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WORK TITLE: The Illegals
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PERSONAL
Born c. 1981.
EDUCATION:Graduated from Oxford University.
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CAREER
Journalist, writer. Worked for an NGO in Moscow, Russia; Independent, Moscow correspondent, 2007-13; Guardian and Observer, Moscow correspondent, 2013–18, central and eastern Europe correspondent, 2018—.
WRITINGS
Also author of the essay
SIDELIGHTS
[open new]Shaun Walker is a British journalist specializing in Soviet and Russian history and contemporary politics. He was first introduced to the long-Communist polity’s complexities in 2000, when at age eighteen he enlisted to teach English in a Moscow secondary school for four months. He then spent several weeks touring the nation on trans-Siberian trains, altogether getting profound and ambiguous impressions about the inversions of Russian life following the 1991 break-up of the Soviet Union and a recent financial crisis. Following his studies at Oxford University, where he concentrated on Russian and Soviet history, in late 2003 Walker returned to Moscow. He spent a year working for an NGO and then became a journalist, writing for the Independent as of 2007 and then the Guardian. He covered events in Moscow as well as neighboring Ukraine until finally leaving his Russian post in 2018. At that time he moved to Budapest, Hungary, to serve as the Guardian’s correspondent for central and eastern Europe. Although he continued to visit Moscow regularly, events surrounding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine led, in 2022, to British sanctions on Russian individuals, which were countered by Russian sanctions on fifty pertinent British journalists, politicians, and analysts. Walker’s “claim to fame,” as he told NPR’s Fresh Air, was being the first name on the list. By the mid-2020s, he was dividing his time between Warsaw, Poland; Kyiv, Ukraine; and London, England.
Walker made his nonfiction book debut with The Long Hangover: Putin’s New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past. Ever since the demise of the Soviet Union, Walker recounts, a general malaise and dissatisfaction have lingered in Russian society—the feeling that the glory days of imperial dominance had passed Russia by. With reduced-status Russia’s early position as a democracy faltering, Boris Yeltsin helped bring onetime KGB middleman Vladimir Putin to power. Central to modern Russian mythmaking has been the heroic role played by Soviet forces in defeating the Nazis in World War II, locally known as the Great Patriotic War. Less palatable aspects of Soviet’s wartime activities, like the mass relocation of the Kalmyk ethnic group over inflammatory accusations, are glossed over. Unabashed in his pursuit of revived global stature, whatever the cost, Putin has pulled propagandistic levers, silenced and punished critics, and deluded much of the nation into viewing purported opponents as existential threats and supporting the revival of Soviet-style governance, politics, and diplomacy. Concerning Russia’s invasive inroads into Crimea and Ukraine, Walker views as a grievous nadir Russia’s unsupportable denials over Russian rebels’ responsibility for bringing down a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet, having mistaken it for Ukrainian forces.
A Kirkus Reviews writer praised The Long Hangover as a “searching account” with “solid reporting” that reveals how Putin’s regime has effectively portrayed its regional enemies “as Nazis, evoking memories that only the oldest Russians have while also recapturing some of the old sense of exceptionalist nationhood.” The reviewer deemed the volume “essential reading for Russia watchers.” A Publishers Weekly reviewer affirmed that Walker’s reportage is “exemplary,” as suffused with “idiosyncratic and telling detail.” The reviewer appreciated how Walker proves an “empathetic interviewer” with both anti- and pro-Putin interlocutors, from common citizens to local officials, able to understand both sides but also willing to “hold his subjects accountable.” The reviewer concluded that Walker’s “intelligent and ambitious” book “succeeds in providing insight.” Affirming that Walker “has consistently been a thoughtful, sensitive, probing and resourceful chronicler” of Russian activity, the Guardian’s Oliver Bullough said that The Long Hangover is “considered and careful and humane, and should be compulsory reading” for politicians with vested interest. Bullough concluded, “It’s not only the best book I’ve read on Putin’s Russia, but also has great resonance for the age of Donald Trump and Brexit: no one likes being told they’re a loser, everyone needs something to believe in.”
Walker’s second book is The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West. The Bolsheviks provided the origins for the unique Soviet tradition of embedding spies so deeply that they pass often as native citizens with no traceable connection to Russia. More conventionally journalists, academics, business people, and embassy employees get tabbed as spies for the nation they are evidently from. The Bolsheviks, founded as a revolutionary operation, with some participants living in exile, approached diplomatic problems through official political representatives and other law-abiding individuals as well as “illegal” operatives who used their positions to secure protected information, such as through blackmail, and mold strategic tactics. Leon Trotsky and Vladimir Lenin themselves were among those who used aliases and assumed identities around Europe. The process of training agents for international stations takes years, and once posted, speaking Russian is forbidden even in private. Many have lived in arranged marriages; children go uninformed about their parents’ occupations. Under the paranoid Stalin, many illegals, being deeply embedded in capitalist circumstances and connected with democratic contacts, came under suspicion of treason, and some were forced to sign false confessions and sent to gulags. Even successfully active illegals sometimes buckle under the strain of service and are withdrawn. After the Soviet Union’s dissolution, Putin’s climb through the bureaucracy included a position as an illegals support officer with the KGB. Putin directed the revitalization of the illegals program in 2004 and later tweaked the tradition in deploying online “trolls” who assume false identities to spread disinformation and foment unrest in America in particular. With Russia’s war against Ukraine leading to the withdrawal of Russia’s legal diplomats and embassy workers from throughout Europe, Putin is understood to be relying on illegals more than ever.
Finding in Walker’s narrative all the traits of a “great spy novel—assassinations, invisible ink, radio encryption, sabotage, misdirection, and treachery”—James Pekoll of Booklist deemed The Illegals “outstanding in its engaging details and harrowing disclosures.” In the Spectator, Thomas W. Hodgkinson affirmed that Walker’s “thrilling book … grabs you by the lapels from the very first page.” Hodgkinson appreciated how Walker is “particularly sensitive to the human cost of the illegals programme. Some of its victims attempted suicide. Some succeeded. The perpetrators themselves cracked up or turned to booze. Their children, several of whom Walker has interviewed, are still processing the trauma of discovering that much of what their parents told them was total fiction.” In the New York Times Book Review, Joseph Finder marveled at Walker’s “deep archival spelunking and source-cultivating. … He’s interviewed former illegals—spies who lived with fabricated identities as beautifully lacquered as a set of matryoshka dolls. These weren’t diplomatic spies with immunity; they were ghosts walking among us with American accents.” Finder wryly concluded that The Illegals “serves as a reminder that somewhere in Russia right now, ordinary citizens are being molded into simulacrum Americans, learning to enjoy Starbucks and complain about property taxes, prepared to live among us regardless of who occupies the White House. … In international relations, as in life, it’s the quiet ones you need to watch.”[close new]
BIOCRIT
PERIODICALS
Booklist, March, 2025, James Pekoll, review of The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West, p. 24.
Economist, July 17, 2025, “Uncovering the Foibles of the KGB and the CIA,” includes review of The Illegals.
Kirkus Reviews, November 1, 2017, review of The Long Hangover: Putin’s New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past; March 1, 2025, review of The Illegals.
New York Times Book Review, June 1, 2025, Joseph Finder, review of The Illegals, p. 27.
Spectator, May 3, 2025, Thomas W. Hodgkinson, review of The Illegals, p. 34.
