Sunday, June 19, 2016

A Bad Day In East Berlin

Note: So many people have asked for a more detailed story about this incident that I guess I better get around to writing about it. Be advised that most of the names are pen-names or pseudonyms – some of the people are, or may be, still alive at the time I am posting this

August 1973:

As I have written in “Just Another Day At The Office...”, during the course of an investigation, we had convinced an East German agent who had been spying on the U. S. Air Force in his capacity as Head Bartender at the Wisbaden Air Base to become a “double agent” – to work for the West while still pretending to spy on us. “Heinrich” and I spent a lot of time together in the interrogation room and developed something of a rapport, if not a friendship. After his decision to affectively switch sides in the Cold War, he was handled by people within the American CIA and the West German Bundeskriminalamt (BKA).

Eventually Heinrich was recalled to East Berlin and was promoted within the Stasi (the Ministerium für Staatssicherheit or Ministry For State Security). He continued to send out information to his CIA & BKA handlers.

Intercepted communications within the East German intelligence agencies indicated that people within the Stasi were beginning to distrust Heinrich and were compiling evidence to arrest him for spying for the West. A decision was made to get him out before he was arrested. Heinrich, being naturally and logically paranoid, did not trust just everybody and would only “come out” if personally contacted by someone he knew wasn’t Stasi. I stupidly volunteered to be that person.

Armed with a very authentic-looking Austrian passport identifying me as a businessman from Salzberg, Austria who worked for a toy company (which fit my Southern German accent), I crossed the border between Austria and Yugoslavia and traveled through the various Warsaw Pact countries on a “business trip” until I got to East Berlin. I made contact with Heinrich and we started to a “safe house” that I had been briefed on where he would be smuggled out of the city and into West Berlin. (The original plan had me finishing my business trip and returning through Yugoslavia and Austria.)
Heinrich realized that we were being followed so we decided to split up a few city blocks before our destination. For whatever reason, the man following us decided to stick with me. I looked for a place to shake him, but made a mistake and entered a dead end street.

He called on me to stop and I did, turning to face him. He was pointing his gun at me (a Makarov pistol) so I put my hands up. I figured the worst possible situation would be that he would take me in, I would be interrogated and then held to be exchanged for some East German agent who had been captured by the West – which was normal practice in those Cold War days of the early 1970’s.
Some psychic sense, however, told me that he was not going to arrest me - he was going to shoot me. I did my best impersonation of a creature than has no internal skeleton and collapsed. His bullet, which was intended for my left chest, gouged across the top of my left shoulder. It felt like an incredibly strong man had hit me in the shoulder with all their strength. On the way to the ground, I got my own gun out and shot him twice.

We both laid there for a moment. I got up, went over to him and found that he was dead. I quickly searched his pockets and took his wallet and his Makarov. I somehow got the few city blocks to the safe house and passed out shortly after entering. The people there gave me emergency medical treatment and smuggled me into West Berlin the next day (I remember nothing about it. I remember collapsing in the hallway of the safe house and my next memory was waking up in a hospital in West Berlin).

Heinrich was given a completely new identity and eventually ended up in Waco, Texas where he taught German at Baylor University. We met once, years later, and had more than a few beers in celebration.

In my 27 years in Army Intelligence/Counter-intelligence I only had one or two scary experiences like this - most of the time it was pretty dull, hum-drum work. I wish it had all been dull, hum-drum work.

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