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SpyMoscow is a
conference/spy tour in Moscow created and led by CI
Centre Professor
Dan Mulvenna. He has organized three tours: 1997,
2003 and 2008.
SpyMoscow
A Cold War Summit: From Cambridge
to Moscow
14-28 August
2008
London and Moscow
CI Centre
Professors Dan Mulvenna and Nigel West are taking a
group to Moscow via London. This tour is run by
Road Scholar. Call Road Scholar Advisors at
1-800-466-7762 to register.
8 nights; 17 meals; 8 Breakfasts, 3
Lunches, 6 Dinners
$4,950.00 pp Group size limited to 48 or fewer
participants
The price of oil had dropped, starving
the Kremlin of the funds it desperately needed to keep
pace in the arms race against the United States. Then
all it took was the nudge of Gorbachev’s perestroika and
the dominoes began to fall: Afghanistan, Poland,
Czechoslovakia and, finally, the Berlin Wall itself.
Twenty years later and the price of oil is at an
all-time high, and Russia has reemerged as a global
superpower, albeit with a new ideology — capitalism.
Flush with the confidence of petrodollars, the Kremlin
is rattling its saber in Europe once again. And a former
Russian spy, Alexander Litvinenko, dies in a London
hospital, mysteriously poisoned by a fatal dose of
radiation.
Unique Features:
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In-depth briefings by intelligence
professionals (from both sides of the Cold War) who
are knowledgeable about the "inside details" of
operations and individuals discussed.
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Study Leader, Nigel West — author of
VENONA and other respected books on security,
intelligence and espionage — takes you behind the
curtain of Cold War intelligence and espionage.
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Discover hidden spy sites in Moscow
with a former KGB colonel and Dan Mulvenna, a former
Western counterintelligence officer and lecturer on
counterintelligence at the Counterintelligence
Centre, Washington.
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Learn about the KGB's roundup of U.S.
agents in Russia/Moscow, including America's great
spy, Adolf Tolkachev.
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Hear about the death of Alexander
Litvinenko from a Russian consultant to the BBC’s
Panorama program.
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With staff at the Churchill Archives
Centre, explore Cold War materials from its
collection.
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Enjoy a reception with retired KGB
officers in Moscow.
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Go behind the scenes at Bletchley
Park, where code breakers decrypted and interpreted
Axis messages and broke the German Enigma Code
during World War II.
Program Description:
From Cambridge, England, to Moscow,
Russia, from the “Cambridge Five” to Gary Powers to the
recently murdered Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko,
trace the trail of diplomacy and intrigue from the
height of the Cold War to the global chess match with
Russia today.
With privileged access to unrivaled authorities in the
fields of espionage and in 1950s Cold War politics, gain
an understanding of the foreign policy conducted in
public and the intelligence machinations that continue
in the shadows. In this one-time program, join important
writers, thinkers and former intelligence professionals
from both sides of the Cold War, including Andrew Lownie,
Piers Brendon, Mike Sewell and Richard Aldrich to
discuss the ramifications and intricacies of the “war,”
as well as commentators Glenmore Trenear-Harvey and
Boris Volodarsz, to consider whether the Cold War has
recently reemerged in Putin’s Russia. Leading the way is
Nigel West. Former member of the House of Commons and
author of more than a dozen books on espionage, Nigel is
considered the “expert’s expert” on intelligence.
Based at the elegant Møller Center at Churchill College,
Cambridge University, track the “Cambridge Five” — the
ring of Soviet spies who passed information to the KGB
and who infiltrated the British establishment. Follow in
the footsteps of the notorious spies on a walking
exploration through Trinity, St. John’s and King’s
Colleges.
Explore Cold War materials in the Churchill Archives
Centre, which houses Sir Winston Churchill’s papers, as
well as those of Margaret Thatcher and other prominent
figures of the 20th century. At Bletchley Park — also
known as “Station X” — see one of the Enigma Machines,
including the rare “Abwehr G312,” and check out the
tales of World War II code-breaking, spies and strategic
deception.
Continue the exploration of the Cold War from the other
side, in Moscow. A retired senior KGB officer and Dan
Mulvenna — a former Western counterintelligence office
and lecturer on counterintelligence at the
Counterintelligence Centre, Washington — lead you on an
exploration of spy sites throughout the Russian capital.
See the graves of Kim Philby, the great British spy, and
those of the famous “illegals” Rudolph Abel (Willie
Fisher), Konon Molody, known to the West as Gordon
Lonsdale, Ramon Mercader — Trotsky’s assassin — and Glen
M. Souther, KGB spy in the U.S. Navy and subsequent
defector to Russia.
Go inside areas not open to the public and learn about
the Russian Intelligence Services. Receive "briefings"
on the KGB's view of the Cold War and on several famous
Cold War spy cases by former KGB officers who have
intimate knowledge of the affairs. Hear from one of Lee
Harvey Oswald's case officers, then meet and mingle with
distinguished senior retired KGB officers at an elegant
farewell reception.
Please Note: This program will operate only once and has
a maximum capacity of 48. Each of two groups of 24 will
have its own Group Leader and motorcoach but all
participants will attend program events together.
Goals for this Program:
To explore the history of the Cold War
and its manifestations; to examine British and
American-Russian relationships from 1945 to 1991; to
delve into recent events that suggest the Cold War has
new dimensions in Vladimir Putin’s Russia, and to follow
the path of the infamous Cambridge Five in England and
Russia. Study Leaders and speakers include: + Nigel West
was born in London and educated at a Benedictine
monastery before reading English at London University.
He is a military historian specialising in intelligence
and security issues. His books include Counterfeit;
Crown Jewels: The Secrets at the Heart of the KGB’s
Archives, and; VENONA: The Cold War’s Greatest Secret. +
Mike Sewell is author of The Cold War: Perspectives in
History series. Topics covered include the origins of
the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the period of
détente, and the end of the Cold War in the 1980's. +
Piers Brendon is the former Keeper of the Churchill
Archives Centre, biographer of Churchill and Eisenhower;
author the acclaimed The Dark Valley, a history of the
1930s and Eminent Edwardians. He is consultant to
numerous television documentaries. + A former Pilot in
the Royal Air Force, Glenmore Trenear-Harvey is a
writer, broadcaster, and lecturer on security,
intelligence, and espionage matters. He is an
Intelligence Analyst for Sky News TV; the Associate
Editor of Eye Spy intelligence magazine and Publisher of
Intelligence Digest. + Richard Aldrich is author of The
Hidden Hand: Britain, America and Cold War Secret
Intelligence. + Andrew Lownie is author of John Buchan:
The Presbyterian Cavalier and is currently writing a
life of Guy Burgess. He is a former journalist for the
(London) Times and the Spectator. + Dan Mulvenna
lectures on counterintelligence and counterterrorism at
the Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies,
Washington. In this capacity he provides specialized
training to a broad range of U.S. agencies.
More information and register
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