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unhappycamper

(60,364 posts)
Thu Aug 15, 2013, 08:04 AM Aug 2013

Code Name 'Kid': American Stasi Spy Tells His Story

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/american-stasi-agent-describes-his-experiences-in-new-book-a-916374.html



One of East Germany's top spies was actually an American soldier. Jeff Carney defected to the Communist state in 1983 and fed the notorious Stasi with reams of valuable information. He has now written a book about his experiences.

Code Name 'Kid': American Stasi Spy Tells His Story
By Jürgen Dahlkamp
August 14, 2013 – 11:18 AM

Berlin's Marienfelde district in the fall of 1983: The day Jeff Carney helped save the world was just four hours old. Carney, a 20-year-old surveillance specialist with the United States Air Force, was sitting in the early morning in front of the equipment he used to eavesdrop on the East. He was on the night shift, and there was nothing special to report.

Then his supervisor told him about a secret operation that was set to take place just a few hours later. It was a war game of sorts, and it involved US fighter jets that would come within threatening range of Soviet airspace, triggering alarm signals on the Russians' radar screen and a general state of confusion. The planners expected that the other side would become so unnerved over the maneuver that emergency response procedures would be set in motion, revealing them to US reconnaissance.

But what if the Russians thought it was an actual attack and launched a counter-attack? Carney, who had been working as an agent for the East German Ministry for State Security, known as the Stasi, for a few months, had mere hours to act. First, he had to finish his shift, but then he hurried to see his Stasi contact, a teacher in West Berlin. His message made it in time; the Soviets were alerted that it was a fake maneuver, but not an actual attack.

Later, after defecting to East Germany, Carney received the gold "Brotherhood in Arms Medal" from Stasi head Erich Mielke. Even later, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a US court sentenced Carney to 20 years in Fort Leavenworth, a military prison in Kansas. Carney, code-named "Kid," was one of a pair of top agents the Stasi had used to infiltrate the US military in West Berlin. The Americans estimated the damage that the "Kid" had caused by betraying secrets over a period of more than two years at $14.5 billion (€10.9 billion).
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Code Name 'Kid': American Stasi Spy Tells His Story (Original Post) unhappycamper Aug 2013 OP
K & R mgc1961 Aug 2013 #1
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