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Quiz about Soviet Spies
Quiz about Soviet Spies

Soviet Spies Trivia Quiz


15 multiple choice questions on espionage during the Soviet era.

A multiple-choice quiz by ironikinit. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
ironikinit
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
140,324
Updated
Jun 10 22
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
10 / 15
Plays
1017
Last 3 plays: Guest 174 (9/15), 173Kraut (10/15), Luckycharm60 (15/15).
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Question 1 of 15
1. In 1917 Lenin appointed Feliks Dzerzhinsky as Commisar for a new secret police. By what name do we know this "All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage"? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. Which of the following Soviet spies posed as a Nazi journalist in Japan and warned Moscow of Operation Barbarossa and the attack on Pearl Harbor? Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. The People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) was one of Stalin's chief instruments in instigating his purges. In 1938 the NKVD itself was purged and its head, Nikolay Yezhov was executed and replaced by his deputy. Who was the deputy? Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. Which of the following Soviet leaders also served as head of the KGB? Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. Which of the following is an American company founded in 1924 by the Soviet Union to handle Soviet-American trade? Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. Which of the following physicists who worked at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project was a Soviet spy? Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. Which of the following British traitors was stripped of his knighthood late in life when he was revealed to have been a spy for the Soviets? Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. Which of the following Americans, who were arrested for spying in the 1980s, was part of a spy ring that included three members of his or her family? Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. The book and movie "The Falcon and the Snowman" was about which of the following people? Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. Which of the following people, with the help of his wife, Maria del Rosario Casas Dupuy, sold the Soviets the names of every U.S. agent working in the USSR and received over US$2.7 million, the most money ever paid by the Russians for spying? Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. The Soviet military counterintelligence organization Smersh was an abbreviation for Smert shpionam, a slogan meaning: Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. The KGB was dissolved in 1991 and replaced with which of the following? Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. One of the KGB's methods of gathering intelligence was sexual situations used to coerce. Which of the following was a term for this practice? Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. Although the KGB was by far the most dominant intelligence agency in the USSR of the late Soviet period, there were separate agencies. Which one of the following was the the most notable of these agencies and primarily dealt with military intelligence? Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. In 1992 a former chief archivist of the KGB's foreign intelligence section smuggled materials out of Russia that served as the basis for a book by Christopher Andrew. Who was it? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Nov 09 2024 : Guest 174: 9/15
Oct 19 2024 : 173Kraut: 10/15
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quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In 1917 Lenin appointed Feliks Dzerzhinsky as Commisar for a new secret police. By what name do we know this "All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage"?

Answer: Cheka

In order to prevent a counter-revolution Dzerzhinsky adopted terror tactics, a position supported by Lenin, Trotsky, and Stalin. Thousands were executed. The Okhranka, by the way, was the tsarist secret police while the OGPU and KGB were later incarnations of the Soviet security apparatus. The Cheka was originally known as the Vecheka.
2. Which of the following Soviet spies posed as a Nazi journalist in Japan and warned Moscow of Operation Barbarossa and the attack on Pearl Harbor?

Answer: Richard Sorge

When Sorge was captured by the Japanese, they proposed to exchange him (the two countries weren't yet at war) but the Soviet embassy denied any knowledge. Sorge was executed in 1944. Obviously, the information he supplied about the Nazi invasion of the USSR went to waste.
3. The People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) was one of Stalin's chief instruments in instigating his purges. In 1938 the NKVD itself was purged and its head, Nikolay Yezhov was executed and replaced by his deputy. Who was the deputy?

Answer: Lavrenty Beria

Beria, too, was executed but not until after Stalin's death in 1953. He made a bid for ultimate power in the USSR but was defeated by a coalition that included Khrushchev.
4. Which of the following Soviet leaders also served as head of the KGB?

Answer: Yury Andropov

Andropov was KGB head from 1967 until 1982 when he became general secretary until his death 15 months later. In the 1950s he was the USSR's ambassador to Hungary and played a major role in coordinating the Soviet invasion of that country. Vladmir Putin, who was appointed President of Russia in 1999 and elected to the office in 2000, also had officially worked for the KGB, having retired in 1990.
5. Which of the following is an American company founded in 1924 by the Soviet Union to handle Soviet-American trade?

Answer: Amtorg

The Amtorg Trading Company in New York was a handy cover for KGB agents. KGB agents also frequently used TASS (the Soviet news agency) as well as more conventional diplomatic covers. L. Ron Hubbard, the author of "Dianetics", was offered a research job by Amtorg.
6. Which of the following physicists who worked at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project was a Soviet spy?

Answer: Klaus Fuchs

Other known Soviet spies who worked at Los Alamos during World War II are Theodore Hall and David Greenglass, the brother of Ethel Rosenberg. Fuchs' espionage is credited with saving the Soviets at least one year's work and a great deal of money in developing the atomic bomb.
7. Which of the following British traitors was stripped of his knighthood late in life when he was revealed to have been a spy for the Soviets?

