http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,810935,00.html

CIA Kremlin bug 'saved Gorbachev' 

The newly revealed exploits of spies who operated in underground tunnels 

Nick Paton Walsh in Moscow
Sunday October 13, 2002
The Observer 

The CIA dug a tunnel under the Kremlin and installed a hi-tech bugging
system to eavesdrop on the Soviet Union's most senior figures, according
to the former US intelligence officer who executed the plan. 
The device was put in by a US agent who had to wear a protective suit and
was guided by satellite and sonar images of Moscow's underground. The
bugging formed part of audacious operations to rescue a key defector, a
KGB officer with responsibility for eavesdropping, and to alert Boris
Yeltsin to the attempted coup against Mikhail Gorbachev. 
This wasn't part of the Cold War - the intrusion into the seat of Soviet
power occurred in 1989, when Washington and Moscow were trying to smooth
relations. 
'The stories about a five-level city beneath Moscow are true,' said Tony
Mendes, a former Moscow-based CIA technical officer, now retired. 'These
are tunnels from ancient times - Ivan the Terrible did a lot of digging
and torturing. But some of the tunnels were recently made.' 
An agent, whom Mendes refuses to say worked for the US government,
entered the tunnel system one night equipped with computer guidance
systems, air filters and maps. He negotiated the sewer and metro system
to reach tunnels running under the Kremlin. One of these passed directly
beneath the nerve centre of the 16th Directorate, the KGB's electronic
ears, which also dealt with state communications. 
That night Mendes was in the Kremlin theatre attending a performance of
the ballet Koppelia. The audience also included a US mole in the 16th
Directorate, 'Major Peter Leonov', and his wife. Two of the ushers were
CIA agents in disguise. 
When the Russian couple went to the toilet during the interval, they were
joined by the two agents, who donned disguises to make them look like
Leonov and his wife and returned to the couple's seats. The Leonovs, now
dressed as the ushers went to the service lifts. 
They went to a tunnel entrance to meet the subterranean agent. Leonov
then reportedly showed the agent where to plant the listening device in
the communication system. 
The Leonovs left the Soviet Union days later on a ferry from one of the
Baltic states. 
Mendes claims the eavesdropping device was instrumental in thwarting the
coup in August 1991, when Gorbachev was detained at his dacha by the
military. President George Bush Senior and Prime Minister John Major
called Yeltsin to urge him to stand up to the army. 
'How do you think they knew about all this?' said Mendes. However,
Russian moles in US intelligence betrayed Mendes's network. 
'For years we were mining high-grade gold,' he said. 'But things started
going awry in 1985. We thought we knew what the KGB was doing, but then
our group of 25 started being caught and executed. 
'This all had to do with Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen [Russian moles
in the CIA's Russia department and the FBI's intelligence unit], but we
did not find out until years later.' 


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