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The Spies Who Outlasted the Cold War

How Two “Boring” Suburban Parents Weaponized Trust, Harvard Degrees, and One-Time Pads to Redefine Modern Espionage Forget the trench coats, silenced pistols, and rooftop parkour. The most successful Russian intelligence operation of the twenty-first century didn’t involve a single car chase. It involved PTA meetings, strategic planning software, and a guy named Donald who just really liked networking at Cambridge coffee shops. If James Bond represents espionage as action, Elena Vavilova and Andrey Bezrukov perfected espionage as endurance. And honestly, that’s the version that should keep policymakers awake at night. The Canadian Ghost Protocol Their story didn’t begin with a dramatic midnight drop. It began in the lecture halls of Tomsk State University in the late 1970s, where two history students caught the attention of KGB recruiters. “They weren’t looking for soldiers,” noted former counterintelligence historian David E. Hoffman. “They were looking for psychological chamele...

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