Legendary scout of the 20th century. Patriotic stories. Rudolf Abel

Exactly 55 years ago, on February 10, 1962, on the bridge separating the Federal Republic of Germany and the German Democratic Republic, an exchange took place between the illegal Soviet intelligence officer Rudolf Abel (real name William Genrikhovich Fischer) and the American pilot Francis Powers, who was shot down over the USSR. Abel behaved courageously in prison: he did not reveal to the enemy even the smallest episode of his work, and he is still remembered and respected not only in our country, but also in the USA.

Shield and sword of the legendary scout

Steven Spielberg's film Bridge of Spies, released in 2015, which told about the fate of a Soviet intelligence officer and his exchange, was recognized by film critics as one of the best in the work of the famous American director. The film was made in the spirit of deep respect for the Soviet intelligence officer. Abel, played by British actor Mark Rylance, is a strong-willed person in the film, while Powers is a coward.

In Russia, the intelligence colonel was also immortalized on film. He was played by Yuri Belyaev in the 2010 film “Fights: The US Government vs. Rudolf Abel”; his fate is partly told in the cult film of the 60s “Dead Season” by Savva Kulish, at the beginning of which the legendary intelligence officer himself addressed the audience from the screen with a small commentary .

He also worked as a consultant on another famous Soviet spy film, “Shield and Sword” by Vladimir Basov, where the main character, played by Stanislav Lyubshin, was named Alexander Belov (A. Belov - in honor of Abel). Who is he, a man who is known and respected on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean?

An American U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, piloted by Francis Powers, was shot down near the city of Sverdlovsk 55 years ago, on May 1, 1960. Look at the archive footage to see what consequences this incident caused.

Artist, engineer or scientist

William Genrikhovich Fischer was a very talented and versatile person with a phenomenal memory and a very developed instinct that helped him find the right solution in the most unexpected situations.

Since childhood, he, born in the small English town of Newcastle upon Tyne, spoke several languages, played various musical instruments, was an excellent painter, sketcher, understood technology and was interested in the natural sciences. He could have turned out to be a wonderful musician, engineer, scientist or artist, but fate itself predetermined his future path even before birth.

More precisely, the father, Heinrich Matthaus Fischer, a German subject who was born on April 9, 1871 on the estate of Prince Kurakin in the Yaroslavl province, where his parent worked as a manager. In his youth, after meeting the revolutionary Gleb Krzhizhanovsky, Heinrich became seriously interested in Marxism and became an active participant in the Union of Struggle for the Liberation of the Working Class created by Vladimir Ulyanov.

Named after Shakespeare

The secret police soon drew attention to Fischer, which was followed by an arrest and many years of exile - first to the north of the Arkhangelsk province, then a transfer to the Saratov province. Under these conditions, the young revolutionary proved himself to be an extraordinary conspirator. Constantly changing names and addresses, he continued to fight illegally.

In Saratov, Henry met a young like-minded person, a native of this province, Lyubov Vasilievna Korneeva, who received three years for her revolutionary activities. They soon married and left Russia together in August 1901, when Fischer was faced with a choice: immediate arrest and deportation in shackles to Germany or voluntary departure from the country.

The young couple settled in Great Britain, where on July 11, 1903, their youngest son was born, who received his name in honor of Shakespeare. Young William passed the exams at the University of London, but he did not have to study there - his father decided to return to Russia, where the revolution took place. In 1920, the family moved to the RSFSR, receiving Soviet citizenship and retaining British citizenship.

The best of the best radio operators

William Fisher entered VKHUTEMAS (Higher Art and Technical Workshops), one of the leading art universities in the country at the time, but in 1925 he was drafted into the army and became one of the best radio operators in the Moscow Military District. His primacy was also recognized by his colleagues, among whom were the future participant of the first Soviet drifting station "North Pole-1", the famous polar explorer and radio operator Ernst Krenkel and the future People's Artist of the USSR, artistic director of the Maly Theater Mikhail Tsarev.

© AP Photo


After demobilization, Fischer seemed to have found his calling - he worked as a radio technician at the Red Army Air Force Research Institute (now the State Flight Test Center of the Russian Ministry of Defense named after Valery Chkalov). In 1927, he married harpist Elena Lebedeva, and two years later their daughter Evelina was born.

It was at this time that political intelligence, the OGPU, drew attention to a promising young man with an excellent knowledge of several foreign languages. Since 1927, William has been an employee of the Foreign Department of Foreign Intelligence, where he worked first as a translator and then as a radio operator.

