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cover of episode 35: The Thing Embassy Incident: How Russian children and the KGB trolled America for years

35: The Thing Embassy Incident: How Russian children and the KGB trolled America for years

2022/6/26
logo of podcast The Why Files: Operation Podcast

The Why Files: Operation Podcast

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AJ和Hecklefish讲述了苏联间谍活动中一个著名的案例——代号为“The Thing”的窃听装置。该装置被伪装成美国国玺的木雕复制品,由苏联儿童赠送给美国大使,并在美国大使馆内秘密安装了七年之久。它是一种无需电力的高频窃听装置,能够远程激活,窃听了大量美国高层官员的秘密谈话,包括军事、外交和情报官员,甚至总统。 该事件展现了苏联在冷战时期先进的间谍技术和情报收集能力。尽管美国大使馆采取了严格的安全措施,但苏联间谍仍然成功地窃听了美国大使的私人谈话多年。 “The Thing”的发明者是苏联科学家列昂·捷尔明,他被苏联招回国后,被迫为克格勃研制窃听设备。“The Thing”的工作原理是利用共振腔麦克风,通过外部无线电波远程激活,无需自身电源。 “The Thing”最终是被英国和美国无线电操作员偶然发现的。这一事件不仅暴露了苏联的间谍活动,也促使美国加强了反间谍措施。美国还反向工程“The Thing”,用于对付苏联。 “The Thing”窃取了大量美国机密情报,为苏联在冷战中提供了优势。然而,美国最终利用“The Thing”的事实,反驳了苏联在联合国安理会会议上的指控,揭露了苏联的间谍活动。“The Thing”事件使得冷战进一步加剧,核战争的风险也随之增高。

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In 1945, Soviet children presented the American ambassador with a wooden replica of the Great Seal of the United States, which secretly housed a sophisticated listening device known as 'The Thing'.

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Hey, it's your buddy AJ from the Y-Files. And Hecklefish. Right, and Hecklefish. We just wanted to tell you that if you want to start a podcast, Spotify makes it easy. It'd have to be easy for humans to understand it. Will you stop that? I'm just saying. Spotify for Podcasters lets you record and edit podcasts from your computer. I don't have a computer. Do you have a phone? Of course I have a phone. I'm not a savage. Well, with Spotify, you can record podcasts from your phone, too.

Spotify makes it easy to distribute your podcast to every platform and you can even earn money. I do need money. What do you need money for? You kidding? I'm getting killed on guppy support payments. These 3X wives are expensive. You don't want to support your kids? What are you, my wife's lawyer now? Never mind. And I don't know if you noticed, but all Y-Files episodes are video too. And there's a ton of other features, but... But we can't be here all day. Will you settle down? I need...

After six long years of fighting, the Allies finally defeated the German war machine in 1945.

In July of that year, the leaders of the allies, Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin, met at the Potsdam Conference to decide what would become of Germany and how to divide the spoils of war. Now, publicly, the allied leaders were friendly and respectful, but privately, it was a different story. When the cameras were off, there was anger, mistrust and hours of arguing.

Stalin felt that Churchill was weak and deceitful, and Roosevelt threw a fit when he heard Stalin's demands for war reparations. Even though the Soviet Union and the United States were allies, they weren't friends. The Potsdam Conference marked the end of the last war, but it was the beginning of a new one. ♪

On August 4th, 1945, just a few days after Potsdam, the United States ambassador William Avril Harriman received a gift from a group of Soviet children who belonged to the Vladimir Lenin All-Union Pioneer Organization. The Vlad-a-what? They were like Russian Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, but more patriotic. I'm Gerasim Vadim. I'm Gorskaya. I'm joining the all-union pioneer group of Lenin.

Young pioneers, be ready to fight for the work of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union!

Whoa. Yeah. Something tells me these kids don't sell cookies. Nope. Intense. The kids presented the ambassador with an impressive gift to commemorate the friendship of the U.S. and the Soviet Union, a hand-carved wooden replica of the Great Seal of the United States. The ambassador was so pleased with the carving that he hung it in his office at the official ambassador residence in Moscow, the Spazzo House. What Harriman didn't realize is that the wooden carving was more than just a decoration.

now hanging on the wall just behind the ambassador's desk, was a state of the art high frequency listening device that was completely undetectable. Ambassador Harriman held private meetings with military, diplomatic and intelligence officials there. He had top secret conversations with generals, the secretary of state and the president. And the Russians, they could hear every word.

Oh boy. How long before they found this bug? Seven years. Oh, for crying out loud. Yep. The intelligence community called the device the Thing. You've got to be kidding. And the Thing was on the office wall of five different ambassadors over seven years. How did they finally find it? Well, by accident, actually. And that's what makes the Thing so interesting and so effective. This was an electronic listening device that didn't require electricity.

Diplomats serving at the American embassy in Moscow were very concerned about Soviet spying. All staff, from the cooks to the cleaners, were background checked. They were constantly sweeping for bugs. And even people visiting the embassy were given cards on arrival that warned them that they should assume all rooms and even outdoor spaces were being monitored. Even with all these security measures in place, the Soviet secret police were somehow able to listen to the American ambassador's

private conversations for years, completely undetected. The thing was created by Leon Theremin, a Russian inventor most famous for developing one of the world's first electronic musical instruments, which he called the Theremin. - Name checks out. - It's all about branding. - I don't think I've ever heard of a Theremin. - Oh, you have. - Okay, I know that one. - In 19-- - Bring back David Tennant! Sorry, sorry, I get emotional about Doctor Who. - I understand.

