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- <text id=93TT2086>
- <title>
- Aug. 23, 1993: A Casualty of Chaos
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 23, 1993 America The Violent
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESPIONAGE, Page 38
- A Casualty of Chaos
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A CIA agent's death demonstrates the dangers of U.S. efforts
- to help the former Soviet states
- </p>
- <p>By J.F.O. MCALLISTER/WASHINGTON--With reporting by John Kohan/Moscow and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Fred Woodruff was just another diplomat until he died. But
- when CIA director James Woolsey flew to Tbilisi to collect his
- body last week, it was not hard to deduce that Woodruff was
- actually a U.S. spy. His death dramatized America's increasing
- involvement in the volatile remnants of the old Soviet empire.
- As Washington tries to boost its ties with these disorderly
- states, even to mediate their conflicts with Russia, Woodruff's
- slaying raises a sharp warning: these lands are increasingly
- chaotic, and chaos has its perils.
- </p>
- <p> Woodruff, ostensibly a regional-affairs officer assigned to
- the new Tbilisi embassy but actually the CIA's acting station
- chief, spent Sunday afternoon on a sight-seeing trip to the
- village of Kasbegi. He was riding home in a white, four-wheel-drive
- Niva jeep driven by Eldar Gogoladze, who heads the security
- unit in charge of protecting top Georgian officials, when suddenly,
- sometime after 9:30 p.m., a single bullet pierced the brain
- of the 45-year-old American. Gogoladze was unharmed.
- </p>
- <p> Was Woodruff killed by criminals in a botched stickup? Or by
- an overzealous guard at a checkpoint? Or by assassins gunning
- for him or Gogoladze? The murder remains a mystery. American
- officials say the killing may have been a random event. Highwaymen
- regularly prey on motorists along that road. Although three
- locals were detained and questioned by Georgian authorities
- several days after the murder, a U.S. official says they were
- "not political." Two FBI agents flew to Tbilisi last week to
- participate in the investigation.
- </p>
- <p> The slain agent was a seasoned veteran of service in Russia,
- Turkey, Ethiopia and Sudan. "Freddie was an enor mously charming
- guy. You liked him, you liked to tell him secrets," said a diplomat
- who served with Woodruff in Africa. "He was an aggressive, old-fashioned,
- street-smart spook. When everything was falling apart, you could
- ask him to get the hell out there and find out what's going
- on."
- </p>
- <p> Woodruff may have learned his way with people as the son of
- a tent-preaching Oklahoma evangelist; his job was to take around
- the collection plate, and by the age of 10, he was giving his
- own sermons. After joining the CIA in 1975, he thrived on Third
- World crises. He loathed neckties and wore cowboy boots and
- sometimes a ten-gallon hat. But he was no cowboy on the job.
- Joseph O'Neill, who served with Woodruff in Africa and is now
- charge d'affaires in Eritrea, considered him a rock-steady operative
- who "knew exactly what he was getting into. When things were
- going bad," he recalls, "you'd count on Freddie to be quiet,
- thoughtful, and then go out and stick his head in the lion's
- mouth."
- </p>
- <p> Georgia was certainly the jaws of peril. State Department officials
- regard the current tensions there as "chaotic to the point of
- anarchy." Eduard Shevardnadze's government is threatened not
- only by a war in the breakaway region of Abkhazia but also by
- violence from supporters of ousted communist President Zviad
- Gamsakhurdia. Says a Western diplomat: "Georgia is a country
- full of people with guns who shoot them all the time."
- </p>
- <p> Washington wants to help Shevardnadze's government regain control,
- and dispatched Woodruff to provide antiterrorist training to
- the bodyguards of top Georgian officials, teaching them defensive
- measures, negotiation tactics and crisis management. But in
- Georgia's highly charged politics, something as benign as preventing
- assassination can still be taken as a provocation.
- </p>
- <p> The CIA is quietly providing the same service to some other
- former Soviet republics that have asked for it: Georgia is not
- the only one being torn apart by a brutal combination of ethnic
- separatism, factional fighting and tensions between locals and
- Russians. The U.S. has a strong interest in tamping down the
- conflicts. "If they are left unsettled," says a senior U.S.
- official, "they will threaten reform in the new republics, and
- Russia itself."
- </p>
- <p> In a little-noticed policy initiative last week, James Collins,
- the former acting ambassador in Moscow, was assigned to provide
- U.S. "good offices" to ex-Soviet republics that would like
- outside help in settling disputes with their neighbors. U.S.
- officials insist that Collins will mediate only when both parties
- to a conflict want him to, that Washington will never deploy
- peacekeeping troops in the former U.S.S.R., and that the U.S.
- will scrupulously avoid manipulating the politics of Russia's
- neighbors for its own advantage. "We may never be able to convince
- every Russian that we have this altruistic motive," says a senior
- State Department official, "but quite frankly, that's what it
- is."
- </p>
- <p> Woodruff's personal tragedy in Tbilisi underscores what dangers
- can lurk even in altruism. Many Russians are acutely suspicious
- that Washington aims to block a return of their influence in
- areas they long controlled. Russia's neighbors wonder what help
- the U.S. can offer in defusing their ethnic problems and strife
- with Moscow except token amounts of aid. So far, programs like
- Woodruff's are strictly defensive. But the more the U.S. takes
- sides in these disputes, the more enemies it will acquire.
- </p>
- <p> Consummate spy that he was, Fred Woodruff would be surprised
- by his fame in death. On Monday, the day of his burial, flags
- at U.S. embassies and consulates around the world were ordered
- flown at half staff. That seems fitting for the first U.S. spy
- to die helping, not harming, a onetime Soviet republic.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-