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<text id=90TT0236>
<title>
Jan. 29, 1990: Espionage:"Top Hat" Knocked Off
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Jan. 29, 1990 Who Is The NRA?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 54
ESPIONAGE
"Top Hat" Knocked Off
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Moscow discloses the capture of a master spy
</p>
<p> By all accounts, Donald F. was a first-class spy. For
nearly 30 years, the well-placed Soviet diplomat was said to
have fed precious secrets about his nation's defense to the
U.S., making him one of the intelligence community's most valued
assets. He used all the tricks: cipher pads, invisible ink,
dead-letter drops in Moscow's Gorky Park, coded advertisements
in the New York Times. Never short on chutzpah, he even
transmitted radio messages to the U.S. embassy in Moscow from
a passing trolley bus. Though Soviet agents reportedly suspected
his disloyalty for years, he repeatedly managed to wriggle out
of trouble. Until just recently, that is. Last week Pravda
revealed that Donald F. had at last been snared and sentenced
to die.
</p>
<p> The affair seemed both a throwback to the cold war and an
illustration of growing openness in the Soviet Union. Rarely
have the Soviets acknowledged that a secret agent has so
seriously compromised their security. Pravda disclosed that
Donald F.--code-named "Top Hat" by his American patrons, who
say he worked for Soviet military intelligence--passed on
diplomatic codes, nuclear-weapons doctrine, civil-defense
blueprints and plans for coping with chemical and biological
warfare. It was not clear when Top Hat was apprehended or
whether he has been executed yet.
</p>
<p> The timing of the announcement was odd, considering that
Mikhail Gorbachev is in the midst of numerous crises, including
growing separatism in Lithuania and untamed ethnic violence in
Azerbaijan. But cloak-and-dagger experts in the West believe
Moscow may have publicized the spy's downfall to warn foreign
espionage agencies not to take advantage of the tumultuous times
in the Soviet Union. "The Top Hat revelation," said a senior
British intelligence officer, "would appear to be a very
sophisticated maneuver."
</p>
<p> Another theory is that Moscow had been on to Donald F. for
some time; his cover may have been blown by several references
to his existence that have appeared in the U.S. press over the
years. Soviet officials may have decided to expose the affair
now in an effort to rehabilitate the reputation of KGB Colonel
Alexander Dukhanin, whom Pravda credited with breaking the case.
Last year Dukhanin was implicated in a corruption investigation
of Politburo member Yegor Ligachev and KGB officers.
</p>
<p> According to U.S. officials, Top Hat and another Soviet,
code-named "Fedora," first offered their services to the FBI in
the early 1960s, when both were attached to the Soviet mission
to the U.N. in New York City. Despite suspicions that the two
were "dangles," double agents actually working for the Soviets,
Top Hat went on to spy for the Americans in posts in Burma,
India and the Soviet Union. When in 1978 it became clear to the
U.S. that Fedora probably was a fraud, doubts about Top Hat's
authenticity resurfaced.
</p>
<p> By Pravda's account, Donald F. was the real thing,
motivated by ideology, vaulting ambition and derring-do. Upon
arrest, the paper said, he showed no fear, telling his captors,
"I was used to walking the knife's edge and could not imagine
any other life for myself."
</p>
<p>By Lisa Beyer. Reported by Ann Blackman/Moscow and Jay
Peterzell/Washington.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>