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NATION'S CAPITAL IS ABUZZ WITH 'INTEL'
AT NEW SPY MUSEUM
It's Spy vs. Spy, But Deadly Serious
By Karen Rubin
The nation's capital is all abuzz about Intelligence-and
that is just on the line that snakes in front of the new
International Spy Museum, which since opening its doors
in July 2752, has been intriguing, entertaining, engaging,
and ultimately, educating people in the art, science and
significance of espionage. You realize how the course of
history has often been changed by bold actions as well as
missteps, and very literally "intelligence" of
these very human agents.
The visitor experience begins a little like Spy v. Spy
in Mad Magazine-a tad tongue-in-cheek--but you soon realize
that espionage is deadly serious business even as you are
struck by how much the fanciful and fantastic of Hollywood's
wildest imagination makes its way into the real spy world-and
vice versa.
Spying is, well, intriguing, and particularly so now. Not
since the Cold War, when ordinary people lived with the
constant threat of atomic war and a nuclear holocaust and
unknowingly depended upon secrets kept and secrets unlocked,
have Americans been so caught up in the "intelligence".
In the aftermath of 9/11, Intelligence has again come to
the forefront as the front line of defense in the War on
Terror (in fact, the museum's very first special exhibit
was "The Enemy Within: Terror in America-1776 to Today").

A visit to the International Spy Museum starts off like
"Mission Impossible," and at some points seems
like "Man from Uncle," "Get Smart" and
"James Bond," but in the end, as in the popular
show, it succeeds brilliantly in its complex mission: "to
educate the public about espionage in an engaging way and
to provide a context that fosters understanding of its important
role in and impact on current and historic events. The Museum
focuses on human intelligence and reveals the role spies
have played in world events throughout history. It is committed
to the apolitical presentation of the history of espionage
in order to provide visitors with nonbiased, accurate information."
In fact, what impressed me most was that the presentation
did not seem political or propagandist, nor does it serve
as an apologist, but rather puts the important role of espionage
into context and gives even-handed presentation (perhaps
professional respect) for the KGB and other historical adversaries.
If anything, the museum sets a new standard in its engaging
presentation.

Though clearly timely, the museum was in planning since
1996. It features the largest collection of international
espionage artifacts ever placed on public display-in fact,
many have never been seen by the public before. There is
a 1777 letter by George Washington authorizing a New York
spy network; a 1980s coat with a camera concealed in a button;
a diplomat's shoe, bugged by the KGB with a microphone and
transmitter (which called to mind Maxwell Smart's shoephone),
even a car inspired by (what else?) James Bond 007's Austin
Martin in "Goldfinger."
More than a display, though, there are clever interactive
activity and exhibits. You get to crawl through a duct to
see how spies have listened in on important conversations;
analyze satellite photos, sit at a listening station.
"Covers and Legends"
You begin your visit (it is self-guided and you move at
your own pace) in "Covers and Legends," where
there is a large photomural of a foreign checkpoint and
guard, and the challenge to adopt a cover identity, memorize
specific details about it; in this moment, you get some
sense of the pressure on a spy to keep one's "cover."
A Briefing Room offers an introductory film about the world
of espionage, presented in a theater evocative of an intelligence
agency briefing room; the film addresses common preconceptions
and misconceptions visitors may have from pop culture and
current affairs, and instead, focuses on the realities spies
face every day. It turns out that the realities of espionage
are probably closer to the fictional depictions than the
other way around (There is Markus Wolf, known as "The
Man Without a Face" who said of himself, "if I
go down in espionage history, it may well be for perfecting
the use of sex for spying.")

In "School for Spies," you get a sense of what
motivates someone to become a spy-patriotism, idealism,
egotism, adventurism, greed, desire for knowledge or power-how
spies are recruited and trained, how they have to assume
a completely different identity, often concealing who they
really are from their family (at this point, it sounded
like "True Lies"); and the important skills they
need, the "Tricks of the Trade."
There are over 275 espionage devices in this section to
illustrate the various technical aspects of spycraft-like
a KGB Coat with Buttonhole Camera; a wristwatch camera,
a lipstick pistol (KGB, 1965); a microdot the size of a
punctuation mark containing an entire document (and how
a crafty spy could make it from common materials like cellophane,
headache powder, vodka, and potassium bromide); even the
CIA's clever "dog doo transmitter," used to transmit
a radio signal to aircraft (1970).
