The Rest Is Classified - 49. The Man Who Tried To Kill The KGB: A Traitor in the Kremlin (Ep 1)
Episode Date: May 25, 2025The Cold War may have ended, but the hunt for dangerous secrets never truly stops. What happens when a disillusioned KGB archivist decides to betray his masters? How did he manage to steal masses of t...op-secret files from the heart of the Soviet Union? And what did the CIA miss that MI6 was able to seize? This is the incredible story of Vasily Mitrokhin, a man with a "profound, even spiritual hatred" for the KGB he served. For years, he meticulously copied secret documents, turning a hidden archive into a weapon against the very "beast" he believed was destroying Russia. His daring escape and the treasure trove of secrets he brought with him would shine a light on the KGB's global operations for decades. Join Gordon and David as they unravel the true tale of a man who risked everything to expose the deepest secrets of one of the world's most feared intelligence agencies. ------------------- To sign up to The Declassified Club, go to www.therestisclassified.com or click this link. To sign up to the free newsletter, go to: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Pre-order a signed edition of Gordon's latest book, The Spy in the Archive, via this link. Order a signed edition of David's latest book, The Seventh Floor, via this link. ------------------- Email: classified@goalhanger.com Twitter: @triclassified Assistant Producer: Becki Hills Producer: Callum Hill Senior Producer: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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The sky was heavy with storm clouds as a yellow minibus with a Baltic Tours sign painted on the
side pulled up by the docks at Klaipeda.
A sharp-eyed observer on that afternoon of 7 November 1992 might have realized they were
not the only ones watching as an odd collection of characters disembarked.
Hovering at the edges were a group of tough-looking figures, bulges beneath long coats tracing
the shape of weapons as they scan the decaying industrial
docks on Lithuania's Baltic coast for trouble.
The fact that this was the 75th anniversary of the revolution that led to the creation
of the Soviet Union was not a coincidence.
A suave, rakish, well-dressed man with graying hair seemed to be directing events.
Another man, heavier-built, wearing glasses, a blue scarf, and a long trench coat seemed to be helping. But then something seemed to go wrong. There was shouting. Watching
events unfold, a wiry older man was the calm center of a storm. He did not appear anxious or nervous,
not even as the limp body of another man was slung over his shoulder. For him, the steps from the
minibus to the waiting boat might be dangerous, but they represented the culmination of his life's journey.
He carried with him a warning that he believed the world needed to hear and a weapon with
which to do battle.
At that moment, he believed he was finally about to slay the beast that had preyed upon
his country and inhabited his nightmares.
Well, welcome to the Rest is Classified.
I'm David McCloskey.
And I'm Gordon Carrera.
And that brilliant piece of prose,
worthy of a spy novel, if I do say so myself,
comes from the pen of none other than Gordon Carrera.
And it is exceptional, Gordon.
It is also my audition to read the audio book.
Too late.
Too late. I've already done it. You're already doing it. But that is the opening from your new book, Gordon. It is also my audition to read the audio book. Too late.
Too late.
I've already done it.
You're already doing it. But that is the opening from your new book, Gordon, The Spy in the
Archive, How One Man Tried to Kill the KGB. It's out in a few weeks in the UK. It is absolutely
brilliant and it is the subject of the next few episodes here on The Rest is Classified.
That's right.
And it's very unlike us to plug our own books, isn't it?
It's very out of character.
We, of course, we never do this.
Barely mentioned yours.
We barely mentioned, what was it?
Fifth floor, sixth, seventh floor, wasn't it?
Yep.
Seventh floor, seventh floor.
Out now and higher back.
Wherever you get your books.
That's right.
So you have a book coming out and we're going to tell that story today.
It is the story of Asli Matrokin. I forget the pronunciation right?
Yeah, that's pretty good. That's pretty good. Okay.
Some people say Matrokin, but I've been told Matrokin is the better version of it. Who
was he? Well, he was the senior archivist of the KGB's Foreign Spy Service, an interesting character, but also
a man who developed a profound even spiritual hatred for the very organization that he worked
for, the KGB, and who set out effectively to destroy it.
And he did so by stealing their deepest secrets, even those who will come to him.
He wasn't your typical spy.
And then with the help of MI6, the British Secret Intelligence Service, crying for escape. The nexus of the British Secret Intelligence Service and Russians, we've hit all of the squares on your
bingo card, haven't we, Gordon? Yeah, within a few minutes, the first few minutes. And we're
going to get to the CIA soon. So don't worry, you won't get left out of this story. So Matrokin had stolen the secrets at the heart of the KGB's Foreign Spy Service,
details of undercover agents, operations around the world, some of their most secret,
deep cover spies.
