Spies & Spying Personality Profiling: Illegals - Non-Official Cover

From The Psychology of Spies and Spying by Adrian Furnham and John Taylor.

The Russian SVR and its predecessors have run a program of ‘Illegals’ for many decades. These are intelligence officers, usually Handlers, who are trained to work overseas using false names and backgrounds. 

The Americans follows two Russian sleeper agents living undercover in the US
The Americans follows two Russian sleeper agents living undercover in the US


Spies & Sleeper Agents

These are long-term operations lasting many years. They acquire access to intelligence through employment in a target area. They may also run other agents in the host country. When they begin their illegal career they will probably not know what their specific mission will be. If caught, they have no diplomatic immunity and will be tried for spying.

Their colleagues working out of an embassy enjoy diplomatic immunity and, if caught, will be persona non grata in their host country although Illegals, if caught, will go through the courts and may spend time in prison. They are often released as part of an exchange

Russian spy Anna Chapman was exchanged as part of a spy swap
Russian spy Anna Chapman was exchanged as part of a spy swap

Spies & Spying Illegals: Psychological profile notes

The requirements for Illegals and NOCs are the same as for the Handler: interpersonal skills, sociability, and drive. 

But the emphasis is much more on drive.

 Real-life Russian sleeper agent and SPYEX consultant Jack Barsky appeared on The Americans
Real-life Russian sleeper agent and SPYEX consultant Jack Barsky appeared on The Americans


The assessment of people to ensure a perfect fit

We summarize below the main skills and qualities which recruiters will look for in their assessment of potential intelligence officers.

 

Intellectual horsepower

Not everyone in an organization needs to be super clever; they do however need to be ‘bright enough’. There are different kinds of intellect that are required in an intelligence service: 

  • Intellectual and cognitive capacity (IQ): an individual’s efficiency at information processing and storage. It predicts how quickly and efficiently they learn. People can be taught skills but there is not much people can do to improve their intelligence.
  • Analytical: the ability to identify relationships and patterns from information and data. 
  • Numeric or deductive ability: this relates to those posts which demand a strong mathematical or scientific approach to their work.

Personality - is about preferred ways of doing things and seeing the world. Intelligence officers cannot change their personalities but they can learn to change their behaviors. Different roles require different personality traits. Recruiters will want to assess the following:

Stability/resilience/composure - an ability to withstand stressful external stimuli without psychological hindrance. All roles involve pressure, some more than others. It is important that people do not buckle under pressure and make bad decisions.

Openness/inquisitiveness - open to experience and embrace the new and the different. They are less fazed by unusual or different places, people, or ways of doing things. Inquisitiveness is about an individual’s ability to innovate and be curious when presented with intelligence from an existing source or a new source. 

Sociability/extraversion - value social interaction and a preference to work in groups and as part of a team. Introverts value independence, preferring to work alone, or in an insular manner.

Risk-taking preferences - central to intelligence roles is the concept of risk. While all risks are thoroughly analyzed, understood, and (as much as possible) mitigated, intelligence roles require that people take risks. We split risk into two distinct parts:

  • ‘Hot’ Risk - risk where decisions have immediate (and potentially dangerous) consequences. This represents a person's willingness to engage in missions that are physically stimulating/frightening. 
  • Cold’ Risk - risk where decisions have effects that are distant and in the future. This represents a person’s willingness to make strategic decisions based on intelligence or challenge existing intelligence in favor of a different strategy. It is calculated, planned, and strategic. 

Drive/conscientiousness/work ethic - this trait assesses the level of self-motivation, organization, and drive within an individual. A conscientious person is organized, reliable, and responsible.

Integrity/honesty - an individual’s ‘moral compass’. It focuses on whether the individual is manipulative, callous, and devious or whether they have an ethical sense and moral backbone. This is one of the most important traits in the spying world, famous for its intrigues and falsehoods. It is vitally important that insiders can trust their colleagues.