Studies in Intelligence, June, 2018, John Ehrman, review of The Long Hangover, p. 36.
ONLINE
Guardian, https://www.theguardian.com/ (February 17, 2018), Shaun Walker, “Putin’s Quest for Lost Glory”; (February 25, 2018), Oliver Bullough, review of The Long Hangover; (April 20, 2025), Adam Sisman, review of The Illegals; (October 9, 2025), author profile.
NPR website, https://www.npr.org/ (April 16, 2025), Dave Davies, “New Book Explores the Real-Life KGB Spy Program That Inspired ‘The Americans,'” author interview.
Publishers Weekly, https://www.publishersweekly.com/ (September 25, 2017), review of The Long Hangover.
Shaun Walker is the Guardian's central and eastern Europe correspondent. Previously, he spent more than a decade in Moscow and is the author of The Long Hangover: Putin's New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shaun Walker (born 1981/1982) is a British journalist and author, noted primarily for his writing on Ukraine and Russia for British newspaper The Guardian.[1] Walker was shortlisted for the 2024 UK Press Awards.[2]
Early life and education
Walker visited Russia for the first time as an 18-year-old, in 2000, working as an English teacher, and then travelling around the country.[3] He then returned home to the UK, where he studied Russian and Soviet history at Oxford University.[4] After completing his studies, Walker returned to Moscow at the end of 2003, working for an NGO for a year, before taking up journalism.[3]
Career
Walker worked for British newspaper The Independent from 2007, and was its Moscow correspondent until 2013.[5] From 2014, working for The Guardian, primarily as its Ukraine and Russia correspondent, he has extensively covered the war in Donbas.[6] As of 2018 Walker was living in Budapest, Hungary.[3] From 2019, he has been The Guardian's central and eastern Europe correspondent.[6]
Walker is the author of the non-fiction books Odessa Dreams: The Dark Heart of Ukraine's Online Marriage Industry (2014) and The Long Hangover: Putin's New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past (2018).[7] The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West (2025) is about the agents who lived apparently normal lives in the west as part of Soviet espionage programmes.[8][9][10][11]
Political views
Walker has been criticised[by whom?] for some his pro-Russian writings prior to 2022, including a 2014 article for The Guardian entitled "I can't stop dreaming about Vladimir Putin", and his positive comments on Russia at the time of the 2018 World Cup.[1]
Publications
Odessa Dreams: The Dark Heart of Ukraine's Online Marriage Industry (2014)
The Long Hangover: Putin's New Russia and the Ghosts of the Past (2018)
The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West (2025)[12]
New book explores the real-life KGB spy program that inspired 'The Americans'
April 16, 20251:50 PM ET
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Identity And The End Of 'The Americans'
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Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell play Philip and Elizabeth Jennings on The Americans. The 5th season of the FX series premiers Tuesday.
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Cold War Spy Series 'The Americans' Taps Into Today's Concerns About Russia
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In The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West, Shaun Walker shares how agents were trained to blend into a target country and pose as citizens.
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DAVE DAVIES, HOST:
This is FRESH AIR. I'm Dave Davies. The FX TV series "The Americans" portrayed a seemingly ordinary couple raising two children in a suburb of Washington, D.C., except that Mom and Dad were actually Soviet spies working on long-term assignment for the KGB. In this scene, the couple, played by Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell, are talking after learning that their new neighbor is an FBI counterintelligence agent. The husband's telling his wife maybe it's time to give up their ruse and defect to the U.S. government.
(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "THE AMERICANS")
MATTHEW RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) We just get relocated, take the good life, and be happy.
KERI RUSSELL: (As Elizabeth Jennings) Are you joking? Is this a joke?
RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) No.
RUSSELL: (As Elizabeth Jennings) You want to betray our country.
RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) Well, after everything we've done, I don't think it's such a betrayal.
RUSSELL: (As Elizabeth Jennings) Defecting to America?
RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) America's not so bad. We've been here a long time. What's so bad about it, you know? The electricity works all the time. Food's pretty, great. Closet space...
RUSSELL: (As Elizabeth Jennings) Is that what you care about?
RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) No, I care about everything.
RUSSELL: (As Elizabeth Jennings) Not the motherland.
RHYS: (As Phillip Jennings) I do, but our family comes first.
DAVIES: The series, which earned a host of honors, including two Peabody Awards, was fiction. But our guest today, investigative reporter Shaun Walker, has written a new book about the real-life espionage program that inspired it. Among others, Walker interviewed two members of the family the show was partly based on - brothers who had no idea their parents were Soviet agents, born in Russia until the day when the boys were 16 and 20, that the FBI raided their home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and arrested their parents. We'll hear more on that later.
From the beginning of the Soviet Union, Walker writes, its leaders put enormous effort into training spies in the language and culture of targeted foreign countries and sent them on missions that could last for decades. The book explores the agents' efforts at espionage, but also the emotional strains they endured living a lie for so long. The program largely fell apart with the collapse of the Soviet Union, but Walker says it's been revived in Russia under Vladimir Putin.
Shaun Walker is an international correspondent for The Guardian. He reported from Moscow for more than a decade and is the author of "The Long Hangover: Putin's New Russia And The Ghosts Of The Past." He currently divides his time among Warsaw, Kyiv and London. His new book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." Well, Shaun Walker, welcome back to FRESH AIR.
You know, so many countries spy on each other, and one typical technique that is used is to give their agents cover when they go to another country by having them employed as a diplomat at the embassy or as a businessperson traveling in the host country. This practice you write about is very different. How common is this idea of training agents to impersonate an ordinary citizen and embed in another country?
SHAUN WALKER: Well, it's great to be back talking to you again, Dave. And yeah, I mean, the Soviet and then Russian illegals program, it does have some similarities with spying programs that a lot of countries use, but it's really something quite unique. And that was sort of what kind of got me obsessed with the program over the last years when I've been researching this book, because I just felt that, like, somehow understanding the illegals and understanding the way this extraordinary program evolved from right at the beginning of the Soviet Union, through the Cold War, through the collapse of the Soviet Union, and up to now.
At all these moments - there were so many moments in this program where you just think, OK, this doesn't quite make sense anymore to do this, to train these people for years, to spend, you know, one-on-one, really intensive training for years on end until you have an operative that's ready to be sent out into another country and pose as someone with no links at all to Russia. There's pretty much no other intelligence service that does that in this kind of scale.
DAVIES: You know, you write that the roots of this program date back to the beginnings of the Soviet Union, really before the Russian Revolution. So what were Lenin and, you know, his compatriots doing that led to this kind of espionage?
WALKER: So Lenin was the head of the Bolsheviks, and the Bolsheviks, at this point, before the revolution, were a kind of close-knit conspiratorial underground group, fighting the czar. Some of them were inside Russia, some of them were in exile. And Lenin developed this concept that, on the one hand, they were going to organize openly inside Russia. They would send people to the Parliament. They would work through trade unions. These would be the legal workers. But they'd also have illegals, who would do clandestine organization. They would often live in disguise. They would be trying to keep one step ahead of the czar's secret police.
And these illegals, they often had fake foreign identities. They lived under false documents. They had code names. They wrote each other letters in invisible ink. Basically, they used a lot of spy craft. And so when Lenin and the Bolsheviks take over after the October Revolution in 1917, they readapt a lot of the spy craft for their brand new intelligence service. And it's that heritage of the Bolsheviks as an underground clandestine organization that really kind of informs this idea of sending illegals out into the field.