And he would, I think, become one of the most consequential spies of recent decades, because what he had uncovered, what he would hand over,
would really shine a light on what the KGB had been up to four decades around the whole world.
So from India to America, Australia to Africa to Britain itself, going back decades. And his name
might be a bit familiar to people interested in the spy world
because in 1999 a book came out which had details from his files and showed really the scale of
what he was revealing and that there'd never really been a compromise of secrets quite like
it. But what no one has revealed before, and what I try and do in the book is tell the story of the man himself, who he was, how he
did it, why he did it, and I think most remarkably, how he escaped. That scene that you read from so
beautifully in your audition for the audiobook at the start, it's really the first time that that
part of the story has been told. This story in Lithuania of first how he approached the British,
and then how we got out.
Much of it has actually been clouded in mystery, maybe even misdirection, going back for decades,
I think. I was disgusted to find out that you had already booked yourself to read the audiobook. So
my audition is far too late. I mean, we're talking about a spy in the archives. And I think
we tend to think they have access to military secrets.
I'm thinking of friend of the pod, Adolf Tolgachev, who we did a series on a few months ago, who
had access to basically advanced aeronautical designs and engineering work inside the Soviet
establishment. Or you think of actual KGB line staff officers who are running assets who might get recruited
themselves. But Matarovkin is actually maybe far more sort of deadly as a spy because he
is quite literally got his hands on all of these documents, right? I mean, he's got the
official record of first chief directorate spying outside of the Soviet Union. I mean, it's an absolutely
exceptional haul for a spy service to get its hands on.
That's right. And I think that's one of the reasons why he's so important. But the other
one is that it's a story which is both about what the KGB had done during the Cold War,
and which he's going to reveal, but also it's about more than just history. Because one
of the things that I think makes Mitrokin so important is that he was also explaining how the KGB had worked and could see and warn that even
though the Cold War had ended effectively in 1991, that actually something of the past and of the
KGB's ideology had persisted. And he, as we'll come to, I think later, was warning that actually the force that drove
the KGB was still there, had survived and persisted, particularly in the form of Vladimir
Putin.
And so, Metrockin was actually also offering a warning about the future and about the world
we're in today. And it's one which I
think almost everyone at the time failed to understand. I think that's one of the other
reasons why he is actually a much more important figure than people have previously understood.
So we've got spy secrets of the highest order. We have really a daring, very human spy story here
about the family, which we'll talk about here. This is really a family
story as well. So I think it's got a little bit of everything. And of course, we are going to
declassify most of your book here on the podcast. But I will just again note this book is fantastic,
go out and get a copy. So I mean, Gordon, where should we start? I think maybe we go back to Lithuania
in November of 92 and pick up on my beautiful reading that kicked this all off.
That reading was about the moment, the dramatic moment in which Metropkin is going to escape.
But if we go back just a few months before that to the start of the year and
to March, there's a moment where an old man walks up to the British Embassy in Vilnius and knocks on
the door. He's about 70 years old, he's got a small moustache, he's wiry though, quite fit,
but at this point he's dressed almost like a tramp in pretty shabby clothes, and he's pulling along with him a grubby
bag on wheels. The whole idea of how he looks is deliberate to look almost like a tramp because he
doesn't want to draw attention to himself, partly because of what's inside that bag. And he's fearful
because he's a former KGB officer and he knows Russian intelligence are still active in Lithuania,
and if they find him, he's in trouble. But he's walking up to the British embassy, and he's what's known in the trade as a walking.
We covered a bit in the Tolkachev series, this idea of walk-ins. I mean, essentially,
he's a volunteer. No one has tried up to this point, as far as we know, to recruit him. He is
offering his services to the British state. And what I think is really fascinating about walk-ins
is they tend to be some of the most valuable assets that spy services run. Because you think
about how hot the interior fire would have to be burning for somebody to take a former KGB officer to go outside of Russia and reach out cold to another secret service,
he's committed by definition. So he's walking in, he hasn't been bumped, he hasn't been developed,
and he's potentially in league with some of these other really important walk-ins that have kind of
framed Cold War spy history. That's right. But the thing is, it isn't the first time he's walked into an embassy,
because the Brits were not his first choice. Amazing as it is for me to admit that someone
wouldn't choose Britain as your first choice. What had he done? He'd already tried the
Americans. And I'm afraid he'd been turned down.
