Index and Concordance to Alexander Vassiliev’s Notebooks and Soviet Cables Deciphered by the National Security Agency’s Venona Project
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unclear if these are references to Julius Heiman and either his daughter Beatrice or Julia. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 76. Heiman, Beatrice: Daughter of Julius Heiman. Secretary to Soviet ambassador Konstantin Umansky in 1945. Heiman, Jacob: Member of the American Scientific Delegation to the Celebration of the Anniversary of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. Venona USA Diplomatic, 30. Heiman, Julia: Daughter of Julius Heiman and sister of Beatrice. Former wife of KGB agent Joseph Gregg. Contact of GRU illegal Arthur Adams. Employed by TASS. Heiman, Julius: Immigrant from Russian and a naturalized citizen. In the early 1920s Heiman, who worked in the jewelry business and was a secret Communist, converted Soviet subsidies that came in the form of jewelry into cash. Treasurer for the American bureau of the Profintern, 1920s. In the 1930s and early 1940s he undertook a variety of support tasks for GRU. Father of Beatrice and Julia Heiman. Heineman, Kristel Fuchs: Soviet intelligence contact and Communist. Sister of Klaus Fuchs, married to Robert Heineman and living in the United States. Cover names in Vassiliev notebooks: “Ant” and “D”. Cover name in Venona: ANT. As Heineman: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 112; Vassiliev
As ANT: Venona New York KGB 1945, 72–73; Venona Special Studies, 6. Heineman, Robert: Husband of Kristel Fuchs Heineman. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 71; Venona
“Heinrich” [Genrikh] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Unidentified KGB officer. References to in 1934. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 40. Heisenberg, Werner: Nobel prize laureate and head of the Nazi atomic bomb program. Venona Special Studies, 153. “Helen”: Party name of Helen Tenney. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 19. ———————————
63. Historian R. Bruce Craig identified Lee as likely the real name behind “Zero”.
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“Helen”: Unidentified work name of a Soviet agent known to Alexander and Helen Koral in the 1930s, possibly associate of the Rosenbliett network. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 81–82. “Helen”: Work name used by Elizabeth Zarubin. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 64, 91; Vassiliev White
Helfand, Lev Borisovich: Head of the KGB station in Rome who refused to return to Moscow in 1940 and fled to the United States. Also known as Leon Helfand, and Leon Moore. Venona New
Helfgott, Leo: Soviet intelligence source/agent. Helfgott was a medical doctor and cancer specialist. Cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Bubi”. As “Bubi”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 27, 34, 157; Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 82–83. “Hell” [Khell] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Floyd Cleveland Miller. Unidentified in Vassiliev’s notebooks but identified in Venona as Miller. “Hell” is described in Vassiliev’s notebooks as a Soviet intelligence agent who had infiltrated the American Trotskyist publishing house Pioneer Publishers. Miller was identified in the Venona decryptions as a Soviet agent engaged in anti-Trotsky work with a partially broken cover name “KHE..”, consistent with “Khell”– “Hell” in Vassiliev’s notebooks. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 176; Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 55. HELL (Russian original of a cover name in Venona): see “KHE..”, apartial decryption of KHELL – HELL. Helldiver: The Curtiss SB2C Helldiver was a carrier-based dive bomber aircraft of WWII. Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 85. Heller, Fred: Associate of Thomas Black, 1930s. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 99. Heller, Peter: Elizabeth Bentley romantic interest in 1945 whom she suspected (incorrectly) was a federal security agent. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 20–22, 24, 31. Hellman, Lillian: Prominent American writer and covert Communist. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 71–72.
“Hello” [Allo] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Solomon Adler (prior to “Sachs”, which appears in 1941). Vassiliev Black Notebook, 174. “Helmsman” [Rulevoy] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Earl Browder. Vassiliev Black
75–76, 121, 153–54; Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 1–5, 7–10, 15–18, 20, 29, 31, 35–39, 41–44; Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 18, 20, 23, 44–45, 67–68, 86; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 62, 64, 66, 77.