Dismissal due to suspicions

In the early 30s, he asked the British authorities to issue him a passport, because he allegedly quarreled with his revolutionary father and wanted to return to England with his family. The British willingly gave Fischer documents, after which the intelligence officer worked illegally for several years in Norway, Denmark, Belgium and France, where he created a secret radio network, transmitting messages from local stations to Moscow.

How the American U-2 piloted by Francis Powers was shot downOn May 1, 1960, an American U-2 aircraft, piloted by pilot Francis Powers, violated Soviet airspace and was shot down near the city of Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg).

In 1938, to escape large-scale repressions in the Soviet intelligence apparatus, NKVD resident in Republican Spain Alexander Orlov fled to the West.

After this incident, William Fisher was recalled to the USSR and at the end of the same year was dismissed from the authorities with the rank of state security lieutenant (corresponding to the rank of army captain).

This change in attitude towards the quite successful intelligence officer was dictated only by the fact that the new head of the People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs, Lavrentiy Beria, openly did not trust the employees who worked with previously repressed “enemies of the people” in the NKVD. Fischer was also very lucky: many of his colleagues were shot or imprisoned.

Friendship with Rudolf Abel

Fischer was brought back into service by the war with Germany. From September 1941, he worked in the central intelligence apparatus at Lubyanka. As head of the communications department, he took part in ensuring the security of the parade that took place on November 7, 1941 on Red Square. He was involved in the training and transfer of Soviet agents to the Nazi rear, led the work of partisan detachments and participated in several successful radio games against German intelligence.

It was during this period that he became friends with Rudolf Ivanovich (Ioganovich) Abel. Unlike Fischer, this active and cheerful Latvian came to reconnaissance from the fleet, in which he fought during the civil war. During the war, they and their families lived in the same apartment in the center of Moscow.

They were brought together not only by their common service, but also by the common features of their biography. For example, like Fischer, Abel was dismissed from service in 1938. His older brother Voldemar was accused of participating in a Latvian nationalist organization and was shot. Rudolf, like William, found himself in demand at the beginning of the Great Patriotic War, carrying out important tasks in organizing sabotage behind the lines of German troops.

And in 1955, Abel died suddenly, never knowing that his best friend was sent to work illegally in the United States. The Cold War was at its height.

The enemy's nuclear secrets were required. Under these conditions, William Fisher, who, under the guise of a Lithuanian refugee, managed to organize two large intelligence networks in the United States, turned out to be an invaluable person for Soviet scientists. For which he was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

Failure and paint

The volume of interesting information was so great that over time Fischer needed another radio operator. Moscow sent Major Nikolai Ivanov as his assistant. It was a personnel error. Ivanov, working under the agent name Reino Heihanen, turned out to be a drinker and a lover of women. When they decided to recall him back in 1957, he turned to the US intelligence services.

They managed to warn Fischer about the betrayal and began to prepare to flee the country through Mexico, but he recklessly decided to return to the apartment and destroy all evidence of his work. FBI agents arrested him. But even in such a stressful moment, William Genrikhovich was able to maintain amazing composure.

He, who continued to paint in the United States, asked American counterintelligence officers to erase the paint from the palette. Then he quietly threw a crumpled piece of paper with a coded telegram into the toilet and flushed it. When detained, he identified himself as Rudolf Abel, thereby making it clear to the Center that he was not a traitor.

Under someone else's name

During the investigation, Fischer resolutely denied his involvement in Soviet intelligence, refused to testify at trial, and suppressed all attempts by American intelligence officers to work for them. They got nothing from him, not even his real name.

But Ivanov’s testimony and letters from his beloved wife and daughter became the basis for a harsh sentence - more than 30 years in prison. In prison, Fischer-Abel painted oil paintings and worked on solving mathematical problems. A few years after this, the traitor suffered punishment - a huge truck crashed into a car driven by Ivanov on a highway at night.


Five Most Famous Prisoner SwapsNadezhda Savchenko was officially handed over to Ukraine today, Kyiv, in turn, handed over Russians Alexander Alexandrov and Evgeny Erofeev to Moscow. Formally, this is not an exchange, but it is an occasion to recall the most famous cases of transfer of prisoners between countries.

The intelligence officer's fate began to change on May 1, 1960, when the pilot of the U-2 spy plane, Francis Powers, was shot down in the USSR. In addition, the newly elected President John Kennedy sought to ease tensions between the United States and the USSR.

As a result, it was decided to exchange the mysterious Soviet intelligence officer for three people at once. On February 10, 1962, at the Glienicke Bridge, Fischer was handed over to Soviet intelligence services in exchange for Powers. Two American students previously arrested on espionage charges, Frederic Pryor and Marvin Makinen, were also released.