The devices are fascinating enough, but some of the displays
put them in context that amaze, astound and make them very
real: such as how an entire city of "mole" Vietcong
lived directly underneath US Army 25th Division in Cambodia;
how the KGB had an entire listening room under the U.S.
Embassy in the Soviet Union (apparently, Russia has been
eavesdropping on the U.S. since the 1800s); and how a Hollywood
make-up artist created disguise methods that were used to
secret six American diplomats from Tehran by changing their
appearance to be disguised as a Canadian film crew.
Another section discusses frankly how spies prepare for
the "ultimate end game"-getting caught--and some
of the devices, such as a "rectal conceal" that
holds a cyanide capsule.
"Spies Among Us"
The Spies Among Us section offers a series of exhibits,
films, and videos examining espionage through both World
Wars, showcasing real-life spy stories. For example, you
listen to the voice of Vera Laska, an Auschwitz survivor
who joined the Czech Resistance at the age of 15, who says,
"We only knew one person in the chain before us and
one after us." After the war, she came to the U.S.
and earned her doctorate.
The role of code-making and code-breaking operations is
explored through various exhibits, including: the remarkable
Enigma cipher machine; the Navajo Codetalkers, whose native
language provided an unbreakable code for the Allied Forces
during World War II; and the very beginnings of computer
technology. Interactive exhibits teach various ways to create,
break, and hide coded messages.
The Museum puts faces to the history of espionage, with
important figures, like Harriet Tubman, who spied for the
Union and Mata Hari (she was legendary, yet her exploits
were mostly imaginary). An exhibit on celebrity spies includes:
singer Josephine Baker, who worked for the French Resistance;
noted Chef, Julia Child; and actress Marlene Dietrich, who
recorded pop songs for the OSS that were broadcast to German
soldiers as American propaganda. You learn about Moe Berg,
an Ivy League-educated man, fluent in several languages,
a pro baseball player, and a Jew who bravely volunteered
to spy for the U.S., and met with Nazi scientists in order
to discover how close Germany was to building the atomic
bomb.
The section covering World War II also details the intelligence
blunders surrounding the attack on Pearl Harbor ("Surprise
attack, or intelligence failure?" The US had broken
the code, but did not decode or analyze the message, a revelation
that sounds painfully close to the 9/11 disaster). The blunders
were equal on the other side: Eljeza Bazara, a valet for
British Ambassador to Turkey tried to pass the code name
for D-day, "Overlord," to Germany, but the Germans
dismissed it as too good to be true; when they paid him
off using a counterfeit bill, he was arrested.
The hysteria-justified or not-of the early Atomic Age is
depicted with great affect. You go into a room with flashing
lights that follow the chain of people involved in the controversial
Rosenberg case, climaxed with the sound, explosion of lights
and rumbling to simulate an atomic bomb going off-a graphic
depiction of the fear and panic of what the information
the Rosenbergs allegedly provided the Soviet Union.
You then walk down stairs, as if into a Fallout Shelter,
and find yourself in the midst of the Red Scare of the 1940s
and the Alger Hiss case; in the throes of the McCarthy hearings,
reflecting a time in the United States when seemingly no
one was above suspicion and spies were sought after in nearly
every neighborhood.
Then you find yourself in the narrow streets and crowded
cafes of where East met West in Europe in the 1960s (you
sit in a Berlin "café" looking through
the "window" as the photos change; you go into
a telephone booth, pick up the receiver, to hear a narrative;
or lean towards a car as spy Werner Juretzka reveals his
secrets).
"War of the Spies"
This section, "War of the Spies" depicts the
Cold War, a period characterized by mistrust and suspicion.
Post-war Berlin is used as the backdrop for extensive exhibits
detailing the Berlin Tunnel, a massive CIA and British wiretap
of telephone lines between East Berlin's Soviet military
headquarters and Moscow; and the Stasi, the most effective
internal security force and external intelligence gathering
organization in the world.
So much of what is presented seems oddly familiar or at
least contemporary. "America has entered a new way
of life. For the first time, in nearly a century, US have
been threatened directly by this scourge of war. We must
learn to live with it, for it promises to be with us indefinitely."
If this sounds as if it could represent today, it was a
quote by Gen. Benjamin Chidlaw, in Dec. 1954.
