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Untitled Document
SPIES:
The Rise and Fall of the KGB in America.
By John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr, and Alexander
Vassiliev. Yale Univ. Press. 650 pp. $35
Reviewed by John Prados
Which brings the
discussion to Spies. The book opens with a chapter that seeks to prove beyond doubt
that Hiss was a Soviet spy, adding the Vassiliev notebooks to previous
evidence. That was also the contention of The
Haunted Wood. In the decade since the earlier
book’s publication, arguments have raged about Hiss, with disputes
over cryptonyms said to refer to him, complicated by the fact that Hiss is
said to have spied for Soviet military intelligence, not the KGB. The
argumentation approaches the minute detail of Talmudic
scholarship, a level that persists through this long work.
Printer
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John
Prados is a senior fellow of the National Security Archive. His most recent book is Vietnam: The History of an Unwinnable War, 1945–1975, published earlier this year.
Reprinted from Summer
2009 Wilson Quarterly
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