He'd been turned away. He wasn't fit for duty. The entire record of the KGB's first
chief directorate, I guess we said no. And I guess it is also, again, to harken back
a bit to the Tokachib series. I mean, there's a track record here of the CIA turning Russian
volunteers away, right? With some good reason, but this is maybe not abnormal, maybe even
less abnormal after the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 90s.
No, that's right. And he'd actually tried multiple times in both Riga in neighboring Latvia, as well as in Vilnius, to go to the Americans.
And he'd been turned away. He'd arrived in these Baltic states just as the Soviet Union had been broken up.
And they were new embassies, which both the US and the UK had set up
in these countries, very small. So one of the CIA people does take him seriously, but that CIA officer,
I'm told, from speaking to people at the time, was about to move on to his next posting. So he said,
come back in a few weeks, I'll leave notes for the next person to look at. But when Metrockin comes
back a few weeks later, this next person looks at him and sees what looks like a tramp with a shopping cart, and basically just dismisses him. And so,
you know, the extent to which he's dressed down to avoid drawing attention seems to have really
worked against him in that case. He might have anticipated that. You might have worn something
underneath the tramp disguise to be able to seem more suave as he's talking
to these Americans.
Another thing to say is it is the context of the time because 1992, the Soviet Union
just collapsed in 1991.
Russia is plunging into economic crisis and there is actually a lot of KGB or former KGB
officers who are trying to offer themselves up to the Americans.
I mean, there was this line that came up, which was another drunk KGB Colonel.
And that was the joke that the CIA officers had at the time, was like, here comes another one,
after a million dollars and a house in Florida resettlement.
So they're getting a lot of these chances and also occasionally dangles,
which are people who are being offered up to smoke out CIA officers,
I guess, and to send them down wild goose chases. So there's tensions within the bit of the CIA,
which deals with Russia, which is known as Russia House, isn't it?
Yes. Yes. And funnily enough, Russia House, so it's obviously the name of the Le Carre novel,
which I believe came out in the late
eighties.
And it wasn't called Russia House.
Like Le Carre didn't hear that from inside either CIA or SIS.
I mean, he made up the name.
And then my understanding is that the CIA officers at the time, I believe it was called
CE division, said, oh, that's cool.
And basically started to call it Russia House colloquially,
right? So Russia House doesn't appear on the org chart, my understanding, but it's how officers
who work on Russia would refer to the group. Yeah. And it's same at MI6. And then at this time,
Russia House, the CIA has got a new boss or it's had one around the end of the Cold War,
91, a guy called Milt Bearden, a swaggering Texan type.
He'd run the secret war in Afghanistan, arming the guerrillas to fight the Soviet Union.
And he'd been sent in partly deliberately to clear the old guard out with the view that the Cold War
was ended. So he'd sent out a message which said to hold off recruiting new agents whilst he tried
to build a relationship with the Russians. There's a message which one CIA officer
remembers receiving, this is how they described it to me, we are cancelling them as their primary
target as their dicks are in the dirt. We will get everything we need from liaison. And that was
how they remember Milt Bearden's message going out. I guess your dick being in the dirt means you're...
Well, I guess you're lying there, or it's been severed, I suppose. In either case, it's bad.
I guess there's the context here of the liaison comment
is interesting because the Russian services
are so inward looking and weak at this point
that they're not much of a threat or this is the perception
and you're meeting with these trunk KGB colonels
during liaison discussions in Moscow,
the idea of paying somebody to commit espionage, you know, maybe
you just say, well, we'll save the money and the time and the energy, right? And I suppose
this is also happening at a point in time where the extent to which there will be real
democratic change in Russia, real political change in Russia, and a new way of the US
dealing with Russia is also very much up in the air. Right. So you can
kind of make some sense of it. Although it does seem like if someone's shown up to
volunteer their services, you might still give them a listen, even if they're dressed
like a hobo.
But they don't.
But they don't.
But they don't.
So for that reason, Vyatrokin then turns up at the British Embassy in March. Being there,
it's a kind of quite grand building, just on the edge of town, big stone lion looking
down on you as you walk up the steps, he
rings the bell, receptionist opens the door, he wants to see a diplomat. What he gets is a young
woman in her 20s. And he's actually quite disappointed at this because he thinks, well,
kind of young woman, she's not going to be a serious player. She's not a spy. She's a diplomat.