HELMSMAN [RULEVOY]: Earl Browder. Venona New York KGB 1943, 38, 72, 83, 221, 283, 285, 322, 363, 365; Venona New York KGB 1944, 14, 32, 42, 47, 113, 190, 219, 291, 344, 500, 549, 564, 581, 608–9, 694, 756; Venona New York KGB 1945, 6, 12; Venona Special Studies, 63. “Helmsman’s brother”: William Browder. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 189; Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 3; Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 38–39; Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 45; Vassiliev Yellow
“Helmsman’s line”: Agents, contacts, and networks derived from or connected to Earl Browder and the CPUSA. Also called the “fellowcountryman line.” Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 63. “Helmsman’s organization”: The Communist Party, USA. Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 68. “Helmsman’s sister”: Margaret Browder. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 189. Hemingway, Ernest: Soviet intelligence recruit, 1941–49. Popular American novelist. Cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Argo”. As Hemingway: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 81, 83, 89, 95;
Henderson, ?: Likely American diplomat Loy Henderson. Venona New York KGB 1943, 217. Henderson, Leon: Prominent government economist. Venona New York KGB 1944, 601–2.
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Henderson, Loy W.: Senior American diplomat and Soviet specialist in the 1920s and 1930s. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 179; Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 59, 63; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 38; Venona New York KGB 1943, 217. HEN-HARRIER [LUN'] (cover name in Venona): Cordell Hull. Venona New York KGB 1943, 356; Venona New York KGB 1944, 34, 51, 80–81, 118, 153, 156–58, 216–17, 426, 469, 471, 522, 649; Venona Special Studies, 43. HENRY [HENRI and HÉNRI] (cover name in Venona): Unidentified, associated with KGB activities in Mexico. Venona Special Studies, 184, 186–88. Henry, ?: Described as an American industrialist, 1965. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 152. “Henry Costin”: U.S. ship. Venona USA Naval GRU, 287. Henry, Count ?: Described as a “White” who worked on Soviet codes for anti-Bolshevik organizations. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 110. “Henry” [Genri] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): William Malisoff. Unidentified in Vassiliev’s notebooks but identified in Venona as Malisoff. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 113–14. HENRY [GENRI] (cover name in Venona): William Malisoff staring in October 1944.Venona New York KGB 1944, 543, 689, 697, 720; Venona Special Studies, 18, 176,. HENRY [GENRI] (cover name in Venona): Unidentified. Venona New York KGB 1944, 356. “Henry”: Party name of Harold Glasser. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 19. “Henry Richardson”: U.S. ship. Venona USA Naval GRU, 339, 350. “Henry”: Work name by which Julius Rosenberg knew “Twain”/Semenov. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 119–20.
Henwood, Darcy Wilfred: Engineer for Standard Oil. Venona San Francisco KGB, 50, 56. Herbert, Edward Joseph: Pseudonym used by Vasily Zarubin, 1934–1940. Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 133; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 11. Hercules Motors Corportation: Venona New York KGB 1944, 763–64. Hercules Powder Company: DuPont subsidiary, maker of explosives. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 68–69. “Herder”: See “Herdsman”. “Herdsman” [Pastukh] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Anton Nikunas, 1943. Vassiliev
Hering, Dorothy: Described as agent of Frank Prince of the Anti-Defamation League. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 97. Herman, ?: Identified as a GRU officer who confessed being a Trotskyist and German spy in the late 1930s. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 87. Hermann Goring Institute, Germany: Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 142. Hernandez, J: Venona analysts thought this a reference to Jesus Hernandez, a former member of the Spanish Republican government in exile in the USSR. Venona New York KGB 1944, 132. Hernig, ?: Described as head of the science division of the East German SED, 1960. Vassiliev Yellow
Hert or Herth, Henry L.: Soviet intelligence source/agent linked to the GRU. May be Henry L. Gert or Gerth. Venona New York KGB 1941–42, 46–47. Hertz, ?: Described as New York Commissioner of Docks in 1932. However, John McKenzie held the position at that time. Possibly a confusion with another Docks Commission official. Vassiliev
Hertz, Gustav: Nobel prize winning (1925) German physicist who worked on the Soviet atomic project after WWII. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 82. HERZOG: See GERTSOG. Venona New York KGB 1941–42, 33. Hess, H.H.: Prominent geologist. Venona New York KGB 1945, 140. Hess, Rudolf: Leading Nazi Party official who parachuted into Scotland in 1941 on a mysterious mission (possibly unauthorized by Hitler and attributable to Hess’s own mental confusion) to negotiate peace with Great Britain. He was imprisoned by British authorities. Tried for war crimes after WWII, he died in prison in 1987. Venona USA Naval GRU, 276.
