviews and access to never-before-seen archives, The Illegals brings to light the KGB''s most secretive and surprising espionage project ever.
Vorwort
A pacy, character-driven history of the KGB's deepest cover spies in the West, a system that took decades to unravel
Autorentext
Shaun Walker is an international correspondent for The Guardian. He reported from Moscow for more than a decade and is the author of The Long Hangover: Putin's New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past. His coverage of Russia's war in Ukraine was shortlisted for the Foreign Reporter of the Year category at the British 2023 Press Awards, and he has appeared as a commentator on Russia and Ukraine for various television and radio programmes. He currently divides his time between Warsaw, Kyiv and London.
Klappentext
'Absolutely fascinating' Andrew Marr
AN ECONOMIST BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025
AN i PAPER BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025**
'A brilliant historical investigation that's as gripping as a Le Carré novel' Tom Burgis
'Shaun Walker skilfully shows how Russia's modern-day election meddling is rooted in the subterfuge and trickery of the bad old days. This is a fascinating read.' Oliver Bullough**
**'A gripping history critical to understanding many of Russia's influence operations today.' Catherine Belton
****'Sinister, clandestine and deadly - this is essential history, and it is happening now.' Simon Sebag Montefiore
'A riveting spy thriller, which doubles as a secret history of Russia.' Peter Pomerantsev
**
In 2010, two decades after the Cold War had ended, ten Russian spies were arrested in America, having hidden their true identities from their friends, neighbours and even their children. They were part of a spy programme that had begun nearly a century earlier, when the revolutionary Bolshevik government began sending Soviet citizens abroad to pose as foreign aristocrats, merchants and students. These deep-cover missions - some remarkable feats of espionage, others high-profile failures - could last for decades.
Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews, as well as newly discovered archival material, Shaun Walker brings this history to life in a page-turning tour de force that goes to the heart of what became the most ambitious espionage programme in history. As Moscow continues to infiltrate illegals across the globe, The Illegals shines new light on the long arc of the Soviet experiment and its messy aftermath - and on how that hidden history shaped Russia and the West.
