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The Sword and the Shield
- The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB
- Narrated by: Charles Stransky
- Length: 6 hrs and 28 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Supplementing this trove of KGB secrets with extensive research in other archives, published and unpublished, Christopher Andrew has written an extraordinary book which forces you to acknowledge that there was indeed an enemy - and that he was very much in our midst.
Revelations from The Sword and the Shield:
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Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Keyvan
- 04-26-10
Enriching Book Astounishing Reading
Great narrator, great story, but for those folks who suggested The Company is the same kind of book, I disagree. This book is fact base and everything is real. The Company is fiction and all made up. My only regret is this audiobook is not unabridged.
In point of fact I think abridge book should be allowed unless the author himself cut it.
8 people found this helpful
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Overall
- John R. Brown
- 09-06-03
Great History - Great Spy Story
Vasili Mitrokhin was an archivist for the KGB. For several years, he reviewed files as they were moved to a new building. He began to secretly copy information from the files and take it home. Security was surprisingly lax and he became bold. Eventually, he had six crates of notes and quotes. After the fall of the Soviet Union, British intelligence exfiltrated him and his family in exchange for access to his files.
In this book, he names names. Hundreds of names. For instance, he names an employee of M.W. Kellogg in Houston, whom no one ever suspected of being a Soviet agent. He names key members of the Roosevelt and Truman administrations.
But saying that he names names is understating the importance of this book.
Beginning in the 1930's and continuing into the late 1980's, he describes Soviet tradecraft and the work of master spys, cutouts, agents, and persons compromised. For instance, the provides the Soviet side of the recuiment and running of the Kim Phily Five, the Alger Hiss matter, the Rosenbergs, etc.
HE EVEN IDENTIFIES SASHA, a Soviet mole who did much damage (although the CIA's hunt for SASHA may have been even more damaging than Sasha's own work - and the skeptics amoung us question whether there was another Sasha).
If this were fiction, it would be a pretty good book. As non-fiction, it is a must read for anyone who wants to know what really happened in the cold war and how close we came to losing to the Soviets.
About 20% of the information in this book is incorporated into Robert Littel's novel, THE COMPANY.
11 people found this helpful
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- Caroline D.
- 03-18-19
wish it weren't abridged
a good introduction to the Mitrokhin archives, but I wish it were the entire book. this just gives a taste without a whole, detailed picture.
3 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Yee Bernard James
- 12-27-03
a must follow up to
For anyone who loved "The Company" by Robert Littell. The sword and the shield is a must read/listen.
A fine record of the other company.
2 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Larry
- 12-24-05
Exposed! The KGB was evil!
Well. Here's a revelation. The KGB and it's predecessors was an instrument of terror in the hands of paranoid tyrants. The good information that they produced that indicated that the U.S was not interested in empire buiiding was discarded and messengers shot. The survivors then, with new understanding, painted the U.S. and its allies as greedy power hungry hegemonists intent on invading mother Russia and received medals. All of this from the KGB's own archives through the bravery and dedication to truth of one minor file clerk, Vasily Mitroken. This is a first rate read for anyone who survived the Fifties.
4 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Sasha
- 03-08-19
learned more than I thought
a very unusual but fascinating book that I would encourage anybody to read. it is very interesting to listen to the history of the KGB from someone who has an inside view
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- Ryan Tossell
- 05-20-18
If you are looking for Cold War and James Bond ...
... type stories, this is not the book for you. If you are looking for an accurate history of the KGB, then this is a solid book.