logo
As the Soviet Union Fell, Did the K.G.B. Leave a Gift in Brazil for Today's Spies?

As the Soviet Union Fell, Did the K.G.B. Leave a Gift in Brazil for Today's Spies?

New York Times22-05-2025
As federal police agents unraveled a Kremlin spying operation in Brazil, they confronted a mystery: How had so many deep-cover Russian spies managed to obtain seemingly authentic Brazilian birth certificates?
The police expected to find that the Russians had forged the documents or bribed municipal officials to create them and slip them into the registry as if they were from the 1980s and '90s.
But when the forensic report came back in April, according to a senior Brazilian official, the analysis suggested something else entirely. The documents did not appear forged. And, most surprising, they weren't even new.
Brazilian counterintelligence officers are now considering a more audacious possibility, one with echoes of the Cold War. Investigators suspect that K.G.B. officers, working undercover in Brazil during the last years of the Soviet Union, may have filed birth certificates in the names of fictitious newborns — hoping that a future generation of spies would someday claim them and continue the fight against the West.
If true, it would represent an extraordinary level of foresight and mission commitment by intelligence officers during a time of great upheaval and unpredictability in the world. By the late 1980s, the Communist bloc had begun to crumble, along with the ideological divisions that had defined global politics — and the mission of Moscow's spies — for decades.
Almost overnight, the K.G.B., once an unparalleled force in global affairs, was deprived of its central purpose, conflict with the West, and would soon be disbanded entirely.
But such forward thinking would align with the culture of Russian espionage, which, unlike in the West, often prizes creative long-term planning over immediate expediency. And in a country that is uniquely committed to placing officers in deep-cover assignments, obtaining birth certificates has long been a priority.
'It's just the sort of thing that they would do,' said Edward Lucas, a British author and expert on the Russian intelligence services. 'It fits with the meticulous and generational attention that they devote to creating these identities.'
Nonetheless, in interviews, intelligence experts and officials with several Western intelligence services could point to no other similar example in the history of Russian espionage. Some expressed skepticism about the hypothesis. Even the Brazilian investigators themselves are still unsure what to make of the findings of their forensic analysis. The investigation continues.
Brazilian courts have ordered that the birth certificates of the Russians suspected of operating as deep-cover operatives be kept secret, so The Times could not independently analyze them.
Creating a convincing cover identity is perhaps a spy's most important job. For Russia's elite deep-cover operatives, known as illegals, an airtight back story can mean be the difference between a heroic career and total failure. Unlike in the West, where intelligence officers may adopt fake identities for particular missions or tours of duty, these spies are meant to live their covers, often for decades.
Through their investigation, the Brazilian authorities disrupted what was essentially an assembly line for creating fake identities. For years, and perhaps decades, Russia's operatives had been traveling to Brazil, not to spy, but to become Brazilian. They obtained passports, created businesses, made friendships and fell in love. Then, when their covers were virtually unassailable, they were to set off for other countries to conduct espionage.
But the first crucial step was to obtain an authentic birth certificate. Historically, Moscow's spy services have devoted a great deal of energy to this task. In his memoir, Oleg Gordievsky, a former K.G.B. officer turned British agent, described his incessant search for birth records suitable for use by illegal operatives. He recounted how, while based in Denmark in the 1970s, he tried to recruit a priest who had access to a church ledger, in which births and deaths were inscribed.
'If we could gain access to the ledgers,' he wrote, 'we would be able to create any number of Danish identities.'
Whoever planted the birth certificates in Brazil paid great attention to detail.
'The ink is normal, the page is OK,' the senior Brazilian investigator said. 'There is no tampering of the books at all.' Like other officials, he requested anonymity because of the continuing investigation.
While the documents seemed legitimate, the information on them was bogus. The authorities found that the parents listed on the birth certificates either did not exist or had never had children whose names matched those on the documents.
One birth certificate, investigators discovered, contained a rare slip-up — or perhaps a sly wink from one generation of spies to the next. According to a Western intelligence official, one of the fathers listed on the document was the Brazilian alias of another Russian deep-cover operative who had worked in South America and Europe a generation earlier.
Andrei Soldatov, an author who is one of Russia's foremost experts on the intelligence services, said he had never heard of officers planting birth certificates so far in advance. But he said that would have been rewarded.
'If you can contribute to the illegals program, you put yourself in a really good spot in the eyes of your superiors,' he said. 'It would be really good for your career.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

African Union urges adoption of world map showing continent's true size
African Union urges adoption of world map showing continent's true size

