A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

The arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States was the most dangerous confrontation in the history of the world. Nikita Khrushchev's decision to place nuclear missiles in Cuba, and John F. Kennedy's willingness to call his bluff, brought the Soviet Union and the West to the edge of a cataclysmic nuclear war. Kennedy's confidence in his brinkmanship hung on evidence provided by Oleg Penkovsky, the MI6/CIA agent inside Soviet military intelligence. While researching Penkovsky's story, Robert Holmes stumbled upon an astonishing chain of intrigue, betrayal, and revenge that suggested a group of maverick Soviet intelligence officers had plotted the crime of the century. When Penkovsky's treachery was discovered he was executed and his boss, General Ivan Serov (the head of Soviet military intelligence) was humiliated. In this extraordinary study, Holmes suggests Serov's anger at America's victory in Cuba and his resentment at the treachery of his protégé turned into an obsessive determination to gain revenge—and reveals the opportunity he had to do so by working with KGB rogue officers to enlist a young American loner, Lee Harvey Oswald, to assassinate the President.

Robert Holmes was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He was a British diplomat for more than thirty years, serving in a number of foreign capitals including Moscow, Russia, and Budapest, Hungary, during the depths of the Cold War.

1113681790
A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

The arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States was the most dangerous confrontation in the history of the world. Nikita Khrushchev's decision to place nuclear missiles in Cuba, and John F. Kennedy's willingness to call his bluff, brought the Soviet Union and the West to the edge of a cataclysmic nuclear war. Kennedy's confidence in his brinkmanship hung on evidence provided by Oleg Penkovsky, the MI6/CIA agent inside Soviet military intelligence. While researching Penkovsky's story, Robert Holmes stumbled upon an astonishing chain of intrigue, betrayal, and revenge that suggested a group of maverick Soviet intelligence officers had plotted the crime of the century. When Penkovsky's treachery was discovered he was executed and his boss, General Ivan Serov (the head of Soviet military intelligence) was humiliated. In this extraordinary study, Holmes suggests Serov's anger at America's victory in Cuba and his resentment at the treachery of his protégé turned into an obsessive determination to gain revenge—and reveals the opportunity he had to do so by working with KGB rogue officers to enlist a young American loner, Lee Harvey Oswald, to assassinate the President.

Robert Holmes was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He was a British diplomat for more than thirty years, serving in a number of foreign capitals including Moscow, Russia, and Budapest, Hungary, during the depths of the Cold War.

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A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

by Robert Holmes
A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

A Spy Like No Other: The Cuban Missile Crisis, The KGB and the Kennedy Assassination

by Robert Holmes

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Overview

The arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States was the most dangerous confrontation in the history of the world. Nikita Khrushchev's decision to place nuclear missiles in Cuba, and John F. Kennedy's willingness to call his bluff, brought the Soviet Union and the West to the edge of a cataclysmic nuclear war. Kennedy's confidence in his brinkmanship hung on evidence provided by Oleg Penkovsky, the MI6/CIA agent inside Soviet military intelligence. While researching Penkovsky's story, Robert Holmes stumbled upon an astonishing chain of intrigue, betrayal, and revenge that suggested a group of maverick Soviet intelligence officers had plotted the crime of the century. When Penkovsky's treachery was discovered he was executed and his boss, General Ivan Serov (the head of Soviet military intelligence) was humiliated. In this extraordinary study, Holmes suggests Serov's anger at America's victory in Cuba and his resentment at the treachery of his protégé turned into an obsessive determination to gain revenge—and reveals the opportunity he had to do so by working with KGB rogue officers to enlist a young American loner, Lee Harvey Oswald, to assassinate the President.

Robert Holmes was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland. He was a British diplomat for more than thirty years, serving in a number of foreign capitals including Moscow, Russia, and Budapest, Hungary, during the depths of the Cold War.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781849544153
Publisher: Biteback Publishing, Ltd.
Publication date: 10/15/2013
Pages: 324
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.50(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

Glossary xiii

Prologue xvii

1 Moscow 1953 1

2 Berlin 1953 7

3 London 1953 16

4 Moscow 1954 21

5 Berlin 1954 23

6 Berlin 1955 27

7 Moscow 1955 31

8 Ankara 1955-6 36

9 Moscow 1956 42

10 Budapest 1956 48

11 Berlin 1956 62

12 Moscow 1957 68

13 Moscow 1958 71

14 Cuba 1958 73

15 Cuba 1959 78

16 Moscow 1959 82

17 Miami 1960 91

18 Moscow 1960 97

19 London 1960 113

20 Moscow 1961 (Part 1) 116

21 London 1961 123

22 Penkovsky Debriefing (Part 1) 128

23 Moscow 1961 (Part 2) 138

24 Penkovsky Debriefing (Part 2) 144

25 Penkovsky Debriefing (Part 3) 148

26 Washington and Miami 1961 160

27 Cuba 1961 167

28 Washington and Miami 1962 170

29 Moscow 1962 179

30 October 1962 (Part 1) The Developing Crisis 199

31 October 1962 (Part 2) The Crisis Days 213

32 October 1962 (Part 3) The Aftermath 229

33 Moscow 1963 (Part 1) 236

34 Washington and London 1963 239

35 Moscow 1963 (Part 2) 241

36 USA 1963 243

37 Mexico City 1963 252

38 Dallas, October and November 1963 259

Epilogue 273

Bibliography 284

Appendix 1 286

Appendix 2 295

Index 317

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