Em meados da década de 1970, a CIA e o KGB vigiaram de perto Karel Koecher, por ambas as agências de espionagem estarem convencidas de que ele trabalhava para o inimigo. E ambas tinham razão.
Acompanhado da sua mulher, Hana, Karel Koecher fez-se passar por candidato checoslovaco a asilo nos Estados Unidos da América, onde chegou como agente comunista infiltrado. Depois de conseguir transformar um doutoramento na Universidade Columbia num trabalho para a CIA, Koecher começou a operar como agente duplo no auge da Guerra Fria.
Nada preocupados com a discrição, os Koechers abraçaram a alta roda de Manhattan: cocaína, encontros de swing e grandes festas emblemáticas daquela época, com a sua atração pelo risco. Hana, que não era mais do que uma adolescente tímida ao chegar aos Estados Unidos, tornou-se uma sofisticada negociante internacional de diamantes que transmitia mensagens aos emissários de Karel. Cavalgando uma onda de euforia, os Koechers sentiam-se imparáveis. Mas tudo o que é bom acaba…
Baseado em documentos tornados públicos recentemente, em gravações de interrogatórios e em relatos extraordinários em primeira mão dos próprios Koechers, Cunningham reconstrói as suas vidas duplas e o final da Guerra Fria, num momento em que uma estranha neblina moral já não permitia saber com que finalidade se mantinha aquele conflito.
Benjamin Cunningham is a correspondent for The Economist. He covered Central and Eastern Europe for six years, and now writes about the wider Mediterranean region from Barcelona. In addition he contributes to The Guardian, The Los Angeles Review of Books, Aspen Review, Le Monde Diplomatique and is an opinion columnist for Sme, Slovakia’s main daily newspaper. He is a PhD candidate at the University of Barcelona.
I have no problem with the writing; it is the subject that lost me.
There were many agents during The Cold War. Plenty of double agents. Why pick this one?
As far as I can tell, the man never accomplished much. He traveled to the U.S. He reported back to the Czechs and the Soviets. ...and? Were any missions accomplished or thwarted because of him? Did anything result from his years traveling about?
Looked at as a case study in how Soviets treated their spies, or how they handled a difficult agent who had gone off on his own; sure. Interesting enough.
However, at the end, one is left to ponder that age old question: And?
The Liar by Benjamin Cunningham Karel Koecher, a Jewish mother, an Austrian father, born in 1934, and by the time he is 15 has lived through his mother’s wartime survival experience, his father’s hostility, and the brief period of contestible Czech politics post war until the many events of 1948….that set the stage for all that followed…The StB=Stasi keeps an eye on young Karel; from a French Lycee in Prague to Physics and Maths at Charles University to a Film degree… a tour guide to Prague. Meets American from Columbia University George Kline…. not the last Columbia connection he will make… able to talk about Kafka with his artiste new friends… goes to work at StB to clean up his own files….and requested to go to NY/DCto penetrate the CIA…. which he does!!! As Pedro/Tulian, Rino Wife Hana co-supports the life style as a diamond seller. The book is also a history of the cold war, and its crescendo like ending, in the ‘80s with the deaths of Brezhneve, Adropov and Chernenko and the interactions of the younger Gorbachev with the soon to be senile Reagan. Spying at the 92nd St Y; swinging on the East Side of Manhattan, FBI and CIA eventually arrested by FBI perhaps given up by his handler to them. Held for a year without trial and eventually on his initiative, traded for Natan Sharanksy. Final comment: StB was like a hyper empowered mutation of the DMV.
Not only a fascinating story about a contrarian spy, but also a supremely well-researched account of the Cold War, The Liar shows the murky reality of espionage in an illuminating and often highly entertaining way. The Spy follows Karel Koecher, a Czchoslovak spy with a troubled upbringing, as he is tasked with uncovering intelligence in the US during the Cold War, initially with a baffling lack of guidance or direction from his employers at the StB and KGB. Ben manages to contextualise Karel's personal journey through the ideological battle between the Soviet Union and the US and illustrate just how random, and sometime truly strange, this time period was. A fascinating read, filled with well-crafted characters and nicely interjected references from literature and cinema that adds surprising colour to the political elements of the story. Well-worth a read!
For those who grew up in the 70's this is a great book that no only reflect on the life of Karel Koecher and his wife lives as doube agents, but also reflects on the history of Czechoslovakia, the USSR (Russia) and the communists relationship with the USA. The book provides a very interesting insight to the recruitment of spys and the relationship between the two super powers.
Anyone interested in espionage or the history between the Soviet states and the USA should enjoy this book.
DNF. Read about half and the deeper into the book the less I liked it. What was interesting to me was all the Czech stuff. I lived in Prague for 3 years and recognized all the place names. The thing I knew nothing about was what happened after the Russians rolled their tanks into Prague and it tipped a balance in the eastern bloc. August 21, 1968.