Spies The epic intelligence war between East and West

Calder Walton

Book - 2023

"The riveting, secret story of the hundred-year intelligence war between Russia and the West with lessons for our new superpower conflict with China. "Spies" is the history of the secret war that Russia and the West have been waging for a century. Espionage, sabotage, and subversion were the Kremlin's means to equalize the imbalance of resources between the East and West before, during, and after the Cold War. There was nothing "unprecedented" about Russian meddling in the 2016 US presidential election. It was simply business as usual, new means used for old ends. The Cold War started long before 1945. But the West fought back after World War II, mounting its own shadow war, using disinformation, vast intellige...nce networks, and new technologies against the Soviet Union. "Spies" is an inspiring, engrossing story of the best and worst of mankind: bravery and honor, treachery and betrayal. The narrative shifts across continents and decades, from the freezing streets of St. Petersburg in 1917 to the bloody beaches of Normandy; from coups in faraway lands to present-day Moscow where troll farms, synthetic bots, and weaponized cyber-attacks being launched on the woefully unprepared West. It is about the rise and fall of eastern superpowers: Russia's past and present and the global ascendance of China. Mining hitherto secret archives in multiple languages, Calder Walton shows that the Cold War started earlier than commonly assumed, that it continued even after the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991, and that Britain and America's clandestine struggle with the Soviet government provides key lessons for countering China today. This fresh reading of history, combined with practical takeaways for our current great power struggles, makes "Spies" a unique and essential addition to the history of the Cold War and the unrolling conflict between the United States and China that will dominate the 21st century"--

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
New York : Simon and Schuster 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Calder Walton (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Item Description
Maps on endpapers.
Physical Description
xiii, 672 pages : maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 561-625) and index.
ISBN
9781668000694
9781668000700
  • Chapter 1. The Hundred-Year Intelligence War
  • Part 1. The Clash Between Dictators and Democracies
  • Chapter 2. Chill in the East
  • Chapter 3. Nemesis
  • Chapter 4. Stalin's Wartime Assault
  • Part 2. The Clash of Civilizations
  • Chapter 5. From World War to Cold War
  • Chapter 6. Puzzle Palaces
  • Chapter 7. Climate of Treason
  • Part 3. The Clash of Arms
  • Chapter 8. Battlegrounds
  • Chapter 9. Rise of the Machines
  • Chapter 10. The Missiles of October
  • Part 4. The Clash of Empires
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 11. Red Heat
  • Chapter 12. Sunny Places, Shady People
  • Chapter 13. Dominoes
  • Part 5. The Clash of Reigning Superpowers
  • Chapter 14. The Main Adversary
  • Chapter 15. Collapse
  • Chapter 16. Fallout
  • Part 6. The Clash of a New Global Order
  • Chapter 17. Putin's War on the West
  • Chapter 18. New Cold War
  • Acknowledgments
  • Glossary
  • Methodology and Sources
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Historian Waldron (Empire of Secrets) presents an authoritative appraisal of 100 years of intelligence operations between Russia and the West. Drawing on declassified records in American, British, Russian, and former Soviet bloc intelligence archives, Walton contends that the espionage of the Cold War was just another step in a still-ongoing covert conflict that began with the Russian Revolution of 1917--though it took the West until the Cold War to realize the extent of Soviet infiltration, which Walton argues was as real as Senator Joseph McCarthy alleged during the Red Scare of the 1950s, despite most of McCarthy's specific claims being "inaccurate and overblown" and his "purges" unnecessary for national security. ("Between 1947 and 1956, 39,000 federal employees were sacked and or resigned.... In Britain, the total for the same period was just 124," and most were reassigned, not fired.) Still, Walton contends that Russian intelligence operations outpaced the West, pointing for example to Soviet espionage inside the U.S. atomic bomb project. He concludes with lessons to apply to the struggle now unfolding between the U.S. and China, and warns against "a new Chinese red scare." This is an encyclopedic yet entertaining dossier on the people, organizations, and events that shaped one of the 20th century's defining ideological battles. (June)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A thorough history of a century of conflict between Britain and America and the East. A serious scholar and lucid writer, Harvard historian Walton, author of the three-volume Cambridge History of Espionage and Intelligence, maintains that the Cold War began with the 1918 Soviet coup and is still in progress in the digital world. Taking advantage of recently declassified documents, the author delivers a vivid account of intelligence skulduggery, mostly familiar to history buffs but no less deplorable in the retelling. Despite a dystopian government and threadbare citizenry, the Soviet government's proclamation that they were building the first truly just society galvanized idealists around the world. This gave them a permanent spying advantage because many Westerners volunteered their services. Stalin feasted on their avalanche of intelligence but acted as his own analyst; wildly paranoid, he regularly dismissed vital information. The Cold War followed with occasionally spectacular but mostly uninspiring and often disastrous operations, from the overthrow of unsympathetic governments to American officials' near-psychotic obsession with Cuba to unwinnable wars and Soviet moles. At the same time, unhappy Russians occasionally defected or passed on their nation's secrets. Walton emphasizes that the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 did not include the KGB, which reconstituted itself as an agent of revenge against the West. "It was from this bitter revanchist stew in Russia that Putin emerged," he writes. Putin's efforts to make Russia great again may not be going well, but his intelligence service's strategy of hijacking the internet to spread disinformation and influence American elections may be its most successful operation. In the final chapter, Walton focuses on China. Not crippled by a command economy and more technologically sophisticated, it is vacuuming up American secrets with a remarkable efficiency. Throughout, the author is incisive in his analyses, and the seven-page glossary of relevant acronyms will help readers keep track of countless global agencies and organizations. A gripping, authoritative work. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.