The Glienicke Bridge over the Havel River, dividing Berlin with Potsdam, does not stand out as anything special today. However, tourists are attracted to it not by today, but by history. During the Cold War, it was not just a bridge, but a border dividing two political systems - capitalist West Berlin and the socialist German Democratic Republic.

Since the early 1960s, the bridge received the unofficial name “Spy”, since it was here that exchanges of arrested intelligence officers between warring parties to the conflict began to take place regularly.

Of course, sooner or later the story of the bridge was bound to attract the attention of Hollywood. And in 2015 the film premiered directed by Steven Spielberg“Bridge of Spies” is the story of the very first and most famous exchange of intelligence officers between the two countries. On December 3, 2015, the film “Bridge of Spies” was released in Russia.

As usual, the fascinating story told in the film is an American view of events, multiplied by the artistic imagination of the creators of the film.

Mark's failure

The real story of the exchange of Soviet illegals Rudolf Abel on an American reconnaissance aircraft pilot Francis Powers was devoid of bright colors and special effects, but no less interesting.

Since 1948, a Soviet intelligence agent under the pseudonym Mark began illegal work in the United States. Among the tasks assigned by management to Mark was obtaining information about the US nuclear program.

Rudolf Abel. USSR stamp from the issue “Soviet Intelligence Officers”. Photo: Public Domain

Mark lived in New York under the name of an artist Emil Robert Goldfus and, as a cover, owned a photography studio in Brooklyn.

Mark worked brilliantly, supplying invaluable information to Moscow. Just a few months later, management nominated him for the Order of the Red Banner.

In 1952, another illegal immigrant, operating under the pseudonym Vic, was sent to help Mark. This was a serious mistake by Moscow: Vic turned out to be morally and psychologically unstable and, as a result, not only informed the US authorities about his work for Soviet intelligence, but also betrayed Mark.

Under someone else's name

Mark, despite everything, denied his affiliation with Soviet intelligence, refused to testify at the trial and rejected attempts by American intelligence agencies to persuade him to cooperate. The only thing he revealed during interrogation was his real name. The illegal's name was Rudolf Abel.

It was clear to the Americans that the man they detained and denied his involvement in intelligence was a top-class professional. The court sentenced him to 32 years in prison for espionage. Abel was kept in solitary confinement, without abandoning attempts to persuade him to confess. However, the intelligence officer rejected all American proposals, spending time in prison solving mathematical problems, studying art theory and painting.

In fact, the name that the intelligence officer revealed to the Americans was false. His name was William Fisher. Behind him was illegal work in Norway and Great Britain, training radio operators for partisan detachments and reconnaissance groups sent to countries occupied by Germany during the Second World War. It was during the war that Fischer worked together with Rudolf Abel, whose name he used after his arrest.

The real Rudolf Abel died in Moscow in 1955. Fischer named his name in order, on the one hand, to give the leadership a signal about his arrest, and on the other, to indicate that he was not a traitor and did not tell the Americans any information.

"Family ties

After it became clear that Mark was in the hands of the Americans, careful work began in Moscow to free him. It was not conducted through official channels - the Soviet Union refused to recognize Rudolf Abel as its agent.

Contacts with the Americans were established on behalf of Abel’s relatives. GDR intelligence officers organized letters and telegrams addressed to Abel from a certain aunt of his: “Why are you silent? You didn’t even wish me a Happy New Year or Merry Christmas!”

So the Americans were made to understand that someone had an interest in Abel and was ready to discuss the conditions for his release.

Abel’s cousin joined the correspondence Jurgen Drives, who was actually a KGB officer Yuri Drozdov, and also an East German lawyer Wolfgang Vogel, who will continue to often act as a mediator in such sensitive matters. Abel's lawyer James Donovan became a mediator on the American side.

The negotiations were difficult, first of all, because the Americans were able to appreciate the importance of the figure of Abel-Fisher. Proposals to exchange him for Nazi criminals convicted in the USSR and Eastern European countries were rejected.

The main trump card of the USSR fell from the sky

The situation changed on May 1, 1960, when an American U-2 reconnaissance aircraft piloted by Francis Powers was shot down near Sverdlovsk. The first reports of the destruction of the plane did not contain information about the fate of the pilot, so US President Dwight Eisenhower officially stated that the pilot got lost while carrying out a meteorological mission. It turned out that the cruel Russians shot down the peaceful scientist.

The trap set by the Soviet leadership slammed shut. The Soviet side presented not only the wreckage of a plane with spy equipment, but also a living pilot detained after landing by parachute. Francis Powers, who simply had nowhere to go, admitted that he was on a spy flight for the CIA.

