Den 4. konference i serien Need to Know afholdes på University of Leuven i Belgien d. 23.-24. oktober 2014.
Nedenfor kan hentes Call for Papers, som har deadline 30. april 2014
Call for Papers Need to Know IV (797 KB)
Conference Form (33 KB)
Herunder kan ses programmet for konferencen
Annual International Conference
Need to Know IV
What We Now Know about Secret Services in the Cold War.
A State of Affairs 25 Years after 1989
23–24 October, 2014
Place: University of Leuven (KU Leuven)
Coorganizers:
Institute of National Remembrance – Commission for the Prosecution of Crimes against the Polish Nation, University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Center for Cold War Studies of the University of Southern Denmark
PROGRAM
23 October, 2014
9.00–9.30 – Welcome coffee
9.30–10.00 – Opening of the conference
10.00–12.00 – Session I – Successes
Chair: Prof. Idesbald Goddeeris (University of Leuven, Belgium)
- Prof. Mark Kramer (Harvard University, USA) – Soviet foreign intelligence tradecraft and operation, 1941–1991: what have we learned?
- Prof. Andrzej Paczkowski (Institute of Political Studies, Polish Academy of Science, Poland) – Fifteen years of research into intelligence: personal experience, major trends and first conclusions
- Dr. Gordan Akrap (Croatia) – Communist intelligence community and violence: case of Yugoslavia
- Dr Shlomo Shpiro (Bar-Ilan University, Israel) - Between eupforia and security realism: Post Cold War intelligence research
- Discussion
12.00–13.30 – Lunch break
13.30–15.30 – Session II – Failure
Chair: Sir Rodric Quentin Braithwaite (United Kingdom)
- Prof. Idesbald Goddeeris (University of Leuven, Belgium) – The Polish rezydentura in Brussels: a prime example of amateurism
- Dr Władysław Bułhak (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland) – The fabricator from Zagreb. “Alessandro” and the case of fake transcripts of political discussions of Paul VI
- Dr Bernd Schaefer (Woodrow Wilson International Center, USA) – “RYAN”: the Soviet warning system before a “surprise nuclear missile attack” in the 1980s
- Dr Petre Opris (C.S. Nicolăescu-Plopşor Institute for Studies in Social Sciences and Humanities, Romania) – “Unexpected” challenges for intelligence officers of Romania in the United States, France, Turkey and Italy (1960–1964)
- Discussion
15.30–16.00 – Coffee break
16.00–18.00 – Session III – The East European intelligence and security services: The European experience
Chair: Associate Prof. Thomas Wegener Friis (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
- Dr Anna Kaminsky (Federal Foundation for the Study of Communist Dictatorship, Germany)
- Dr Łukasz Kamiński (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland)
- Nikita Petrov (Memorial Society, Russia)
- Anders B. Werp (Parliament of Norway)
19.00 – Dinner
24 October, 2014
9.00–11.00 – Session IV – 1989
Chair: Associate Prof. Svend Gottschalk Rasmussen (University of Southern Denmark, Denmark)
- Daniel Belousek (Ministry of Defence, Czech Republic) – In the shadow of the Velvet Revolution – shredding of operative files within the Czechoslovak Ministry of Interior after 17 November 1989
- Dr Nadia Boyadjieva (University of Plodviv “Paisii Hilendarski”, Bulgaria) – Todor Zhivkov’s regime, civil movements, and the state security organs in Bulgaria in the late 1980s
- Przemysław Gasztold-Seń (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland) – “Brotherly” concerns. The Soviet bloc countries’ official and secret pressure on Polish intelligence services in 1980s
- Prof. Wanda Jarząbek (Institute of Political Studies, Polish Academy of Science, Poland) – Something old, something new: Polish Communist intelligence during the German reunification
- Discussion
11.00–11.30 – Coffee break
11.30–13.30 – Session V – Western Intelligence
Chair: TBC
- Michael Fredholm (Stockholm International Program for Central Asian Studies, Sweden) – Trust, but verify: the verification role of signals intelligence. Then for decision-makers, now for historians
- Miriam Matejova (University of British Columbia, Canada) / Don Muton (Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan) – Intelligence from Southeast Asia and its impact on the Cold War: the allies and the superpowers
- Prof. Jacek Tebinka (Gdańsk University, Poland) – British intelligence and the Polish revolution 1980–1982
- Guenther K. Weisse (International Intelligence History Association, Germany) – NATO-SIGINT: 1985–1989
- Discussion
13.30–15.00 – Lunch break
15.00–17.00 – Session VI – Culture
Chair: Dr Krzysztof Persak (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland)
- Dr Franciszek Dąbrowski (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland) – The system of electronic intelligence information processing of the 1st Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the People’s Republic of Poland: The impact of the technological progress and the change of information exchange culture
- Dr Patryk Pleskot (Institute of National Remembrance, Poland) – Dangerous foundation. Australian-Polish Polcul Foundation and the secret services of communist Poland (1980–1984)
- Dr Douglas Selvage (Office of the Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives, Germany) – The limits of repression: the East German Ministry for State Security, relative economic decline and the East’s opening to the West, 1972–1989
- Mihaela Toader (Institute for Investigation of Communist Crimes and the Memory of Romanian Exile, Romania) – The Romanian Library of Freiburg: advanced outpost of the Romanian culture in the West in attention of the foreign intelligence services
- Prof. Joanna Wojdon (University of Wrocław, Poland) – Polish American cultural activities from the perspective of the secret services of the Comunist Poland
- Discussion
17.00–17.15 – Conclusion of the conference
17.30–18.30 – Guided tour of Leuven
19.00 – Reception