-Caveat Lector-

Intelligence services have always had a bad habit of inflating their
informer roles with the names of people they *wish* were actually working
for them. This tendency was satirized in Graham Greene's exquisite novel
*Our Man in Havana*, which was made into a marvelous film starring Alec
Guiness. The Soviet-bloc agencies (KGB, Stasi, etc.) were particularly prone
to pulling names out of the phone book and making up dossiers to impress the
Powers That Were, but the CIA was (and presumably still is) guilty of the
same thing. The German effort to establish spy rings in Ireland during WW2
produced some positively farcical examples of this behavior (see Carolle J.
Carter, *The Shamrock and the Swastika: German Espionage in Ireland in World
War II* [1975]). I have a feeling that toward the end of the Soviet era,
someone in the KGB decided to prepare a nice little time-bomb for the West,
and concocted all sorts of fake dossiers for present and future political,
social, and economic leaders...
===========================================
Italian Rightists Call for Coalition's Resignation after Lawmaker Is Named
as KGB Spy

October 11, 1999

ROME (Reuters) -- A prominent figure in Italy's center-left ruling
coalition, communist leader Armando Cossutta, was named Monday as a KGB spy,
a member of a special parliamentary commission said on Monday.

The right had a field day when a parliamentary commission made public a
650-page dossier that pointed the finger at an ally of Prime Minister
Massimo D'Alema, himself an ex-communist.

"Given the fact that ... Cossutta appears as an informer and confidant of
the KGB, the highest rank a spy can attain, we ask officially for D'Alema's
government to resign," said Enzo Fragala of the far-right National Alliance
(AN) party, a member of the commission which earlier made public the list.

Commission secretary Mario Palombo, also an AN member, told reporters a
former general-secretary of the small Socialist Party and current life
senator, Francesco De Martino, was also among the 261 names in the so-called
Mitrokhin dossier.

"We knew Cossutta was there, but just imagine, there is also the name of a
monk," he added.

Palombo said other high-ranking ministry officials were also down as spies,
but many of the names on the list were in code.

Cossutta, 73, a World War II resistance fighter and one of the founding
fathers of what was once the most powerful Marxist party in the West,
laughed off the "secret agent" tag.

Cossutta and his supporters broke away from communist hard liners last year
and joined D'Alema's coalition when it was formed on October 21, 1998. Two
of his party members are ministers, the first Marxist ministers in an
Italian administration since a government of national unity more than 50
years ago.

"Oh I see. So I had contact with the Soviets. What a discovery!" the head of
the Party of Italian Communists said to reporters, adding he had met a
string of Soviet leaders including Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov and
Mikhail Gorbachev.

"Were they all KGB spies who were trying to milk me for information?
Cossutta the informer -- oh do let's try not to be ridiculous," he said.

De Martino, 92 and recovering from flu, said he was staggered to learn he
was on the list, telling reporters at his home in Naples that he had felt
stunned, then bitter.

"I've done nothing I'm ashamed of," he said. "I don't know how to explain
this...but everything happened legally."

De Martino, a member of the Socialist Party leadership in the 1970s, said
the idea he was a Soviet spy was "pure fantasy." He added: "I have never had
any ties of any sort with any person or body connected with the Soviet
secret services."

Reporters clamored to get their hands on the list which has dominated
headlines for days and was said to include many top names in the media
world. Parliamentary officials hunted for 10,500 sheets of paper to make 150
copies for hungry reporters.

The list is part of the Mitrokhin archive -- a huge cache of Soviet
documents smuggled out of Moscow by former KGB archivist Vasili Mitrokhin
when he defected to the West in 1992. According to Mitrokhin's documents,
Italy was second only to France as a base for KGB spies in Europe.

The government of Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema, the first ex-communist to
become an Italian premier, passed the documents on to prosecutors last week
for investigation. A person convicted of spying faces at least 15 years in
prison in Italy.

Carlo Leoni of D'Alema's Democrats of the Left defended publication of the
list and said the right had been left with egg on its face by trying to
imply only "reds" were named.

"It seems that there are the names of numerous journalists, including that
of Jas Gawronski, a member of the European Parliament for the (conservative)
Forza Italia party and former spokesman for (ex-Prime Minister) Silvio
Berlusconi," he said.

"Is it credible to think all these were Soviet spies? For the right, this
case is becoming a real boomerang. They thought they'd find a list of
communists and what they found were names of people from all political and
cultural walks of life."

Berlusconi demanded names be named and referred to the P2, or Propaganda
Due, Masonic lodge scandal in the early 1980s, which brought down the
government when the beans were spilled.

The lodge was found to have some 1,000 prominent members, mostly of the
right, including top politicians, businessmen and military officers.

Copyright 1999 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

=======================
Robert F. Tatman
Computer Help Desk
Desktop & LAN Services
Systems Department
Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc.
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215.854.2729
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The contents of this message represent the opinion only of the writer, and
may not be construed to indicate the endorsement of Knight-Ridder, Inc.;
Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc.; The Philadelphia Inquirer; or the
Philadelphia Daily News.
"Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity."

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