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- NATION, Page 43American NotesESPIONAGESeen a Spy? Call the FBI
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- In John le Carre's fictional world of spy vs. spy, the good
- spooks outfox the bad spooks by dealing in deceit and deception.
- In the real world of counterespionage, the FBI is taking a much
- more candid approach. This month it began running an unusual
- help-wanted ad in a Russian-language newspaper in New York City to
- make a very public plea: anyone having "direct knowledge of KGB
- methods or operations" should call or write the nearest FBI office.
- The ad provides telephone numbers, including that of a
- counterintelligence section conveniently manned by Russian-speaking
- agents.
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- The appeal is directed at the roughly 200,000 Soviet citizens
- who have immigrated to the U.S. since 1975, many of whom live in
- the New York area. The purpose of the ads, says FBI spokesman Milt
- Ahlerich, is the "identification of hostile intelligence
- activities." That includes the detection of approaches made to
- Soviet emigres by KGB agents. But couldn't the callers deliberately
- feed disinformation to the FBI? "That could happen," concedes
- Ahlerich. "We're prepared to address the problem." Despite the
- FBI's new glasnost, Ahlerich would not even hint at what
- respondents to the ad have been telling the bureau.
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