Some nice KGB chauvinism there on display. It was a bit. But crucially, she's a Russian speaker, and she's smart. And so she has to
make that quick instant decision, is this person, this kind of tramp-like person, someone she should
take seriously? And she does that most British of things. She offers him a cup of tea.
Which I love that detail, because I think she clearly thinks,
okay, I'm going to give this guy the time of day and a cup of tea.
But it's quite an interesting exchange because she gives him a cup of tea and he gives her
some of the KGB's most deepest secrets because he kind of reaches into his grubby bag, rummages
around, there's clothes, sausages, some bread.
Sausages.
Sausages because I think part of his cover story is that they're hard to get hold of
in Russia, I guess, but at the bottom of the files.
And he pulls them out.
Now, the crucial thing is, it's not immediately obvious what they are, because they are not
original KGB files.
So they haven't got the kind of markings to suggest they're official documents.
Which I guess would explain some of the skepticism on maybe our services part and yours.
It's just that they're not the originals, very hard to verify them immediately.
Exactly.
So it's hard to be sure what they are.
But the diplomat, who's a Russian speaker, can see that they look like they might be
some of the deepest secrets of the KGB.
Well, and maybe there with Matraken about to hand over the crown jewels.
Let's take a break and when we come back, we'll see how he did it and why.
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But welcome back. Vasily Matrukhin, the spy in the archive, has reached out to not the Americans, but the Brits. He has met with
a British diplomat and he has begun the process of handing over this archive.
That's right. At this point, interestingly enough, he's not given his real name. He actually says
he's called Yurisov. It's a false name's using. And he also tells the woman that he's got
to get back to Moscow on a train in a few hours time, but he says he can come back in a few weeks
with more material. Now once he's left, the woman goes to talk to her ambassador. They agree they
need to inform London. One of the challenges is this embassy is so new, they don't actually have
a secure line in the embassy. So she's going to have to go to Berlin to send it. I mean, it's that small. It's a half dozen people. They hadn't even done like the
electrical plumbing work to even get a secure line set up at that point. That's wild. Yeah,
it is that early. So eventually that message gets to London and it clatters out of a teleprinter
in London at a place called Century House. Great name. It name and it was a great building because this was the
headquarters of MI6 at that time. People now remember this place called Vauxhall Cross,
which is the current headquarters and Vauxhall Cross, sometimes known as Lego Land, because
that's how some people think it looks. Whereas Century House was in Lambeth and it was actually
quite an old and quite crubby block, which people who worked in there
joked would not have looked out of place in the Soviet Union.
So if you think a slightly kind of brutalist concrete block.
And I think this is also a time when MI6, a bit like the CIA, is undergoing a bit of
an identity crisis because the Cold War, which defined it for so long, had just ended. And here in Russia House, MI6's version of the team dealing with Russia,
they're also kind of trying to cope with the fact that they had been before the top dogs in MI6.
They were the ones with the deepest secrets.
And now everyone is kind of wondering, A, what MI6 is for these days.
People used to kind of ask that.
And B, do we still need to spy on the Russians in the same way as the past?
So it's a disorienting time, I think, for MI6 and Century House.
But they get this message that a man has walked in in Vilnius.
There's a discussion about it.
Some people think he is a dangle.
In other words, he's been sent there by the Russians deliberately to play with them, to
flush them out.
The paranoia is fascinating, isn't it?
And I think it's with a decent amount of justification too, that this is how the Russian
services behave.
So even though the entire state has collapsed and Russians are basically growing their own
potatoes for sustenance amid the sort of absolute economic collapse of the 90s, the idea that
there's still KGB officers who were
like, you know, it'd be great, a good idea. Let's dangle this archivist in front of the British
service just to mess with them. But these are the conversations that are going on, right? It's the
mindset. It's amazing. Yeah, it is. But they decide he's worth checking out at the very least. So
they're going to dispatch a team to the Baltics when he returns in April. Now, who do you send on a mission like this?
It's interesting, isn't it?
Because if you think it might be a dangle, you don't necessarily want to send out newbie officers,
recently trained, clean skins who the Russians might not know who they are,
and blow their cover effectively.
So instead, they send a pair who I call the odd couple,
for reasons which have become clear in the book, I think, particularly. But let's call them James and Robert.
Real names. Yeah.
Not real names.
Last names and driver's license numbers in the show notes.
Fortunately, not.
Are they long time like Russia hands inside MI6?
They're really interesting characters. So James is a veteran
officer, and he's been around the block. He's now in his 50s.
