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Technical manual of KGB spy camera F-21 in Russian
Technical manual of KGB spy camera F-21 in Russian
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SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
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KIEV-30M Russian 16mm Submini Spy KGB Camera/ EXC
KIEV-30M Russian 16mm Submini Spy KGB Camera/ EXC
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F-21 Spy KGB Russian Sub-Mini Spring Motor Camera
F-21 Spy KGB Russian Sub-Mini Spring Motor Camera
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KIEV-30 Submini 110 Russian USSR KGB SPY 16mm camera EX
KIEV-30 Submini 110 Russian USSR KGB SPY 16mm camera EX
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F-21 Spy KGB Russian Sub-Mini Spring Motor Camera
F-21 Spy KGB Russian Sub-Mini Spring Motor Camera
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KIEV-30M Submini 110 Russian USSR KGB SPY 16mm camera
KIEV-30M Submini 110 Russian USSR KGB SPY 16mm camera
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Russian SPY KGB camera F-21 spring motor on ~22 picture
Russian SPY KGB camera F-21 spring motor on ~22 picture
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  KIEV-30 M Russian USSR spy KGB camera 16 mm. submini
KIEV-30 M Russian USSR spy KGB camera 16 mm. submini
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KIEV 30M Blue body Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
KIEV 30M Blue body Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
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KIEV VEGA Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB, SPY
KIEV VEGA Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB, SPY
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1960s KIEV VEGA Russian Submimi SPY KGB Camera/doc/MINT
1960s KIEV VEGA Russian Submimi SPY KGB Camera/doc/MINT
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Spy Camera  KGB  STASI
Spy Camera KGB STASI
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RARE russian KGB SPY camera ZOLA zorki fed kiev f-21
RARE russian KGB SPY camera ZOLA zorki fed kiev f-21
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KGB spy mini camera ZAHOD button kit f-21 Ajax kiev fed
KGB spy mini camera ZAHOD button kit f-21 Ajax kiev fed
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Minolta 16 Model P - A Spy Camera 007 KGB CIA Cold War Berlin wall era Rare!
Minolta 16 Model P - A Spy Camera 007 KGB CIA Cold War Berlin wall era Rare!
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KIEV VEGA Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
KIEV VEGA Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
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KIEV 30 White body Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
KIEV 30 White body Russian 16mm Submini Camera, KGB SPY
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Vintage Rare Russian Spy Mini Film Camera Vega Kiev KGB
Vintage Rare Russian Spy Mini Film Camera Vega Kiev KGB
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SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
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Russian SPY KGB camera F-21 spring motor on ~22 picture
Russian SPY KGB camera F-21 spring motor on ~22 picture
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KIEV-30 Russian Soviet USSR Minolta Copy KGB Submini Spy 16mm Camera
KIEV-30 Russian Soviet USSR Minolta Copy KGB Submini Spy 16mm Camera
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KIEV-30M 30 Russian Soviet USSR Minolta Copy KGB Submini Spy 16mm Mini Camera
KIEV-30M 30 Russian Soviet USSR Minolta Copy KGB Submini Spy 16mm Mini Camera
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VINTAGE 1970's RUSSIAN USSR ORIGINAL OFFICERS KGB SPY MINI CAMERA F-21 AJAX KMZ
VINTAGE 1970's RUSSIAN USSR ORIGINAL OFFICERS KGB SPY MINI CAMERA F-21 AJAX KMZ
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Rare russian MVD SPY KGB Police camera ELKA C-64 YOLOCHKA
Rare russian MVD SPY KGB Police camera ELKA C-64 YOLOCHKA
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Covering (button) for F-21 (Ajax) SOVIET KGB Spy Camera
Covering (button) for F-21 (Ajax) SOVIET KGB Spy Camera
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OLD BOXED KIEV 30 MINI USSR SPY KGB CAMERA 16MM
OLD BOXED KIEV 30 MINI USSR SPY KGB CAMERA 16MM
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F-21 AJAX T86531 ANTIQUE USSR RUSSIAN KGB GRU OFFICERS SPY 21MM FILM MINI CAMERA
F-21 AJAX T86531 ANTIQUE USSR RUSSIAN KGB GRU OFFICERS SPY 21MM FILM MINI CAMERA
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SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
SOVIET PORTABLE KGB SPY CAMERA VEGA MINOLTA COPY 1960
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F-21 SPY camera KGB manual KIT NEW (never used) in BOX
F-21 SPY camera KGB manual KIT NEW (never used) in BOX
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KIEV-30 RUSSIAN SUBMINIATURE SPY KGB CAMERA USSR cover box manual CCCP
KIEV-30 RUSSIAN SUBMINIATURE SPY KGB CAMERA USSR cover box manual CCCP
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VINTAGE USSR RUSSIAN ORIGINAL OFFICERS KGB GRU SPY MINI CAMERA F-21 AJAX T22456
VINTAGE USSR RUSSIAN ORIGINAL OFFICERS KGB GRU SPY MINI CAMERA F-21 AJAX T22456
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Russian SPY KGB camera F-22 spring motor f 21
Russian SPY KGB camera F-22 spring motor f 21
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Covering (button) for F-21 (Ajax) SOVIET KGB Spy Camera
Covering (button) for F-21 (Ajax) SOVIET KGB Spy Camera
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F-21 SPY camera KGB manual KIT  in BOX  BLACK
F-21 SPY camera KGB manual KIT in BOX BLACK
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NEW!!! KIEV 303 USSR SPY KGB CAMERA LENS VINTAGE RARE SOVIET RUSSIAN FILM
NEW!!! KIEV 303 USSR SPY KGB CAMERA LENS VINTAGE RARE SOVIET RUSSIAN FILM
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RARE Vintage KGB spy camera Kiev 30 1975 USSR
RARE Vintage KGB spy camera Kiev 30 1975 USSR
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KIEV 303 Submini Russian camera Cold war KGB SPY BOX
KIEV 303 Submini Russian camera Cold war KGB SPY BOX
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KIEV-30M. Russian spy KGB camera.
KIEV-30M. Russian spy KGB camera.
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Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324f)
Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324f)
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Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324b)
Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324b)
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Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324e)
Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324e)
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Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324h)
Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324h)
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Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324c)
Spy KGB Attachment LOMO for lens of SLR camera (324c)
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KIEV-30. Russian spy KGB camera.
KIEV-30. Russian spy KGB camera.
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BUTTON F-21 Russian Soviet SPY KGB krasnogorsk KMZ rare camera vintage super
BUTTON F-21 Russian Soviet SPY KGB krasnogorsk KMZ rare camera vintage super
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Krasnogorsk F-21 SPY camera made for Russian KGB
Krasnogorsk F-21 SPY camera made for Russian KGB
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Vintage KIEV-30  Russian USSR spy KGB camera.
Vintage KIEV-30 Russian USSR spy KGB camera.
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KIEV-vega 2. Russian spy KGB camera.
KIEV-vega 2. Russian spy KGB camera.
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KIEV-30m. Russian spy KGB camera. #9
KIEV-30m. Russian spy KGB camera. #9
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Kgb Spy