DAVIES: In the 1920s and '30s, when the new Soviet Union had a lot of international enemies, it ended up with a lot of these embedded spies, so-called illegals in the field. But things changed when there were these purges instituted by Joseph Stalin, the dictator of the Soviet Union, in which many people in many aspects of Soviet society, particularly government, were accused of disloyalty and tortured and forced to make public confessions. This happened to the illegals, too. Why did Stalin target those who presumably were among the most loyal of his followers?
WALKER: Yeah. I mean, so the logic of the purges was such that even the most loyal people were subject to suspicion, and everybody was desperate to show they were more loyal than everybody else. A key feature of the purges was accusing people of having links with foreign intelligence services. So essentially, spying for the enemies of the Soviet Union to bring down the Soviet state. And of course, the illegals here were kind of first in the firing line because, unlike your factory director in Siberia or your train worker in the Urals, who might be accused of working for German or Japanese intelligence - and it's fanciful - here were people who were traveling all through the world. They were posing as capitalists. They had all kinds of links. And so suspicion, when it was so ubiquitous, naturally fell on them very quickly.
And so what you see is that these people who, you know, in the case of someone like Dmitri Bystrolyotov, he had spent years posing as a Hungarian, as a Brit, as different brands of capitalists, and he hadn't been uncovered in the West. He comes back to the Soviet Union, and he's accused that this whole career when he was working for Moscow, was all a sham. He actually - there's another layer to his cover, and the whole time he was this secret enemy spy. Now, this is ridiculous, but to get him to admit to this, there are weeks, months of interrogations, violence, torture, until eventually, he feels his life slipping away from him, and he agrees to sign whatever they put in front of him just to make it stop.
DAVIES: And ends up with a very long prison term.
WALKER: Yeah. I mean, in some ways, luckily for him, he managed to hold out long enough that by the time he signs, the real peak is winding down. He doesn't get shot, like many of the other illegals, but he does end up with 20 years in the gulag, which completely breaks him.
DAVIES: You know, I think one of the most interesting points of this description is when he is being repeatedly tortured, beaten and tortured by this operative who is trying to get him to sign a statement making this false admission that he had betrayed his country, and at some point, he realizes what his interrogator is going through. Tell us about this.
WALKER: Yeah. I mean, the - it's a really extraordinary scene. And actually, the - Dmitri's description of his interrogations, it's some of the most interesting and evocative writing about the purges that I've ever seen. And yeah, there's this moment where the guy who's been in charge of his torture, suddenly - it sort of suddenly dawns on him this life that Dmitri had had in the West - wearing nice suits, going out to bars, traveling, having money. And he just looks at him and he says, you know, so you mean to say you could have just run off somewhere with all this money, and you could have lived in luxury until the end of your life? But you chose to come back here and face a bullet. I mean, what an idiot. And he starts beating Dmitri, like, why on earth did you come back here? And I think there's this moment where Dmitri sort of sees - there's a little bit of - the kind of curtain of the theater raises a bit, and he sees this guy as maybe someone who's also a bit of a victim of this crazy system, even though he's the torturer and Dmitri is the tortured.
DAVIES: We're going to take a break here. Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Shaun Walker. He's an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." We'll continue our conversation in just a moment. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF NATHAN BARR'S "THE AMERICANS MAIN TITLE THEME")
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR, and we're speaking with Shaun Walker, an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is about a program run by the Soviet Union, and later by Russia, to train intelligence agents to learn the language and customs of a foreign country and then go there in missions that could last for decades, posing as ordinary citizens. His book is called "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West."
I want to move to the postwar era when, you know, Germany was defeated, and it was clear to the Soviet leaders that their greatest rival would be the United States. They refer to it as the main enemy, right? So a new crop of these sleeper agents, these illegals, were trained and dispatched to the United States, typically going through Canada. They go to Canada, and then they eventually make their way to the U.S. One difficulty was that this life was hard on these agents - mostly single men - and would lead them to make mistakes or abandon their missions. You want to give us an example of this? You cite some of this in the book.
WALKER: Yeah. So you have a few of these early postwar spies, illegals, who are sent out to the U.S. And yeah, as you say, it's very hard on them. There's one - the one case that springs to mind is a chap called Yevgeni Brik (ph). So he arrives in Canada with the ultimate goal of getting to the U.S., and he's supposed to spend a bit of time in Canada brushing up on what the KGB called the legend of the spy - so his backstory, basically. So he would go around several Canadian towns. He would visit the places where, supposedly, he had grown up, and he would sort of get himself a nice cache of stories that he'd be able to tell about these places.
But he shows up, and in one of the first places he stays in in Winnipeg, he's in a guesthouse. And he's missing his wife, who's back in Moscow. His family is in Moscow. Of course, he has absolutely no links. He's not allowed to contact them and not even allowed to contact the local Soviet Embassy. And so, rather lonely, he starts drinking in this guesthouse. He meets the daughter of the guesthouse owner, decides that he's in love with her and, basically, at the first opportunity, sort of spills the whole story - who he is, what his training was, what his mission is. She's absolutely horrified and persuades him to go to the police and confess everything. This story, much later, ends with Brik going back to Moscow and being arrested because the Soviets had realized that he talked to the Canadians.
But yeah, there's a whole bunch of these stories where illegals would sort of get drunk. They would confess. They would defect. And the whole idea of this program is that they have to be on a very long leash, that the Soviets can't be watching them from the embassy because they can't have any links. So it becomes a real problem of, what do you do? How do you send these people out and make sure that they're loyal when you have no oversight?
DAVIES: Another issue was - and this is fascinating - that a lot of these agents had advanced education in the Soviet Union, but they couldn't carry their degrees with them. So they would often get trained in blue-collar employment and then be sent to, you know, the United States, in many cases, often through Canada, and then given instructions that were pretty unrealistic, right? There was this guy who adopted the name Rudy Herrmann - right? - who was - he was a delivery man. And what was his instruction?
WALKER: So he was actually a cameraman, Rudy Herrmann.
DAVIES: Cameraman. That's right. OK.
WALKER: Yeah. So Rudy Herrmann, exactly as you said - I mean, he had this wonderful degree from Charles University in Prague. He was an incredibly clever guy. And he was posing brilliantly as a right-wing German. But he was very, very good at the job. But the problem was he didn't have any German or American qualifications. So he was very resourceful guy. He learned how to be a cameraman. He got a good job at CBC, Canadian Broadcasting. Then he moved to New York.
He was doing very well. Like, he was making movies for IBM, doing all kinds of interesting stuff. But the KGB really wanted him to penetrate decision-making circles in Washington, D.C., and they particularly were interested in the Hudson Institute, which they were sure was a kind of front for the CIA. And Rudy Herrmann kept saying to his handlers, like, how do you expect me to do this? Like, I don't have a degree. And they would just sort of say, well, do the best you can. And, yeah, I mean, it's sort of emblematic of the way that as the decades go on, it gets harder and harder to do this job. The missions are longer and longer. The psychological strain is more and more. And the espionage results, with some exceptions, seem to get fewer and fewer.