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Hewellyn, ?: Likely a garble for Llewellyn. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 69. “Heywood Broun”: U.S. ship. Venona USA Naval GRU, 382. Hiat, Joseph: Earlier name used by Joseph Katz. Venona New York KGB 1944, 312. Hibben, James Herbert: Soviet intelligence source. Cover names in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Solid” until October 1944 and “Reed” in June 1945. 64 Cover names in Venona: SOLID [SOLIDNYJ], KINSMAN [RODSTVENNIK], and REED [RID]. As “Solid”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 27, 33, 49, 69, 101, 105, 107, 110–11, 114–17; Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 111. As “Reed”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 69, 114, 119, 135. As KINSMAN [RODSTVENNIK]: Venona New York KGB 1944, 542–43, 607 ; Venona Special Studies, 62, 68, 176. As REED [RID]: Venona New York KGB 1944, 628. As SOLID [SOLIDNYJ]: Venona New York KGB 1943, 319–20; Venona New York KGB 1944, 289, 542–43, 605–7; Venona Special Studies, 62, 68. Hickerson, John D.: Deputy Director, State Department Office of European Affairs (1944–47). Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 42, 149. “Hicks” [Khiks] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Guy Burgess. Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 124. HICKS [KHIKS] (cover name in Venona): Guy Burgess. Venona London KGB, 9, 20–21, 32. Hight: See Norman Hait. Hightower, John: Journalist. Venona New York KGB 1944, 601; Venona New York KGB 1945, 183. Hildebrand, J.H.: Prominent chemist. Venona New York KGB 1945, 139. Hildring, John: U.S. Army general and chief of the War Department Civil Affairs Division. Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 26. Hiliman, ?: Unidentified. Associted with Polish matters. Venona New York KGB 1944, 169. Hill Group: Informal term for secret CPUSA members who worked for the Congress on Capitol Hill.
Hillenkoetter, Roscoe: First director of the CIA, 1947–1950. Vassiliev Odd Pages, 19. Hillman, Sidney: CIO leader and political ally of President Roosevelt. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 37. Himmler, Heinrich: Head of National Socialist Schutzstaffel (SS) and chief of German police. Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 98–102; Venona New York KGB 1944, 470. Hindenburg, Paul von: German military leader in WWI, later president of the German republic at the time of Hitler’s rise to power. Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 98–99. Hirard, P.: Described as a secretary at the French embassy in Berlin and a contact of Martha Dodd in Berlin. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 47. Hirschfeld, Hans: Soviet intelligence source/agent. A German exile, Hirshhfeld was a consultant to the OSS on German matters. In the 1961 Robert Soblen trial former KGB courier Johanna Beker testified that she had picked up OSS information from Hirschfeld and delivering it to Soblen, her KGB superior. Hirschfeld, then an aide to the mayor of West Berlin, denied the allegation but refused to come to the United States to testify about the matter unless given total immunity. Immunity was denied, and he was forced to resign from his position with the mayor’s office. 65
Venona New York KGB 1945, 30. Hirshfeld, Samuel: California doctor. Venona San Francisco KGB, 68. ———————————
64. “James Herbert Hibben,” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 49,6 (1959), 196; Stuart G. Hibben, Aristocrat and Proletarian: The Extraordinary Life of Paxton Pattison Hibben (Tamarac, FL: Llumina Press, 2006).
65. New York Times, (14 October 1961), 10, (7 July 1961), 9 (4 November 1961), 11; Herbert Romerstein and Stanislav Levchenko, The KGB Against the “Main Enemy”: How the Soviet Intelligence Service Operates Against the United States (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 1989), 195–96; Haynes and Klehr, Venona [2000], 274.