Comrade Lenin: Alive and Well

The New Russia may have finally embraced free-market capitalism, but Vladimir Lenin, founder of Soviet communism and one of the great murderers of the twentieth century, still casts a long shadow across the Russian landscape. Indeed, when I journeyed to Russia with my family last summer to research my forthcoming novel, Moscow Rules, it seemed Lenin was our constant companion. His statue still looms over the gates of the city that once bore his name, with its arm heroically extended as if poor Vladimir were forever trying to hail a cab. Streets still bear his name, as do squares, schools, parks, and sports clubs. And he still snoozes peacefully in his little rose-colored mausoleum at the edge of Red Square, a waxen figure in a bottle, well-dressed and neatly groomed.
  
One cannot enter a tourist bazaar without stumbling across all manner of Lenin paraphernalia, including ubiquitous metallic busts of the great man that peer inscrutably from dusty shelves. Sometimes, the head of his accomplice and successor, Joseph Stalin, stands next to him. In one market on the outskirts of Moscow, I saw a fine little statuette of Lenin seated in a chair, clearly thinking deep thoughts. I wondered what weighty matter was he pondering at the moment the artist conceived this iconic image. The annihilation of a village that would not bend to his will? The murder of a rival? Or perhaps he was thinking about killing a few meddlesome shopkeepers who didn’t quite see the wisdom in submitting themselves to "the dictatorship of the proletariat."

Imagine if the scene were Berlin instead of Moscow. Imagine if, near Brandenburg Gate, there stood a hundred-foot-tall statue of Adolf Hitler with his arm raised in a Nazi salute. Imagine if one could buy a bronze-plated bust of Hitler in a flea market in the Tiergarten. Imagine if one could window shop in the Hilter-Strasse or take lunch at an outdoor café in the Hitler-Platz. Or if one could view Hitler's body -- or his ashes, perhaps -- in a sacred tomb at the edge of the Alexanderplatz. Editorial pages, interest groups, and political leaders throughout the civilized world would surely howl with indignation and anger. And rightly so.

Fortunately, the idea of a giant Hitler statue standing in the heart of Berlin is laughable. So why is this not the case in modern Russia? Why are there no howls of righteous indignation from Western shapers of opinion over the display and sale of symbols of a murderous, totalitarian system? And why don’t the leaders of the New Russia remove the statues of Lenin, change the names of the streets and squares that still bear his name, and give his poor old carcass a proper burial?

