Adolf Tolkachev
Adolf Tolkachev (born
1927,
Aktyubinsk,
Kazakhstan; died
1986) was a
Soviet Union electronics engineer who provided key documents to the
CIA over the years between 1979 and 1985. Among the systems compromised was the radar used by the
MiG-31 Foxhound fighter. He was executed as a
spy in 1986.
His distrust of the
Communist government seemed to spring from
persecution his wife's parents had suffered under
Stalin, perhaps because they were
Jewish. He told the CIA he was inspired by
Alexander Solzhenitsyn and
Andrei Sakharov. Tolkachev attempted over a long period to make contact with a
U.S. official, coincidentally approaching the CIA chief at the U.S.
embassy on the street, but the CIA was wary of
counterintelligence operations by the
KGB. Eventually Tolkachev established his
bona fides with intelligence data that proved "incalculable" to US experts. Later, the
U.S. Air Force would "completely reverse" its decision on an electronics package for its fighter planes due to the information passed.
Because Tolkachev resisted the use of traditional CIA methods including
dead drops, preferring personal meetings, he was able to transfer a much larger volume of classified data, much of it collected using various
matchbox-sized
cameras. The need for these meetings necessitated several innovations in CIA
tradecraft such as signals and concealment. Although he demanded money for his cooperation, he seemed to insist that he only wanted payment as proof of the value of his effort and risk. He was eventually paid a salary "equivalent" to the
U.S. President, at the time $200,000 annually.
At some point in 1985, Tolkachev was compromised. While attempting to meet him, a CIA officer was arrested and questioned at the
Lubyanka KGB headquarters and prison, and incriminating materials including spy equipment such as cameras was seized from him, but he was soon released into US custody and later ejected from the USSR. The source of the exposure is believed to have been
Edward Lee Howard, an ex-CIA officer who fled to Moscow to avoid
treason charges.
Aldrich Ames apparently also passed his name to the Soviets.
Though Tolkachev was executed, he had carefully compartmentalized his spy work and his family, so they were not punished. His son Oleg Tolkachev is now said to be a prominent architect.
*[https://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/vol47no3/article02.html CIA historical study of Tolkachev]