The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Kremlin pays tribute to late spy it says may have changed history

Vartanyan allegedly helped foil plot to kill Churchill, Stalin, Eisenhower in 1943

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MOSCOW — The Kremlin on Wednesday paid tribute to a late Soviet intelligen­ce officer it credits with helping foil a Nazi plot to kill Winston Churchill, Josef Stalin and Franklin Roosevelt, saying her career may have changed the course of history.

Goar Vartanyan, who died on Monday at the age of 93, was an undercover field operative for decades and allegedly helped thwart a plan backed by Adolf Hitler to assassinat­e the allied leaders at their first “Big Three” conference in Tehran in 1943.

Born in Armenia in 1926, Vartanyan moved to Iran in the 1930s where, at the age of 16, she joined an anti-fascist group led by her future husband, Soviet spy Gevork Vartanyan, that was tasked with ensuring security for the World War Two conference.

The Soviet group, which had already unmasked more than 400 Nazi agents in Iran, identified a group of Nazi assassins ahead of the conference and arrested them, causing the plot, known as Operation Long

Jump, to fail, Gevork Vartanyan has said. “Without Goar Vartanyan and her husband Gevork, the history of our world could have been different. These are people who left their mark on the history of mankind,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday.

The couple went on to work as undercover spies, known in Moscow as “illegals”, in an array of countries from 1956 to 1986 after which Goar retired and began to train future agents, the Foreign Intelligen­ce Service (SVR) said.

 ?? REUTERS/ITAR-TASS/KREMLIN PRESS SERVICE ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin congratula­tes Goar Vartanyan, veteran of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Service, during Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Moscow in 2005.
REUTERS/ITAR-TASS/KREMLIN PRESS SERVICE Russian President Vladimir Putin congratula­tes Goar Vartanyan, veteran of the Foreign Intelligen­ce Service, during Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Moscow in 2005.

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