CNN

time12 minutes ago

  • CNN

African Union urges adoption of world map showing continent's true size

The African Union has backed a campaign to end the use by governments and international organizations of the 16th-century Mercator map of the world in favor of one that more accurately displays Africa's size. Created by cartographer Gerardus Mercator for navigation, the projection distorts continent sizes, enlarging areas near the poles like North America and Greenland while shrinking Africa and South America. 'It might seem to be just a map, but in reality, it is not,' AU Commission deputy chairperson Selma Malika Haddadi told Reuters, saying the Mercator fostered a false impression that Africa was 'marginal,' despite being the world's second-largest continent by area, with over a billion people. The AU has 55 member states. Such stereotypes influence media, education and policy, she said. Criticism of the Mercator map is not new, but the 'Correct The Map' campaign led by advocacy groups Africa No Filter and Speak Up Africa has revived the debate, urging organizations to adopt the 2018 Equal Earth projection, which tries to reflect countries' true sizes. 'The current size of the map of Africa is wrong,' Moky Makura, executive director of Africa No Filter, said. 'It's the world's longest misinformation and disinformation campaign, and it just simply has to stop.' Fara Ndiaye, co-founder of Speak Up Africa, said the Mercator affected Africans' identity and pride, especially children who might encounter it early in school. 'We're actively working on promoting a curriculum where the Equal Earth projection will be the main standard across all (African) classrooms,' Ndiaye said, adding she hoped it would also be the one used by global institutions, including Africa-based ones. Haddadi said the AU endorsed the campaign, adding it aligned with its goal of 'reclaiming Africa's rightful place on the global stage' amid growing calls for reparations for colonialism and slavery. The AU will advocate for wider map adoption and discuss collective actions with member states, Haddadi added. The Mercator projection is still widely used, including by schools and tech companies. Google Maps switched from Mercator on desktop to a 3D globe view in 2018, though users can still switch back to the Mercator if they prefer. On the mobile app, however, the Mercator projection remains the default. 'Correct The Map' wants organizations like the World Bank and the United Nations to adopt the Equal Earth map. A World Bank spokesperson said they already use the Winkel-Tripel or Equal Earth for static maps and are phasing out Mercator on web maps. The campaign said it has sent a request to the UN geospatial body, UN-GGIM. A UN spokesperson said that once received it must be reviewed and approved by a committee of experts. Other regions are backing the AU's efforts. Dorbrene O'Marde, Vice Chair of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Reparations Commission, endorsed Equal Earth as a rejection of Mercator map's 'ideology of power and dominance.'

Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal
Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

By Lisandra Paraguassu and Lucinda Elliott BRASILIA/MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) -Brazil is engaged in a "constructive dialogue" with Canada to resume negotiations for a free trade agreement between South America's Mercosur bloc and Ottawa, the Brazilian Foreign Trade Secretary said. Canadian officials are due to visit Brazil in late August, according to Tatiana Prazeres, Brazil's Foreign Trade Secretary, who shared details of the visit in a written response to Reuters this week. Canada signaled renewed interest in restarting talks with Mercosur last month, as part of a broader push to diversify trade away from the United States amid uncertainty caused by tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump. Sources from both Canada and Brazil told Reuters that Canada's International Trade Minister, Maninder Sidhu, is expected to travel to Brasilia on August 25. Mercosur, which includes Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, with Bolivia in the process of becoming a full member, is a major exporter of beef, soybeans and minerals. Sidhu's visit "will be an opportunity to assess the conditions for a possible relaunching of negotiations," Prazeres said, although no formal date has been set to restart them, she added. Talks have been stalled since 2021 as South American countries focussed on local issues such as elections, before Trump's radical policy shifts reset the trade agenda. Two senior diplomatic sources said formal negotiations could resume in late September or early October. Bilateral trade between the U.S. and Canada totaled $727 billion last year while Canada's trade with Brazil - the biggest Mercosur economy - reached $9.1 billion, with Brazil posting a $3.5 billion surplus. One source monitoring developments said both sides view the Mercosur-Canada agreement as relatively obstacle-free and expect negotiations to take about a year. Prazeres said any formal restart of negotiations, including setting a timetable for talks, would depend on internal coordination within Mercosur. "Mercosur is willing to evaluate the next steps," she said. Uruguay's Foreign Ministry told Reuters that "no new steps" had been taken regarding Mercosur-Canada talks, but confirmed the agreement remains on the bloc's agenda. Argentina's Foreign Ministry declined to comment.

Bolivian voters are hungry for change — and disillusioned by the options ahead of election
Bolivian voters are hungry for change — and disillusioned by the options ahead of election

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Bolivian voters are hungry for change — and disillusioned by the options ahead of election

