If one spends very much time doing anything connected to Russia, the topic of spies will undoubtedly come up. As one who was born before the Cold War had ended and as one who served a church mission in Russia, Russian spies are something I’ve often heard about. On my mission, I served in the mission office for a while. Missionaries who were serving in the city of Kaliningrad (I, sadly, have never been able to visit that intriguing place) once sent the office a copy of an editorial cartoon published in a local newspaper that depicted missionaries for our church asking local Russians about missiles. Thanks to the Cold War, all Americans knew there was a vast intelligence complex in Russia, bent on suppressing dissent in Russia and recruiting spies abroad. It seems that the American news has often dealt with the topic, too, thanks to traitors like Robert Hannsen and Edward Snowden or people that catch the media’s attention like Anna Chapman. There have been a few Russians willing to help the West, though, even if we seem to not hear as much about them.
Next Stop Execution by Oleg Gordievsky is the account of one of those Russians. The book is an autobiography or memoir, and takes the reader through Gordievsky’s life from his early childhood to his post-defection life in England. He seemed to have a fairly normal childhood, although his father was somewhat enigmatic since his father worked for Stalin’s intelligence organ, the NKVD. Gordievsky did well in school and happily joined up when the intelligence services came calling. He enjoyed being pushed by his training and quickly assimilated to the system, including bureaucratic idiosyncrasies. He had a talent for languages, and ended up being posted abroad, where he enjoyed life and started to get a taste for Western democracy. Gordievsky chronicles his home life, including an unsatisfying first marriage and then a second marriage. He explains how he had suspicions about inefficiencies in the Soviet system and outright lies about Communist doctrine early in his training since he had access to Western publications. Those doubts didn’t lead to much until he saw the Berlin Wall go up and Czechoslovakia invaded. After that, he decided to take action and responded positively to overtures from the British and Danish intelligence services. Eventually, he would go on to spy for quite a while for the UK, before being outed. He says he figured out on his own that something was about to go down since he was unexpectedly called back to Moscow from London, where he had been posted. Gordievsky made the decision to get out of Russia then and there. He left his wife and kids, surviving extended family, and homeland with the help of the UK via a harrowing ride to Finland. That story includes all the stuff of movies, including being smuggled across borders in the trunk of a car. Gordievsky’s life in the UK, he says, has been interesting, presenting information to many Western governments, but not without some sadness since his longtime separation from his second wife resulted in them splitting up.
The book was interesting and a good read. I enjoyed reading about his childhood and schooling and probably could’ve handled more information about everyday life in the post-WWII Soviet Union. Having lived in Russia as a missionary and having experienced everyday Russia, information expanding my views on that is always nice to have. I enjoyed reading about some of his disdain for the processes his agencies made their employees go through. As an American, I often participate in the time-honored tradition of complaining about bureaucracy, and it was good to see that Russians do the same. The middle part of the book, about his work and home life, was maybe a little less interesting, and I thought a little on the egotistical side. His philosophical evolution was interesting to read about, especially from the standpoint of current international relations. He was intrigued by the West because of democracy and economic opportunity. It is worth asking is we are doing all we can today to preserve those two ideals. The final section of Gordievsky’s book, about being hunted by his own employer and his escape to freedom, was riveting, although, as mentioned above, a bit sad because of the need to leave his family behind. That, too, though, is a lesson, not unique to this book, about the value of liberty and the need to sacrifice in order to have liberty.
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This work, including all text, photographs, and other original work, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 3.0 License and is copyrighted © MMXIV John Pruess. |
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