He's pretty worldly wise. He spent most of his career hunting
Russians in various parts of the world trying to recruit them,
trying to spy on them. That's James. Now Robert, the other one,
is a really unusual character. He's actually one of the most
unusual characters I've ever come across. One of the reasons is he's technically not an MI6 officer, but technically an agent. And even
more surprisingly, he's actually Russian. He was born and grew up in the Soviet Union, and had come
to Britain and ended up working with MI6 as an, effectively an agent, but who they are using on multiple operations
because of his effectively pretty unique skill set and understanding. I mean,
that's pretty unusual, isn't it? I mean, I don't know how often you've heard about that happening
on the American side. It is unusual, though not unprecedented. And in fact, the CIA has a name for
that sort of officer, which I was actually not allowed to print
in one of my books.
It was one of the redactions that they forced me to make.
But essentially, I guess what we're describing here is
the typical model would be there's an intelligence officer
who's let's say the Brit,
and then there's the asset or agent who's Russian.
And this is a kind of middle ground individual, I guess,
who kind of blurs the distinction
between those two roles in some ways,
where it's essentially a foreign born individual
who's got a foreign passport,
but who effectively acts as a staff officer
for the intelligence agency that they're working with or for.
You can see why it's very appealing
and interesting for
an intelligence agency to have these people because they are more vetted, more trusted than
your typical agent, but they have all of the sort of documentation and experience and cultural and
linguistic skills that the agents might have too. So it's a very interesting and very valuable
type of person. And this pairing had worked together quite a bit around that time. And one
person described Robert, this Russian, as having effectively what they described as a superpower,
which was that they could meet someone and they could smell or tell on meeting them, as they put
it, if the person in front of them was for real or not,
and whether they were KGB or not. That's how it was described to me, is they could just tell
from the aura someone gave off and the body language, whether they were really a spy and
someone who'd worked for the KGB. That's the kind of thing which only comes from experience, because
I think in this case, Robert had had plenty of run ins and knew quite a lot about the
KGB. Yeah. And so has that instinctive understanding of who
someone might be and whether they're telling the truth or
not. So you can see the value of that as an asset.
This made me think and I assume you're not familiar with the
show. It's always sunny in Philadelphia, Gordon.
There's an episode in which two of the characters write a terrible movie script about a
detective who can smell crime. Like he can actually smell it in his nose. And that's when I first read
this in your notes, I thought of that because it is really truly a superpower. But I guess you're
right that if you have spent your adult life basically flying out to meet with Russians, and some of whom are probably
dangles and some of them work for the KGB, you'd be much harder
to fool someone like James.
Robert the Russian.
Robert the Russian. Sorry. The codenames you gave them are very
Anglo. So I got them confused.
They are very Anglo. There's a reason. So the two of them are
going to be dispatched. They'll go out and meet this old man in April.
First couple of days when they're there, he fails to show up. Finally, he walks back into
the embassy in Vilnius. Robert uses this superpower. I don't know whether he literally
takes a sniff of him, but he says... He smells the sausages in his bag.
He smells the sausages. And he goes, this guy is for real. And instantly decides he's not a chancer.
But they also get the sense, I think, right at the start that he's going to be hard to
handle this person, this guy who's still calling himself Yurasov.
Lots of strange things about him.
He doesn't want to talk at that point exactly how he was able to get hold of this information
and why he's doing what he's doing.
He's quite evasive, but he reveals for the first time that his name is Vasily Matrokin. And he says that
for decades he was the archivist of the first chief directorate of the KGB, which we should say
is the KGB was a huge institution in the Cold War and it included domestic security and lots of other
code breaking all came under the guise of the KGB, but the first chief directorate were the elite foreign spies. They were the equivalent of the CIA or MI6 within the KGB, and he was the archivist for them
for decades. So he's saying he's stolen their secrets, but it's this interesting question.
How do you steal a library? How do you steal an entire archive of secrets without anyone noticing,
and of the most secret secrets in the world, and to do it in a way where no one seems
to notice the files are missing. I mean it's one of the fascinating things about Metrukin is both
why he does it but how he does it and how he got there is a really interesting story. It's a
complicated mixture I think of grievance and ideology, grievance because he'd been a proper
foreign spy posted abroad but but his postings,
which include Israel and Australia in the early Cold War, had gone wrong. And so he was banished
effectively to the belly of the KGB, the Lubyanka, this famous headquarters in Moscow, the building,
and been sent there to work on the archives, effectively as punishment for having
failed as a foreign spy. I mean, that's where he was sent. And so you can see why, initially,
there is a sense of disappointment and grievance that's there for him.