Skills

Skills can be taught - people can learn to do better. Inevitably an individual’s intellect and personality tend to dictate both what skills they initially have and how efficiently they learn further or higher skills.

Interpersonal skills - the ability to cultivate and maintain relationships. Certain jobs specify a need for strong social skills, not only to gather information but also to operate with others.

Observational skills - the ability to observe and follow targets. Certain roles have a need to be aware of their surroundings.

Physical ability - some roles require more than average physical fitness.

Leadership - leadership is relevant primarily for the Spymaster and for those who have to lead groups. It needs to encompass strategic ability, ambition, and a willingness to delegate. The desirable qualities of a leader are much debated. 

Excerpt courtesy of The Psychology of Spies and Spying by Adrian Furnham and John Taylor.

Spies & Spying Personality Profiling: Illegals - Non-Official Cover

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From The Psychology of Spies and Spying by Adrian Furnham and John Taylor.

The Russian SVR and its predecessors have run a program of ‘Illegals’ for many decades. These are intelligence officers, usually Handlers, who are trained to work overseas using false names and backgrounds. 

The Americans follows two Russian sleeper agents living undercover in the US
The Americans follows two Russian sleeper agents living undercover in the US


Spies & Sleeper Agents

These are long-term operations lasting many years. They acquire access to intelligence through employment in a target area. They may also run other agents in the host country. When they begin their illegal career they will probably not know what their specific mission will be. If caught, they have no diplomatic immunity and will be tried for spying.

Their colleagues working out of an embassy enjoy diplomatic immunity and, if caught, will be persona non grata in their host country although Illegals, if caught, will go through the courts and may spend time in prison. They are often released as part of an exchange

Russian spy Anna Chapman was exchanged as part of a spy swap
Russian spy Anna Chapman was exchanged as part of a spy swap

Spies & Spying Illegals: Psychological profile notes

The requirements for Illegals and NOCs are the same as for the Handler: interpersonal skills, sociability, and drive. 

But the emphasis is much more on drive.

 Real-life Russian sleeper agent and SPYEX consultant Jack Barsky appeared on The Americans
Real-life Russian sleeper agent and SPYEX consultant Jack Barsky appeared on The Americans


Spies & Spying essentials

They have to operate with very little guidance or contact from their superiors back in HQ. Their work is potentially more stressful because they have no one they can turn to and the risks are higher. 

We have, therefore, in the chart below shifted one of the Handler essentials from ‘sociability’ to ‘stability’.

The three essentials for an Illegal are:

The three essentials for an illegal

Spies & Illegals in film and books


It is curious that while this is the most secret of operations, there is rich literature on the subject from commentators and previous Illegals.

Oleg Gordievsky started his career in the Illegal section of the KGB. There are several books on some of the better-known cases on Konon Molody alias Gordon Lonsdale, Jack Barsky, and the notorious Anna Vasil'evna Kushchenko alias Anna Chapman, one of the ten Illegals arrested by the FBI in 2010. Gordon Corera’s book Russians Among Us (2020) provides an excellent account of the work they do. There is also rich fiction, particularly in film. The Fox series The Americans is one of the best acclaimed. 

The French series Le Bureau, while covering a wider range of intelligence activities, also covers an Illegal program. The film Bridge of Spies (2015) tells the true story of the exchange of Rudolph Abel and Gary Powers, an American U2 spy plane pilot shot down over the Soviet Union.

Mark Rylance stars in Bridge of Spies as Soviet intelligence officer Rudolf Abel 
Mark Rylance stars in Bridge of Spies as Soviet intelligence officer Rudolf Abel 


Spies & Illegals in podcasts

Amaryllis Fox, a CIA NOC (non-official cover) who resigned in 2010 wrote her revelatory memoirs Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA (2019). You can listen to her SPYSCAPE podcast below.