DAVIES: Right. Well, I want to talk about the couple that - we mentioned this earlier - that actually were - partly inspired the TV series "The Americans." This was a couple that came from the Soviet Union to Canada, and eventually to the United States, and stayed for a long, long time. Their names were Andrey Bezrukov and Elena Vavilova, right? They were actually recruited as college students from a university in Siberia - right? - where they were both in school.
WALKER: Yeah, that's right. So by the time you get to the early 1980s, which was when they were starting their university in Tomsk - yeah, all these people that we were talking about at the beginning, the Dmitri Bystrolyotov characters who had already traveled the world and spoke many languages - they were long gone. The Soviet Union was quite a closed, quite a paranoid society. Anyone who actually had traveled would be a magnet for suspicion.
So instead, what they're doing is they're looking for very, very talented young students who come from what would be considered politically reliable families who are clearly clever, have an aptitude for languages. And they have spotters in universities all across the Soviet Union to look for these ideal candidates. They get short lists. They start interviewing them. They wouldn't - they - at this early stage, they won't even tell them, you know, we're considering you might become an illegal spy. They just start to have conversations once a week. And eventually, they sort of whittle it down to a short list of really promising candidates, which Andrey and Elena were both on.
DAVIES: Tell us what their training was like - this is really interesting - when they decided they are going to be sent to a foreign country to embed as an - so-called illegal.
WALKER: Yeah. So the early-stage training will happen when they're still at university. That will be personality tests and just sort of checking they're compatible. And then they were sent - when it was decided that they really could be illegals, then they were sent on to the full training course. And by the early 1980s, this would last four or five years. It would be entirely one-on-one or, in the case of couples like Andrey and Elena, one-on-two.
They would have - they would - and one of the things that runs through the program - so they would never - it wouldn't be that they would go in the morning to their, you know, training room at KGB headquarters and attend classes for the day. So they would never set foot inside a KGB building. They would never see any of their trainers in KGB uniform. They wouldn't even know the real names of most of their trainers. This was all done in safe houses, secret apartments across Moscow. So you would go to one for your language classes. You'd go to another one for your etiquette classes. You would sit - so if you have a Canadian cover, you would sit in an apartment for hours on end reading Canadian schoolbooks year by year, so you would imbibe the things you would have imbibed if you really had been to Canadian school.
And then you'd have a whole set of tests for loyalty because, you know, the - almost nobody - the illegals, in fact, are the only Soviet citizens who are allowed to travel freely, and the KGB is very worried about kind of how to do this. I mean, how - it's such a paradoxical situation that you have to shape these sort of virtuoso, maverick spies who are going to go out in the field and lie to absolutely everyone about everything, including their own children. But at the same time, without any oversight, you have to make sure they stay slavishly loyal to you.
And I think in all of the stories I heard from different people about the training, it - I mean, it almost sounds a bit like an induction into a cult. I mean, they're really trying to break you. They're trying to show you that they're watching all the time. They will engineer different situations, fake arrests where you'll be sort of, you know, pressured. And if you finally break and say, listen, there's been a terrible mistake. I work for the KGB. Please call my handlers - that's it. You'll be kicked off the program. So just endless tests to make sure that you have what it takes for this, like, really quite intense psychological endurance that it's going to be to live abroad for these years. And then it's only after you've kind of passed all of those tests and learned how to look for surveillance, learned how to receive the messages in code - all of this stuff is incredibly time-consuming. Finally, after four or five years, they're ready to go.
DAVIES: We need to take another break here. Let me reintroduce you. We are speaking with Shaun Walker. He is an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." He'll be back to talk more after this short break. I'm Dave Davies, and this is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF BLACKOUT & STEFON HARRIS' "UNTIL")
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR. We're speaking with Shaun Walker, international correspondent for The Guardian. He reported from Moscow for more than a decade. And he has a new book about a unique espionage program operated by intelligence services of the Soviet Union, in which agents were trained in the language and customs of a target country and then sent there to pose as citizens for missions that would last for years. In some cases, spy couples would raise families in their adopted country, keeping their true identities from their own children. Walker's book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." When we left off, Walker was talking about Andrey Bezrukov and Elena Vavilova, a married couple recruited from their college in Siberia and trained for years to be sent on a mission to embed in the United States.
So they had two sons, Timothy and Alexander, who, as far as they knew, were Canadian, right? And the couple were making their way to the United States when, to their shock, the Soviet Union was changing rapidly. You know, Gorbachev was opening up the society. And in 1989, the Berlin Wall falls, and the satellite states around the Soviet Union are demanding independence. And this couple, who are known as Don Heathfield and Ann Foley, are in a motel room in Buffalo in 1991. And what do they see on CNN?
WALKER: Yeah. They turn on the TV, and they see the Soviet flag being lowered over the Kremlin for the final time. They see President Bush talking about the collapse of the Soviet Union, the fact that the U.S. has won the Cold War. And here they are, sitting in this cold motel room a few years after their deployment. They've had this intense training. They've sworn an oath to defend the motherland, and now the motherland doesn't exist.
DAVIES: Right. So all of these agents that are all around - in 1991, I guess, the KGB is disbanded, right? So the instructions stop coming, the money stops coming, and they have to decide what they're going to do. What do all these agents that are around there, the so-called illegals, do? I guess they took different courses.
WALKER: Yeah, many - I mean, it's - it was a really kind of individual moment. So some of them decided to come home, see - be with their families. Others had a look at this choice and decided not to come home. They - you know, maybe - in the way that Andrey and Elena tell it, they were always patriotic and they were just waiting for Russia to kind of come back, to - OK, to get back off its knees and they could spy again. I think the reality was probably a little bit more complicated.
I think for a lot of these people, they looked, and they saw, OK, well, we've started building a life in the West. We've got quite a comfortable life. We've made solid foundations. This is what we've spent years training to do. We have kids who were born in the West. So we can either stay here, see what happens - maybe Russia and the U.S. will become friends, but then, OK, we don't need to be spies. We'll just live this other life that we've created for ourselves. Or we could go back to the Soviet Union, which is in chaos, where there's economic turmoil, where it's uncertain what will happen, where it's - also, at this stage, it's uncertain, I mean, will there be trials for top people in the KGB?
Suddenly, this - the work they were doing that was seen as sort of patriotic, wonderful work, maybe it's not going to be viewed like that in the new Russia. So some of them maybe just decide to wait and see. Perhaps they'll come back into the fold if and when there is a renewed demand for spying. Or maybe they will just start their new lives in their cover identities, and no one will ever know that once upon a time, they were from Siberia.
DAVIES: All right. Well, we'll see what happens to this couple after we take a break here. Let me reintroduce you. We're speaking to Shaun Walker. He's an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." We'll continue our conversation after this break. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF HOWARD FISHMAN SONG, "DIRTY")
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR, and we're speaking with Shaun Walker, an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is about a program operated by the Soviet Union - and later Russia - to train spies to learn the language and culture of a target state and then embed there for decades. His book is called "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West."
So the Russian government begins to revive the program under Vladimir Putin, And so once again, they are now filing reports on things they're observing in the United States. Unfortunately for them, the FBI got on to them, in part because a Russian agent who knew all about this, who was right in the middle of this program, flipped and started providing information. And in 2010, the FBI swooped in and arrested them. Tell us what happened that day in Cambridge.
