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Red Horizons

Red Horizons

List Price: $76.95
Your Price: $76.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A kingdom for a sequel!
Review: I read a Slovenian edition of this book, and I think I'm going to order the English version to see what I missed by reading the translation.

I am inclined to believe most of what the author writes. I found the book astonishing, fascinating, downright enlightening; I can recommend it to anyone who has the guts to learn what the world and its history are actually like, as opposed to a fanciful portrayal of what they ought to be. We who have the privilege of living somewhat freely and luxuriously in our safe, comfortable dwellings can only appreciate an occasional injection of cold truth.

That said, there are two things Pacepa discreetly 'fails' to include in this book, and I cannot blame him for doing so:
- He never mentions any atrocities that may have been done by the US or the CIA. Obviously, as the book was written in the USA, he better not.
- When DIE does an atrocity, Pacepa never implicates himself - he just says that 'DIE' did it. When DIE does something good, such as prevent Golda Meir from getting killed, it is Pacepa who made sure it happened. :) I wouldn't mind Pacepa elaborating on his role in the atrocities, I would actually find it very laudable and titillating if he did so, but I guess there are too many aggressive hypocrites and perpetually offended people out there for him to be able to afford that.

There's some other minor stuff he inserts rather awkwardly - like his alleged Christianity and his love for the USA - but that's unverifiable and pretty much irrelevant, so let's leave it at that. Pacepa's personal issues are not what makes the book amazing, and they are kept to a minimum.

To summarize, I highly recommend this book to anyone who can stand the enormities - for entertainment as well as educational value.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A convincing history from a shady character
Review: I would definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in the Byzantine twists and turns of Eastern Bloc diplomacy during the Cold War. Pacepa's riveting descriptions of what really went on in the Ceausescu home and in Romania during Ceausescu's reign are bound to shock and surprise even the most jaded reader of spy fiction.

But this is not fiction. This is fact. Dirty, disgusting fact. Pacepa was part of it, and admits to acts which would shock all but the most cynical reader, but his guts in publishing this book during Ceausescu's lifetime cannot be underestimated.

As Pacepa is no saint, he doesn't make an easy protagonist. Homophobic in the extreme, somewhat repressed, apt to treat people of colour with condescension, he's not the kind of man I'd be comfortable with, but that doesn't diminish the power of his words. Read this book; if you don't want to enrich a homophobic racist, borrow it from the library, but read it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting Portrayal of the Conducator
Review: Ion Mihai Pacepa does a wonderful job in recounting the many conversations he had with Nicolae Ceausescu and other high-ranking Romanian communist officials. If you're the kind of person who enjoys Tom Clancy novels, this book is for you; it contains many tales of intrigue, espionage and deception as well as a shocking biography of the unscrupulous, hate-filled leader and his neurotic wife woven into each chapter.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Riveting account of incredible corruption and abuse of power
Review: Ion Mihai Pacepa was the highest ranking official ever to defect from the Eastern Bloc. His book is a first-hand account of the hideous monster that grew in the minds of Romania's Communist dictator, Nicolae Ceausescu, and his wife, and that fed on an entire nation. I have to think that the escalating deception and abuse would have been found out by the West. Amazingly, Romania retained its Most Favored Nation trade status for years after the author defected. Two years after Pacepa published "Red Horizons", the Ceausescus were overthrown and executed. Romania is still in an economic and social shambles nearly a decade later.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Self-serving yet a good read
Review: Pacepa's description of life among the Inner Party during the Ceausescu words is chilling. He documents abuses of power, cruelties, and downright stupidities among the ruling elite of Communist Romania, and shows why the Ceaucescus were so hated (and deservedly so) by average Romanians.

It's too bad that he tries to exculpate himself at the end by showing himself to be a closet Christian and pro-American. It seems to me that he pulls this rabbit out of the hat near the end so his American friends and readers will overlook the murders, tortures and other atrocities he committed and abetted. (The Karla Faye Tucker defense.) By springing this surprise on the reader, the author makes us wonder: if he were really the pro-Western Christian he claims to be, would he have really aquiesced to even one of the horrors he describes? Wouldn't he have allowed himself to die before allowing hundreds of innocents to be slaughtered?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: titillating but take it with a block of salt
Review: Pacepa's well-known and smoothly written _Red Horizons_ does make for a titillating view of the role of Romania's foreign intelligence during his tenure as DIE chief, Romania's relationship to East and West, and eye-popping eyewitness details of the smarmy occurrences and attitudes in Ceausescu's inner circle. However, as a postcommunist analyst of Romania reading some of the reviews below, I need to inject some notes of caution.

Readers should be careful of taking everything Pacepa says as the gospel truth for at least four reasons:

1) When the director of a foreign intelligence service defects to the US, you can pretty much bet any publicly available memoirs have been vetted by the CIA and its ghostwriters before publishing. I.e., what was left out? And how the hell do we fact-check what's left, to be sure there wasn't some disinformation or exaggeration going on (as someone pointed out, the book was launched in 1987, two years before Ceausescu's fall)?