On August 19, 1960, Powers was sentenced by the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the USSR under Article 2 “On criminal liability for state crimes” to 10 years in prison, with the first three years to be served in prison.

Almost as soon as it became known that the American pilot of the spy plane had fallen into the hands of the Russians, there were calls in the American press to exchange him for the convicted Abel, whose trial was widely covered in the United States.

Now the USSR has taken revenge by holding an equally high-profile trial of Powers.

The American pilot really became a significant bargaining chip in the negotiations for Abel’s release. Still, the Americans were not ready for a one-for-one exchange. As a result, an American student from Yale was offered to join Powers. Frederick Pryor, arrested for spying in East Berlin in August 1961, and a young American Marvin Makinen from the University of Pennsylvania, who was serving an 8-year sentence for espionage in the USSR.

Strange “fishermen” and an “ambush regiment” in a van

Finally, the parties reached an agreement in principle. The question arose as to where the exchange should take place.

Of all the possible options, they chose the Glienicke Bridge, exactly in the middle of which the state border between West Berlin and the GDR ran.

The dark green steel bridge was about a hundred meters long; the approaches to it were clearly visible, which made it possible to take all precautions.

Both sides did not really trust each other until the very end. So, on this day, a large number of fishing enthusiasts were discovered under the bridge, who suddenly lost interest in such a hobby after the operation was completed. And in a covered van with a radio station, which approached from the direction of the GDR, a detachment of East German border guards was hiding, ready for any surprises.

On the morning of February 10, 1962, Abel was delivered to the bridge by the Americans, and Powers by the Soviets. The second point of exchange was the Checkpoint Charlie checkpoint in Berlin, on the border between the eastern and western parts of the city. It was there that the American side was handed over Frederick Pryor.

Once word of Pryor's transfer was received, the bulk of the exchange began.

Glienicke Bridge. Photo: Commons.wikimedia.org

"Rarity" from President Kennedy

Before Rudolf Abel was taken to the bridge, the American accompanying him asked: “Are you not afraid, Colonel, that you will be sent to Siberia? Think, it’s not too late!” Abel smiled and replied: “My conscience is clear. I have nothing to fear."

Official representatives of the parties were convinced that the persons delivered were indeed Abel and Powers.

When all the formalities were completed, Abel and Powers were allowed to go to their own.

One of the participants in the exchange operation from the Soviet side Boris Nalivaiko described what was happening this way: “And after that, Powers and Abel begin to move, the rest remain in place. And so they go towards each other, and here I must tell you, the climax. I still... I have this picture before my eyes, how these two people, whose names will now always be mentioned together, walk and literally glare at each other - who is who. And even when it was already possible to go to us, but, I see, Abel turns his head, accompanies Powers, and Powers turns his head, accompanies Abel. It was a touching picture."

At parting, the American representative handed Abel a document, which is now kept in the foreign intelligence history room at the SVR headquarters in Yasenevo. This is a document signed US President John Kennedy And Attorney General Robert Kennedy and sealed with the large red seal of the Ministry of Justice. It reads, in part: “Be it known that I, John F. Kennedy, President of the United States of America, guided by... good intentions, hereafter decree that the term of imprisonment of Rudolf Ivanovich Abel on the day that Francis Harry Powers, an American citizen , now imprisoned by the Government of the Soviet Union, be released... and placed under the arrest of a representative of the Government of the United States... and provided that the said Rudolf Ivanovich Abel be expelled from the United States and remain outside the United States, its territories and possessions." .

The best place

The last participant in the exchange, Marvin Makinen, as previously agreed, was transferred to the American side a month later.

William Fisher really did not end up in Siberia, as the Americans predicted. After rest and treatment, he continued to work in the central intelligence apparatus, and a few years later made an opening statement for the Soviet film “Dead Season,” some of the plot twists of which were directly related to his own biography.

Chairman of the KGB under the Council of Ministers of the USSR Vladimir Semichastny (1st from left) receives Soviet intelligence officers Rudolf Abel (2nd from left) and Conan the Young (2nd from right). Photo: RIA Novosti

Francis Powers experienced many unpleasant moments in the United States, listening to accusations of treason. Many believed that he should have committed suicide rather than fall into the hands of the Russians. However, a military inquiry and an investigation by the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee cleared him of all charges.

After finishing his intelligence work, Powers worked as a civilian pilot; on August 1, 1977, he died in a helicopter crash he was piloting.

And the Glienicke Bridge, after the successful exchange on February 10, 1962, remained the main place for such operations until the fall of the GDR and the collapse of the socialist bloc.