In the 1920s, Theremin was touring the world showing off his invention. He even performed with the New York Philharmonic and at Carnegie Hall. Now, eventually he set up a lab in New York and developed one of the first metal detectors for Alcatraz Prison. He also created an electronic burglar alarm and was the first person to demonstrate interlaced video. Now, this was advanced stuff for the 1920s. Theremin was churning out inventions, working with Thomas Edison and really making a name for himself. But in 1938...

He suddenly disappeared. When Leon Theremin suddenly and mysteriously disappeared from New York in 1938, it was reported that he was executed. But eyewitnesses said that they saw him talking to several tough talking Russians who

encouraged him to return to the Soviet Union. Did he go back? Well, the other option was a firing squad. He went back. He did. In Russia, Theremin was put in a Siberian gulag and given a choice. He could work a gold mine, breaking big rocks into smaller ones, or he could work at a shurashka, which is a secret lab for detained scientists and engineers. He chose the lab? He did.

At the secret lab, Theremin was tasked with developing new surveillance technology to bug the U.S. embassy and the Spaso house. His first success was an infrared microphone called a boron eavesdropping device, which inspired the modern laser microphone. And it worked by emitting a low-power IR beam to detect vibrations on glass windows. Now, the boron system worked well, but it required good line of sight, which the Russians didn't have at the Spaso house in Moscow. They needed to get something inside.

So Thurman invented the thing, the first resonant cavity microphone. The thing was light, hollow, and it was made of wood so it would vibrate when sound passed into it.

Now this is a lot like how a guitar body generates sound when strings vibrate. But the thing was shaped so that sound wouldn't amplify outwards like a guitar, but instead sound waves were focused on an interior membrane that acted as a microphone. And the microphone was attached to a small antenna which could broadcast radio waves. But radios need power to broadcast.

And that's why the thing is so unique. It didn't have its own power source and wasn't connected with wires. Instead, it was activated externally. The NSA calls this technique illuminating a device. And when the Russians knew an important meeting was happening at the embassy, they would park an unmarked van somewhere close by. And then using a strong radio transmitter, agents could activate the thing's antenna remotely and listen to conversations at will. Once the thing was no longer illuminated, it was completely inert.

And this was genius, cutting edge and highly effective. And that's why it operated for years undetected until in 1951, a full six years after the thing was installed in the American embassy in Moscow, a British Army radio operator was randomly scanning frequencies coming from the Moscow airport and suddenly heard what sounded like an American conversation. Now,

Now, as he tuned the signal, he realized he recognized one of the voices as the British air attache. Now, completely by accident, he had tuned into the KGB frequency. Now, he alerted the embassy who conducted a full bug sweep, but they found nothing. Then about a year later, another operative was scanning Soviet military radio traffic

when he picked up a conversation in English that seemed to be coming from the Spaso house. The new ambassador, George Kennan, called in a special anti-espionage unit to perform a sweep, but this time they focused on radio traffic. So, Kennan went to his office and pretended to dictate an important message to his secretary. The American radio tech switched on their equipment and picked up the signal almost immediately. And...

It was coming from something very close by. It's coming from inside the house. Exactly. A few minutes later, they triangulated the signal and found the source hanging right there on the wall. It was the thing. So you remember my name now, do you? During those seven years, the thing gathered top secret information from some very high level guests, including General Eisenhower, White House staff and a dozen congressmen.

A member of the Soviet team that monitored the Spaso house later said, "The thing allowed the KGB to get specific and very important information which gave us certain advantages in the prediction and performances of world politics in the difficult period of the Cold War." That night, a radio technician slept with the thing under his pillow just in case the KGB tried to retrieve it. The next day, it was sent to Washington to be studied.

And what did the Russians say about this? Oh, nothing. The Americans and the British didn't say a word for years. No? What did they do with it? They reverse engineered it to use on the Soviets. Yeah, I saw that coming.

Whatever information the thing provided to the Russians, it eventually came back to bite them. In May 1960, an American U-2 spy plane was shot down over Soviet airspace. A few weeks later, at a UN National Security Council meeting, the Soviets accused the United States of spying and drafted a resolution that would have the UN officially condemn the U.S., call the violation of Soviet airspace an aggressive act, and force American flights to stop. So for three days, the Soviets presented arguments attacking the U.S.,

Right, right, right, right.

The Americans quietly took the punishment. Then on day four, when it was finally time for the U.S. to present its rebuttal, it simply brought out the thing. Ambassador Large counters repeated denials of Soviet spy activities with a concrete and dramatic example. He tells how the Soviet planted a listening device in America's Moscow embassy, concealed inside a wooden carving of the Great Seal, presented as a gift by the Russians.

The thing was top secret for almost 10 years, but now the entire world was shown spying goes both ways.

The UN voted against the Soviet resolution seven to two. And now, thanks to a wooden carving delivered by children as a gift of peace and friendship, the Cold War was in full swing and nuclear war seemed more likely than ever.

Thank you so much for hanging out with me today. My name is AJ. That's Hecklefish. This has been the Y-Files. If you had fun or learned anything, do me a favor and like, comment, subscribe, share. All that stuff really helps with the algorithm. And until next time, be safe, be kind, and know that you are appreciated.