The silence in many quarters of the West is, sadly, easy to understand. During the Cold War, many of the opinion leaders in Western Europe -- the academics, the essayists and novelists, the campaigners for peace and human rights -- were too often willing to overlook the Soviet Union's inexhaustible list of crimes against humanity because they were adherents of Marxist-Leninist bilge themselves. Lenin was to be forgiven his sins because, in their eyes, his cause was just. As for Stalin, yes, he was a monster, but he was also a hero, the man who single-handedly fought Nazi Germany to a stalemate until the American and British could join the fight. Many conveniently overlook the fact that, by agreeing to the infamous Non-Aggression Pact with Hitler in 1939, Stalin was the one who made the Second World War possible in the first place.

The answer to the second part of the question is, in my opinion, far more perilous for Russia’s newly free neighbors and the West. Vladimir Putin, the man now running Russia, is a child of the system Lenin and Stalin created. A former KGB officer and Party member, he surely studied their writings, as a seminarian studies the sacred texts. Moreover, an estimated seventy-five percent of the senior members of his regime also came from the KGB and its successor services. Putin and his cabal surely cannot permit a full and honest exploration of the crimes of the Soviet state, because to do so would discredit the system and the organization -- i.e., the KGB -- that produced them.

Edward Lucas, a reporter for the Economist, argues in a persuasive new book, The New Cold War, that Putin and his cronies are engaged in a carefully orchestrated effort to "sanitize" the more repulsive elements of Soviet history while honoring its achievements, which is to say, its military might and its empire. In 2005, Putin made his feelings abundantly clear when, in his state of the nation speech, he referred to the collapse of the Soviet Union as "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century." And he even managed to say it with a straight face.

Let us return to Germany for a moment. Let us imagine that Chancellor Angela Merkel was a former officer of the SS rather than a former professor of physical chemistry. And let us imagine she went before her parliament and people and proclaimed the collapse of Nazi-occupied Europe the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century. Such a remark would have produced a furious response from the German press, the German political opposition, and the German people. Germany’s neighbors would have twitched with anxiety. Ambassadors would have been recalled. Editorial writers would have wondered whether the Nazi beast was reawakening. 

And imagine, too, that the SS and the Gestapo, under new, benign-sounding names, were still responsible for internal German security. And that they still worked from their old headquarters buildings. That scenario, as preposterous as it sounds, is exactly the situation in Russia today. The FSB, Russia's Federal Security Service, occupies the KGB’s old headquarters building in Lubyanka Square. Many Russians don’t even bother to call the FSB by its new name. They still refer to it as the KGB.

While researching Moscow Rules, my family and I were invited to visit FSB headquarters. A former KGB colonel with an amiable face and glittering eyes gave us a private tour of the building. It ended in a small, private KGB museum, where we spent several hours, carefully reviewing the organization’s remarkable history. It was a surprisingly honest place, though distinctly lacking in any evidence that the Soviet Union had ever tried to spy on the United States. A particularly telling moment occurred when we paused to examine a photo album of all the KGB's leaders. There was Vladimir Putin, proudly displayed with all the great murderers and oppressors of the past. Our guide flipped through the pages, giving us highly abbreviated biographies of each chief. "He was shot," he said of one. "He was shot," he said of the next. "He was shot, too." Flipping to the next page, he paused and smiled. "Ah, this one was different," he said. "He was poisoned."

The overall message of the museum was unmistakable: the course of Soviet history would have proceeded much differently if the KGB had been running the regime instead of serving has its guardian. Now, nearly two decades after the fall of the Soviet Union, the KGB has finally gotten its wish. Putin and his cabal want their empire back, and they want to be a great power again. And they are using Russia’s newfound oil wealth to achieve those goals. As for taking an honest look into the Russian past, there isn’t time for that. Nor is there any appetite. Lenin once said: "There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience." Vladimir Putin would surely agree. Perhaps that is why Lenin the murderer still stands at the gates of the city that once bore his name. And why Lenin the murderer still sleeps peacefully in Red Square.

©2008 Daniel Silva

About the Author

Daniel Silva is the author of eleven bestselling novels, including The Confessor, A Death in Vienna, The Messenger, and The Secret Servant. His newest novel,Moscow Rules, will be published July 22. To read more about Daniel and his books, visit danielsilvabooks.com.

Which was the World most treacherous Spy agency. Old Communist KGB or the Bush Cheney web of terror???

The KGB has fallen, that leaves the Bush/Cheney web of terror. It has spread terror across the globe.

Aunt Moura, the frisky spy in Nick Clegg's closet
Nick Clegg’s great-great-aunt had affairs with HG Wells and Maxim Gorky and was suspected of being an agent for Bolshevik Russia. Now Dimitri Collingridge, the Liberal Democrat leader’s cousin, unpicks her tangled life

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