FBI Director Edgar Hoover once gave a kind of description of his professional qualities: “The persistent hunt for spymaster Abel is one of the most remarkable cases in our asset...” And the long-time head of the CIA, Allen Dulles, added another touch to this portrait, writing in his book “The Art of Intelligence”: “Everything that Abel did, he did out of conviction, and not for money. I would like us to have three or four people like Abel in Moscow.”

His biography is a ready-made script not even for a feature film, but for an exciting serial saga. And even if something has already formed the basis of individual film works, not in every film you will see what this person really went through, what he experienced. He himself is a cross-section of history, its living embodiment. A visible example of worthy service to his cause and devotion to the country for which he took mortal risks

Don't think down on seconds

Rudolf Ivanovich Abel (real name William Genrikhovich Fischer) was born on July 11, 1903 in the small town of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in England, into a family of Russian political emigrants. His father, a native of the Yaroslavl province, was from a family of Russified Germans, actively participated in revolutionary activities and was sent abroad as “unreliable.” In England, he and his chosen one, the Russian girl Lyuba, had a son, who was named William - in honor of Shakespeare. My father was well versed in natural sciences and knew three languages. This love was passed on to Willie. At the age of 16, he successfully passed the exam at the University of London, but at that time his family decided to return to Moscow.

Here William works as a translator in the international relations department of the Executive Committee of the Comintern, and studies at the Institute of Oriental Studies. There was also conscription military service - her future intelligence officer served in the radiotelegraph regiment of the Moscow Military District, as well as work at the Red Army Air Force Research Institute. In 1927, William Fisher was hired into the foreign department of the OGPU as an assistant commissioner. He performed illegal intelligence tasks in Europe, including acting as a station radio operator. Upon returning to Moscow, he received the rank of state security lieutenant, but after some time he was unexpectedly dismissed from intelligence. It is believed that this was Beria’s personal decision: he did not trust the personnel working with “enemies of the people,” and Fischer managed to work abroad for some time with the defector Alexander Orlov.

William got a job at the All-Union Chamber of Commerce, later worked at an aircraft manufacturing plant, but at the same time bombarded his former “office” with reports of reinstatement. His request was granted in the fall of 1941, when the need arose for experienced, proven specialists. Fischer was enlisted in a unit that organized sabotage groups and partisan detachments behind enemy lines, in particular, he trained radio operators to be deployed behind the front line. During that period, he became friends with his workmate Abel, whose name he would later use when arrested.

After the war, William Fisher was sent to the United States, where, living on different passports, he organized his own photo studio in New York, which played the role of an effective cover. It was from here that he directed the vast intelligence network of the USSR in America. In the late 40s, he worked with the famous intelligence officers the Cohen couple. This activity was extremely effective - important documents and information were received into the country, including on missile weapons. However, in 1957, the intelligence officer ended up in the hands of the CIA. There was a traitor in his circle - it was radio operator Heikhanen (pseudonym “Vic”), who, fearing punishment from his superiors for drunkenness and waste of official funds, passed on information about the intelligence network to the American intelligence services. When the arrest occurred, Fischer introduced himself as Rudolf Abel, and it was under this name that he went down in history. Despite the fact that he did not admit his guilt, the court imposed a sentence of 32 years in prison. The intelligence officer also rejected persistent attempts by American intelligence officers to persuade him to cooperate. In 1962, Abel was exchanged for the American U-2 spy plane pilot Francis Powers, who was shot down two years earlier in the skies over the Urals.

After rest and treatment, William Fisher - Rudolf Abel returned to work in the central apparatus of Soviet intelligence. He took part in the training of young specialists who were to go to the “front line” of foreign intelligence. The famous intelligence officer passed away on November 15, 1971. The SVR website notes that “Colonel V. Fischer for outstanding services in ensuring the state security of our country was awarded the Order of Lenin, three Orders of the Red Banner, two Orders of the Red Banner of Labor, the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, the Red Star, many medals, as well as badge “Honorary State Security Officer”.

They whistle like bullets at your temple

The name of Abel-Fisher is known to the general public, by and large, only from the final episode of his work in America and the subsequent exchange for a downed US pilot. Meanwhile, his biography had many bright pages, including those about which not everyone knows everything. Special services historian, journalist and writer Nikolai Dolgopolov, in his book “Legendary Intelligence Officers,” focused on only some facts from the life of the legendary intelligence officer. But they also reveal him as a real hero. It turns out that it was Fischer who conducted the radio game on behalf of the captured German Lieutenant Colonel Schorhorn.

“According to the legend planted on the Germans by Pavel Sudoplatov’s department, a large Wehrmacht unit operated in the Belarusian forests and miraculously escaped capture. It allegedly attacks regular Soviet units, while simultaneously reporting to Berlin about the movement of enemy troops, writes Nikolai Dolgopolov. - In Germany they believed this, especially since the small group of Germans wandering in the forests actually maintained regular contact with Berlin. It was William Fisher, dressed in the uniform of a fascist officer, who played this game together with his radio operators.”

