Gouzenko Affair, Canada, 1945-1946
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Variants
Corby Case, Canada, 1945-1946
Igor Gouzenko Affair, Canada, 1945-1946
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Sources
found: Work cat.: How the Cold War began : the Gouzenko affair and the hunt for Soviet spies, c2005:p. 6 (Britain's M15 and M16 also responded urgently to the Gouzenko case) p. 9 (On February 3, 1946 Drew Pearson broke the story; the next day Canadian prime minister King informed his cabinet about the top secret case, clearing the way for arrests of 15 Canadians suspected of spying for the Soviet Union) p. 11 (The Gouzenko affair did not end with the resulting spy trials in Canada and Britain) p. 12 (For decades, much of the official documentation on the Gouzenko affair in Canada, Britain, and the United States was kept under wraps) p. 31 (many archival materials on the Gouzenko affair now declassified, it is difficult to separate fact from legend in the dramatic story of Igor Gouzenko's flight from the Soviet Embassy in September 1945)
found: The techniques used by the Soviet espionage network in Canada from 1943 to 1945 : the Igor Gouzenko case, 1981.
found: Closely guarded: a life in Canadian security and intelligence, 2001:p. 72 (For security reasons, the Gouzenko affair was often referred to in open correspondence as "the Corby case")
found: Radical Tories, 1984:p. 71 (The critical event was the Liberal government's handling of the Gouzenko affair, especially its suspension of basic legal rights for those Canadians suspected of aiding the Soviet Union)
found: Les interprétations de l'affaire Gouzenko: entre sécurité nationale et démocratie, 1946-1999, 2000.
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Change Notes
2006-10-18: new
2007-01-26: revised
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