「K.G.B.」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 308件
ed from Moscow, where they had been held by the | KGB after Germany's defeat in World War II. |
etic event in Moscow when he is arrested by the | KGB after being approached by a scientist wanting h |
Felix Dzerzhinsky, the pride of the | KGB agency |
an who probably performed the deed was the head | KGB agent in Washington, Anatoly. |
Extracts from an interview with former | KGB agent Yuri Bezmenov in 1985 are used as an intr |
Britain instruct him to find and assassinate a | KGB agent named Krasnevin, believed to have killed |
He reportedly worked as an undercover | KGB agent in Vneshtorgbank in Switzerland and for D |
squandered, though, when he was approached by a | KGB agent and invited to live in the Union of Sovie |
provocations V. Landsbergis, a wider Sajudis, a | KGB agent in its ranks. |
ay 1979, together with Morucci, in the house of | KGB agent Giuliana Conforto. |
Vladimir Putin was a | KGB agent working with Stasi officers in East Germa |
ster Harold Wilson (secretly accused of being a | KGB agent by the Soviet defector Anatoliy Golitsyn) |
Sergei Shmearnov - A overbearing | KGB agent with an agenda of his own. |
Klugmann was a Communist and was undoubtedly a | KGB agent and linked to the Cambridge Five. |
They hire taxi driver (and former | KGB agent) Yegor (played by Vladimir Kolev) to chau |
, and Alexander Molokov, his second (actually a | KGB agent), watch with curiosity and disdain on TV |
toxicated and (hopefully) reveal secrets to the | KGB agent, who would simply be pretending to be dru |
He was a | KGB agent, working under the codename ADAMANT, whos |
s to assist in the defection of a female Soviet | KGB agent. |
assassination plot, and teams up with a veteran | KGB agent. |
- to frame his superior, Bret Rensselaer, as a | KGB agent. |
s girlfriend to believe that Bond is actually a | KGB agent. |
Vyto Ruginis as Carl, another | KGB agent; Talbot's menacing silent henchman. |
the Czechoslovak Communist Party and with many | KGB agents on board was a "long hand" of Moscow. |
The legend states that while this did not work, | KGB agents discovered that the tablet did have an u |
, it was proved that Oda and Yoshikawa were the | KGB agents by opening the confidential Soviet docum |
ived for her political activities in 1974, when | KGB agents arrived at her place of work in a black |
The photos of Evdokia being rough-handled by | KGB agents at Sydney Airport and her agonised last- |
ain characters “dinosaurs” meaning that CIA and | KGB agents are no longer needed in the post cold wa |
She allowed | KGB agents into her apartment to peruse such docume |
KGB agents were all around and Eric later admitted | |
d his wife Barbara were arrested on 25 April by | KGB agents for smuggling anti-Soviet leaflets. |
"really" the phrase "Oda and Yoshikawa were the | KGB agents" in the reference, Koenker, Diane P., an |
Are they really "the | KGB agents"? |
After escaping the | KGB agents, Flint sneaks into the Kremlin, where he |
ricin-like symptoms after a 1971 encounter with | KGB agents. |
ey are attacked, and narrowly escape the former | KGB agents. |
, in the Soviet Union during the 1950s, head of | KGB Aleksandr Shelepin proposed and carried out a d |
On 27 December 1979, members of the Soviet | KGB Alpha Group killed him and Babrak Karmal became |
He was barred from his teaching job, and the | KGB also attempted to take his children away from h |
As part of operation TOUCAN, the | KGB also forged a letter tying the CIA to an assass |
Upon fleeing the lake, Gant is captured by the | KGB and taken back to the Soviet Union. |
s acquired information on Cassandra-G, the CIA, | KGB, and DREK are after him. |
The | KGB and local police quickly collected about 950 of |
aoists were closely followed by Suojelupoliisi, | KGB and the Communist Party of Finland (SKP), which |
ntually, Filitov's identity is uncovered by the | KGB, and he is subsequently arrested while attempti |
r 2, 1986 when he was arrested in Moscow by the | KGB and accused of espionage. |
iving astrophysicists have been abducted by the | KGB, and Bludd learns that Russians plan to answer |