The Germans were fooled in this way for almost a year. For this operation and for his work during the war in general, William Fisher was awarded the Order of Lenin. He received the military order of the Red Star in the very first years of his work in the USA. Then, not only from New York, where he lived (by the way, he allegedly settled in mockery at 252 Fulton Street - near the FBI office), but also from the coast, radiograms came from the coast about the movements of military equipment, information regarding the operational situation in major American port cities, delivery, transportation of military cargo from the Pacific coast. Fischer also led the network of Soviet “atomic agents” - this, as Nikolai Dolgopolov notes, “was his first and most important task.” In general, “Mark” - this was the pseudonym Fisher had in the USA - managed to quickly reorganize the illegal network that remained in the USA after World War II. The fact is that in 1948, Soviet intelligence suffered losses here: even before Fischer’s arrival, many Soviet agents were arrested due to betrayal, our consulates and official representative offices in New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco were closed.

“Nine years of work, each of which counts to the illegal immigrant for two, several orders, and a promotion in rank. The colonel did not manage to accomplish even more, although he created all the conditions for successful work - his own and the agents’, notes Nikolai Dolgopolov. “The traitor Heihanen interfered.”

During the arrest, Fischer showed fantastic composure and composure. When people from the FBI called him a colonel, he immediately realized that the traitor was “Vic”: only the radio operator knew what officer rank “Mark” had. Our intelligence officer also behaved courageously during the trial: his lawyer James Donovan later recalled with what admiration he watched his client. But the sentence for a 54-year-old man looked almost like death - 32 years in prison... By the way, in Steven Spielberg’s recent film Bridge of Spies, the image of the Soviet intelligence officer was talentedly portrayed by British actor Mark Rylance, showing the character of his hero without the usual Hollywood cliches and current anti-Russian hysteria . The role was so successful that the artist even received an Oscar for her performance. It is worth noting that Rudolf Abel himself took part in the creation of the feature film “Dead Season,” which was released in 1968. The plot of the film, in which Donatas Banionis played the main role, turned out to be connected with some facts from the intelligence officer’s biography.

To whom is infamy, and to whom is immortality

In his memoirs, set out in the book “Notes of the Chief of Illegal Intelligence,” the former head of department “C” (illegals) of the First Main Directorate of the KGBSSR, Major General Yuri Drozdov, spoke about some of the details of the exchange of Rudolf Abel for the American pilot Powers. In this operation, the security officer played the role of Abel’s “cousin,” a petty employee of Drives who lived in the GDR.

“Painstaking work was carried out by a large group of Center employees. In Berlin, in addition to me, the department’s leadership also dealt with these issues,” writes General Drozdov. - A relative of Drives was “made”, correspondence between Abel’s family members and his lawyer in the USA, Donovan, was established through a lawyer in East Berlin. At first, things developed sluggishly. The Americans were very careful and began checking the addresses of the relative and lawyer. Apparently they felt insecure. In any case, this was evidenced by the data that came to us from their office in West Berlin, and by monitoring the actions of their agents on the territory of the GDR.”

On the eve of the exchange, as Yuri Drozdov recalled, the head of the Office of the Commissioner of the USSR KGB in the GDR, General A. A. Krokhin, had his last meeting. “Early in the morning I woke up from a knock on the door. The car was already waiting for me below. I arrived at the exchange place without sleep. But the exchange went well - R.I. Abel returned home.”

By the way, Yuri Ivanovich remembered this detail - Powers was handed over to the Americans in a good coat, a winter fawn hat, physically strong and healthy. Abel crossed the exchange line in some kind of gray-green prison robe and a small cap that barely fit on his head. “On the same day, we spent a couple of hours buying him the necessary wardrobe in Berlin stores,” General Drozdov recalled. - I met him again in the late 60s, in the dining room of our building on Lubyanka, during my visit to the Center from China. He recognized me, came up, thanked me, and said that we should still talk. I couldn't because I was flying out that evening. Fate decreed that I visited Abel’s dacha only in 1972, but already on the anniversary of his death.”

The former deputy head of the First Main Directorate of the KGB of the USSR, Lieutenant General Vadim Kirpichenko, emphasized in one of his interviews that only the most famous episodes of Abel’s work are still named in open sources.

