Reagan Approved Plan to Sabotage Soviets
Book Recounts Cold War Program That Made Technology Go Haywire
By David E. Hoffman
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, February 27, 2004; Page A01

In January 1982, President Ronald Reagan approved a CIA plan to sabotage
the economy of the Soviet Union through covert transfers of technology
that contained hidden malfunctions, including software that later
triggered a huge explosion in a Siberian natural gas pipeline, according
to a new memoir by a Reagan White House official.

Thomas C. Reed, a former Air Force secretary who was serving in the
National Security Council at the time, describes the episode in "At the
Abyss: An Insider's History of the Cold War," to be published next month
by Ballantine Books. Reed writes that the pipeline explosion was just
one example of "cold-eyed economic warfare" against the Soviet Union
that the CIA carried out under Director William J. Casey during the
final years of the Cold War.

At the time, the United States was attempting to block Western Europe
from importing Soviet natural gas. There were also signs that the
Soviets were trying to steal a wide variety of Western technology. Then,
a KGB insider revealed the specific shopping list and the CIA slipped
the flawed software to the Soviets in a way they would not detect it.

"In order to disrupt the Soviet gas supply, its hard currency earnings
from the West, and the internal Russian economy, the pipeline software
that was to run the pumps, turbines, and valves was programmed to go
haywire, after a decent interval, to reset pump speeds and valve
settings to produce pressures far beyond those acceptable to pipeline
joints and welds," Reed writes.

"The result was the most monumental non-nuclear explosion and fire ever
seen from space," he recalls, adding that U.S. satellites picked up the
explosion. Reed said in an interview that the blast occurred in the
summer of 1982.

"While there were no physical casualties from the pipeline explosion,
there was significant damage to the Soviet economy," he writes. "Its
ultimate bankruptcy, not a bloody battle or nuclear exchange, is what
brought the Cold War to an end. In time the Soviets came to understand
that they had been stealing bogus technology, but now what were they to
do? By implication, every cell of the Soviet leviathan might be
infected. They had no way of knowing which equipment was sound, which
was bogus. All was suspect, which was the intended endgame for the
entire operation."

full: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A10432-2004Feb26.html

--

The Marxism list: www.marxmail.org

Reply via email to