It is also kind of fascinating that the idea is let's take our failures and give them the
most wide-reaching access in the organization, right, to all the paper, which I guess gives you
some sense of the idea being that these
people are so sort of maybe bumbling and incompetent and irrelevant, like what
damage could they possibly do?
It also made me think of Molly Duran and slow horses.
Like the people in the archives are always a little bit strange.
You maybe don't join an intelligence service to sit in the archives, right?
And so you do end up, I suppose,
with a group of people who have not cut it, typically, in their line jobs, for which they
might have interviewed and joined. I mean, do we know when he was in Israel and Australia, was he
actually at fault for what happened? Or was he just not cut out for the job to begin with?
I think people realize he is not a natural
foreign intelligence officer.
He is not someone who is naturally good
at the cocktail party chat and sidling up to people,
nor is he very good at office politics.
He's not very good with his colleagues.
He's seen as kind of grumpy,
a bit argumentative, a bit difficult.
He doesn't kind of play the game very well.
And so they think to themselves,
where can we get rid of him?
We'll put him in the archives.
And it is going to be the most damaging personnel decision,
I think, in intelligence.
The KGB ever made.
Right.
Yeah, that's for sure.
Because when he's in the archives, he's not just angry,
but he also starts to see over the years what's in the files.
And he starts to read the files and absorb what's in the files.
And there's this interesting interplay
between events which are taking place in the outside world, things like the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia in 1968, when
the Soviet Union ends up crushing a moment at which there looks like there'll be more freedom
under communism. And at the same time, he's seen those events in the outside world and reading in
the files what the KGB is up to at that time, and in other ways that it's repressing the people of the Soviet Union and spying on its own people.
And I think this transforms his character. But over a period of years, I mean, really years, it's not a quick, instant thing.
How long is he in the archives for in the end?
Decades. So effectively from 1956 to 1984. So I've been decades, I mean, most of his
life. And it's interesting because he, he's a very introverted character. That makes sense. All
those years in the archives, even if you're not naturally an introvert, I suppose all the years
with the paper is gonna make you one. And being seen quite dismissively, I think, by the other
KGB officers. But in his own mind, of course, he becomes the hero of his own story, as all spies do.
And he particularly sees himself, in I think semi-mystical terms, as like a peasant hero from Russian folk stories.
And he actually develops this quite spiritual, mythical idea that he is actually fighting a beast. And he actually visualizes what he's fighting and his enemy is a beast,
a kind of dragon or a hydra with three heads, which are the Communist Party,
the elite, the nomenclatura of the Soviet Union.
And finally, most importantly, the KGB and its spies.
And he sees this beast as effectively
feeding off the nation of Russia and destroying it.
And he starts to see his own mission as being the hero from the folk stories who is going
to try and slay this beast.
So you can see these kind of quite odd ideas are swirling around in his brain, which I
guess is, I mean, to be a spy or to get involved in this kind of work, to do the kind of things
he's doing, you've got to be perhaps slightly odd.
Yeah, I think you're not.
The psychology is off with most people
who eventually volunteer.
I also will note for listeners of the pod
that we have yet another example
of Gordon Carrere's affinity
for a son-deprived committer of espionage, right?
So there's a theme there.
There's very much a theme here because I do not picture Matrakan as having a nice tan. I picture
him as being quite pasty. He's working in the archives for the KGB's first chief directorate.
I always think of the first chief directorate as being out in the Yatsen-Evo and the woods outside
Moscow, which is eventually where the SVR has its
headquarters. But of course, that wasn't always the case. And
so in the early 70s, this kind of real estate move, I guess
creates another opportunity for him.
That's right. So until 1972, the first chief directorate has been
in the Lubyanka with the rest of the KGB in the centre of Moscow
in this quite famous building. And that's where Matrokin has been working literally in the basement in the rest of the KGB in the centre of Moscow in this quite famous building. And that's
where Metrokhin has been working literally in the basement, in the basement, which is where the
prison cells used to be as well. So it's not a particularly nice place. It's a kind of dark place.
But now in 1972, as you said, they're moving to this place, Yasenov, which is known as the forest
or the woods, and they're going to have to move their files. And so at this point, Metrokken is one of those few archivists responsible for overseeing the move of the files. So his job
is going to be to weed them effectively, to go, these ones can be destroyed, these ones we need
to keep, these ones we'll seal up and we'll move. And at this point, that gives him the opportunity
to forge the weapon in his mind, which he's going to use to fight this beast.
