home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
021389
/
02138900.023
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
2KB
|
46 lines
<text id=89TT0428>
<title>
Feb. 13, 1989: Soviet Union:Inside The KGB
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Feb. 13, 1989 James Baker:The Velvet Hammer
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 54
SOVIET UNION
Inside The KGB
</hdr><body>
<p>A rare glimpse into the workings of the Soviet secret police
</p>
<p> No branch of the Soviet government has been so secretive --
and so dreaded -- as the Komitet Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti
(Committee for State Security), better known as the KGB. The
world's largest spy and state-security machine, the KGB employs
more than 500,000 people, including thousands of agents abroad.
The agency has long been the stuff of shadowy legend, its name
synonymous with terror and its doors shut tightly to the public.
</p>
<p> Now they have been opened a crack, as attested by the photos
on these pages, obtained by TIME. In a remarkable display of
glasnost, the Moscow newspaper Nedelya last week published the
pictures in a three-page report that gave many Soviet citizens
their first look inside the forbidding KGB building on Moscow's
Dzerzhinsky Square. Nedelya Editor in Chief Vitali Syrokomsky
and photographer Viktor Akhlomov toured the KGB's headquarters,
a KGB officers' academy and the notorious Lefortovo prison,
where Natan Sharansky, Alexander Solzhenitsyn and many
lesser-known dissidents have been detained. What Syrokomsky and
Akhlomov saw, of course, was carefully screened; they were not
allowed into the KGB communications center, laboratories and
interrogation rooms. And conspicuously absent from Nedelya's
pages was any insight into Vladimir Kryuchkov, the new chief of
the KGB.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>