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SpyCast

“America's Most Damaging Russian Spy, FBI Agent Robert Hanssen" – with Lis Wiehl

SpyCast

SpyCast

Education, News, History

4.41.7K Ratings

🗓️ 10 May 2022

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Summary Lis Wiehl (Twitter, Website) joins Andrew (Twitter; LinkedIn) to discuss the FBI Agent Robert Hanssen. His espionage for the Russians was described as the “worst intelligence disaster in U.S. history.”  What You’ll Learn Intelligence The many contradictions of this fragmented personality The criminal sworn FBI Agent The sexual fetishist in Opus Dei The anti-communist Soviet spy Hanssen’s impact on the FBI and American Intelligence How the Hanssen case effected the FBI-CIA relationship  Reflections Technology’s impact on the espionage/counterespionage cat-and-mouse game Cultural and institutional blind spots And much, much more… Episode Notes The International Spy Museum has the handcuffs that were put on one of the most notorious spies in American history, former FBI Agent Robert Hanssen. But what was the backstory of the moment those metal restraints closed around his wrists in Foxstone Park, Virginia? What did he do? Why did he do it? Who was this man? What damage did he do? To discuss these questions, Andrew sat down with the author of A Spy in Plain Sight, Lis Wiehl. Lis is a former Federal Prosecutor and a legal analyst and reporter on major news networks, including a 15-year stint at Fox News. She is the best-selling author of 20 fiction and non-fiction books and last but not least she is the daughter of an FBI Agent who heard stories of Hanssen’s betrayal from her father. Hanssen betrayed “jewel in the crown of American intelligence, Dimitri Polyakov, and other U.S. assets, as well as handing over thousands of pages of highly classified information to the Soviet Union and later Russia. And… In the intelligence community compartmentalization is a way to try to protect sensitive information, caveats, codewords, clearances, read ins, need to know, etc., but in the personal context it refers to being capable of being a “different person in terms of outlook, values and behavior at different times and circumstances.” David Charney met with Hanssen for an entire year after his arrest and described him as “the most compartmentalized person I have ever met.” He also mentions that he is a very experienced psychiatrist. Charney says in terms of compartmentalization most of us are a 1-2 on a scale of 10. Guess where Hanssen was? Quote of the Week "At one point hacked into one of his colleagues’ computers to get more information, he was found out and his excuse was, I was just trying to show you how easily we're hacked into so that we can make sure that we don’t, and they believed him because he was a computer guy…they just believed him when he hacked in this other person's computer. Crazy." – Lis Wiehl Resources Headline Resource A Spy in Plain Sight, L. Wiehl (S&S, 2022) *SpyCasts* “The FBI Way” - Counterintelligence Chief Frank Figliuzzi “Leningrad, Molehunts, and Life After the CIA” - Christopher Burgess (2021) “Defending a Spy, An Espionage Attorney” - Plato Cacheris (2015) “The Movie Breach and Hollywood’s Take on Espionage” – Eric O’Neill (2007) “FBI Counterintelligence and the Robert Hanssen Spy Case” – Dave Major (2007) Books New History of Soviet Intelligence, J. Haslam (FS&J, 2015) Spy Handler, V. Cherkashin, (Basic, 2008) Articles Spy Who Kept Cold War Cold – Polyakov, History (2019) Spy Psychology/Insider Spies, NOIR (2014) Death of the Perfect Spy – Polyakov, Time (2001) Videos Charney on What Makes Traitors Tick? SPY (2014) Primary Sources Witness to History at SPY, Hanssen Investigation (2013) Review on FBI Performance Detecting Hanssen, OIG (2003)  A Review of FBI Security Programs, Webster Commission (2002) Sandy Grimes Interview on Polyakov (1998) *Wildcard Resource* Inside the Supermax Prison (Florence, Colorado)  Hanssen is here alongside Harold James Nicholson, El Chapo, Ramzi Yousef and Terry Nichols

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to The CyberWire Network, powered by N2K.

0:12.0

Hey, Spycast listeners, I'm Maria Varmazes, host of another N2K podcast, called T-Space Daily.

0:21.0

I'm a big fan of Andrew Hammond and Spycast.

0:25.0

That voice, right?

0:27.0

I love the world of spies and intelligence, and I bet you do too.

0:31.0

That's why I know you'll also love our show, T-Space Daily.

0:36.0

If you want to unravel the world of space mysteries, T-Space Daily gives you the latest from across the space industry around the world and into the cosmos.

0:48.0

If you're looking to separate the signal from the noise and stay current on what's happening in space,

0:54.0

from science and technology to business and espionage, then join me every day for T-Space Daily.

1:02.0

We are T-Space Daily.

1:04.0

Now sit back, relax, and back to you, Andrew.

1:17.0

What's the true cost of a single cybersecurity incident?

1:21.0

Try $4.3 million, and it's even higher in the United States.

1:26.0

Each organization faces more than 1200 cyber attacks per year, tally that up, and you're staring down some hefty losses.

1:34.0

Getting ahead of these threats requires the right technology for tying cyber risk to business impact, so you can add context to any risk decision,

1:43.0

prioritize remediation, and report what matters most to your key stakeholders.

1:48.0

LogicGate's risk cloud, cyber risk, and controls compliance solution makes all of that possible.

1:54.0

Learn more at LogicGate.com.

2:05.0

Hi, and welcome to Spy Cups.

2:09.0

I'm your host, Dr. Andrew Hammond, the storing curator here at the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C.

2:18.0

Spycast's sole purpose is to educate our listeners about the past, present, and future of intelligence and espionage.

2:28.0

Every week through engaging conversations we explore some aspect of a vast ecosystem that looms beneath the surface of everyday life.

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