And the weapon is going to be the truth that's in the files.
And so he starts, and he's got his own office at this point, to copy what he sees.
I mean, at first he actually tries to memorize it and then write it down when he goes home.
Then he starts to copy it on tiny pieces of paper, which he will fold up and place in his shoe,
and then walk out of the offices of both headquarters, but the Libyanca at first,
with those details of the files on them, which he would then reconstitute in his home and in his dacha,
his weekend kind of country house or cottage, because he's written them in his own special code
to try and minimise the amount of space, kind of like shorthand.
He will then reconstitute them into documents and into the story of the KGB.
And it's amazing because he's got access to the files of the first chief directorate,
which are things like the instructions going from Moscow Centre out to the residencies,
the places in the embassies where the spies are based. It's got the details of agents, cultivation of
agents, some of the production files of the reports that agents are sending back. And
in later years, when they move Directorate S, which is in charge of the Deep Cover Illegal
spies, those are the kind of spies who assume different identities and different nationalities.
They're the most secret identities the KGB has.
He will also be in charge of moving those files
and be able to note down details about those agents.
So these are effectively the deepest secrets.
Does he have their true names or did he have enough to kind of identify them?
He has true names. In some cases he can remember.
He writes down the passport numbers, the false names,
the true names, the code names.
There are still some files which are kept from him,
which are some of the most sensitive files,
but almost everything he can see.
And he does this for 12 years, effectively.
12 years of copying files down by day
and then writing them up by night and weekend.
I mean, it's kind of
intense, isn't it? It's kind of crazy. I think it is crazy. And I guess the other wild thing is,
he's not being run as an asset or an agent in this period. He's doing this in his spare time
as part of a plan that I would imagine cannot be even close to fully worked out in
his own mind for what he does with this, eventually, right? I mean, he's just kind of stashing
it away as he works.
That's one of the things I find extraordinary. It's not as if he had any idea what he was
going to do with it. I mean, he was doing what Russian or Soviet writers would talk
about, which was writing for the draw, which meant you wrote knowing something might not be able to be published now, but in the hope that one
day it could be published. And that's a kind of Russian tradition. And you see it with dissident
writers, you see it with Bulgakov, who wrote The Master of Margarita and kind of wrote it secretly,
and then eventually it comes out. So there is a tradition, I think, in Russia of doing this, of writing secretly. But you're right, he doesn't see himself so much as a spy, as a kind of secret
dissident in parallel to those other dissidents in the Soviet Union at the time. No plan to get the
stuff out. He also, and this is going to become important, he doesn't tell his family what he's
doing. So he has a wife, Nina, and she is actually quite an eminent doctor. She's an academic expert,
she lectures, she even lectures abroad, she treats at various times some of the Central Committee of
the Communist Party. So she's quite a senior figure in her own right, and she's much more
extroverted and outgoing and sociable than her husband. And they have a son, Vladimir. And
Vladimir is important to this story. He's born in 1953, but it soon becomes clear
that he has a muscle wasting disease,
which they struggle to diagnose and to treat.
And he will end up in a wheelchair as a young man.
And I think actually a lot of what Mitrokin will do
and will drive him will be driven by his son,
as well as that ideology and grievance,
and the desire, I think, partly to get treatment for him and to help him. And I think that's
that's something which he doesn't always openly acknowledge later, but I think is
definitely one of the motivations for him. The archive is an asset that he can,
maybe a call option down the road on medicine or treatment outside of the Soviet Union or
Russia for Vladimir.
They're both desperate to try and get treatment for their son.
At one point, Nina actually takes the son and they both go to China to look for alternative
treatments.
This is during the Cold War.
It's quite unusual to have that ability to travel.
And it's part of a desperate desire to help him really.
But Matrokin is doing this.
He's working on the files, he eventually retires in 1984, but he's still sitting on the files, you know, and he's
thinking at this point about possible ways of getting them out, but he's quite scared, he's
quite unsure about how to do that and where to take them where he won't get caught, because also
by the now he's written them up.
And it's not, if you think about Snowden,
Edward Snowden could put these things on floppy disks
or on USB drives.
But here we're talking about piles of manuscripts
that he's written up.
You can't carry that out by yourself very easily either.
How much physical space did they require?
The whole archive would be, I guess, a large table's worth, but more than you can carry
in a suitcase.
Thousands of pages.
Yeah, hard to move in a clandestine way.
