Escape from the CIA : How the CIA Won and Lost the Most Important KGB Spy Ever to Defect to the ., Paperback by Kessler, Ronald, ISBN 1501196472, ISBN-13 9781501196478, Brand New, Free shipping in the US

<b>A true tale of espionage retracing the remarkable story of Colonel Vitaly Yurchenko, a KGB spy who defected to the United States and returned to the Soviet Union after the CIA bungled his case. </b><br><br>In November 1985, Colonel Vitaly Yurchenko, the most important KGB spy ever to defect to the US, walked out of a trendy Washington restaurant, telling his inexperienced CIA security guard, &#8220;I&#8217;m going for a walk. If I don&#8217;t come back, it&#8217;s not your fault.&#8221;<br> <br>Two days later, from the Soviet embassy, Yurchenko described his escape to the press and the world, denying ever defecting with an extraordinary tale of CIA kidnapping and mind control.<br> <br>Yurchenko knew so much that the CIA had planned to question him for years. How did the CIA lose such a phenomenal intelligence source, a man who flooded his debriefs with sensitive information?<br> <br>To separate truth from rumors in the strange and complex story of the spy&#8212;including the theory that Yurchenko was a double agent sent to the US&#8212;Ronald Kessler, winner of sixteen journalism awards, investigates the inner workings and attitudes of the CIA and the Russian soul of the Soviet spy.<br> <br>Kessler superbly portrays the intelligence agency and the torment of a spy who betrayed his country only to be mistreated by his adopted nation, forcing him to choose between two bitter realities. Relentlessly fascinating and endlessly surprising, <i>Escape from the CIA </i>is a classic work from America&#8217;s premier writer of espionage nonfiction.<br> <br>&#8220;Drawing on deep-throat sources in the intelligence community and interviews with the disaffected principal, Kessler offers a tellingly detailed account of the stranger-than-fiction case&#8230; intriguing&#8230; fascinating and painstakingly documented.&#8221; &#8211;<i>Kirkus Reviews</i>