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–The Nosenko case and the key unsolved mysteries of the CIA will hold center court at the 5th Raleigh Spy Conference Coming Up March 26-28 at the North Carolina Museum of History in downtown Raleigh.–
March 10, 2008 (RALEIGH, NC) — Why would the KGB take pains to deny it had nothing to do with the assassination of John F. Kennedy, or that the Soviet spy agency had no contact with Lee Harvey Oswald when he lived in the USSR prior to the events in Dallas?
CIA officer Tennent “Pete” Bagley asked those questions of KGB defector Yuri Nosenko in Geneva in 1964 — less than two months after the assassination. James Angleton, the chief of counterintelligence for CIA, agreed with Bagley’s assessment: Nosenko was part of a deception and was not telling the whole truth. Thus ensued one the most controversial sagas in CIA history that continues today with the publication of a new book by Pete Bagley.
The 2008 Raleigh Spy Conference, an internationally acclaimed event that draws top experts in the field of intelligence to Raleigh each year, will feature Bagley and five other expert speakers under the title CIA’s Unsolved Mysteries: The Nosenko Defection, Double Agents and Angleton’s Wilderness of Mirrors. The final conference schedule is available at http://www.raleighspyconference.com (click on “event info”) and tickets may be purchased in advance since seating is limited.
According to Conference founder Bernie Reeves, editor and publisher of Raleigh Metro Magazine, “Many questions remain from the monumental battle between the Soviet Union and the United States when the wheel of history often turned to the will of agents of deception and moles burrowed inside intelligence and other government agencies. It was indeed a ‘wilderness of mirrors’ that continues today to cast a confused image of history.”
On Wednesday evening March 26, the conference kicks off with a intriguing inside look at two of the most notorious traitors in US history – Aldrich Ames of CIA and Robert Hanssen of the FBI – and a third shadowy operative who lives today near Raleigh in Chapel Hill, NC: Felix Bloch, the former Deputy Chief of Mission in the American embassy in Vienna, Austria. Using personal knowledge of the cases, former CIA counterintelligence officer Brian Kelley – whose life was disrupted when the FBI thought he was the mole who turned out to be Robert Hanssen – will bring never before disclosed first-hand insight into the most infamous spy cases in US history. Registration begins at 6 p.m.
David Robarge, chief historian for CIA, will start off Thursday morning at 9 a.m. discussing the environment at CIA created by the legendary James Jesus Angleton, CIA’s counterintelligence chief who turned the Agency inside out searching for a Soviet mole he thought had burrowed into the highest levels of the US intelligence community.
At 10:30 a.m., former CIA counterintelligence officer Brian Kelley will dramatize for the first time the true story of an American double agent targeted against the KGB. Drawing on newly declassified information, Kelley will trace the deceptions and mystery of the case – involving spy agencies, presidents and KGB sources — and conclude with a stunning surprise involving an American official.
At 1:30 p.m., Special Guest Tennent “Pete” Bagley will be center stage for a Q&A session led by Brian Kelley to divulge the story of KGB defector Yuri Nosenko in 1964, who brought news that the KGB had nothing to do with the assassination of John F. Kennedy – and had no contact with Lee Harvey Oswald when he lived in the Soviet Union just prior to the assassination. Bagley’s new book, Spy Wars: Moles, Mysteries and Deadly Games, maintains that – despite the CIA’s eventual acceptance of Nosenko as a valid defector – he was actually a KGB plant sent to disrupt US intelligence. Bagley, snubbed by some of his CIA colleagues over his book, will reveal his findings at the Raleigh conference and discuss his experience in the wilderness of mirrors created by moles, double agents, false defectors and deception operations.
At 3 p.m., Former Time Magazine Moscow bureau chief – and respected author of seminal books on the Cold War – Jerrold Schecter will address the political environment that produced the double agents, moles and deception operations that created the wilderness of mirrors that signified the Cold War confrontation of spy agencies for the US and the Soviet Union.
From 4:15 to 5 p.m. authors at the Conference will hold a book signing. The day will conclude with a Conference Gala from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Amra’s in Raleigh’s Glenwood South district.
Friday, March 28, kicks off at 9 a.m. with a panel discussion featuring all speakers to field additional questions from the audience, introduce special guests, and discuss the findings and conclusions from the 5th Raleigh Spy Conference.
At 11 a.m., David Ignatius, Washington Post columnist and former Moscow bureau chief – and author of espionage fiction applauded by the intelligence community – will deliver the final address with an overview of the era that created the wilderness of mirrors and the political and historical impact of Cold War espionage.
The Raleigh Spy Conference was founded “to bridge the gap between intelligence and current history,” according to Reeves. “The calculus of modern events is intelligence. We don’t really know what happened until someone declassifies something.”
Association of Intelligence Officers President Gene Poteat says of the Raleigh Conference: “In Washington, it’s difficult for the public to comprehend important intelligence and terrorism issues since everything is partisan and politically charged. Outside Washington, there are few voices for the public to hear, and those heard are often wrong or media-driven. Few are able to explain to the public what really has happened, and is happening, in intelligence, counterterrorism and national security — important issues, which, throughout history, have spelled the survival or loss of this or other nations.
“The annual Raleigh Spy Conference is a rare opportunity to hear it straight, with an unusual ‘insider’s’ perspective and knowledge. Each year this conference opens that door to share remarkable insights and stellar speakers with the public. If one claims a scintilla of world-affairs knowledge, it cannot be true unless the annual Raleigh Spy Conference is on your calendar.”
Tickets to the three-day event are $250 for the general public, $175 for seniors, and $145 for teachers, students and members of the military and intelligence community. Early registration is available by calling Jennifer Hadra at 919-831-0999. For complete information, including accommodations, go to http://www.raleighspyconference.com.
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Thank you, Hersfeld. Will do!
There’s a new book on the assassination by a Harvard Phd, David Kaiser. It is called THE ROAD TO DALLAS. Kaiser claims that he hes uncovered substantial evidence for conspiracy in the official government files. Hope you will check it out!