Larry Watts afirma: Mihai Caraman a fost agent sovietic. O afacere cu homosexuali NATO si crime KGB pe teritoriul Romaniei
Caraman a fost unul dintre ofiţerii DIE care a continuat serviciul clandestin în slujba stăpânilor sovietici
Caraman a fost unul dintre ofiţerii DIE care a continuat serviciul clandestin în slujba stăpânilor sovietici
Larry L Watts: „With Friends Like These… The Soviet Bloc’s Clandestine War Against Romania” – „Cu aşa prieteni… Războiul clandestin al blocului sovietic împotriva României”
Larry L Watts: „With Friends Like These… The Soviet Bloc’s Clandestine War Against Romania”
The CIA’s document collection on the Wartime Statute sheds new light on Romania’s behavior during the latter Cold War
Larry Watts: By the time of its revolution Romania had been the target of hostile Soviet and Warsaw Pact disinformation and “active measures” operations
There are a number of problems with the current use of “evidence” regarding the presence or absence of Soviet (and Soviet bloc) “tourists” in Romania during the 1989 revolution. They…
The insertion of Soviet intelligence and military personnel in the guise of “tourists” was eminently plausible precisely because Moscow had done it many times before. The Soviets had even done it before in Romania. By 1989 the precedent of Soviet “tourism” for ulterior purposes was well established.
In my judgment as a teacher in this field, the three volumes will constitute a trilogy that should be required reading not only for historians of modern Romania but for any historian, political scientist, or intelligence analyst seeking to understand the internal Cold War dynamics of the Warsaw Pact and COMECON.
Scrisă cursiv, privind obiectiv realitatea, fără idei preconcepute, cartea lui Larry L. Watts, „Aliaţi incompatibili”, este un studiu de excepţie, un dar făcut de un străin istoriografiei române. Autorul şi editura RAO merită nu doar aprecieri, ci şi elogii, iar cartea ar trebui să se afle în biblioteca oricărui român.
Comintern agent Willi Münzenburg is credited with inventing the Soviet front organization and the “clubs of innocents” (or “useful idiots”) through which he manipulated unsuspecting Western opinion. In similar fashion Pacepa and company persist on running with the lie that Communist Romania during 1963-1989 was a Soviet Trojan horse and its independence a sham. That lie falls before overwhelming archival evidence to the contrary.