March 28, 2024

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Yuri Bezmenov/Thoman David Schuman – from Wikipedia

Yuri Alexandrovich Bezmenov (Russian: Юрий Безменов, also known as Tomas David Schuman; 1939 – 1997?) was a journalist for RIA Novosti and a former KGB informant from the Soviet Union who defected to Canada.

After being assigned to a station in India, Bezmenov eventually grew to love the people and culture of India, while, at the same time, he began to resent the KGB-sanctioned oppression of intellectuals who dissented from Moscow’s policies. He decided to defect to the West. Bezmenov is best remembered for his pro-American, anti-communist lectures and books from the 1980s.

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Contents

1 Early life

2 Soviet life

3 Defection to the West

4 Pro-American lecturer, writer, advocate

5 Bibliography

6 See also

7 References

8 Further reading

9 External links

Early life

Bezmenov was born in 1939 in a suburb of Moscow to a high ranking Soviet Army officer. He was educated in an elite school inside the Soviet Union, and became an expert in Indian culture and Indian languages.

At the age of 17, Bezmonov entered the Institute of Oriental Languages, a part of Moscow State University—which was under the direct control of the KGB and the Communist Central Committee. In addition to languages, Bezmonov studied history, literature, and music. During his second year, Bezmonov sought to look like a person from India; his teachers encouraged this because graduates of the school were employed as diplomats, foreign journalists, or spies.

As a Soviet student, he was also required to take compulsory military training in which he taught how to play “strategic war games” using the maps of foreign countries, as well as how to interrogate prisoners of war.

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Soviet life

After graduating in 1963, Bezmonov spent two years in India working as a translator and public relations officer with the Soviet economical aid group Soviet Refineries Constructions, which built refinery complexes.

In 1965, Bezmonov was recalled to Moscow, and began to work for Novosti as an apprentice for their classified department of “Political Publications” (GRPP). Soon he discovered that about three-quarters of Novosti’s staffers were actually KGB officers, with the remainder being “co-optees”, or KGB freelance writers and informers like himself. However, Bezmonov did no real freelance writing; rather, he edited and planted propaganda materials in foreign media, and also accompanied delegations of Novosti’s guests from foreign countries on tours of the Soviet Union, or to international conferences held in the Soviet Union.

After several months, Bezmonov was formally recruited by the KGB as an informer—an offer he stated one could not simply say “no” to[citation needed]—while still maintaining his position as a Novosti journalist. He then used his journalistic duties to help gather information and to spread disinformation to foreign countries for the purposes of Soviet propaganda and subversion.

Rapid promotion followed, and Bezmonov was once again assigned to Bila in 1969, this time as a Soviet press-officer and a public-relations agent for the KGB. He continued Novosti’s propaganda effects in New Delhi, working out of the Soviet Embassy. Bezmonov was directed to slowly but surely establish the Soviet “sphere of influence” in India. In the same year, a secret directive of the Central Committee opened a new secret department in all embassies of the Soviet Union around the world, titled the “Research and Counter-Propaganda Group.” Bezmonov became a deputy chief of that department, which gathered intelligence from sources like Indian informers and agents, regarding most every influential or politically significant citizen of India. Those who favored the Soviets’ expansionist policy into India were promoted to higher positions of power, affluence, and prestige through various KGB/Novosti operations.[further explanation needed] Those who refused to cooperate with Soviet plans were the target of character assassination in the media and press.

Bezmonov stated that he was also instructed not to waste time with idealistic Leftists, as these would become disillusioned, bitter, and adversarial when they realized the true nature of Soviet Communism. To his surprise, he discovered that many such were listed for execution once the Soviets achieved control. Instead, Bezmonov was encouraged to recruit such persons as were in large circulation, established conservative media, rich filmmakers, intellectuals in academic circles, and cynical, ego-centric people who lacked moral principles.

During that period, Bezmonov increasingly saw the Soviet system as insidious and ruthless, and began careful planning to defect.[1] [2]

Defection to the West

In February 1970, Bezmenov clothed himself in hippie attire, replete with a beard and wig, and joined a tour group; by this means, he escaped to Athens, Greece. After contacting the American embassy and undergoing extensive interviews with United States intelligence, Bezmenov was granted asylum in Canada.

In an interview with G. Edward Griffin he detailed how Soviet help for inciting anger and uprising in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) was the final straw in his personal decision to defect to the West. In the interview Yuri details how Russian consulates in India were used to smuggle weapons and propaganda material to East Pakistan in a largely Soviet effort to break up the state of Pakistan, then a staunch Western and US ally.

After studying political science at the University of Toronto for two years, Bezmenov was hired by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 1972, broadcasting to the Soviet Union as part of the CBC’s International Service. In 1976, the KGB compelled his departure from that position, and Bezmenov began free-lance journalism. He later became a consultant for Almanac Panorama of the World Information Network.[2]

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Pro-American lecturer, writer, advocate

In 1984, he gave an interview to G. Edward Griffin, who at that time was a member of the John Birch Society, an anti-communist group. In the interview, Bezmenov explained the methods used by the KGB to secretly subvert the democratic system of the United States.[3]

Under the pen-name Tomas D. Schuman, Bezmenov authored the book Love Letter to America. The author’s biography of the book states “Like a true-life Winston Smith, from George Orwell’s 1984, Tomas Schuman worked for the communist equivalent of Orwell’s Ministry of Truth—The Novosti Press Agency. Novosti, which means ‘News’ in Russian, exists to produce slanted and false stories to plant in the foreign media. The term for this K.G.B. effort is ‘disinformation.’ ”[1]

Tomas D. Schuman was associated with the World Information Network (WIN) of Westlake Village, California.

In 1983, at a lecture in Los Angeles, Bezmenov expressed the opinion that he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the Soviet Union had shot down Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in order to kill Larry McDonald, a member of the United States House of Representatives.[4]

Bibliography

Schuman, Tomas (1984). Love Letter to America. Los Angeles: NATA. ISBN 9780935090130. OCLC 19468210.

——— (1985). No “Novosti” is Good News. Los Angeles: Almanac. ISBN 9780935090178. OCLC 45013143.

——— (1985). Black is Beautiful, Communism is Not. Almanac-Press. ISBN 9780935090185. OCLC 62325386.

——— (1986). World Thought Police. Los Angeles: NATA. ISBN 9780935090147. OCLC 23919332.

 

 

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