erican FBI agent, and also cites documents from | KGB and Mexican government archives. |
ith his parents' killer, Pyotr, now head of the | KGB and consumed by jealousy of Superman, to attemp |
name and image were used widely throughout the | KGB and the Soviet Union- and other socialist count |
by MI5 with evidence that he had worked for the | KGB and recruited others to its service. |
In 1975-2001 he served in the | KGB and its successors. |
ogrammed to Kill: Lee Harvey Oswald, the Soviet | KGB, and the Kennedy Assassination," in which he as |
According to "The World Was Going Our Way: The | KGB and the Battle for The Third World by Christoph |
states that the bulletin had help from both the | KGB and the Cuban DGI. |
The first departments reported to | KGB and were not subordinated to the management of |
Special Archive, where documents of the former | KGB archive are kept. |
r 1948: in Alexander Vassiliev's Notes from the | KGB Archive. |
h the Orthodox Churches and published a work on | KGB archives relative to the Catholic Church. |
d an article in Izvestia quoting documents from | KGB archives that David Karr was "a competent KGB s |
rown Jewels: The British Secrets Exposed by the | KGB Archives, London: HarperCollins, 1999, 1998. |
f independence in 1990 and opening up of secret | KGB archives. |
y, stating that: "Former, senior members of the | KGB are willing to testify in such an investigation |
Another | KGB armed force guarded sensitive military, scienti |
Berenson's spy work is left unusable to the | KGB, as Sir Nigel, using his own spy network, inten |
other sources, Alexius has been working for the | KGB as agent DROZDOV and received an honorary citat |
g refuge at the embassy, and Chuck Connors as a | KGB assassin posing as a U.S. Air Force officer. |
llemarest, Daniele & de Villemarest, Pierre, Le | KGB au coeur du Vatican, Editions de Paris, Paris, |
lost in space with two cosmonauts on board, the | KGB authorities abduct two petty criminals. |
Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the | KGB based on the Mitrokhin Archive - 82.3.200.11 |
ussia's Last Great Secret from the Files of the | KGB, based on documents in the Soviet archives, rep |
The | KGB brought their wives and children for blessings |
wirkmann was responsible for discovering Soviet | KGB bugs and recording devices planted in the West |
He was appointed to dismantle the | KGB, but he was unable to control this organization |
No one likes much FBI, SIS, Siguranca, | KGB, but don't forget, it is a necessary tool of th |
at the game's ending, working not only for the | KGB, but also under the direct orders of the DCI (u |
n sworn to secrecy by the NKVD (and, later, the | KGB), but on his deathbed he told his daughter the |
t deny it - he admits to being recruited to the | KGB by a girlfriend who took advantage of his Socia |
to expert witness testimonies prepared for the | KGB by three scientists, novichok and other related |
Lambert is named in a 1945 San Francisco | KGB cable intercepted and deciphered by the Venona |
Actual jokes recorded by the | KGB can be found in the gameplay, depicting the con |
.), [1993] 1 S.C.R. 740, popularly known as the | KGB case, is a leading Supreme Court of Canada deci |
Sir Kenneth Ralph Barnes, | KGB, CBE (11 September 1878 - 16 October 1957) was |
The | KGB Cells Museum in Tartu is situated in the "gray |
ilitov and arrange the defection of the sitting | KGB Chairman, Nikolay Borissovich Gerasimov. |
apparently crucial in giving the edge to former | KGB Chief Yuri Andropov in the race to succeed Brez |
y, St. Cyril's, being used by Kristatos to meet | KGB chief General Gogol (Walter Gotell) where he wi |
n newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda in 2005 former | KGB Chief Vladimir Kryuchkov claimed that "the murd |
oved from his office and replaced by the former | KGB chief Givi Gumbaridze the same month. |
tation to Alexander Shelepin, the former Soviet | KGB Chief, to visit Britain. |
akutia and later in Surgut, where, according to | KGB claims, he committed suicide in 1973. |
s to the Middle East and the United States as a | KGB co-optee under codename MAKSIM. |