“The paradox is that many other, very interesting fragments still remain in the shadows,” the general noted. - Yes, the classification of secrecy has already been removed from many cases. But there are stories that, against the backdrop of already known information, look routine and inconspicuous, and journalists, understandably, are looking for something more interesting. And some things are completely difficult to restore. The chronicler didn’t follow Abel! Today, documentary evidence of his work is scattered across many archival folders. Bringing them together, reconstructing events is painstaking, long work, who will get around to it? But when there are no facts, legends appear..."

Perhaps Rudolf Abel himself will forever remain the same legendary man. A real intelligence officer, patriot, officer.

Soviet illegal intelligence officer, colonel. Since 1948 he worked in the USA, in 1957 he was arrested. On February 10, 1962, he was exchanged for American reconnaissance aircraft pilot F. G. Powers, who was shot down over the USSR, and American economics student Frederick Pryor.


Soviet intelligence officer-illegal. His real name was William Genrikhovich Fischer, but he went down in the history of the 20th century as Rudolf Abel. In 1948, V. Fischer was sent to work illegally in the United States to obtain information from sources working at nuclear facilities. He worked under the pseudonym "Mark". And he succeeded so much that already in August 1949 he was awarded the Order of the Red Banner.

In 1957, as a result of the betrayal of a certain Heikhanen, who was sent to help Fischer as a radio operator, he was arrested. When arrested, he identified himself as Rudolf Abel - that was the name of his friend, also an illegal intelligence officer, who died in 1955. This was done intentionally so that the “Center” would understand that it was he who was arrested. In October 1957, a noisy trial began on charges of espionage against Abel Rudolf Ivanovich. Sentence: 32 years in prison. But on February 10, 1962, R. Abel was exchanged for the American pilot Francis Powers, who was shot down on May 1, 1960 near Sverdlovsk and convicted by a Soviet court of espionage.



For outstanding services in ensuring the state security of our country, Colonel V. Fischer was awarded the Order of Lenin, three Orders of the Red Banner, the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree, the Red Star and many medals. His fate inspired V. Kozhevnikov to write the famous adventure book “Shield and Sword”.

V. Fischer died on November 15, 1971, remaining for the whole world Rudolf Abel. He was buried in Moscow at the Donskoye Cemetery (1st place).

How to find a grave

From the entrance to the cemetery, walk along the central alley keeping to the left. Landmark - sign "Common grave 1", "Common grave 2". Turn left and go straight. The grave of Rudolf Abel is on the left near the road. To the left of Abel’s grave, in the third row from the road, is the grave of another legendary intelligence officer - Konon the Young.

Rudolf Abel - short biography

The real name of the man who is considered the most outstanding intelligence officer of the twentieth century is William Genrikhovich Fisher. He was born on July 11, 1903 in the English city of Newcastle upon Tyne. His father, Heinrich Fischer, a Russified German from the Yaroslavl province, was a convinced Marxist who knew Lenin personally. His mother, Lyubov Vasilievna, a native of Saratov, was his comrade-in-arms in the struggle. In 1901, the tsarist government arrested them for revolutionary activities and sent them abroad. After graduating from school, William passed the entrance exams to the University of London, but did not have time to start studying there. After the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia, his family returned to their homeland. As old party members, his family even lived for some time on the territory of the Moscow Kremlin. Before becoming a scout, William Fisher changed many professions.

Immediately upon his arrival in Soviet Russia, he worked for some time as a translator in the executive committee of the Communist International, which was the governing body of the Comintern. Later, being very gifted artistically, he entered the Higher Art and Technical Workshops, which before the revolution were the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture. However, he did not study there for long and in 1924 he became a student at the Institute of Oriental Studies. Here he studied for only one year and in 1925 was drafted into the army. He served in the first radiotelegraph regiment of the Moscow Military District, where he mastered the profession of a radio operator, knew how to assemble radios in a short time from improvised means, and was considered the best radio operator in the regiment. After demobilization, unable to find anything to do, he entered, on recommendation, the Foreign Department of the OGPU. With a good background, technically literate and fluent in foreign languages, Fischer was an ideal candidate for work as an intelligence officer. At first he performs the well-known duties of a translator, and then a radio operator. Since his homeland was England, the leadership of the OGPU decided to send Fisher to the British Isles to work.