2) Pacepa defected in 1978, right as things were really starting to spiral down the tubes internally in Romania. Anything after that, you won't find in this book or else it's not eyewitness stuff. He had not yet attained the higher reaches of power when *hundreds* of thousands endured the physical as well as psychological terror of Ceausescu's predecessor, Gheorghiu-Dej, as opposed to the *tens* of thousands enduring somewhat more psychological pressure (i.e., much fewer executions) under Ceausescu. Still, Pacepa had to have known a great deal about the repressive system under both leaders, which leads to the next point:

3) Never, ever forget that Pacepa rose to the pinnacle of power and says next to nothing about how he got there (why was *he* approved?) or his ethics in defending the regime from the highest levels. Don't buy his "foreign intelligence had nothing to do with the internal secret police" nonsense--there was a great deal of organizational separation, but you cannot divorce what DIE was doing from what the domestic police were doing--perpetuating a brutal one-party regime. It's rather silly to suggest, as one reviewer did, that Pacepa should've killed himself, but his own morals are in considerable doubt, Christian or otherwise; his was not a case of somebody joining the party just to keep a job. Read Dennis Deletant's _Ceausescu and the Securitate_ to get an idea of what kind of regime he was defending, as well as the introduction which points to some of Pacepa's factual lapses. To Pacepa's credit, he does admit to organizing brutal operations against dissident emigres as ordered, but you see the problem.

4) Throughout the '90s, Pacepa has been and still is very, very active in sending frequent, sensationalist letters and articles on the Ceausescu and post-Ceausescu period, most notably to the Bucharest daily _Ziua_ (whose director, Sorin Rosca Stanescu, is an admitted former collaborator with the former Securitate, that is, the internal communist-era secret police). Both men have enormous political axes to grind (mostly against Ion Iliescu and company). Sometimes they're on target, but Stanescu in particular has at times played fast and loose with principles and facts underpinning journalist ethics (e.g., the whole alleged Iliescu-KGB affair and its sub-scandals), such that it's hard to trust him or the information from his sources even if you want to. For his part, Pacepa has had a major bone to pick with parts of Romania's multiple intelligence agencies for most of the last decade--quite possibly for good reason, as many of them have a lot to answer for, but until he stops being incredibly oblique and conspiratorial, and comes clean about the specific targets, evidence, and motivations of his agenda, you are advised to retain some skepticism, as many informed Romanians do back in Romania proper.

All that said, you will get in this book an excellent expose of how Ceausescu was using the West and feeding the Soviets a steady stream of intelligence information, despite the rather "maverick" rhetoric that distanced him from the rest of the Warsaw Pact. (Realize also that this Western support was enabling Ceausescu to put the screws to the population.) It's also probably not far off when describing the paranoia and other bizarre behavior of the ruling couple (especially Elena) and their family. The difficulty is in determining exactly how accurate vs. selective it all is.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: How communist live and operate
Review: Red Horizons is a very informative book on the inside operations of the Ceausescus's régime and how communist operate against the West. Nicolae Ceausescus duped an American president (Carter) into supporting and aiding Romanian at the same time his component of the communist intelligence operations were expanding against the United States. Read J. R. Nyquist's web site for expanded details of communist operations against the West at http://www.jrnyquist.com. I highly recommend Red Horizons and related works of Red Cocaine: The Drugging of America and the West by Joseph D. Douglass, Ray S. Cline and The Perestroika Deception : Memoranda to the Central Intelligence Agency by Anatoliy Golitsyn, Christopher Story.

Lorenz H. Menke, Jr.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fascinating!!!!
Review: Red Horizons: Chronicles of a Communist Spy Chief is a fascinating book. Pacepa has insights that you will fine nowhere else.

One very interesting piece is where Pacepa relates a conversation in 1978 with Constantin Munteaunu, a general assigned to teach Arafat and the PLO techniques to deceive the West into granting the organization recognition.

From this book, one finds out that Arafat was indeed a homosexual. He cause of death was likely AIDS.

Here is an excerpt:

"I just called the microphone monitoring center to ask about the 'Fedayee,'" Arafat's code name, explained Munteaunu. "After the meeting with the Comrade, he went directly to the guest house and had dinner. At this very moment, the 'Fedayee' is in his bedroom making love to his bodyguard. The one I knew was his latest lover. He's playing tiger again. The officer monitoring his microphones connected me live with the bedroom, and the squawling almost broke my eardrums. Arafat was roaring like a tiger, and his lover yelping like a hyena."

Munteaunu continued: "I've never before seen so much cleverness, blood and filth all together in one man." Munteaunu, wrote Pacepa, spent months pulling together secret reports from Egyptian, Jordanian and Syrian intelligence agencies as well as Romanian files.

"I used to think I knew just about everything there was to know about Rahman al-Qudwa," Arafat's real name, "about the construction engineer who made a fortune in Kuwait, about the passionate collector of racing cars, about Abu Amman," Arafat's nom de guerre, "and about my friend Yasser, with all his hysterics," explained Munteaunu, handing Pacepa his final report on the PLO leader. "But I've got to admit that I didn't really know anything about him."

Pacepa wrote: "The report was indeed an incredible account of fanaticism, of devotion to his cause, of tangled oriental political maneuvers, of lies, of embezzled PLO funds deposited in Swiss banks, and of homosexual relationships, beginning with his teacher when he was a teen-ager and ending with his current bodyguards. After reading the report, I felt a compulsion to take a shower whenever I had been kissed by Arafat, or even just shaken his hand."

"If true, Arafat would have a great deal to conceal from his people and his murderously anti-homosexual supporters in the Islamic world," writes Frum, suggesting that Arafat was airlifted to France for medical treatment because he "could trust the French to protect his intimate secret.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beg your pardon, Bob!
Review: Sorry Bob, I did not take the time to read the very end of your review. Apologies!

Yes, you have mentioned about the 'homophobic and racist stuff' not being true.

Apologies for the misunderstanding...

DL

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lurid eyewitness account of the Communist ruling class
Review: The author was a spy boss in Communist Romania. He saw the Ceausescus on a daily basis, and relates all their shocking--but true--dirt. From their dealings with drug lords to their rapist son's wild partying. Aside from its historical value, the book provide insight into the workings of foreign/Communist intelligence operations.


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