imself, Kishenin mentioned that he studied in a | KGB college in 1972-1975. |
to England in the mid-1960s, to play the Soviet | KGB Colonel Stok in Funeral in Berlin (1966) and Bi |
A former | KGB colonel, he is a member of the Agrarian Party o |
Miller's primary | KGB contacts, as noted in Venona traffic, were Jose |
She cited | KGB correspondence about payments to Rajiv Gandhi a |
According to | KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky, Jones provided intell |
KGB defector Vasili Mitrokhin and dissident priest | |
KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky has stated that Andrei | |
Confinement of a | KGB defector, Yuri Ivanovich Nosenko, that "might b |
The | KGB denied any involvement although high-profile KG |
e on a courier mission to Mexico, reporting the | KGB detected surveillance of Ruth Wilson, Epstein's |
While there is some truth to this legend (the | KGB did conduct some alcohol-related tests involvin |
ler burial site might become a Neo-Nazi shrine, | KGB director Yuri Andropov authorised an operation |
t Katys was dropped from active status when the | KGB discovered his father had been executed in one |
The recently declassified | KGB documents about Allende and his relation with t |
arn MI5 that Kim Philby, MI6 officer and Soviet | KGB double agent, had been a member of the Communis |
e Bernard Samson's wife Fiona was unmasked as a | KGB double agent and was forced into defecting, and |
Led to believe that the | KGB drove his son to suicide, but suspecting his ot |
Gromov served in the | KGB during 1973-1991. |
ecca Getzoff was an American who worked for the | KGB during World War II. |
He was used by the | KGB during the war as a source of information and f |
Albats learned that the | KGB employed the future Russian Patriarch Alexius I |
himself to be Soviet Colonel Bulba, head of the | KGB, explaining that this was how he managed to sup |
Mitrokhin's transcribed versions of Top Secret | KGB files, alleges that the Soviet Union was princi |
Goodman founded her own production company, | KGB Films, in 1994. |
He was arrested in Moscow by the | KGB for passing out anti-war leaflets in Red Square |
rnment decided to dispose of him, and asked the | KGB for help. |
The film was shelved by the | KGB for twenty years. |
rea 51, the player can find references that the | KGB found a partially destroyed craft, as well as e |
ly 1999) was a Soviet Union spy and head of the | KGB from 1982 to 1988. |
iet Union and its Politburo and was the head of | KGB from 25 December 1958 to 13 November 1961. |
ot known but the unit was formed in 1981 by the | KGB Gen. Drozdov within the First Chief Directorate |
Sergei Kurilov as Bocharov, the | KGB General |
ly unpopular President Murat Zyazikov, a former | KGB general who was criticized both by human rights |
(better-known for his numerous guest stints as | KGB General Gogol in a string of James Bond films d |
cheslav Tikhonov played the central role of the | KGB General in the film. |
Alexei Kondaurov is a former | KGB general, former Head Analyst at Yukos, and curr |
o it's small wonder that agents of both CIA and | KGB get added into the mix. |
up , GRU, and 30 operators from another special | KGB group: «Зенит» ("Zenith"). |
he International Department, however, tasks the | KGB, GRU, and 10th Department of the General Staff |
d never held classified documents, and that the | KGB had created false information. |
until the fall of the Soviet Union itself, the | KGB had kept information about the shooting to a ba |
services there was unanimous agreement that the | KGB had been involved in the assassination of Presi |
ted UN secretary and there were rumors that the | KGB had blackmailed him during his UN time. |
ace protest in New York City, but said that the | KGB had not manipulated the American movement "sign |
legation was disturbing news, implying that the | KGB had a mole in the sensitive Armed Forces Securi |
York told the FBI that his | KGB handler during 1941-42 had been Bill Weisband, |
individuals, including some associated with the | KGB, have affirmed either the specific existence of |
up in Vilnius on 14 October 1992 in the former | KGB headquarters (which had been used by the Gestap |