Scout Rudolf Abel (William Fisher)

Beginning in 1930, he lived in England for several years as a resident of Soviet intelligence, periodically traveling to other countries of Western Europe. He acted as a radio operator for the station and organized a secret radio network, transmitting radiograms to the center from other residents. On instructions that came from Stalin himself, he managed to persuade the famous physicist Pyotr Kapitsa, who was teaching at Oxford at that time, to return to the USSR from England. There is also some information that at this time Fischer was in China several times, where he met and became friends with his colleague from the foreign department of the OGPU, Rudolf Abel, under whose name he went down in history. After the curator of residents in Western Europe, Alexander Orlov, fled to the United States in early 1938, taking with him the NKVD cash register, William Fisher was recalled to the USSR because he was in danger of being exposed. Having worked briefly in the foreign intelligence apparatus in Moscow, on December 31, 1938, he was dismissed from the agency without explanation and sent into retirement. After his dismissal, Fischer got a job, first at the All-Union Chamber of Commerce, and six months later at an aircraft industrial plant, while constantly writing reports to the Central Committee with a request to reinstate him in intelligence.

When the Patriotic War began, William Fisher was remembered as a highly qualified specialist, and in September 1941 he was appointed to the post of head of the communications department in the central intelligence apparatus at Lubyanka. There is evidence that he was involved in supporting the parade on November 7, 1941 on Red Square in Moscow. Until the end of the war, Fischer was engaged in technical training of radio operators of sabotage groups that were sent to the German rear, including countries occupied by Hitler. He taught radio science at the Kuibyshev intelligence school, participated in radio games with German radio operators, including “Monastery” and “Berezino”. In the last of them, Fischer was able to fool such a German master of sabotage as Otto Skorzeny, who sent his best people to help the non-existent German underground on the territory of the USSR, where the Soviet secret services were already waiting for them. Until the end of the war, the Germans never learned that they had been cleverly led by the nose. For his activities during the Patriotic War he was awarded the Order of Lenin and the Order of the Patriotic War, 1st degree.

Activities of Rudolf Abel in the USA

In the post-war years, when the “cold” confrontation with Western countries began, it was decided to use Fisher’s multifaceted talent to obtain information on the American atomic project. In 1948, under the pseudonym “Mark,” he was sent to work illegally in the United States, carrying an American passport in the name of Lithuanian Andrew Kayotis. Already in America, he changed his legend and began to impersonate the German artist Emil Robert Goldfus. He lived in New York, where he managed the Soviet intelligence network in the United States, having a photo studio in Brooklyn as cover. His subordinates acted independently of the Soviet station with legal cover - diplomats and consular employees. Fischer had a separate radio communication system for communication with Moscow. As his liaison agents, he had the later famous married couple Maurice and Leontine Cohen. He managed to create a Soviet spy network not only in the United States, but also in Latin American countries - Mexico, Brazil, Argentina. In 1949, William Fisher was awarded the Order of the Red Banner for obtaining important data concerning the American atomic experiment "Manhattan". They obtained information about the creation of the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Council in the United States, with a detailed list of tasks assigned to them.



In 1955, Fischer returned to the Soviet Union for several months when his close friend Rudolf Abel died. His intelligence career ended on June 25, 1957, when he was arrested by FBI agents at the Latham Hotel in New York. Fischer was betrayed by his partner, radio operator Reino Heikhanen, under the pseudonym “Vic”. Since he was being recalled to the USSR, where he could be subject to repression, Reynaud decided not to return and reported everything he knew about the Soviet intelligence network to the American intelligence services. Reynaud knew only Fischer's pseudonym, so Fischer, when arrested, pretended to be his late friend Rudolf Abel. With this, he insured himself that the Americans would not play a radio game on his behalf and made it clear to Moscow that he was not a traitor. In October 1957, a public trial against Fischer-Abel began in federal court in New York, in which he was accused of espionage; his name became known not only in the United States, but throughout the world. He categorically refused to admit guilt on all charges, refused to testify in court and rejected all offers from the American side for cooperation. In November 1957, Fisher was sentenced to 32 years in prison, served in solitary confinement in Atlanta. From March 1958, he was allowed to correspond with his family, who remained in the Soviet Union.

On May 1, 1960, an American U-2 reconnaissance aircraft was shot down over Sverdlovsk. The pilot who piloted it, Francis Harry Powers, was captured. Long-term Soviet-American negotiations began on the exchange of spies. On February 10, 1962, an exchange procedure took place on the Glienicke Bridge between East and West Berlin. Since the Americans were well aware of the level of Agent Fisher, in addition to Harry Powers, the Soviet side also had to hand over Frederick Pryer and Marvin Makinen, students convicted in the USSR for espionage. After his return, Fischer continued to work in the central intelligence apparatus. Acted as a consultant during the creation of the Soviet film about intelligence officers “Dead Season”, where the facts of his own biography were filmed. Died November 15, 1971. In 2015, in Samara, a memorial plaque was installed on the house where he lived during the war. In the same year, the film Bridge of Spies, directed by Steven Spielberg, was released in Hollywood, telling the story of the life of William Fisher from the moment of arrest to the exchange.