Re: The KGB Plays Chess
The main headline of the Toronto Daily Star on Monday Sept. 24, 1956 was "Soviet envoy expelled as spy tries to buy super jet data."
I assume that was the Avro CF-100 or CF-105, Arrow, which eventually got cancelled [with US pressure and the engineers took their ideas to NASA]. The news came from the Pan-Canadian Anti-Communist League.
Gennadi F. Popov, 2nd secretary at the Soviet embassy met a civil servant [30-year-old James Stanley Staples, accountant/Grade 2 clerk at the Rockcliffe air station] at a local chess club and invited the player to a game at the Soviet embassy. Over a period of 7-8 months a dozen Russian officials tried to pry out air force secrets from the RCAF employee. He said they first tried to convert him to communism then were fishing for military secrets but he gave them nothing. They offered him a camera. He was always short of money and on one evening, while he was drinking, he did borrow $50 from Popov, and the next day consulted a RCMP friend who told him to return it. The Russians didn't realize that he wasn't in a position to obtain any highly-secret information. Staples was fired in June and blacklisted. He also reported being shadowed by Nikolai P. Ostrovsky of the NKVD.
Club President John Bergevin said that more than a few members were approached to be spy contacts and he told Popov that if he heard any more complaints that they would be expelled. Some Canadian members resigned in protest when the Russians flocked to the club. The club was part of a civil servant recreation association, the RA centre.
The next day had photos of Popov at the chess board, Staples, and Mrs. Sam Goldstein, Popov's landlady, who was shocked to hear that he was a spy. Popov was ordered out by external affairs and left Canada on Aug. 12. The other Russian involved, Sergei V. Selivanov, third Secretary, wasn't recalled.
Originally posted by Gilles Groleau
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I assume that was the Avro CF-100 or CF-105, Arrow, which eventually got cancelled [with US pressure and the engineers took their ideas to NASA]. The news came from the Pan-Canadian Anti-Communist League.
Gennadi F. Popov, 2nd secretary at the Soviet embassy met a civil servant [30-year-old James Stanley Staples, accountant/Grade 2 clerk at the Rockcliffe air station] at a local chess club and invited the player to a game at the Soviet embassy. Over a period of 7-8 months a dozen Russian officials tried to pry out air force secrets from the RCAF employee. He said they first tried to convert him to communism then were fishing for military secrets but he gave them nothing. They offered him a camera. He was always short of money and on one evening, while he was drinking, he did borrow $50 from Popov, and the next day consulted a RCMP friend who told him to return it. The Russians didn't realize that he wasn't in a position to obtain any highly-secret information. Staples was fired in June and blacklisted. He also reported being shadowed by Nikolai P. Ostrovsky of the NKVD.
Club President John Bergevin said that more than a few members were approached to be spy contacts and he told Popov that if he heard any more complaints that they would be expelled. Some Canadian members resigned in protest when the Russians flocked to the club. The club was part of a civil servant recreation association, the RA centre.
The next day had photos of Popov at the chess board, Staples, and Mrs. Sam Goldstein, Popov's landlady, who was shocked to hear that he was a spy. Popov was ordered out by external affairs and left Canada on Aug. 12. The other Russian involved, Sergei V. Selivanov, third Secretary, wasn't recalled.
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