Major General

Oleg D. Kalugin retired


  • Retired KGB Major General

  • Former Chief, KGB Foreign Counterintelligence (Directorate KR)

  • Former Deputy Chief and Acting Chief, KGB Rezidency at Soviet Embassy

  • Youngest General in KGB History

  • Campaigned and was elected to the Soviet Parliament

  • Pro-Democracy Activist

  • Author, The First Chief Directorate: My 32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West

  • Professor, Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies

  • Advisory Board Member, International Spy Museum

Oleg Danilovich Kalugin is a retired Major General in the Soviet KGB. Born in Leningrad in 1934, his father was an officer in Stalin's NKVD. Oleg Kalugin attended Leningrad State University and was recruited by the KGB for foreign intelligence work, serving in the First Chief Directorate. Undercover as a journalist, he attended Columbia University in New York as a Fulbright Scholar in 1958 and then worked as a Radio Moscow correspondent at the UN in New York, conducting espionage and influence operations. From 1965 to 1970, he served as deputy rezident and acting chief of the Rezidency at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, DC. General Kalugin rose quickly in the First Chief Directorate, becoming the youngest general in the history of the KGB, and eventually he became the head of worldwide foreign counterintelligence (Line KR). Serving at the center of some of the most important espionage cases of his period, including the Walker spy ring, he quickly became known for his aggressive operational methodology.

 

General Kalugin's internal criticism of lawlessness, arbitrary rule, and cronyism within the KGB caused friction with the KGB leadership, and he was demoted to serve as first deputy chief of internal security in Leningrad from 1980 to 1987. He recalls that for the first time in his career, he saw that the KGB's internal functions had little to do with the security of the state, and everything to do with maintaining corrupt Communist Party officials in power. Kalugin retired from the KGB in 1990 and became a public critic of the Communist system.

 

Kalugin's vocal attacks on the KGB won him both notoriety and a political following. In 1990, Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev signed a decree stripping General Kalugin of his rank, decorations, and pension. General Kalugin then ran successfully for the Supreme Soviet, or "Parliament" of the USSR. From that post he continued his attacks on KGB abuses. Following the August 1991 putsch, General Kalugin became an unpaid advisor to reformist KGB Chairman Vadim Bakatin, who succeeded in the dissolution of the old state security apparatus, but had little time to reform it.

 

In addition to currently teaching regularly at The Centre for Counterintelligence and Security Studies, General Kalugin has taught at Catholic University and lectured throughout the country. He is also the Chairman of Intercon International, which provides information services for  businesses in the former Soviet Union. He contributes regularly to its Daily Report on Russia and the former Soviet Republics, and some other US publications. Since 1998, General Kalugin has been representing in the US The Democracy Foundation, headed by Alexander Yakolev, a former politburo member and close ally of Mikhail Gorbachev.

 

General Kalugin's autobiography, The First Chief Directorate: My 32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West, was published in September 1994 by St. Martins Press. He collaborated with former CIA Director William Colby and Activision to produce Spycraft: The Great Game, a CD-ROM game released in February 1996. General Kalugin has appeared in hundreds of television news shows and documentaries all over the world and played a cameo role as himself in the CBS-TV movie "Masterspy: The Robert Hanssen Story."

 

 


Travels from Washington, DC area

Speaking engagements in the Continental United States only


 

Short excerpt from Kalugin's book, The First Directorate: My 32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West 

 

"On a later trip (1979) with Vladimir Kryuchkov, this time to Czechoslovakia, I shared an unsettling--even melancholy--experience with the KGB director of intelligence. On a glorious summer day, our Soviet delegation traveled down the Danube on a Czech border patrol vessel. Not far from Bratislava, we disembarked and inspected the barbed wire barrier separating Czechoslovakia from Austria, 150 yards away. On the other side of the river, Austrian families picnicked along the riverbank. Children flew kites as parents unpacked food hampers and made campfires. It was a picture of idyllic contentment and peace. Silently, we stood on our side of the barbed wire, surrounded by watchtowers and dour Czech border guards with carbines. The contrast between the two scenes could not have been sharper, and I sensed that everyone in the Soviet delegation was thinking the same thing: They are the ones who are free and we are the ones in a prison camp. I'll never forget Kryuchkov's reaction. For a long time, he stared intently at the opposite bank. Finally, he muttered, "Hmmm.....well, yes....." I think he felt what the rest of us were feeling, but simply was unable to fathom the truth that our system was rotten through and through.

 


Oleg Kalugin Links

 

FBI and KGB Cold War Operations

CI Centre Professors David Major (ret FBI) and Oleg Kalugin (ret KGB) talk about their intersecting counterintelligence careers.

 

 

RFE/RL Profile of Kalugin 

 

CI Centre op-ed about Kalugin trial, 27 Jun 02

 

CNN "Cold War" series interview

 

CNN "Cold War" series "chat" with viewers re the Cold War

 

Aug 91: Photo of Kalugin under KGB surveillance

 

Photo of Kalugin for publication

 

Articles written by Kalugin:

4 August 2003

 


Sample Topics:

 

32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West

 

KGB Deception Operations

 

Russia Today

 

MORE TOPICS

 


Feedback:

 

"Fantastic speaker with great anecdotes and a lifetime of stories and experiences."

 

"Very charismatic and quite engaging!"

 

"Oleg is a one-of-a-kind briefer. I feel privileged to have hear him speak."

 

"Excellent presentation. He really captured my attention the entire time and his stories were amazing."

 

MORE FEEDBACK

 


Media Interviews Include:

 

TV & Radio:

-ABC News

-NBC News

-CBS News

-CNN News

-FOX News

-BBC News

-NTV News

-CBS 60 Minutes

-ABC Good Morning America

-C-SPAN

-NBC Dateline

-CNN Burden of Proof

-Local Washington, DC News

-National Geographic Inside Base Camp

-Australian Broadcasting

-Canadian Broadcasting

-Voice of America

 

Print:

-Washington Post

-New York Times

-Los Angeles Times

-Wall Street Journal

-USA Today

-Baltimore Sun

-Christian Science Monitor

-Associated Press

-Reuters

-AFP

-US News & World Report

-Newsweek

-Insight magazine

-People magazine

 

Numerous other national and international media

 

Technical Consulting/

Documentaries:

CBS Movie: Masterspy-The Robert Hanssen Story

 

Various History and Discovery Channel documentaries on spy cases

 

Various videos shown at the International Spy Museum

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