Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Ruse (book)

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Media type
  
Hardcover

Dewey Decimal
  
327.1273 B

Author
  
Robert Eringer

Published
  
2008

OCLC
  
755573094

Pages
  
215

LC Class
  
HV

Page count
  
215

ISBN
  
9781597973175

Preceded by
  
An Ear in Provence: Listening to the French

Followed by
  
Reunion-Sunset Romance,Two Novellas

Genres
  
Creative nonfiction, Autobiography

Similar
  
Crinkum Crankum, Upon Awakening & Sentien, Into Art, Three Stories, My Story

Ruse is an autobiographical account written by investigative journalist and FBI counterintelligence operative, Robert Eringer. Ruse covers the author's covert interactions with CIA defector, Edward Lee Howard in the late years of his life. The primary objective is to convince Howard to travel outside of Russia, to a jurisdiction where he could be arrested and extradited. Eringer's cover as a literary agent also allows him to gain the confidence of the 23 year fugitive, Unicorn Killer (Ira Einhorn). Frustrated with extradition negotiations, the FBI approved Eringer's plan to keep tabs on Einhorn in case that he would attempt to flee from France during extradition negotiations. Activities described in Ruse also expose Cuban intelligence (DGI) operatives in Washington D.C., and preemptively exposed a Cuban plot to disenfranchise Senator Bob Menendez. When allegations were made against the Senator in 2012, a short passage from Ruse, reported in The Record in 2008, caused Alex Seitz-Wald (Salon) to Tweet his theory, and the Daily Caller ultimately published information disproving the allegations in 2013.

Contents

Summary

The author's cover as a book agent served to open communications with fugitives who wished to capitalize on their memoirs. Instead of just publishing these books, Robert Eringer approached the FBI with his plan to "ruse" these fugitives and attempt to bring them to justice. Set between the end of the Cold War and September 11, 2001, Ruse is an account of Eringer's involvement in the efforts of the rendition of Unicorn Killer (Ira Einhorn) and CIA defector Edward Lee Howard. Howard died with operations on hold, due to diplomatic concerns. Einhorn was arrested and is serving a life sentence. The Edward Lee Howard operation produced intelligence of interest in the Aldrich Ames double-agent case. The book includes candid statements from Russian operatives, during the period when Russia's security services were transitioning to the FSK and FSB.

Senator Menendez conspiracy

In 2014, The Washington Post quoted from Ruse concerning unfounded allegations that Senator Menendez had underpaid a pair of unnamed prostitutes while on vacation in the Dominican Republic. The Daily Caller had reported in 2013 that the story was fabricated by attorney Melanio Figueroa, who admits that he was paid US$5000 by a man named "Carlos" to find women who would support the allegations. The passage from Ruse was first picked up by Elizabeth Llorente, of The Record in Bergen County, NJ in early 2008. It appears that both Eringer and Menendez commented for the article at that time. In 2014, Menendez asked for an investigation into whether the plot originated with Cuban Intelligence.

Style

The book is written in three parts, "Hoodwinking Howard", "Conning the Cubans", "Bamboozling Beelzebub" and a short epilogue,"Blackmail, Vodka and Threat to Kill". Ruse is documented with dates and photographs of meetings and correspondence. On April 20, 1994, shortly after the arrest of Aldrich Ames, Eringer entered the country to meet with CIA defector Edward Lee Howard under conditions that Russia would consider espionage and with the knowledge that the FBI would disavow any connection to himself, or the operation.

Hoodwinking Howard 
Introductory chapters begin with the death of the fugitive CIA agent, Edward Lee Howard and how he slipped surveillance. After the initial background on Edward Lee Howard, Eringer establishes his credentials as an investigative journalist, and how a private citizen became a counterintelligence operative with the FBI. The book then largely follows a chronological order of the events. Planning for the rendition of Howard required that he be caught traveling, of his own free will, within a jurisdiction that would expedite to the United States. Howard was interested in retiring in Lake Baikal in southern Siberia and Havana, Cuba. The operation was called-off, in fear of damaging relations with Russia. Edward Lee Howard's memior, Safe House (1995) ISBN 9781882605156, was actually published by National Press Books; however, an additional title, A Spies Guide to Europe, the book-ruse employed to encourage Howard to travel was never written. In a related issue, it was disclosed to Eringer by Igor Prelin that Oleg Kalugin blew the cover of the convicted CIA double-agent Aldrich Ames.
Conning the Cubans 
Eringer's trip to Cuba supposedly on behalf of Howard instilled trust with the Cubans who ran intelligence operations in Washington D.C., Eringer's interest in publishing Fidel Castro's memoirs helped ensure them that Eringer was the untrustworthy kind of person they could trust. The Cubans also expressed a desire have Eringer spy for them to attempt to hobble the political careers of proponents of sanctions against Cuba, Senator Robert Menéndez (NJ), Representative Ileana Ros(FL) and Mario Díaz-Balart (FL).
Bamboozling Beelzebub
This section is about Eringer's personal interaction preceding the successful extradition of Ira Einhorn (the Unicorn Killer) from France on July 20, 2001. Eringer was instrumental in keeping Einhorn frozen in place while extradition negotiations wound through the courts, with missed payment and publications dates for a book he never intended to publish. The French court finally ruled against Einhorn and Eringer's FBI handlers called from the tarmac at Charles De Gaulle Airport, letting Eringer know that Einhorn was handcuffed and on a plane to the United States.
Blackmail, Vodka and Threat to Kill 
This section is about Eringer's insight since his association with Clair George (the former Deputy Director of Operations of the CIA) was published in 2001 and Vladimir Putin's rise to power. Eringer does not discount the probability that Howard may been a victim of a house cleaning operation, noting high-profile deaths of Russian journalists and the exile of former politicians.

Reviews

"The book falls squarely in the “trust me” category despite the inclusion of some 10-year-old photographs that tend to substantiate meetings with Howard and former KGB chairman, Vladimir Kryuchkov." — Hayden B. Peake, curator of the CIA Historical Intelligence Collection "Ruse fully chronicles Eringer’s association with Howard, as well as detailing another FBI operation in which he captured wanted murderer Ira Einhorn, who oddly enough also claims to be the founder of Earth Day. The book is fast-paced, absorbing, and a must-read for anyone with an interest in espionage." — Elena Gray-Blanc, "Real-Life Spy Puts 007 to Shame", Santa Barbara Independent

References

Ruse (book) Wikipedia