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009P $qapplication/pdf $A2 $3Inhaltsverzeichnis $uhttp://scans.hebis.de/HEBCGI/show.pl?43194379_toc.pdf $mV:DE-603;B:DE-26
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011@ $a2016 $n[2016]
011F $n© 2016
013D $RBiograf $RLebenslauf $RBiografik $#Biographies $#Biography $#Biographies -- Histoire et critique $#Biographie $#Biographisches Nachschlagewerk $#Lebensbeschreibung $#Berühmte Persönlichkeit Biografie $#Biografisches Nachschlagewerk $74006804-3 $8Biografie [Ts1] $9085010375
021A $aThe @man with the poison gun $da Cold War spy story $hSerhii Plokhy
028A $BVerfasser $#Плохiй, Сергiй $#Plokhii, Serhii $#Plochij, Serhij Mykolajovyč $#Plachij, Sjarhij $#Plochij, Serhij $#Plochij, S. M. $#Plochij, S. N. $#Plochij, Sergej N. $#Plochij, Sergej $#Plochij, Sergej Nikolaevič $#Plokhii, Serhii Mykolajovych $#Plokhii, Sergei Nikolaevich $#Plokhii, S. M. $#Plokhii, S. N. $#Plokhy, Serhii $#Плохий, Сергей $#Плохий, С. $#Плохiй, С. М. $#Плохiй, С. $#Плохій, Сергій Миколайович $4aut $712483017X $8Plokhy, Serhii$Z1957- [Tp1] $9155438026
033A $pNew York $nBasic Books
034D $axiii, 365 Seiten
034M $a1 Illustrationen, 2 Karten
039U $8--Oou--Buhari-Gulmez, Didem$Z1981- [Tp3]. [Péter Apor, Sándor Horváth and James Mark (eds.): Secret agents and the memory of everyday collaboration in Communist Eastern Europe; Serhii Plokhy: The Man with the Poison Gun], 2018 $9507195264
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047I $a"In the fall of 1961, a KGB agent defected to West Germany. The slim 30-year-old man in police custody had papers in the name of an East German, Josef Lehmann, but claimed that his real name was Bogdan Stashinsky, and he was a citizen of the Soviet Union. On the orders of his KGB bosses, he had traveled on numerous occasions to Munich, where he singlehandedly tracked down and killed two enemies of the communist regime. He used a new, specially designed secret weapon...a spray pistol delivering liquid poison that, if fired into the victim's face, killed him without leaving any trace. Wracked by a guilty conscience, Stashinsky escaped with his wife under the tragic cover of their infant son's funeral, and crossed into West Berlin just hours before the Berlin Wall was erected. In 1962, after spilling his secrets to the CIA, Stashinky was put on trial in what would be the most publicized assassination case in Cold War history. Stashinsky's testimony, implicating the Kremlin rulers in political assassinations carried out abroad, shook the world of international politics. The publicity stirred up by the Stashinsky case forced the KGB to change its modus operandi abroad and helped end the career of one of the most ambitious and dangerous Soviet leaders, the former head of the KGB and Leonid Brezhnev's rival, Aleksandr Shelepin. In West Germany, the Stashinsky trial changed the way in which Nazi criminals were prosecuted. Using the Stashinsky case as a precedent, many defendants in such cases claimed, as had the Soviet spy, that they were simply accessories to murder, while their superiors, who ordered the killings, were the main perpetrators."...Provided by publisher
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