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SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 2025
Oleg Gordievsky, Britain's most valuable Cold War spy inside KGB, dies at 86

Europe

UNB/AP
23 March, 2025, 12:25 pm
Last modified: 23 March, 2025, 12:36 pm

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Oleg Gordievsky, Britain's most valuable Cold War spy inside KGB, dies at 86

Gordievsky passed away on March 4 in England, where he had lived since defecting in 1985. Police confirmed Saturday that his death is not being treated as suspicious

UNB/AP
23 March, 2025, 12:25 pm
Last modified: 23 March, 2025, 12:36 pm
Former Soviet spy Oleg Gordievsky after receiving the Companion of the Most Distinguished Order of St Michael and Saint George from Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in London, Oct. 17, 2007. Photo: Fiona Hanson/PA via AP, file photo, via UNB
Former Soviet spy Oleg Gordievsky after receiving the Companion of the Most Distinguished Order of St Michael and Saint George from Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in London, Oct. 17, 2007. Photo: Fiona Hanson/PA via AP, file photo, via UNB

Oleg Gordievsky, the Soviet KGB officer who played a crucial role in shaping the course of the Cold War by secretly passing intelligence to Britain, has died at the age of 86.

Gordievsky passed away on March 4 in England, where he had lived since defecting in 1985. Police confirmed Saturday that his death is not being treated as suspicious.

Historians regard Gordievsky as one of the most significant spies of the Cold War era. His intelligence, particularly in the 1980s, helped prevent a dangerous escalation of nuclear tensions between the Soviet Union and the West.

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From KGB insider to british spy

Born in Moscow in 1938, Gordievsky joined the KGB in the early 1960s, serving in Moscow, Copenhagen, and eventually London, where he became the agency's station chief.

Disillusioned with the Soviet regime—particularly after the USSR crushed Czechoslovakia's Prague Spring in 1968—he was recruited by Britain's MI6 in the early 1970s.

In his 1990 book KGB: The Inside Story, co-authored with British intelligence historian Christopher Andrew, Gordievsky wrote that he believed "the Communist one-party state leads inexorably to intolerance, inhumanity, and the destruction of liberties." He saw working for the West as his way of fighting for democracy.

For over a decade, he provided critical intelligence to Britain and its allies during some of the Cold War's most tense moments.

Preventing nuclear escalation

In 1983, Gordievsky warned the US and UK that Soviet leaders were so convinced of an imminent Western nuclear attack that they were considering a preemptive strike. Amid heightened tensions during a NATO military exercise in Germany, his intelligence helped reassure Moscow that the exercise was not a precursor to war—potentially averting catastrophe.

Shortly afterward, US President Ronald Reagan took steps to ease nuclear tensions with the USSR.

Gordievsky also played a key role in shaping early interactions between Britain and Mikhail Gorbachev. In 1984, he briefed both Gorbachev—then a rising Soviet leader—before his visit to the UK and the British government on how to approach him. The meeting between Gorbachev and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was a major success, paving the way for future diplomacy.

Ben Macintyre, author of The Spy and the Traitor, a book about Gordievsky's life, told the BBC that the double agent "secretly helped launch the beginning of the end of the Cold War."

A daring escape to the West

In 1985, Gordievsky was summoned back to Moscow—a call he feared meant his double life had been exposed. He was interrogated and drugged but not immediately charged. Britain soon launched a covert operation to extract him from the USSR, successfully smuggling him across the Finnish border in the trunk of a car.

He became the highest-ranking Soviet spy to defect to the West.

Declassified documents from 2014 revealed that Britain considered Gordievsky so valuable that Thatcher offered Moscow a deal: If his wife and daughters were allowed to join him in London, Britain would refrain from expelling all the KGB agents he had exposed. The Soviet government refused. In response, Thatcher ordered the expulsion of 25 Russian agents, triggering diplomatic tit-for-tat expulsions but no permanent rupture in relations.

Gordievsky's family remained under KGB surveillance for six years before finally being allowed to join him in 1991.

Life in Britain and continued risks

In Russia, Gordievsky was sentenced to death for treason—a sentence that remains in force. In Britain, he was honored for his service, receiving the title of Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George in 2007, an accolade also held by the fictional spy James Bond.

Despite living under UK protection in the quiet town of Godalming, he believed he remained a target. In 2008, he claimed he had been poisoned and spent 34 hours in a coma after taking sleeping pills given to him by a Russian associate.

His fears were underscored in 2018 when former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter were poisoned with a Soviet-developed nerve agent in Salisbury, England.

Death not considered suspicious

Surrey Police said officers responded to a call at a residence in Godalming on March 4, where they found an 86-year-old man deceased. Counterterrorism officers are leading the investigation, but authorities say there is "nothing to suggest any increased risk to members of the public."

Gordievsky's extraordinary life—from KGB insider to one of Britain's most valuable Cold War spies—left an enduring impact on history.

Top News / World+Biz

Oleg Gordievsky / ex-KGB spy / KGB / United Kingdom (UK)

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