I mean, do you get the sense that he was waiting for political change before he did something?
Because I mean, I guess the timing to me seems to be, he retires in 84, he's done this for
12 years at that point, he's copying this archive, and then he sits for another eight? Is he waiting for a political opportunity? What's driving that period of time, do you think?
to borders or looks at possible ways of crossing borders. But he's always too nervous about doing it because I think he fears getting caught. He knows the consequences for him will be terrible.
And he knows that if he's caught, the archive will be captured and then everything will have
been for nothing. So I think there is a bit of nervousness and that is until the Soviet Union
collapses. And at that point, 1991, the Soviet Union is effectively gone.
And the Baltic states, so Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, have become independent.
Border controls have also weakened.
And so at that point, he realizes he can get across to a Baltic state, a newly independent
Baltic state, where there are, he hopes, an American embassy, but he's going to find a British embassy with a bag, with, if you like, a sample, like a kind of traveling salesman.
He's got a sample in his bag, which he can show to them and try and convince them that he's finally sitting there with these two MI6 officers.
And it's interesting because he makes clear he is willing to hand over his entire archive,
but there are two things he wants, two guarantees he's clear about.
First, he wants to get his whole family out, all of them, although they so far, he says,
know nothing about what he's done.
So you can see there's a slight tension there.
What did his wife think he was doing when he was copying the
documents? Because I would imagine, I'm just imagining now
if I was sitting in my office here, like just sort of
endlessly on the weekends, writing longhand that at some
point, someone's gonna ask a question, my sons, my wife, like
what are you doing? He must have had an alibi.
I think he was just so solitary and introverted that he really got away with it. I mean,
He was just in the study again, kind of reading or writing and no one asked questions.
Dad's in the study again.
Yeah, exactly.
But they don't know. But it is interesting. It's clearly very important to him that they get out
and that the whole family get out. And that is a condition that MI6 will
have to get his family out. The second condition he has, though, is also very interesting. Because
unusually, I think for a spy, he says he wants his archive to be made public. He wants it to be
published. Now that is unusual. That is unusual. The family bits, not necessarily, but this one is.
I mean, coming out and saying I want all of the secret stuff to be in print is maybe not the natural response of the committer of espionage.
Because most would either want no one to ever know what they've done, or they know it's going to be kind of technical secrets.
And I think it goes back to that idea of what he thought he was, which was this secret dissident who'd been writing for the draw, who'd been writing in the hope that one day the truth would get out.
He wants his work published.
He wants his work published, like any author.
But I think it goes back to that slightly spiritual sense he has, the mystical sense
in which he views his archive actually as a weapon.
It is the truth.
And the truth is a weapon because it can pierce the kind of armor of lies that the KGB and the Soviet Union has built up about what's happened and destroy this beast which he has seen in his mind.
And so it's very important to him that it's going to be published.
He didn't ask for money, by the way?
No.
No.
Wow.
Definitely no interest in money.
So absolutely kind of ideologically and personally
motivated in that sense.
So those are the two conditions.
They're sitting there in April, Robert and James with him,
and they message back to MI6 headquarters, Century House,
looking for instructions.
They say, this guy looks good.
Can we give him these guarantees for this?
And I love it because they get an answer back from MI6
saying, it will probably
be a fine. It'll probably be okay. Which is, maybe, maybe, maybe not. Like I think any
good spy, they kind of edge the truth slightly when they go back and talk to Matrock in that
day after a few hours gap and basically tell him it's on. They forget it's probably good.
It's rock solid. It's rock solid.
We're on.
We've got the publishing deal in hand right now.
Yeah, it's all good.
So now the question for MI6 is,
how do you get a man, his files and his family
out of the country from under the watching eyes
of Russian intelligence?
And that is what's gonna cause some of the headaches
and the showdown at the docks in
Lithuania in November. And so maybe there Gordon on that wonderfully Carrerin cliffhanger. And when
we come back next time for the thrilling conclusion of the Vasily Matrokin story, we'll see exactly how
MI6 does it, how they get him and his archive out. But we should note, Gordon, of course,
that members of our Declassified club can get early access to that episode right now.
All you have to do is go to the restisclassified.com, become a member of the club and start listening
right now.
We might get a sudden spike in membership applications from Moscow, from former KGB
officers. Dangle's and Walken's.
From the FSB or something. How did the Brits do it?
All are welcome. Afternoon now.
Really? All are welcome.
Even KGB or SVLB. Okay. We'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time.