WALKER: Yeah. So after this nearly quarter of a century of living in these cover identities, they're very comfortable. They've got the two kids. They think that everything is going very well. But of course, as with all spies, you're only ever one turncoat, one defector, away from being exposed. And for some years, they'd actually - every move had been tracked by the FBI. And this was a day - the FBI had been tracking illegals across the United States. There was about 10 of them, and this was the - finally the time. The defector wanted to be exfiltrated. They needed to round them up. And this was the day, in June 2010, that it was decided it was going to happen.
So across the U.S., coordinated raids and arrests. And it's actually Tim, the older son - it's his 20th birthday. There's a knock at the door. Everyone thinks it must be somebody come to wish him happy birthday. It's actually the FBI, who put Andrey and Elena - Don and Ann - into separate cars, drive them away. And Tim and Alex, the two sons, are left there kind of asking, you know, what on earth is going on? And they're basically told, well, your parents have been arrested for being agents of a foreign government. And it's only a few days later that they will start to hear the full details and, even then, not really believe it.
DAVIES: Now, what's fascinating about this is that at the time that this arrest happens - I mean, the boys have never been told anything about their true identities. As far as they know, they're all Canadians. And their grandparents live so far away, they never see them. There're various excuses for that. The family had been planning - they had traveled a lot, but they'd been planning a trip to Moscow. They'd been all over Europe, but never to Russia. And so they had visas to go there. The couple are taken to an American court where they have to admit their guilt. And you wrote a fascinating story because you talked to the two boys in 2018 and wrote the story in The Guardian. But as I - if I have this right, the sons, who were taken to a hotel by the FBI, didn't really know what to think about any of this, and they have a brief conversation with their mom in court. She's still wearing an orange jumpsuit from prison, right? What is that conversation like?
WALKER: Yeah. So she tells them, you should fly to Moscow. And they do. And this is like - I mean, this is one of these kind of slightly confusing moments here. So what on earth was this trip that they were going to do to Moscow that summer? In their telling, this was just going to be an ordinary tourist trip. You know, they'd traveled all over the place. One of the kids had said, oh, let's - what about Russia? We've never been there. They were going to go. They were going to stay in character the whole time as Canadians, Americans and leave again.
Now, of course, I'm a little bit suspicious about this. I do wonder if, you know, we had that story decades earlier of the illegal trying to recruit his son as a second generation, maybe this was a trip where they were going to reveal - they'd decided it was time - and see if their children would join their mission. The FBI have suggested they believe that might be the case. Parents and the children fully deny it. I think we'll never know the truth of that. But, yeah, I think at the moment when your mom tells you, (laughter) what I think you should do is fly to Moscow, I guess that's the moment where you realize, OK, looks like this is true.
So these poor kids, they fly off to Moscow. Their parents arrive a couple of days later in a spy swap. They swapped on the tarmac at Vienna Airport, and they arrive back in Moscow. And yeah, and the - one of - the younger brother said to me that the moment he realized it was all true was when one of these - one of the people who met them at the airport, and they introduced themselves as, you know, we're friends of your parents. We work with them. And they showed the two brothers pictures of their parents in KGB uniforms, which had been taken just before they were sent off to the - to Canada back in the late 1980s. And Alex said, you know, this was the moment where I realized it was all true.
So they have this, I mean, unimaginable sort of family summit back in Moscow. They meet grandparents they didn't know they had, or at least they thought they were living somewhere in remote Canada rather than in Siberia. They're taken to the Bolshoi Theatre. They have these long discussions with their parents about, you know, what on earth has just happened. And they're given Russian passports with new names. They can't even pronounce their names properly. And, yeah, it was meeting the two of them - it was actually back in 2016, when I wrote a story about them and their battle to have their Canadian citizenship restored, that was the sort of first impulse for me - this crazy, twisted family story that sort of set me on this path of getting obsessed with the illegals over the years.
DAVIES: Yeah. It is a fascinating story. I mean, suddenly their lives are turned upside down, these boys. The couple stays in Russia. You know, they hadn't been there in decades. What were their lives like? Are they - are you still in touch with them? Are they comfortable with it? You did speak with Elena, right?
WALKER: I spoke with Elena a couple of times, yeah, a few years ago. We're not - we haven't been in touch a lot recently. I think context has changed a bit since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. I - you know, I used to go to Russia very regularly. I'm now on a blacklist, so I can't visit. But, yeah, I mean, they were essentially - I mean, what's fascinating about them - so with earlier illegals, who achieved an awful lot, they were often, as we discussed, sent to the gulag, shot. Some of them were disgraced because they were caught. And despite having, you know, given years of their lives to this program, what you see with Andrei and Elena is sort of the opposite. I mean, they definitely did a very impressive job to integrate so well and live many years undercover.
But because of this defector, for 10 years, the FBI knew exactly what they were doing. So essentially, their value as espionage agents was pretty much zero. But that's slightly glossed over or rather fully glossed over when it comes to the sort of modern Russian telling of their story. And, of course, now under Putin, there is a really big focus on finding patriotic stories on nationalist mythmaking. And the illegals are perfect for this. These people who sacrificed everything, they - you know, they lived abroad for years. They gave everything for the motherland. And that's now their position in Russian society.
So they came back. They were given a very nice apartment. They were both given quite lucrative jobs in state-controlled companies. They met with Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin and sang songs together. And then, you know, they're introduced on chat shows as legendary spies, and they will give the talking points. Well, more Andrei, actually. Andrei will often be on chat shows, giving the talking points of the day about Russia's war in Ukraine or how the evil West is trying to bring down Moscow. So they fit quite nicely into this system. What they say to each other in their quieter moments in the evenings, I don't know.
DAVIES: And what about the two boys, Timothy and Alexander? Do you know where they live, what they do, how they regard their parents?
WALKER: So I think it was very difficult for them, particularly I think Alex, the younger son. They had both found ways to live outside Russia, but they were struggling with getting visas. You know, I know Alex had been applying to various schools in Europe and then not - had not been able to get visas. And I think with their parents, it was not an easy conversation. But they somehow - you know, they felt they'd had a loving childhood. They felt their parents had been very good to them in many ways, and they tried to find a way, I think, to sort of sidestep this big deception. And, you know, I guess there are ways in which with all of these families - and it was the same talking to Peter Herrmann, the guy whose father tried to recruit him. In many ways, these - the dilemmas these kids face and these families face are similar to a lot of families. You know, there might be a secret affair or a secret past history that parents don't want to talk about. You have the dilemmas of immigrant parents coming to a new country, and, you know, they want their children to integrate, but they also don't want to lose them to the new culture. And Illegals had all these same dilemmas, but they were just heightened 10 times over by this kind of extraordinary secret that they had a second life as Soviet citizens.
DAVIES: You spent more than a decade reporting in Russia. You mentioned earlier that you're on a blacklist, which prevents you from traveling there now. How did that happen? What got you there?
WALKER: While I'd love to say it was a phenomenal journalistic scoop that infuriated Vladimir Putin, but it was basically early on in the full-scale war in the summer of 2022, I think the Brits must have put sanctions on a certain number of Russians, and as the Russians love to do, they put reciprocal sanctions on whoever's sanctioning them. If you sanction me, I'm going to sanction you back. So they released a list of about 50 British journalists, politicians, analysts, all kinds of people. My claim to fame is I was No. 1 on the list, but there was also every other journalist for The Guardian who'd reported from Ukraine, pretty much was on this list.
