You probably didn’t notice. Hardly anyone here did. The Brits, as usual, paid more attention.
He was a Polish Jew, born Victor Spielman, which he changed to Victor Grayevsky after he found that “Spielman” was just too Jewish for an ambitious young Pole. He went to school in Kazakhstan, then returned to Poland at the end of the war, where he joined the Communist Party and made a bit of a name for himself as a journalist. In the mid-fifties he followed his parents and sister to Israel, where he ran a lot of the broadcasting to the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
And so? And so, he was arguably one of the most important men of the twentieth century, for he was the person who obtained the advance text of Khrushchev’s Secret Speech, the one delivered in February, 1956, the one that laid out the crimes of Stalin for the leaders of the Soviet Communist Party. That text was a turning point in the Cold War. Grayevsky gave it to the Israeli Embassy, where it was copied and sent to Israel. The Shin Bet intelligence service delivered it by courier to James Jesus Angleton, the head of CIA counterintelligence (and the CIA’s liaison with the Israelis), who gave it to CIA chief Allen Dulles, who gave it to President Eisenhower.
The speech made headlines around the world, and Khrushchev’s revelations were vigorously exploited by the United States, shocking the Communist faithful. But even more importantly, the speech provided a clear window into the world of Soviet Communism for American analysts both in and outside the government. Until then, it was possible for intelligence analysts and foreign service officers to believe that the Soviet system wasn’t all that horrible. The speech put paid to that delusion.
In keeping with the general rule that the most important information about the Soviet Union invariably came from “walk-ins,” and not from “agents” recruited by CIA, Grayevsky performed his world-changing act solely out of personal conviction. He had recently visited Israel to be with his dying father, and he had become a Zionist, secretly determined to emigrate to Israel as soon as he could manage it. But he was not working for the Israeli Government, or indeed any Western country.
It was only after his move to Israel shortly thereafter that Victor Grayevsky become involved in the world of espionage. The KGB recruited him, and for decades thereafter he pretended to be their man in Tel Aviv, while actually working as an Israeli double agent. He did his work so effectively that the Soviets awarded him the Lenin Medal.
But perhaps the most telling fact about Grayevsky came just a few years ago, after he retired. He decided to tell his story at long last, and wrote a memoir about his amazing life. You might have thought it would become an instant world-wide bestseller, but in fact he couldn’t find a publisher anywhere. By then, no editor was interested, and so far as I know his book didn’t even appear in Hebrew. It’s just one further example of the self-imposed ignorance that so afflicts us in this day and age.
If you Google “Victor Grayevsky,” you’ll find some articles from Australia, Italy and of course Israel, in addition to the Telegraph article linked above. But I haven’t seen anything in the big American papers or on the tube. A couple of bloggers noticed (Lucianne, for example), but nothing like the attention he deserved.
Sometimes you have to die before people notice how important you were. Maybe some serious publisher will now scratch his head and decide to permit Victor to tell his story.


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5 Comments
1. David W. Lincoln:Victor Grayevsky was one of the latter day Cassandra’s who wasn’t believed because, in her case she ticked off Apollo, even though she was accurate.
Frankly the fact that Victor’s story hasn’t been told reflects poorly on the literary world.
I suppose those who would have printed him, they are limited by only having so many languages mastered - none of which were used by Victor Grayevsky.
Nov 5, 2007 - 4:49 pm 2. Korla Pundit:They’re too busy publishing the lies of that most covert of spies, Valerie Plame.
If Grayevsky could have only worked in some way of blaming Bush for the gulags, then there’d be some press.
Nov 5, 2007 - 10:47 pm 3. Mark Buehner:One of the most important people of the century? Lets not get carried away… Angleton, for one, probably has a stronger case. I suspect the world without Grayevsky would have been dramatically less different than the world without Churchill or Von Nuemann or Borlaug or Reagan. The world would have eventually discovered the scope of Stalin’s crimes- i mean, even the NYT figured it out eventually.
Nov 6, 2007 - 5:14 pm 4. Harry:Looks like we could use a few Victor Spielman’s today. Today’s Weekly Standard carried an article by Michael Weiss called “The Cool Peace?” After your last scathing comment to me when I said we’re wasting our breath on Iran I was going to inform you that the cold war never ended. I wrote a couple of drafts but they ran on and on so I decided to delete them. Too bad. I actually did call Putin a tyrant a few years ago on certain message boards. He keeps making me right more and more each day. The marriage of Islamofascists and neo-communists is a very lethal combination. We’re getting bled dry by these forces. While we spill our blood and trillions of $$$ we find the same old nemeses growing stronger, namely Russia and China. I believe the underlying culprit to be oil. It’s been stated that under Colorodo sits a trillion barrels of oil in shale rocks waiting to be tapped. Back in 1979, the last time gas was rationed and shale oil was the rage, gas cost 67 cents. It’s nearly 30 years down the road, oil is $100/bbl and we haven’t done any shale mining. Let’s stop enriching tyrants, kings, and Islamofascists and start producing some domestic oil. Let China solve the Middle East’s problems. Let’s see them bleed for their oil. Why empower a former Soviet era KGB agent? Why allow Islamofascists to dictate anything let alone our future? Proxy wars are back in style. America via Israel vs Russia via Syria and Iran. As Weiss in his column says, it’s 1962 all over again. Yeah, but this time it’s worse.
ML:
Couldn’t agree more.
Nov 7, 2007 - 7:53 pm 5. mollo:Do you have a link to this famous speech? I’ve never heard of it.
Nov 10, 2007 - 12:33 am