The department’s ‘principal enemy’ was the United States, with Britain as a close second. …Department V…became known notoriously as the ‘wet affairs’ department for its proficiency in ‘liquidating’ targets.
The Defector is the story of a KGB Department V agent, Oleg Lyalin, who was sent to London in 1969 under the cover of a businessman specialising in the export and import of knitwear. He was in fact ‘one-part saboteur, one-part fashionista’, because his real role was to learn how to break the British people and their government through ‘the penetration and ultimate destruction of their central nervous system: their critical national infrastructure, ranging from their food supply warehouses to their electricity grids’.
His day-to-day job involved meetings with British textiles suppliers, managing his ‘agents’ (spies)…and socialising. He enjoyed going to pubs, bars, nightclubs and fine-dining restaurants; he was a big spender, a natty dresser and a dedicated womaniser.
When he finally defected, in 1971, he seemed not driven by ideology, or money, but rather by his messy private life. His estranged wife had begun to pose a serious threat to his career, telling KGB colleagues that he was a cheat, a liar, untrustworthy and disloyal to both his family and to the USSR. The threat of a recall to Moscow and ‘severe administrative action’ loomed. So he jumped, taking his Russian lover along with him.
And thereby created a pivotal event in the Cold War. As a direct result of his defection, more than 100 Soviet spies were expelled from the UK – and the formerly close relationship between MI5 and the CIA was broken.
In the past, MI5 would have requested CIA assistance with Lyalin’s debriefing. But the British agency was finding the CIA’s head of counterintelligence, James Jesus Angleton, increasingly paranoid and obsessed with the hunting down of ‘moles’ within both intelligence organisations – so they decided to go it alone. Good decision. It turned out that Lyalin had information that would discredit the CIA’s prize defector, Anatoly Golistsyn, reveal the CIA’s misguided approach to other genuine defectors and eventually end Angleton’s career.
The whole story is riveting, incredible, creepy and just a little mad. I was left wondering what kind of a life it was for Lyalin and his partner, Irena Teplyakova in the UK. They were never to go back to the Soviet Union, never to see their children. False identities for life, and probably always wondering whether they would be taken out by the ‘wet affairs’ department…
The Defector is a little out of my time frame, but it involves many familiar 1950’s players, like the notorious British spy Kim Philby and the CIA’s James Jesus Angleton. I keep telling myself that the NEXT book I write will require no research. Or minimal research. Or research that is really only fact checking after the first draft is done. It’s so easy to go chasing down multiple rabbit holes – and so enjoyable! – that I can put off the actual writing quite easily.