And, yeah, and actually, most of the - what was frustrating about is most of the people on this list were not people who were ever going to Russia, so they get to sort of very proudly put on their biographies that, you know, I've been banned by the Kremlin whereas, yeah, I mean, I was last there a few months before the war started, the full-scale war started. I was continuing to go back. I'm obviously - you know, it's really quite sad and depressing to see what's happened to the country, but I would - it doesn't feel a good feeling to not be able to go after I spent so many years reporting from there.
DAVIES: Well, Shaun Walker, we'll look forward to more of your reporting. Thanks so much for speaking with us.
WALKER: Thank you very much for having me.
DAVIES: Shaun Walker is an international correspondent for The Guardian. His new book is "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies And Their Century-Long Mission To Infiltrate The West." Coming up, jazz historian Kevin Whitehead pays tribute to the versatile tenor saxophonist Gene Ammons, born a hundred years ago this week. This is FRESH AIR.
(SOUNDBITE OF CHARLES MINGUS' "SELF-PORTRAIT IN THREE COLORS")
The Illegals. By Shaun Walker. Knopf; 448 pages; $32. Profile Books; £22
The Mission. By Tim Weiner. Mariner Books; 464 pages; $35. William Collins; £25
The Spy in the Archive. By Gordon Corera. Pegasus Books; 336 pages; $29.95. William Collins; £25
TO BE AN intelligence officer is to make sacrifices: to wear a mask, to deceive even those close to you, to persuade others to betray their countries. When answering the call of duty, some have to make greater sacrifices than others. In the early 1970s Yury Linov reported to a KGB clinic in Moscow, where he was circumcised. Mr Linov then headed for Israel, where he introduced himself as Karl-Bernd Motl, an Austrian Jew. The real Mr Motl was alive and well, living in East Germany. Mr Linov was a KGB "illegal"—an intelligence officer operating not only under a false name, but also a false nationality.
His remarkable story is told by Shaun Walker, a journalist, in "The Illegals", one of the most compelling and insightful books on intelligence of the past decade. It is one of a trio of new works, alongside Gordon Corera's "The Spy in the Archive" and Tim Weiner's "The Mission", which illustrate the foibles of different spy agencies: Russia's obsession with illegals and America's reliance on firepower at the turn of the millennium.
In the 1920s Soviet leaders feared that foreign powers would try to bring down their regime. They knew this was possible, since they had only recently helped overthrow the regimes that came before them. So they created some fake plots to smoke out counter-revolutionaries. Yakov Blyumkin, one illegal, pretended to be a Persian merchant, selling religious manuscripts stolen from Ukraine. Georgy Agabekov posed as an Armenian carpet salesman. There was a fishmonger in Paris and a bookseller in The Hague.
Many intelligence officers pose as diplomats, but use their real names. Illegals, by contrast, must speak, act and even think like a native. Slips are inevitable. Iosif Grigulevich—an illegal who attempted to assassinate Leon Trotsky, a revolutionary—was once asked at an exhibition whether he liked Marc Chagall's paintings. "Nyet," he replied, unthinkingly. On realising his mistake, writes Mr Walker, Grigulevich "recomposed himself and added with a chuckle: 'I believe that's how they say it in the country of the artist's birth'."
Mr Walker combines the methods of the journalist and the historian. He has tracked down not only Mr Linov, a spy who crops up in Ireland, Czechoslovakia and Israel at key moments during the cold war, but also Elliot Holar, the son of Rudi Herrmann, another illegal who defected to America in 1980. Mr Holar's case is fascinating in its own right. As a teenager, after learning of his father's true identity, he too was recruited by the KGB. When his father defected, Mr Holar changed his name and disappeared—until Mr Walker found and interviewed him.
"The Illegals" draws on another remarkable resource: a trove of archival material pilfered by Vasily Mitrokhin, a KGB archivist who defected to MI6, Britain's foreign-intelligence service, in 1992. The story of Mitrokhin's grievance towards the Soviet system and his decision to reveal its secrets is told in "The Spy in the Archive" by Mr Corera, a British journalist who has published several books on espionage.
Mitrokhin was haunted by his own role in the Soviet Union's machinery of torture and repression in eastern Ukraine, where he worked in 1944. The KGB, founded in 1954, was both a spy service and a secret police force, a dual identity which profoundly shaped its espionage work. After a mediocre career in the field, including a stint babysitting Soviet Olympians in Australia, Mitrokhin was demoted and tasked with moving the archives of the First Chief Directorate, the KGB's foreign-intelligence arm, to a new headquarters. He painstakingly studied the files and took copious notes in cryptic shorthand. His knowledge of the KGB's methods gave him an edge. He knew, for instance, that the agency monitored people who purchased large quantities of ink ribbons for typewriters, which were used for underground publications . So Mitrokhin used concentrated fruit juice to type up his notes, which he hid in milk churns under his dacha.
Mitrokhin was arguably one of the most important agents of the late 20th century. His files exposed huge numbers of KGB operations and illegals around the world. Some 3,500 counter-intelligence reports were issued to 36 countries, with about 1,000 people identified as Soviet agents. He was also an irascible character, who would come to resent MI6. "There is a saying within the spy world which is rarely uttered outside," observes Mr Corera. "Defectors defect because they are defective."
The Company culture
But spy agencies can be defective, too. Mitrokhin had originally proffered his secrets to the CIA, which turned him down and would later have to pay $1m towards his resettlement in exchange for access to the files. "Most defectors went to the Americans first," notes Mr Corera, as they had "more money and more influence". (Britain proved nimble with limited resources.)
For Paul Redmond, deputy head of the CIA's counter-intelligence centre at the time, it was an example of the agency's post-cold-war "risible naiveté": the belief that the KGB was dead and that recruiting Russian agents was no longer a priority. In the mid-1990s the CIA is thought to have had fewer than 800 case officers worldwide, down 25% from the cold-war peak.
Its subsequent transformation is the subject of "The Mission" by Tim Weiner, who won a Pulitzer prize in 1988 for his reporting on the CIA. Mr Weiner's book covers the agency's frantic post-9/11 years, including the distortion of its intelligence prior to the Iraq war. Mr Weiner meticulously documents a level of chaos, deception and politicisation in the upper echelons of the CIA that put in perspective current debates over Donald Trump's own efforts to reshape and purge the agencies . "The very survival of the agency" was in question in 2004, he recalls.
Mr Weiner also shows how the CIA's role in counter-terrorism changed the identity of the agency. The naiveté of the 1990s was replaced with machismo: in the early 21st century the CIA "looked much more like a paramilitary organisation than a spy service". The 500 CIA personnel in Baghdad were obliged to travel in convoys of three armoured vehicles, which "was not conducive to conducting clandestine meetings with Iraqis", remarks Mr Weiner. Incompetently designed covert-communication systems contributed to the collapse of agent networks in Iran and China.
Traditional human intelligence (HUM INT) would not return to the fore until after 2016, when American spies were blindsided by Russia's meddling in that year's presidential election. The CIA's "Russia House" doubled in size in two years. Recruitment of Russian sources surged. Intelligence was shared more freely with allies. Those efforts all bore fruit in 2021 when the CIA contributed to the exposure of Russian plans to invade Ukraine. That "triumph of HUMINT", as the agency's deputy director called it, exorcised at least some of the ghosts of the Iraq debacle.
