The main enemy : the inside story of the CIA's final showdown with the KGB

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The main enemy : the inside story of the CIA's final showdown with the KGB

Milt Bearden and James Risen

Presidio Press : Ballantine Books, 2004, c2003

  • : pbk

Available at  / 1 libraries

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Note

"This work was originally published in hardcover by Random House" --T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [529]-533) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A landmark collaboration between a thirty-year veteran of the CIA and a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, The Main Enemy is the story of the generation of spies who came of age in the shadow of the Cuban missile crisis and rose through the ranks to run the CIA and KGB in the last days of the Cold War. The clandestine operations they masterminded took them from the sewers of Moscow to the back streets of Baghdad, from Cairo and Havana to Prague and Berlin, but the action centres on Washington, starting in the infamous "Year of the Spy" - when, one by one, the CIA's agents in Moscow began to be killed, up through to the very last man. Behind the scenes with the CIA's covert operations in Afghanistan, Milt Bearden led America to victory in the secret war against the Soviets, and for the first time he reveals what he did and whom America backed, and why. Bearden was called back to Washington after the Soviets withdrew from Afghanistan and was made chief of the Soviet/East Euro-pean Division - just in time to witness the fall of the Berlin Wall, the revolutions that swept across Eastern Europe, and the implosion of the Soviet Union. Laced with startling revelations - about fail-safe top-secret back channels between the CIA and KGB, double and triple agents, covert operations in Berlin and Prague, and the fateful autumn of 1989 - The Main Enemy is history at its action-packed best.

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