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Hirschman, A.O.: Venona analysts thought this a reference to Albert Otto Hirschman, a refugee German economist who served with the OSS. After the war he became an influential economic advisor. Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 110; Venona New York KGB 1944, 525-26, 779. “Hirt” [Khirt] (cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks): Unidentified Soviet intelligence officer/agent who got a passport via Jacob Golos. Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 139. Hisey-Wolf Machine Company: Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 87. Hiskey, Clarence: Soviet intelligence source. Chemist and secret Communist working at the Manhattan Project facilities at the University of Chicago. The FBI observed Hiskey meeting covertly with a Soviet agent in 1944 and in response the Army activated his officer commission, removed him from the Manhattan project, and sent him to a remote base in Canada. 66 Cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Ramsay”. Cover name in Venona: RAMSAY and RAMSEY [RAMZAY]. As Hiskey: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 109; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 1–3. As “Ramsay”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 109, 112, 115, 136, 138; Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 116; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 1, 7–12, 23, 27–28. As RAMSAY and RAMSEY [RAMZAY]: Venona New York KGB 1944, 61, 315–16, 502–3, 702; Venona New York KGB
Hiss, Alger: Soviet intelligence source/agent. Government lawyer and senior American State Department official. Convicted of perjury in 1950 for denying cooperation with Soviet intelligence in 1938. 67 Cover names in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Jurist” (1936), “Ales” (1945), and “Leonard” (1948–1950). Cover name in Venona: ALES. Work name by which Harold Glasser referred to ‘Ales”/Hiss when communicating with KGB, “Bob”. As Hiss: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 51, 73, 77, 152 (misidentified as Robert Hiss, may be Donald Hiss); Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 57, 60, 78, 98, 118–19; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 4–5; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 79; Venona USA GRU, 130 (may be Donald Hiss). As “Jurist”: Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 4–6, 10; Venona Washington KGB, 20; Venona Special Studies, 124. As “Ales”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 50–51, 66; Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 57–58, 80, 98. As “Leonard”: Vassiliev Black Notebook, 77, 82. As ALES: Venona Washington KGB, 20; Venona Special Studies, 124. As “Bob”: Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 57. Hiss, Donald: Soviet intelligence source/agent. Government lawyer and mid-level American State Department official. Cover name in Vassiliev’s notebooks: “Junior” (1948). As Hiss: Vassiliev
that ? Hiss at Venona USA GRU, 130, described as a State Department official, was Alger Hiss. Donald, however, also worked at the DOS at that time. Hiss, Robert: Described as a State Department official with progressive views in 1938, likely an error for either Alger Hiss or Donald Hiss, the only Hisses at DOS at the time of the September 1938 reference to Robert Hiss. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 152. Hite: See Norman Hait. ———————————
66. U.S. House Committee on Un-American Activities, Report on Atomic Espionage: (Nelson-Weinberg and Hiskey-Adams Cases) (Washington: U.S. Govt. Print. Off., 1949); U.S. House Committee on Un-American Activities, Testimony of James Sterling Murray and Edward Tiers Manning Regarding Clarence Hiskey and Arthur Adams. Hearings, Eighty-First Congress, First Session. August 14 and October 5, 1949 (Washington: U. S. Govt. Print. Off., 1950), 877–99.
67. Allen Weinstein, Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case (New York: Random House, 1997); Tanenhaus, Whittaker Chambers; “Alger Hiss: Case Closed” in Haynes, Klehr, and Vassiliev, Spies, 1–31.
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Hitler, Adolf: Head of Germany’s Nazi regime. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 21, 23, 68, 150; Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 67, 99–101; Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 51, 67, 82–84; Vassiliev White Notebook #3, 124, 134–35; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 60, 66, 78, 97; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #2, 41; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 105; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 8, 97, 100, 111, 145; Venona New York KGB 1943, 136, 142, 244, 280; Venona New York KGB 1944, 168, 267, 446, 470; Venona USA GRU, 97; Venona USA Naval GRU, 109, 380; Venona USA
Hitlerjugend: Hitler Youth. White Notebook #1, 100–101. Hnizdo, Jaroslav: Unidentified. Venona USA Diplomatic, 15, 63. Ho Ying-Chin: Chinese Minister of War 1930 – 1944. Venona USA GRU, 68–69. HOARE [GOR] (cover name in Venona): Joseph Gregg. Unidentified by Venona analysts but identified in Vassiliev’s notebooks as Gregg. Venona New York KGB 1943, 207, 228, 276; Venona New York KGB 1944, 557. Hoettl, Wilhelm: Senior officer of the RSHA: Reichssicherheitshauptamt [Reich Security Main Office]. Vassiliev White Notebook #1, 103–5. Hoffman, Paul: Business executive and administrator of the Marshall Plan. Vassiliev Black Notebook, 71; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 87. Hogman, Captain ?: Soviet intelligence source/agent. Cover name in Venona: Source No. 22. Described as an officer in the OSS. As Hogman: Venona USA GRU, 113. As Source No. 22:
Hoinko, Tadeusz: Promient Polish American. Venona New York KGB 1944, 121, 167, 363. Holbrook company: Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #1, 99. Holcomb, General Thomas: Commandant of the United States Marine Corps (1936–1943). Venona USA Naval GRU, 338. Hol-d: Garbled name of someone described as a left influence on Helen Douglas. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 64. Hollis, ?: Senior British official in 1948 taking part in a Anglo-American planning session for the NATO treaty. Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #4, 149. Hollywood and the Hollywood movie industry. Vassiliev White Notebook #2, 75; Vassiliev Yellow Notebook #3, 4, 7–8, 11, 17–20, 24–25, 27–31, 43–44, 52, 56, 60, 63, 66, 68, 70, 105–6; Venona Download 5.57 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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