Moscow
Moscow is the capital of Russia and was the capital of the Soviet Union; as the seat of the KGB (and its successors) and the Communist Party Central Committee throughout the Cold War, it is the ultimate target or origin point for the majority of the intelligence operations documented in this vault.
Moscow is the capital and largest city of Russia, situated in the central European part of the country on the Moskva River. During the Cold War (1947-1991), Moscow served simultaneously as the capital of the Soviet Union, the headquarters of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and the seat of the KGB - the Committee for State Security that served as the Soviet Union's primary intelligence, counterintelligence, and internal security organization. As such, virtually every major intelligence operation documented in this vault either targeted Moscow's secrets, was conducted in reaction to Moscow's operations, or was a response to the perceived threat from Soviet power.1
KGB Headquarters
The KGB was headquartered at the Lubyanka, a building on Lubyanka Square in central Moscow that also housed the organization's internal prison. The Lubyanka was the administrative center of Soviet intelligence from 1920; the KGB's various predecessor organizations (Cheka, GPU, OGPU, NKVD, NKGB, MGB) were all headquartered at or adjacent to the same building. KGB operations directed from Moscow included: comprehensive programs to penetrate Western intelligence services (the Cambridge Five, Kim Philby, and others operated as Soviet assets); active measures campaigns to spread disinformation in Western media; and directorate operations that ran agents across Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Americas.1
Embassy Row and Moscow Rules
The American Embassy in Moscow, located on Tchaikovsky Street, was a primary KGB surveillance and penetration target throughout the Cold War. KGB "swallows" (female operatives) and "ravens" (male operatives) attempted to compromise Embassy personnel; technical penetration devices were found embedded in Embassy walls and furniture in multiple instances. The operational culture of the CIA Moscow station, operating under constant surveillance, developed specific tradecraft protocols known as "Moscow Rules" - the most stringent security practices in the agency's operational repertoire, used as a benchmark for extreme counterintelligence environments.2
Mikhail Gorbachev and the End of the Cold War
Moscow's political evolution under Mikhail Gorbachev's glasnost and perestroika reforms (1985-1991) produced the conditions for the Cold War's end. The Soviet coup attempt of August 19-22, 1991, launched against Gorbachev by hardliners, failed when military units refused orders to fire on protesters surrounding the Russian parliament (White House) building. The Soviet Union formally dissolved on December 25, 1991; Moscow became the capital of the Russian Federation. The KGB was dissolved and its functions distributed among successor agencies including the FSB (Federal Security Service) and SVR (Foreign Intelligence Service).1
STARGATE and Moscow Signal
Moscow is indirectly present in this vault's parapsychology subjects. The STARGATE PROJECT's most significant early remote viewing test - Pat Price's 1974 description of a Soviet military facility at Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan - was directed at Soviet military infrastructure. The Moscow Signal (the Soviet microwave irradiation of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow from 1953 to 1976) generated CIA research into the health and potential psychological effects of microwave radiation that intersected with the agency's broader interest in psychotronic research.2
Sources
- "Moscow," Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/place/Moscow ↩
- Baer, Robert. The Company: A History of CIA. Crown, 2007. ↩
Hidden connections 4
Entities named in this page's prose without an explicit wikilink — surfaced by scanning for known titles and aliases.
Local network
Moscow's direct connections. Click any node to navigate, drag to pan, scroll (or pinch) to zoom. + 2‑hop expands the neighborhood one level further.
An interactive diagram of Moscow's connections, drawn on a canvas and explored with a pointer. The same connections are listed as links in the Connected and Mentioned-in sections below.
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Mentioned in 57
- PersonAlan Bond
- PersonAldo Moro
- PersonAldrich Ames
- PersonAlisher Mukhitdinov
- PersonAnatoli Golitsyn
- PersonAndrei Soshnikov
- OrganizationCentral Intelligence Agency
- PersonChe Guevara
- ConceptCold War
- EventCuban Missile Crisis
- PersonDonald A. Myers
- PersonEduard Naumov
- PersonEdward Snowden
- PersonEnrico Berlinguer
- PersonErich Honecker
- ConceptExtrasensory Perception
- PersonGeorge Blake
- PersonGeorge Kennan
- EventHungarian Revolution
- PersonImre Nagy
- OrganizationIron March
- PersonIsabelle Pettie
- OrganizationItalian Communist Party
- PersonJames Jesus Angleton
- PersonJanos Kadar
- OrganizationJohn Curtin Foundation
- PersonJohn H. Stitcher Jr.
- PersonJosef Cardinal Mindszenty
- PersonJoseph Stalin
- ConceptKH-11
- PersonKim Philby
- EventKorean War
- PersonLeon Goure
- OrganizationLockheed Aircraft Company
- PersonMarion Pettie
- PersonMarkus Wolf
- OrganizationMI5
- OrganizationMisanthropic Division
- EventMoscow Signal
- PersonMoshe Dayan
- PersonNikita Khrushchev
- ConceptOstpolitik
- OrganizationPergamon Press Trust Fund
- ConceptPrecognition
- PersonRichard Babayan
- PersonRichard Helms
- PlaceRussia
- ConceptRussian Cosmism
- OrganizationThe Finders
- ConceptU-2 Spy Plane
- PlaceU.S. Embassy in Moscow
- PersonWalter Stoessel Jr.
- PersonWalter Ulbricht
- PlaceWest Germany
- PersonWilliam Burns
- PersonWilliam Harvey
- PersonYuri Nosenko