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George T. Kalaris, James
Angleton's successor as
CIA chief of counterintelligence. Kalaris commissioned a massive, secret
study of the mole hunt and
of several controversial spy
cases. The mole hunt investigated 120 CIA officers
as suspected Soviet spies,
destroyed the careers of
innocent agency employees,
paralyzed the CIA's operations around the globe, and,
in its wake, damaged U.S.
counterspy operations to the
present day.

The roots of the mole hunt reached back to the 1950s, when
Edward Ellis Smith, the first CIA man sent to Moscow, was
sexually compromised by his maid, a KGB agent. KGB agents
forced Smith to meet with them. The CIA fired Smith and
hushed up the scandal.

Former CIA station chief Cleveland C. Cram conducted the
six-year, classified study of the
Counterintelligence Staff and
the mole hunt that filled twelve
volumes, each 300 to 400 pages
long.

TRIUMPH:
Peter Karlow gets his medal. In a
secret ceremony at CIA headquarters
in 1989, Peter Karlow receives the
Intelligence Commendation Medal
from Richard Stolz, then the chief of
the agency's clandestine operations,
who inscribed the photo. Congress
passed the "Mole Relief Act" again
for Karlow, who received close to half
a million dollars in damages from the
CIA, and this medal.

Certificate was signed by CIA director
William H. Webster.

The CIA citation that
accompanied Karlow's medal recognized his "devoted service to the
Central Intelligence Agency."

At the party on K Street after the
ceremony at CIA headquarters,
among those who showed up to congratulate Karlow was former CIA
director Richard Helms, right. As
deputy director for operations in
1963, Helms did not intervene to prevent Karlow's dismissal.

David Wise is America's leading writer
on intelligence and espionage. He is coauthor of The Invisible
Government, a number one bestseller that has been widely credited with
bringing about a reappraisal of the role of the CIA in a democratic
society. He is the author of The Spy Who Got Away, The American
Police State, and The Politics of Lying, and coauthor with Thomas B.
Ross of The Espionage Establishment, The Invisible Government, and The
U-2 Affair. Mr. Wise has also written three espionage novels, The
Samarkand Dimension, The Children's Game, and Spectrum. A native
Nw Yorker and graduate of Columbia College, he is the former chief of
the Washington bureau of the New York Herald Tribune and has contributed
articles on government and politics to many national magazines. He
is married and has two sons.
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