KGB: Death and RebirthBloomsbury Academic, 1994. gada 23. febr. - 248 lappuses It was official. In 1991, two months after an abortive coup in August, the KGB was pronounced dead. But was it really? In KGB: Death and Rebirth, Martin Ebon, a writer long engaged in the study of foreign affairs, maintains that the notorious secret police/espionage organization is alive and well. He takes a penetrating look at KGB predecessors, the KGB at the time of its supposed demise, and the subsequent use of segmented intelligence forces such as border patrols and communications and espionage agencies. Ebon points out that after the Ministry of Security resurrected these domestic KGB activities, Yevgeny Primakov's Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (FIS) assumed foreign policy positions not unlike its predecessor's. Even more important, Ebon argues, spin-off secret police organizations--some still bearing the KGB name--have surfaced, wielding significant power in former Soviet republics, from the Ukraine to Kazakhstan, from Latvia to Georgia. |
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1.–3. rezultāts no 38.
... early fifties " had been a violation of humanitarian principles . He said that , “ as early as 1954 , " during the regime of Nikita Khrushchev ( whom he did not name ) , “ state security began to review cases " of " enemies of the ...
... Early in 1989 , corre- spondents for the military paper Krasnaya Zvezda were invited to visit the premises of the traditionally notorious Lefortovo Prison . In a three- article series entitled " KGB Investigates : How State Security ...
... early June 1989. The victims were Meskhetian Turks — a minority group that in 1944 , on Stalin's orders , had been exiled from their homes in Soviet Georgia . Official statistics on the 1989 riots stated that one hundred people were ...
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