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A Spy's Guide to Santa Fe and Albuquerque

door E. B. Held

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When thinking of New Mexico, few Americans think spy-vs.-spy intrigue, but in fact, to many international intelligence operatives, the state's name is nearly synonymous with espionage, and Santa Fe is a sacred site. The KGB's single greatest intelligence and counterintelligence coups, and the planning of the organization's most infamous assassination, all took place within one mile of Bishop Lamy's statue in front of Saint Francis Cathedral in central Santa Fe. In this fascinating guide, former CIA agent E. B. Held uses declassified documents from both the CIA and KGB, as well as secondary sources, to trace some of the most notorious spying events in United States history. His work guides modern visitors through the history of such events as the plot to assassinate Leon Trotsky, Ted Hall's delivery of technical details of the atom bomb to the KGB, and the controversial allegations regarding Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist Dr. Wen Ho Lee's contacts with China. Held provides background material as well as modern site locations to allow Cold War enthusiasts the opportunity to explore in a whole new way the settings for these historical events.… (meer)
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*A Spy’s Guide to Santa Fe and Albuquerque*, by E. Bruce Held, is a history of Soviet clandestine operations in Santa Fe and Albuquerque, New Mexico, prior to and during the Cold War, particularly Soviet efforts to acquire information on U.S. nuclear weapons development, with a focus on the geography of Santa Fe and Albuquerque where clandestine information transfers took place.

Held was a CIA officer before heading counterespionage at Albuquerque’s Sandia National Laboratory and serving as the Department of Energy's acting undersecretary for nuclear security in the Obama administration. He introduces readers to the tradecraft of clandestine operations and argues they have an ethical component, and that the ebb and flow of history—whether a nation is in good or bad repute—influences effectiveness in intelligence gathering. Held embeds tradecraft in the narrative, sometimes leading to confusing text, as in Chapter 5, where he uses seven spies’ code-names interspersed unevenly with their real names. He also constructs a hypothetical scenario involving North Korea, paralleling actual events that involved the Soviet Union, rather than telling straightaway what the spies and their Soviet handlers did. On the other hand, Held uses short statements like, “Stalin had a low tolerance for failure,” that cram in a lot of meaning.

Chapter 2 describes Soviet operatives’ use of a Santa Fe drugstore as a jumping-off point for the Mexico City assassination of Stalin’s rival Leon Trotsky. Chapters 3 through 8 describe Soviet operatives’ recruitment of sources within the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, with Oak Ridge, Chicago and Berkeley on the periphery. Hill shows that while the physicists Klaus Fuchs and Ted Hall were enthusiastic sources for the Soviets, J. Robert Oppenheimer was not a source. And this reveals an important irony, though Held is not explicit about it: Reality as understood at the highest classification level may differ from reality as understood at a more mundane level. Oppenheimer’s enemy Lewis Strauss apparently made sure Oppenheimer’s security clearance investigators had no access to the highest-level information.

Chapter 9 covers the 1985 defection to the Soviet Union of ex-CIA officer Edward Lee Howard, which began on residential streets in Santa Fe. Howard betrayed a top U.S. spy and an important U.S. intelligence gathering method to the Soviets—but not before those sources revealed information about Soviet weaknesses that President Reagan exploited in his talks with Gorbachev in Geneva and Reykjavik. Held depicts Reagan as a hawk, but in fact Reagan abhorred nuclear war and, beginning with the Korean Air shoot-down in 1983, sought to reduce tensions--and both sides' nuclear arsenals--to the dismay of his hawkish advisors. (See J. Peter Scoblic, *U.S. vs. Them*, Viking, 2008, 131-145.)

Chapter 10 describes the murky case of Taiwan-born nuclear engineer Wen Ho Lee, suspected of spying for China but quietly allowed to retire in Albuquerque.

With 29 photos and three maps (all black-and-white), *A Spy’s Guide* is of special interest to residents of Santa Fe and Albuquerque, and to visitors familiar with these cities in the “Land of Enchantment.” And it was published (in 2011) by the University of New Mexico Press. ( )
  HerbThomas | Nov 19, 2023 |
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When thinking of New Mexico, few Americans think spy-vs.-spy intrigue, but in fact, to many international intelligence operatives, the state's name is nearly synonymous with espionage, and Santa Fe is a sacred site. The KGB's single greatest intelligence and counterintelligence coups, and the planning of the organization's most infamous assassination, all took place within one mile of Bishop Lamy's statue in front of Saint Francis Cathedral in central Santa Fe. In this fascinating guide, former CIA agent E. B. Held uses declassified documents from both the CIA and KGB, as well as secondary sources, to trace some of the most notorious spying events in United States history. His work guides modern visitors through the history of such events as the plot to assassinate Leon Trotsky, Ted Hall's delivery of technical details of the atom bomb to the KGB, and the controversial allegations regarding Los Alamos National Laboratory scientist Dr. Wen Ho Lee's contacts with China. Held provides background material as well as modern site locations to allow Cold War enthusiasts the opportunity to explore in a whole new way the settings for these historical events.

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