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- LETTERS, Page 8BETRAYAL
-
- To revive the 1987 Moscow espionage scandal, as Ronald
- Kessler's Moscow Station does, is disturbing to U.S. Marines
- currently serving in the corps (BOOK EXCERPT, Feb. 20). The
- humiliation brought about by the original investigation was
- enough to make heads hang low for quite a while. A few inferior
- characters must not undermine the reputation of one of the
- world's elite fighting forces. The public should have complete
- faith in the U.S. Marine Corps.
-
- (PFC) Robert L. Minchew Jr., U.S.M.C. Camp Pendleton,
- Calif.
-
- Forty years ago, I was a Marine and had an experience very
- much like that of Sergeant Clayton Lonetree, only in my case it
- happened in Japan. While still wearing my uniform, I was
- assigned as defense attorney for a Japanese field marshal at the
- 1946-48 Tokyo war-crimes trial. I poured my heart into my work
- and became a prominent figure at the trial. The Soviets noted
- this and reckoned that, at age 34, I was a probable comer in
- postwar America. They decided to make a "friend" of me. A new
- member of the Soviet prosecution staff arrived, a young beauty
- who had all the physical attributes of Violetta, the Soviet
- woman who entrapped Lonetree. She too spoke perfect English.
- "Chance encounters" began -- in the hallways en route to the
- courtroom and to and from my office in the same building. She
- would stop me and express enthusiasm over my courtroom work, and
- soon made it clear that these conversations could be continued
- after hours if I wished. She played her role very well. Had I
- been a bachelor instead of a married man who loved his wife, it
- is possible that I might have overcome my hatred of Communism
- and accepted her blandishments, just as our bachelor Marines did
- with the Soviet women at the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
-
- Aristides George Lazarus Bronxville, N.Y.
-
- Enough is enough! How many times are you going to defame
- the Marine Corps on your cover? The fact that a couple of
- lightweights managed to slip through the screening process does
- not justify such a scurrilous attack.
-
- Richard Ohlarik Somerville, N.J.
-
- I was shocked by Kessler's account of how the KGB
- penetrated the American embassy in the Soviet Union. It's absurd
- to expect unarmed, inexperienced, vulnerable personnel to
- protect our embassy.
-
- Elle Friedman Becker Beaverton, Ore.
-
- The excerpt from Moscow Station does a disservice to
- journalism and the truth. Kessler's paragraphs drip with gossipy
- innuendo, and his insinuations serve to vilify Lonetree,
- Corporal Arnold Bracy and, by extension, all enlisted men and
- women. Kessler has smeared two young men, both scapegoats in an
- effort to cover up high-level security violations at the
- embassy. Lonetree was convicted by the press before his trial.
- Bracy was never tried. I'm afraid it is Lonetree who was
- betrayed by his country, not the other way around.
-
- Paul Bloom Clayton Lonetree Defense Committee Big
- Mountain Support Group Berkeley
-