Author Topic: The Thing At the beginning of the Cold War, the Soviet Union bugged the U.S. Embassy with one of the  (Read 86 times)

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Online IsailedawayfromFR

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The Thing
At the beginning of the Cold War, the Soviet Union bugged the U.S. Embassy with one of the most ingenious devices ever created.


At the beginning of the Cold War, the Soviet Union bugged the U.S. Embassy with one of the most ingenious devices ever created.

In the summer of 1952, an attaché at the American Embassy in Moscow was idly tuning his shortwave radio, searching for a broadcast from Washington. As he slowly turned the dial, a voice suddenly emerged from the static—a voice he knew all too well. It belonged to his superior, Ambassador George Kennan.

At first, he assumed it was a recording. Then his blood ran cold. What he was hearing was not a broadcast at all. It was a live conversation taking place at that very moment inside the ambassador’s office. The attaché listened in disbelief. Every word was perfectly clear.

Without hesitation, he raced upstairs, shoved past the secretary, burst into the office, and, to the astonishment of everyone present, pressed a finger to his lips. Silence! The room froze. Beckoning urgently to the ambassador, he led him into the embassy courtyard and whispered the incredible news into his ear.

Kennan was stunned. For all practical purposes, the walls of his office had become transparent. The ambassador immediately abandoned the room. Meetings were moved outdoors, and an urgent request for assistance was sent to Washington.

Within days, a team of counterintelligence specialists arrived. They attacked the office like surgeons operating on a patient whose life depended on the outcome. Walls were stripped bare. Floors were torn up. Ceilings were dismantled. Every inch was examined. Nothing. Yet the mysterious transmissions continued.

The investigators inspected every object in the room—the desk, telephones, lamps, chairs, and even the inkwell. Still nothing. Finally, their attention fell upon an ornate wooden carving of the Great Seal of the United States hanging above the ambassador’s desk. The plaque had been presented seven years earlier by children from the Soviet youth camp Artek on the Black Sea. Few suspected that this beautiful gift concealed one of the most ingenious espionage devices ever created.
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/06/the-thing/
“You will never understand bureaucracies until you understand that for bureaucrats procedure is everything and outcomes are nothing.” Thomas Sowell

Offline Fishrrman

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Online verga

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I read about this several years ago. I recall there was another situation where "locals" had been hired to do part of the construction. Millions of dollars had been spent and the bulding was deemed useless because of all of the listening devices that had been planted in the walls, ceilings etc....
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