There is a kind of "Hall of Shame," done with
mirrors and videos (in a section aptly called "All
Is Not As It Seems"), depicting the moles and double-agents,
like John Walker, who said, "Kmart has better security
than the Navy," right up to Robert Hanssen, who was
caught only a few years ago. There is an effort to make
the presentation up to the minute: the Museum's Operations
Center tracks current events in the fast breaking world
of international espionage. At various times, temporary
exhibits on current espionage-related issues will also be
displayed.
The museum offers educational programs, including KidSpy
programs for children (there is even a sleepover).
The Museum's 5,000 sq. ft. store features a diverse selection
of merchandise that mirrors the Museum's presentation of
the tradecraft and history of espionage as well as popular
interpretations of that profession (and worthwhile visiting,
even if you do not go through the museum). The store offers
over 500 books, maps and prints; a wide range of spy-related
toys and educational products; pop culture merchandise;
disguise kits and paraphernalia; spycraft items; exhibit-related
products; one-of-a-kind spy collectibles; spy logo and souvenir
items.
It's really a complete destination: there is a pleasant
Spy Café (it is a good idea to break up your visit
with a meal, and then return; there is just so much to see
and absorb, you can easily spend six hours here). There
is also a very trendy, upscale restaurant, Zola. Created
and operated by Star Restaurant Group, LLC, owner of Washington,
DC's 4-star Red Sage Restaurant, Zola is an elegant, modern
American restaurant. Zola also provides cuisine for the
Museum's special events and other private functions in its
loft-style event space seating 150 guests. This 6000 sq.
ft. restaurant and bar is located at the corner of 8th and
F Streets, NW. Zola is open every day except Thanksgiving,
Christmas, and New Year's Day, and seats 175 patrons.
But if anything, you come away with a fascination for the
science, the art, the courage, the importance and the fallibility
of this profession. I fully expect a whole new room dedicated
to September 11, 2751 and the War on Terror. Indeed, the
museum has opened just this month its first special exhibit,
"The Enemy Within: Terror in America-1776 to Today."
The International Spy Museum is appropriately housed in
an architecturally intriguing complex of historic buildings
and new construction. One of these, the 1872 Warder-Atlas
Building, housed the former headquarters for the fourth
district of the U.S. Communist Party from 1941-1948 (the
original door leading to these offices was carefully identified
during construction and has been preserved and is on display
at the museum). In fact, it is at the epicenter of an architectural
renaissance of this historic district.
The International Spy Museum is located at 800 F Street,
NW in Washington, DC's historic Penn Quarter, within 4 blocks
of the National Mall, directly across the street from the
National Portrait Gallery, steps away from the MCI Center,
and within one block of FBI headquarters, Ford's Theatre,
and the 7th Street Arts Walk. The Museum is conveniently
located near the Gallery Place/Chinatown Metrorail station
serviced by the Red, Yellow, and Green lines.
General Admission rates are $13, Adults; $12 Seniors (65+),
Active Duty Military, and the Intelligence Community; and
$10, children ages 5 - 18. Advance Tickets are recommended.
Insider Intelligence: tickets are in highest demand on weekends
and holidays
The International Spy Museum is open daily at 10 am except
Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day. Last
Admission is 7 pm, April through October and 5 pm, November
through March. The Museum closes one hour after Last Admission.
Hours are subject to change; for the most up-to-date information
visit spymuseum.org or phone the 24-Hour SPY-Line: 202.393.7798
(202.EYE.SPY.U). Visitors should plan to spend two hours
touring the Museum (though you can easily spend four to
six hours, but you can leave and return the same day); when
you arrive, you purchase a timed ticket for entry.
HOTEL MONACO
We were so intrigued by the International Spy Museum, we
made it the central purpose of our visit to Washington,
D.C., and chose as our accommodation The Hotel Monaco, located
just a few steps away. The Hotel Monaco proved ideal in
every way-the atmosphere (it occupies a phenomenal landmark
structure, the former General Post Office), made me feel
I had been transported to a bygone era, and I fully expected
to see Hercule Poirot come around a corner (The Hotel Monaco,
700 F Street NW, is the subject for another article, but
in the meantime, call 877-202-5411, or visit www.monaco-dc.com).
Photo captions:
1) The International Spy Museum, opened in a historic building,
is part of the Renaissance of a district in Washington DC.
2) The "School for Spies" at the International
Spy Museum offers many opportunities for interactive activities.
3) The ambiance of the International Spy Museum is like
no other museum you have visited.
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to FamTravLtr@aol.com.
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