Answer: Anthony Blunt

Blunt, Philby, Burgess, and Maclean attended Cambridge together and all passed information to the Soviets. Maclean and Burgess were diplomats, Philby was a high-ranking intelligence officer and Blunt was a respected art historian.
8. Which of the following Americans, who were arrested for spying in the 1980s, was part of a spy ring that included three members of his or her family?

Answer: John Walker, Jr.

Walker had retired from the US Navy by the time of his arrest in 1985. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. His son Michael and his brother Arthur were also convicted of charges related to their sale of information to the Soviets.
9. The book and movie "The Falcon and the Snowman" was about which of the following people?

Answer: Christopher Boyce

Long-time friends Christopher Boyce and Andrew Daulton Lee sold spy satellite information to the Soviets. After his conviction Boyce escaped from prison. Apparently, he was aided in his escape by the prison administration showing the movie "Escape From Alcatraz" from which Boyce borrowed the idea of making a paper maché dummy head to leave in his bed while he escaped. Further, books he'd read in the prison library had informed him about what plants were safe to eat in the wild while he hid from authorities.

He was eventually recaptured.
10. Which of the following people, with the help of his wife, Maria del Rosario Casas Dupuy, sold the Soviets the names of every U.S. agent working in the USSR and received over US$2.7 million, the most money ever paid by the Russians for spying?

Answer: Aldrich Ames

Aldrich Ames was the son of a CIA analyst. During the 1970s he was involved in several high-level cases, including the defection of Soviet ambassador Arkady Nikolaevich Shevchenko to the USA. In the 1980s Ames sold information on 25 CIA agents working in the Soviet Union. One, a diplomat, was a personal friend of Ames'.
11. The Soviet military counterintelligence organization Smersh was an abbreviation for Smert shpionam, a slogan meaning:

Answer: death to spies

Smersh was absorbed into the NKVD in 1946. A rather obscure outfit, it is mostly remembered because Ian Fleming used the name in his James Bond novels. Bizarrely, while researching this question the name L. Ron Hubbard came up again. Apparently he believed that Smersh was part of an anti-Scientology conspiracy. See a 1971 memo called "Notes on Smersh" at:
http://www.xenu.net/archive/go/go070571/go070571.htm
12. The KGB was dissolved in 1991 and replaced with which of the following?

Answer: SVR

SVR stands for Sluzhba Vneshney Razvedki, meaning Foreign Intelligence Service. It was the first element of the KGB to establish a separate identity. The Stasi (Staatsicherheit or "State Security") was the East German secret police and Abwehr was Nazi military intelligence.

The FSB (Federal'naya Sluzhba Bezopasnosti or Federal Security Service) is responsible for Russian internal security.
13. One of the KGB's methods of gathering intelligence was sexual situations used to coerce. Which of the following was a term for this practice?

Answer: honey trap

An example of a honey trap is the case of Clayton J. Lonetree, a US marine assigned to the U.S. embassy in Moscow. He confessed in 1987 to passing secrets to his girlfriend who in turn passed the information to her KGB control officer. An account of a failed honey trap was reported in Pravda.

Indonesian President Ahmed Sukarno was clandestinely filmed by the KGB in what most would consider a compromising situation. When shown the video, Sukarno misinterpreted the blackmail attempt as a gift and asked for copies to take home.

This is odd considering that according to the Christian Science Monitor (March 1, 2002) the CIA made a pornographic film with a Sukarno look-alike to discredit him with Muslims.
14. Although the KGB was by far the most dominant intelligence agency in the USSR of the late Soviet period, there were separate agencies. Which one of the following was the the most notable of these agencies and primarily dealt with military intelligence?

Answer: GRU

The GRU (Glavnoye Razvedyvatelnoye Upravleniye or Central Intelligence Office) is still in existence, providing the Russian military with information. Its origins date back to the Russian Civil War. According to Britain's internal security agency, the MI5, the GRU's intelligence activity in the UK has remained constant since the end of the Cold War.
15. In 1992 a former chief archivist of the KGB's foreign intelligence section smuggled materials out of Russia that served as the basis for a book by Christopher Andrew. Who was it?

Answer: Vasili Mitrokhin

The book is "The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB". Among the revelations in the book: The KGB engineered a disinformation campaign linking the CIA to the assassination of John F. Kennedy and another campaign to label J. Edgar Hoover as a homosexual. Less successful was the miscalculated attempt to portray Martin Luther King as an "Uncle Tom".

Interestingly, Mitrokihn first approached the CIA with the material but was turned away. He then went to the British, who spirited Mitrokhin and his family out of Moscow.
Source: Author ironikinit

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor Beatka before going online.
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