The Moscow Rules

The Secret CIA Tactics That Helped America Win the Cold War

Hardcover, 272 pages

Published May 21, 2019 by PublicAffairs.

ISBN:
978-1-5417-6219-0
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(3 reviews)

Two former CIA agents stationed in Moscow reveal the ins and outs of spycraft.

The golden days of the espionage aspect of the Cold War may have been the early 1960s, but the contest was still going strong in the late-’70s, when the Mendezes (Spy Dust, 2002, etc.) were CIA operatives in Moscow. It was a heady and dangerous time, they write, whose closing months, dating into the mid-’80s, were marred by revelations of double agents and the quick dismantling of the CIA’s spy network. “The majority of Soviet citizens working for us,” they write, “had been arrested and executed, most of them betrayed by Americans inside the intelligence community.” But before that, there was a world of spycraft to explore, with elaborate disguises, consultations from magicians who helped construct secret compartments, and all kinds of nifty gadgetry, such as “a contraption that would allow an individual to rapidly rappel …

3 editions

Review of 'The Moscow Rules' on 'Goodreads'

I picked up this book from the library after hearing an interview with one of the authors on NPR. I was mostly interested in the aspects talking about how Hollywood special effects and magic tricks where integrated into CIA disguise repertoire. As such, there were several chapters that were quite interesting and talked about how certain devices or costume changes were planned out, although I would’ve liked more specific details. In terms of actual politics or spycraft however all the information in this book is pretty old of course. If that’s an area that interests you there’s probably not much new here although it seems like a good summary for someone new to the topic. I found it interesting how large the overlap was between Hollywood and the CIA. Overall it’s a pretty quick read and pretty shallow overview of the history of the time, so YMMV depending what you’re …

Review of 'The Moscow Rules' on 'Goodreads'

Fun enough for the nuts and bolts of espionage, disguise, and misdirection in Moscow in the '70s and '80s. Light reading about cool tradecraft.

It's not a memoir, and it doesn't really present an argument, other than that the CIA employed some extremely clever people (which no one would dispute).

The Mendezes are fascinating people and knew the Agency thoroughly from their decades of loyal service. But for that same reason, there's no critical or outsider perspective; very few connections are drawn to shifting world politics, or the arms race, or the influence of Reagan.

Even if they wanted to keep the focus narrowly on espionage tactics vs. the KGB - why not then include some material from or about the KGB side, available post-Cold War? How did the other side perceive what was going on? What were their strengths and weaknesses? (Based on the book, you would think that …

Review of 'The Moscow Rules' on 'Goodreads'

Good book, with interesting details about the technology and techniques used by the CIA. However many of the stories have been told before. The authors own book The Master of Disguse includes many of them. The book Billion Dollar Spy is a more detailed telling of the same assets and the agents who worked with them.