Meanwhile, the KGB's descendants in post-Soviet Russia never abandoned their use of illegals. (The programme remains active today.) The spies acquired mythical status, feted publicly by Vladimir Putin and glorified in "The Americans", a popular American television show. But Mr Walker draws a contrast between their intricate cover stories and the paucity of their achievements. As the Soviet system closed itself to the world, the pool of people with knowledge of the West declined, making it harder to produce convincing fake Americans and Europeans. Despite that, the KGB's Directorate S would come to run "the most intense training regimen for any espionage programme in history", with legends built up over years in some cases.
Mr Walker vividly describes a system that churned out deep-cover spies who often cracked under the pressure. "Some illegals might have been callous sociopaths," he writes, "but many were victims of a KGB programme that made a normal emotional life impossible." "The Illegals" and Mr Weiner's account of the CIA's militarisation diagnose the organisations' pathologies. The lesson of both books is that agencies, regardless of their operational brilliance, can set up spooks to fail.
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"Uncovering the foibles of the KGB and the CIA." The Economist, 17 July 2025. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A848109094/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=11a08ec6. Accessed 25 Sept. 2025.
In his new book, ''The Illegals,'' Shaun Walker studies the Russian agents who worked deep undercover as Americans for decades.
THE ILLEGALS: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West, by Shaun Walker
In July 2010, the F.B.I. rounded up a ring of 10 deep-cover Russian spies -- ''illegals,'' as they were known -- many of whom had been here for decades, living under false American identities, inhomes in places like Hoboken, N.J. For most of us, it seemed comically anachronistic, less like a national security crisis than like discovering your neighbor still uses a rotary phone.
But the timing couldn't have been worse. The arrests came just days after a meeting between President Barack Obama and the Russian president, Dmitri Medvedev, aimed at ''resetting'' relations. As an exasperated Obama complained to his F.B.I. director, it reminded him of a John le Carré novel. As it turned out, the F.B.I. had been quietly watching these operatives for over a decade before deciding to move in.
What Shaun Walker's fascinating and meticulously researched new book, ''The Illegals,'' makes clear is that these suburban moles weren't Cold War leftovers but rather the continuation of a century-long Russian project for infiltrating Western society. The program began in 1922, when Lenin was still pacing the Kremlin corridors, and continues today under Vladimir Putin, who seldom met a Soviet relic he didn't want to polish up.
Walker, a reporter for The Guardian, has done the kind of deep archival spelunking and source-cultivating that makes editors nervous about expense accounts. He's interviewed former illegals -- spies who lived with fabricated identities as beautifully lacquered as a set of matryoshka dolls. These weren't diplomatic spies with immunity; they were ghosts walking among us with American accents and, presumably, Sam's Club memberships.
The tradecraft has a ghoulish elegance. In one strategy, Russian agents would comb American newspapers and cemeteries for the names of children who had died young, then use their identities to create new, adult lives. (Modern security measures have thankfully made this harder to pull off.)
Walker's illegals aren't just background characters in history, either. They helped eliminate Trotsky with an ice ax (points for memorability, if not for subtlety). They warned Stalin about Hitler's impending attack (he ignored them). They handed Stalin intelligence about the H-bomb before Truman knew the details (a genuine intelligence coup).
The psychological toll of living a lie for decades comes through with particular clarity. Some agents crack under the pressure, some go native and some fall in love -- which turns out to be op-sec kryptonite. One lovesick spy blew his Moscow money on gifts for a Polish ballerina. Another became so enamored with a Canadian woman that he turned himself in at her urging. These human frailties make for better reading than operational successes.
''A spy is an actor,'' one illegal explained to Walker, ''but an actor that doesn't need a public or a stage.'' It's a haunting definition, though slightly misleading. These people are performing constantly, but for everyone they meet -- neighbors, colleagues, sometimes even spouses -- maintaining their American personas with the steadiness of Method actors who never break character. The only people they don't act for are their handlers: brief moments of contact when they can exhale and speak in their native tongue about true concerns.
When caught and expelled back to Russia, though, these agents often found themselves distrusted. After all, Moscow Center must have reasoned, the agents had been extensively trained to withstand interrogation and lie convincingly; how could their handlers ever be certain they hadn't been turned? In a twist worthy of the TV show ''The Americans'' -- which was created by the ex-C.I.A. officer Joe Weisberg, and inspired by these 2010 arrests -- the very skills that made them valuable assets abroad rendered them suspect at home.
Were the illegals worth the considerable investment Russia poured into them? Walker doesn't think so. For every useful agent, he writes, ''there were a dozen living frustrated lives'' that bore little fruit. The metrics of espionage success are notoriously slippery, though: A single border crossing with perfect documents might be considered a technical triumph, a test of forgery methods, even if no actual intelligence is gathered.
What's more fascinating is how the mythology of illegals took on a cultural life of its own, separate from operational realities. The Soviet TV series ''Seventeen Moments of Spring,'' featuring a fictional Russian spy who, undercover as ''Max Otto von Stierlitz,'' infiltrated Nazi leadership, became the most watched show in Soviet history. This cultural phenomenon, which had little connection to the actual effectiveness of real-world spies, captivated Soviet audiences and seems to have inspired a young Putin to enlist with the K.G.B. Years later, when this uncharismatic bureaucrat needed rebranding as Russia's prime minister, the Kremlin transformed him into Stierlitz, Russia's answer to James Bond, minus the Aston Martin.
America tried creating its own illegals program in the 1950s, Walker tells us, establishing a secret training facility in a former hotel on a lake near the German-Austrian border. But penetrating the Soviet Union proved nearly impossible, even with native Russian speakers, and the program was shuttered by 1959. The closed Soviet society, with its constant internal surveillance and byzantine paper-trail requirements for even mundane activities, proved remarkably resistant to outsiders trying to blend in.
Despite periods of diplomatic warming, Putin has never abandoned his illegals. He ordered the program revitalized in 2004, three years before his Munich speech signaled the return of Cold War tensions. While America was busy declaring the ''end of history,'' Russia was quietly training a new generation of agents to live among us.
Walker's book serves as a reminder that somewhere in Russia right now, ordinary citizens are being molded into simulacrum Americans, learning to enjoy Starbucks and complain about property taxes, prepared to live among us regardless of who occupies the White House or how many summit handshakes take place. In international relations, as in life, it's the quiet ones you need to watch.
THE ILLEGALS: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West | By Shaun Walker | Knopf | 443 pp. | $32
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PHOTO: The hit Soviet TV series ''Seventeen Moments of Spring'' featured a fictional undercover Russian spy who infiltrated Nazi leadership. (PHOTOGRAPH FROM ITAR-TASS) This article appeared in print on page BR27.
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Finder, Joseph. "Into the West." The New York Times Book Review, 1 June 2025, p. 27. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A842238582/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=7f19bce9. Accessed 25 Sept. 2025.
The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West
by Shaun Walker
Profle, [pounds sterling]22, pp. 448
In June 2022, Vladimir Putin tipped up at a party at the headquarters of Russia's foreign intelligence service, the SVR. This was to mark, of all things, the centenary of the country's programme of deep-cover spies, who live for years abroad under elaborate false identities while passing secrets back to their masters at home. The weirdness of that espionage hoopla, just four months after the invasion of Ukraine, leaves one wondering what other bizarre birthday events Putin might have in his diary. The 85th anniversary of the assassination of Leon Trotsky, perhaps? Ah, you can imagine the banter. The cracker hats. The roll-out noisemakers.
