After we talked to Denis Lavinksi about[growing up in the White 
Russian/Vlasovite-inspired Russian Orthodox community in 
California](https://yasha.substack.com/p/white-russians-in-california-immigrant?s=w),
 I remembered a short series that I did almost two years ago about a guy named 
Leonid Pylaev, a Soviet Red Army soldier who got captured during World War II 
and got sucked into the collaborationist Vlasovite emigre world, eventually 
going to work at a propaganda radio station in Germany covertly run by the CIA.

[Check it out if you haven’t 
already](https://yasha.substack.com/p/part-one-a-portrait-of-a-soviet-cia?s=w). 
I look at how emigre groups from the former Soviet Union were central in 
getting stations like Radio Liberty and Radio Free Europe up and running.

—Yasha Levine

PS: Apparently the series I wrote got read by a bunch of people who used to 
work at Radio Liberty. After it came out, the widow of Oleg Tumanov — a[Soviet 
spy](https://www.labirint.ru/books/562080/)who apparently was sent in to 
penetrate Radio Liberty in Munich — got in touch with me on Facebook and, after 
accusing me of “libeling” Leonid Pylaev did a bit of libeling herself: She 
accused Pylaev of being a KGB plant. According to her, it is very likely that 
he never served in the Vlasov movement and she implied that he made up the 
whole story to penetrate the Russian emigre/exile community on behalf of his 
Soviet masters, I guess like her former husband. Not sure if she’s right or 
wrong, but it gives you a glimpse into the paranoid, spook-infested world of 
anti-communists in exile.

-Yasha Levine

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