Bolivia Election LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) — The campaign billboards adorning the streets of Bolivia for Sunday's presidential election make grand promises: A solution to the dire economic crisis within 100 days, an end to fuel shortages and bread lines, unity for a divided nation. One vice presidential candidate pledges to 'Make Bolivia Sexy Again.' In their efforts to draw votes, all eight candidates — two right-wing front-runners, a conservative centrist and splintered factions of Bolivia's long-dominant left-wing — are vowing drastic change, launching searing attacks on the status quo and selling a message of hope. But for many Bolivians, hope has already hardened into cynicism. Slogans fail to break through Promises of quick fixes — like right-wing candidate Samuel Doria Medina's pledge to stabilize the upside-down economy within '100 days, dammit!' — fall flat. Vandals add extra zeroes to his campaign posters, suggesting a million days might be a more realistic goal. Tuto, the nickname of Jorge Quiroga, the other right-wing favorite, turns up on city walls with its first letter swapped to form a Spanish insult. Some signs for left-wing candidate Andrónico Rodríguez, pledging 'unity above all' have been defaced to read 'unity in the face of lines.' And few know what to do with the acronym of the governing party candidate, Eduardo del Castillo: 'We Are a National Option with Authentic Ideas.' (No, It's not any catchier in Spanish). Yet for all their disenchantment with politicians, Bolivians are counting down the days until elections, united in their relief that, no matter what happens, leftist President Luis Arce will leave office after five difficult years. Inflation is soaring. The central bank has burned through its dollar reserves. Imported goods have vanished from shelves. 'I have no faith in any candidate. There's no one new in this race,' Alex Poma Quispe, 25, told The Associated Press from his family's fruit truck, where he slept curled into a ball in the front seat Wednesday for a second straight night, stranded with 50 other trucks in a fuel line en route from farms in the Yungas region to markets in Bolivia's capital of La Paz. 'The only thing we're enthusiastic about is Arce leaving.' New campaigns, old faces A bitter power struggle between Arce and former President Evo Morales has shattered their hegemonic Movement Toward Socialism, or MAS, party, giving the right-wing opposition its best shot at victory in two decades. 'I've seen that socialism has brought nothing good to this country,' said Victor Ticona, 24, a music student, as he left Quiroga's campaign rally Wednesday. 'We have to become more competitive in the world.' Doria Medina, a 66-year-old multimillionaire businessman, and Quiroga, a 65-year-old former vice president who briefly assumed the presidency in 2001 after then-President Hugo Banzer resigned with cancer, are familiar faces in Bolivian politics. Both have run for president three times before. While their calls for economic freedom and foreign investment appeal to voters desperate for change, they have struggled to stir up excitement. Nearly 30% of voters are undecided, according to polls. Doria Medina, a former minister of planning, acknowledged in a recent social media video that 'people say I have no charisma, that I'm too serious.' Quiroga's association with Banzer, a former military dictator who brutally quashed dissent over seven corruption-plagued years before being democratically elected, has turned some voters off. 'It was a bloody era,' recalled 52-year-old taxi driver Juan Carlos Mamani. 'For me, Tuto is the definition of the old guard.' At the pumps, not the polls Poma Quispe and his 24-year-old brother Weimar have no idea who'd they vote for — or if they'll vote at all. Voting is compulsory in Bolivia, and about 7.9 million people in the country of 12 million are eligible to cast ballots in Sunday's election. Non-voters face various financial penalties. Over the past year, fuel shortages have brought much of Bolivia to a standstill. Truckers waste days at a time queuing at empty gas stations around Bolivia, just to keep their vehicles moving. The diesel arrives on no set schedule, and the rhythm of life is forced to adapt. If the diesel arrives before Sunday, the Poma Quispe brothers will vote. If not, 'there's no way we're giving up our spot in line for those candidates,' Weimar Poma Quispe said. Personal drama over political debate This year's election coincides with the 200th anniversary of Bolivia's independence. But instead of celebrating, many Bolivians are questioning the validity of their democracy and state-directed economic model. Crowds booed at President Arce during his bicentennial speech earlier this month. His government invited left-wing presidents from across Latin America to attend the event; only the president of Honduras showed. The lack of enthusiasm among ordinary Bolivians and beleaguered officials seems matched by that of the candidates. Authorities allowed televised presidential debates — banned under Morales — for the first time in 20 years. The front-runners turned up to just one of them. Personal attacks overshadowed policy discussions. Doria Medina accused Del Castillo of ties to drug traffickers, while Del Castillo mocked the businessman's record of failed presidential bids. Rodríguez and Quiroga traded barbs over alleged involvement in extrajudicial killings. Chasing the youth vote The median age in Bolivia is 26. For comparison, it is 39 in China and the United States. Having grown up under the government of Morales and his MAS party, many young Bolivians are restive, disillusioned by current prospects as they become more digitally connected than any generation before them. Quiroga in particular has energized young voters with his running mate, JP Velasco, a successful 38-year-old tech entrepreneur with no political experience who vows to reverse a brain drain in Bolivia and create opportunities for youth in exploiting the country's abundant reserves of lithium, the critical metal for electric vehicle batteries, and developing data centers. Young crowds packed Quiroga's Wednesday night campaign rally, even as 20-somethings in goth makeup and tight-stretch dresses expressed more interest in the lively cumbia bands than the political speeches. Others sported red MAGA-style caps with Velasco's slogan, 'Make Bolivia Sexy Again.' Cap-wearers offered varying answers on when Bolivia was last 'sexy,' with some saying never, but agreed it meant attractive to foreign investors. 'It won't just be tech companies coming here, McDonald's might even come,' Velasco told the crowd, eliciting whoops and howls. 'Young people, if you go abroad, let it be for vacation.' ____ Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store