 Listen to Amaryllis Fox, a CIA sleeper agent, in The Spying Game: Sex and Special Agents
Listen to Amaryllis Fox, a CIA sleeper agent, in The Spying Game: Sex and Special Agents
Listen to Amaryllis Fox, a former CIA sleeper agent, in The Spying Game: Sex and Special Agents

Excerpt courtesy of
The Psychology of Spies and Spying by Adrian Furnham and John Taylor.

SPYCHOLOGY
You can try the SPYCHOLOGY personality element online


SPYCHOLOGY

Your personalized SPYCHOLOGY profile is based on a series of challenges available exclusively at SPYSCAPE HQ and included free in the price of admission. While the complete SPYCHOLOGY experience is only available at our HQ in New York City you can try the personality element online.

The assessment of people to ensure a perfect fit

We summarize below the main skills and qualities which recruiters will look for in their assessment of potential intelligence officers.

 

Intellectual horsepower

Not everyone in an organization needs to be super clever; they do however need to be ‘bright enough’. There are different kinds of intellect that are required in an intelligence service: 

  • Intellectual and cognitive capacity (IQ): an individual’s efficiency at information processing and storage. It predicts how quickly and efficiently they learn. People can be taught skills but there is not much people can do to improve their intelligence.
  • Analytical: the ability to identify relationships and patterns from information and data. 
  • Numeric or deductive ability: this relates to those posts which demand a strong mathematical or scientific approach to their work.

Personality - is about preferred ways of doing things and seeing the world. Intelligence officers cannot change their personalities but they can learn to change their behaviors. Different roles require different personality traits. Recruiters will want to assess the following:

Stability/resilience/composure - an ability to withstand stressful external stimuli without psychological hindrance. All roles involve pressure, some more than others. It is important that people do not buckle under pressure and make bad decisions.

Openness/inquisitiveness - open to experience and embrace the new and the different. They are less fazed by unusual or different places, people, or ways of doing things. Inquisitiveness is about an individual’s ability to innovate and be curious when presented with intelligence from an existing source or a new source. 

Sociability/extraversion - value social interaction and a preference to work in groups and as part of a team. Introverts value independence, preferring to work alone, or in an insular manner.

Risk-taking preferences - central to intelligence roles is the concept of risk. While all risks are thoroughly analyzed, understood, and (as much as possible) mitigated, intelligence roles require that people take risks. We split risk into two distinct parts:

  • ‘Hot’ Risk - risk where decisions have immediate (and potentially dangerous) consequences. This represents a person's willingness to engage in missions that are physically stimulating/frightening. 
  • Cold’ Risk - risk where decisions have effects that are distant and in the future. This represents a person’s willingness to make strategic decisions based on intelligence or challenge existing intelligence in favor of a different strategy. It is calculated, planned, and strategic. 

Drive/conscientiousness/work ethic - this trait assesses the level of self-motivation, organization, and drive within an individual. A conscientious person is organized, reliable, and responsible.

Integrity/honesty - an individual’s ‘moral compass’. It focuses on whether the individual is manipulative, callous, and devious or whether they have an ethical sense and moral backbone. This is one of the most important traits in the spying world, famous for its intrigues and falsehoods. It is vitally important that insiders can trust their colleagues.

Skills

Skills can be taught - people can learn to do better. Inevitably an individual’s intellect and personality tend to dictate both what skills they initially have and how efficiently they learn further or higher skills.

Interpersonal skills - the ability to cultivate and maintain relationships. Certain jobs specify a need for strong social skills, not only to gather information but also to operate with others.

Observational skills - the ability to observe and follow targets. Certain roles have a need to be aware of their surroundings.

Physical ability - some roles require more than average physical fitness.

Leadership - leadership is relevant primarily for the Spymaster and for those who have to lead groups. It needs to encompass strategic ability, ambition, and a willingness to delegate. The desirable qualities of a leader are much debated. 

Excerpt courtesy of The Psychology of Spies and Spying by Adrian Furnham and John Taylor.
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