Yet it's not out of the question--as we learn from this thrilling book by the journalist Shaun Walker, which grabs you by the lapels from the very first page. It recounts the 100-year history of the covert Russian agents known in the SVR as 'illegals' (as opposed to the spies thinly disguised as diplomats abroad, the 'legals'). The murder of Trotsky in Mexico in August 1940, when an icepick was planted in the back of his head, was one of the proudest triumphs of the illegals programme.
Ironically, Trotsky's early life as an outlaw Bolshevik, creeping about the capitals of Europe under various aliases, would foreshadow and inspire the illegals. Consider the time Lenin and the gang met up in a pub in Islington, claiming to be a convention of foreign barbers. There's a direct line from here to the outlandish adventures of Dmitry Bystrolyotov, the most colourful of the characters whose stories Walker tells. He was a handsome fellow with a raffish moustache who at different times passed himself off as a Dutch artist, a Greek businessman, an English aristocrat and a Canadian timber merchant.
It was as a Hungarian count that Bystrolyotov pulled off his greatest coup when, in the early 1930s, he befriended and blackmailed a British Foreign Office mole named Ernest Oldham. The Soviet smoothie managed this partly by bedding his wife, Lucy, while Ernest was in rehab. According to a report sent by an eager colleague to the SVR, Bystrolyotov had no sooner turned up at Lucy's home in Kensington, when, 'with the spirited gesture of a port-town girl, she hoisted up her dress, opened her legs and begged him not to waste any time'.
Racy stuff, but it's unclear how much of it to believe. Inevitably, a lot of this book's material comes courtesy of career liars. This doesn't make Bystrolyotov's story, which is largely based on his eye-popping memoirs, any less enjoyable. Here he is on the demands of deep-cover work:
If you pose as a herring salesman, you should be able to tell one herring from another. A Norwegian herring. A bloater. You should learn how a herring salesman moves and talks. You should reek of herring.
I would have loved to ask Bystrolyotov how a herring salesman moves.
I wonder, too, how he felt, after years of loyal service, to be arrested in Moscow, tried and tortured as a traitor, and then consigned to the gulag for 15 years. One revelation here is that the success of the illegals left Stalin convinced the West must be carrying out similar operations. His resulting paranoia was one of the engines of the Great Purge.
It turned out that Stalin was wrong. MI6 and the CIA got going later than the SVR and never built a comparable programme of illegals. Walker's gloriously mundane explanation for this is that it was precluded by the Soviet obsession with bureaucracy. Most likely, any deep-cover CIA agent would have got busted within minutes of entering Russia.
The author, who has spent many years as Russia correspondent for the Independent and Guardian, is particularly sensitive to the human cost of the illegals programme. Some of its victims attempted suicide. Some succeeded. The perpetrators themselves cracked up or turned to booze. Their children, several of whom Walker has interviewed, are still processing the trauma of discovering that much of what their parents told them was total fiction.
Meanwhile, he raises serious concerns about the operations of the illegals programme today. During Putin's early years at the KGB, he worked as an illegals support officer, and he retains a 'fondness for the programme'. One consequence of the war in Ukraine has been the withdrawal from Europe of Russian diplomats, including the legals mentioned earlier. That has created a massive intelligence shortfall. The result? Russia now needs its illegals more than ever. According to Walker, that is why, in the speech Putin made at that SVR party three years ago, he raised a glass not only to the illegals of the past but also to those who 'right now are carrying out unique operations' around the globe.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 The Spectator Ltd. (UK)
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Hodgkinson, Thomas W. "Living a lie." Spectator, vol. 358, no. 10262, 3 May 2025, p. 34. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A838974370/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=fd13b9ca. Accessed 25 Sept. 2025.
* The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West. By Shaun Walker. Apr. 2025. 448p. Knopf, $32 (9780593319680); e-book, $14.99 (9780593319697). 327.1247.
While most nations use intelligence operatives to obtain knowledge not publicly available about other countries, the Soviet Union took the concept to extremes by creating remarkably elaborate false identities for their spies. These operatives were called the illegals. Walker's deep dive into the KGB's extensive program is a fascinating story of espionage that spans the Bolshevik Revolution, the Stalinist purges, WWII, and the brutal USSR. Under the KGB agent-turned-president Putin, the illegals were resurrected as social media trolls disseminating toxic disinformation to influence and disrupt the U.S. Paranoia, frustration, and family secrets permeate this study of konspiratsiya (subterfuge). Walker's chronicle has all the elements of a great spy novel--assassinations, invisible ink, radio encryption, sabotage, misdirection, and treachery. Walker also examines the efficacy of the program. Was it really worth the resources dedicated to training and inserting agents who ended up as mere messengers and menial laborers in the West? Walker puts a human face on the illegals, especially agents in arranged marriages who had to live complicated lies, forbidden to speak Russian even in private and forced to conceal the truth from their children. Many illegals cracked under the strain and had to be withdrawn from service. The Illegals is outstanding in its engaging details and harrowing disclosures.--James Pekoll
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 American Library Association
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Pekoll, James. "The Illegals: Russia's Most Audacious Spies and Their Century-Long Mission to Infiltrate the West." Booklist, vol. 121, no. 13-14, Mar. 2025, p. 24. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A847201861/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=517ff550. Accessed 25 Sept. 2025.
Walker , Shaun THE ILLEGALS Knopf (NonFiction None) $32.00 4, 15 ISBN: 9780593319680
On the hunt for Soviet and Russian spies from Lenin's time to our own.
It's the stuff of TV drama (The Americans) brought to real life: From the earliest days of the Bolshevik Revolution, Russian spies were sent abroad to gather intelligence. Many were posted as diplomats, which meant that counterintelligence agencies could easily keep track of them; others went abroad as journalists, academics, businesspeople. But early on, writesGuardian international correspondent Walker, the "father of Russian intelligence," a man named Meer Trilisser, was putting "illegals," Soviet spies posing as natives of the countries in which they were working, to work. Trilisser himself, "posing as a specialist on Gothic architecture traveled to Berlin, ostensibly to attend an academic conference," but used the occasion to connect with an undercover agent. In time, writes Walker, "the Soviets were far ahead of their adversaries when it came to espionage," emboldened enough to begin to insert illegals, once almost exclusively male but eventually including women, into countries under cover so deep that their children didn't know they were spies. Such was the case with Don Heathfield (né Andrei Bezrukov) and Ann Foley (née Elena Vavilova), whom the FBI arrested in June 2010, posing as a married Canadian couple working in Boston, having taken their identities from real Canadians who had died in infancy. Elena/Ann styled herself as a soccer mom, "but once the kids were tucked away in bed, she crept into a back room and decrypted radio messages from Moscow." Both, working for first the KGB and then Russia's new SVR, were traded for Western spies imprisoned in Russia. There are surely more illegals out there, Walker concludes, especially since after Putin's invasion of Ukraine, "ordinary" Russians traveling abroad are subject to greater scrutiny than before.
A fast-paced tale of real-world spycraft that will have you wondering whether your neighbors are who they say they are.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 Kirkus Media LLC
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"Walker , Shaun: THE ILLEGALS." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Mar. 2025. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A828785069/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=b0d38bef. Accessed 25 Sept. 2025.