About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 87. Chapters: Kim Philby, Donald Maclean, Anthony Blunt, Guy Burgess, Ignace Poretsky, Richard Sorge, Wilfred Burchett, Atomic spies, Mark Zborowski, Walter Krivitsky, Aleksandr Mikhailovich Orlov, Cambridge Five, John Cairncross, Willi Munzenberg, Oleg Gordievsky, Nikolai Skoblin, Portland Spy Ring, Pavel Sudoplatov, Victor Louis, Dmitri Bystrolyotov, Konon Molody, Perlo group, Arnold Deutsch, Vasily Zarubin, Georges Agabekov, Karl Koecher, Manfred Stern, Vasili Mitrokhin, Ruth Greenglass, Kerttu Nuorteva, Hotsumi Ozaki, Nikolai Ivanovich Kuznetsov, Vladimir Pravdin, Rudolf Herrnstadt, Theodore Maly, Gheorghe Pintilie, Alfred Tilton, Eva Sandberg, Viktor Petrov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich Petrov, Gevork Vartanian, Elizabeth Zarubina, Pavel Fitin, Zhang Zhizhong, Robert Rene Kuczynski, Willi Lehmann, Semyon Semyonov, Iskhak Akhmerov, Reino Gikman, Gaik Ovakimian, David Crook, Kobulov, Ain-Ervin Mere, Melita Norwood, Armando Cossutta, Sam Carr, Yuri Modin, Perseus, Konstantin Volkov, Mikhail Koltsov, Boris Bazarov, Boris Bukov, Henri Pieck, Leonid Kvasnikov, Ursula Kuczynski, Kitty Harris, Yuri Shvets, Chen Han-seng, Lev Vasilevsky, Valeri Zentsov, Morris Childs, Evdokia Petrova, Jakob Rudnik, Yevgeni Ivanov, Goronwy Rees, Anatoly Zotov, Fedora, Gennadi Zakharov, Elena Miller, Valery Ivanov, Avenir Bennigsen, Adam Purpis, Artur Artuzov. Excerpt: Donald Duart Maclean (; 25 May 1913 Marylebone, London - 6 March 1983 Moscow) was a British diplomat and member of the Cambridge Five who were members of MI5, MI6 or the diplomatic service who acted as spies for the Soviet Union in the Second World War and beyond. He was recruited as a "straight penetration agent" (not a double agent) while an undergraduate at Cambridge by the Soviet intelligence service. His actions are thought to have contributed to the 1948 Soviet blockade of Berlin and...