s inspired by an accidental visit to the former | KGB headquarters in Vilnius, calling it "one of the |
elligence seminars and has lectured at both the | KGB headquarters in Dzerzhinsky Square, Moscow and |
over the internal security headquarters (former | KGB headquarters) and a state TV channel in the cap |
said in his autobiography that "the GRU and the | KGB helped to fund just about every antiwar movemen |
m the Kazakh Institute of Physical Training and | KGB Higher School of the USSR in Moscow, USSR with |
nt slogan on the paper bulletin, he'd be in for | KGB hot pursuit, whereas the electoral platform was |
Andrew & Mitrokhin, The Mitrokhin Archive: The | KGB in Europe and the West (London, 1999) p. 64-65 |
litician who served as the last chairman of the | KGB in 1991. |
Decoded messages reveal activities of | KGB in the '40s. |
nown for his role as General Gogol, head of the | KGB, in the James Bond film series. |
ommittee of Communist Party and the chairman of | KGB in Latvia. |
o BBC documentaries exploring the legacy of the | KGB in today's Russia and also presented a BBC radi |
han an assassin, Bond helps her escape from the | KGB in Bratislava, gaining her trust by claiming to |
Tarasov was arrested by the | KGB in 1975, but was not brought to trial. |
s forbidden without a permit issued by the FSB ( | KGB in the time of the Soviet Union). |
elligence agency with strong ties to the Soviet | KGB, including with a special-operations unit. |
No mention of the | KGB infiltration and direction of policy? |
At this time, | KGB infiltration was rife in London, and Bullard is |
death, Josef Frolik claimed that he had been a | KGB informer; Hill's widow strongly denied the clai |
ined by "Berg", Alexander Mikhailovich Orlov, a | KGB intelligence officer who defected to the West i |
Total assets ( | KGB Intelligence resource): 500 Billion (USD) |
Grigoriev, under arrest and | KGB interrogation, plays to buy the Froments time t |
evik secret police (the Cheka, precursor to the | KGB), it was renamed after Ukraine became independe |
They were being held in Minsk | KGB jail and were handed over to Russians almost th |
In the | KGB jail were imprisoned Alexander Lukashenko's riv |
According to Vasili Mitrokhin, a former | KGB major and senior archivist in the KGB intellige |
Stanislav Levchenko, a | KGB Major who defected to the United States in 1979 |
Frank Dunniger, who had to capture and hide the | KGB man while the CIA smuggled the defector out of |
These ships were built for and operated by the | KGB Maritime Border Guard. |
Bernard Schuster and Joseph Katz: | KGB Master Spies in the United States |
281 | KGB Mexico City to Moscow, 21 April 1944; |
212 | KGB Mexico City to Moscow, 25 March 1944; |
e K", founded in 1950s by the Soviets using the | KGB model, was in charge of the dirty work against |
337 | KGB Moscow to New York, 8 April 1945. |
626 | KGB Moscow to Mexico City, 29 October 1944; |
288 | KGB Moscow to Mexico City, 11 May 1944; |
292 | KGB Moscow to New York, 29 March 1945. |
h Desmond Ball) Breaking the Codes: Australia's | KGB Network, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1998. |
The | KGB neutralizes him. |
1523 | KGB New York to Moscow. |
1636 | KGB New York to Moscow, 21 November 1944; |
1791 | KGB New York to Moscow, 20 December 1944; |
1582 | KGB New York to Moscow, 12 November 1944; |
1052 | KGB New York to Moscow, 5 July 1945; |
1524 | KGB New York to Moscow, 27 October 1944; |
Venona decrypt #588 April 29, 1944 from the | KGB New York office states “for more than a year Zu |
880 | KGB New York to Moscow, 8 June 1943, p.1 |
880 | KGB New York to Moscow, 8 June 1943, p.2 |
1003 | KGB New York to Moscow, 18 July 1944. |
749 | KGB New York to Moscow, 26 May 1944. |
1397 | KGB New York to Moscow, 4 October 1944 |
864 | KGB New York to Moscow, 16 June 1944 |
627 | KGB New York to Moscow, 5 May 1944 |
1636 | KGB New York to Moscow, November 21, 1944 |
1464 | KGB New York to Moscow, 14 October 1944. |
899 | KGB New York to Moscow, 11 June 1943; |
1142 | KGB New York to Moscow, 10 August 1944; |
579 | KGB New York to Moscow, 28 April 1944 |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |