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CIA RDP96 00788r000100330001 5
Page 80
80 / 88
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788R000100330001-5
LOS ANGELES TIMES
USS. Suspects
Soviets Ordered
Envoy Beaten
By ROBERT GILLETTE,
Times Staff Writer
MOSCOW—An American diplo-
mat was attacked and beaten by
several unidentified men in Lenin-
last month in an assault that
8, officials believe was organized
by Soviet authorities in an atmos-
of increasingly cold relations
with the United States.
The diplomat, Ronald A. Harms,
was not seriously injured in the
attack,. which was said to have
occurred April 17. According to
sources familiar with the incident,
the State Department and the U.S.
Embassy vigorously protested to
Soviet officials in Washington and
Moscow. The assault on the diplo-
mat was not publicly disclosed.
According to the sources, who
asked not to be identified, the
indident occurred as Harms, one of a
dozen American diplomats serving
in the U.S. Consulate in Leningrad,
left a restaurant where he had met
with a Soviet acquaintance.-
Several unidentified men in civil-
ian clothes were said to have sur-
rounded the 35-year-old diplomat
on’ the sidewalk, beating him in
plain view of passers-by. Harms
immediately hailed a uniformed po-
lice officer to report the attack, but
officer is said to have shown
little interest.
ccording to the sources, the
officer asked Harms whether
hejhad struck back at his assailants.
‘When told he had not, the officer
replied, “It’s a good thing you
didn’t.”
A spokesman for the U.S. Embas-
«sy in Moscow confirmed that details
of the account were “substantially
correct,” but he declined to elabo-
rate, saying that “we felt it would
not be appropriate to go public with
this incident.” Harms could not be
reached for comment.
Harms has served since October,
1982, at the consulate in Leningrad,
where his duties include the sensi-
tive—and, to the Soviets, unwel-
come—task of following human
rights issues, Both Harms and his
wife, Norma, hold the rank of consul
in Leningrad, the country's sec-
ond-largest city and the only U.S.
outpost in the Soviet Union outside
of Moscow.
SPECIAL EDITION -- TERRORISM -- 26 JUNE 1984
30 May 1984 Pg. 1
‘The assault is believed to be the
first such attack here on an Ameri-
can diplomat since 1981, when Dan-
iel Fried, a vice-consul in Lenin-
grad. was beaten in one of the city’s
subway stations.
Fried was also assigned to the
human rights post in Leningrad. In
the official Soviet view, Westerners
who maintain contacts with reli-
gious or political dissidents in the
Soviet Union do so for the purpose
of fomenting subversion and elicit-
ing “slander” of the Soviet system.
‘Western diplomats note that in
the relative isolation of Leningrad,
400 miles north of Moscow, Soviet
police. and KGB agents have long
operated with.a freer hand against
the small cofamunity of foreign
diplomats. Supyeillance of diplomats
and the occ: I traveling corre-
spondent is more intense and obvi-
ous in Leningrad than Moscow, and
instances’, petty harassment—
from police detention to minor van-
dalism of foreign cars—tend to be
more frequent.
Last August, the Soviets expelled
a vice consul at the U.S. Consulate
in Leningrad after accusing him of
spying. A month later, State De-
partment spokesman Alan Romberg
disclosed that the United States had
protested what he called the “phys-
ical maltreatment” of the diplomat,
Lon David Augustenborg, and his
wife Denise, before their expulsion.
Romberg did not elaborate.
The Soviet Union regularly and
publicly protests incidents involv-
ing its own diplomats in the United
States, invariably branding them as
terrorism perpetrated by American
authorities, Last Feb. 24, the official
Tass news agency said, three sticks
of dynamite were thrown ‘nto the
housing compound of the Soviet
mission to the United Nations in
New York, destroying one car and
damaging two others.
Attributing the attack. to the
Jewish Defense League, Tass said
the State Department had ignored a
telephone warning and “in so doing
actually connives at the perpetra-
tion of such acts of terrorism.”
The assault on the U.S. diplomat
in Leningrad occurred amid in-
creasingly shrill press attacks on
the United States, punctuated earli-
er this month by the Olympic
boycott, as Moscow has turned a
cold shoulder on overtures from the
Reagan Administration for renewed.
talks on nuclear arms control.
Three’ American diplomats in
Moscow who follow human rights
NEW YORK TIMES
31 May 1984 Pg. 10
U.S, ASSAILS SOVIET
ON ENVOY ASSAULT
By STEPHEN ENGELBERG
Special t The New York Times
WASHINGTON, May 30— The State
rtment has filed a formal protest
the Soviet Union about an assault
off-
on an American t in
young men last
cases were accused recently of
being CIA agents. And last Friday's
edition of Red Star, the armed
forces newspaper, accused sever
Prien! British and Canadian
military attaches of photographia
industrial installations in a!
and penetrating deep into zones
closed to foreigners,
No action appears to have been
taken against any of the diplomats,
however.
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RBF96-00788R000100330001-5
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