Barron, John. KGB: The Secret Work of Soviet Secret Agents. New York: Bantam Books, 1974. 624 pages.

In 1974 John Barron, a former intelligence officer and a senior editor of Reader's Digest, received money and researchers from his bosses to write "KGB: The Secret Work of Secret Agents." Most of the book relates the ugly exploits of KGB assassins and disinformationists in typical Digest idiom, based on the debriefings of various defectors. This material was not indexed in NameBase. Of more interest was the appendix of 1,600 names of alleged KGB and GRU officers posted abroad under diplomatic cover. This appendix was a retaliation for "Who's Who in CIA," published in East Germany in 1968 by Julius Mader. Barron told the New York Times (1977-12-25, p. 12) that he received "quite a bit of help" from the CIA.

After 11 printings of the 1974 book, Barron followed up with "KGB Today" in 1983. The Digest knows a mass market when it sees one. This new volume had an appendix of 200 names of Soviets expelled from foreign countries for espionage activities.

As with most transliterated names, several variations of spelling are probably in current use. This requires the use of the phonetic or leading letters search in NameBase to find every citation.
ISBN 0-553-23894-9

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