Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 37. Chapters: Sergei Kourdakov, Alexander Pokryshkin, Alexander Ustinov, Israel Shamir, Yuri Larionov, Aleksandr Karelin, Vyacheslav Shalygin, Yan Golubovsky, Vadim Repin, Dmitri Nabokov, Maxim Vengerov, Ekaterina Vinogradova, Meir Dagan, Tatiana Malinina, Igor Polyansky, Arseny Sokolov, Denis Inkin, Yanka Dyagileva, Joseph Werth, Pavel Podkolzin, Yury Yershov, Ivan Roudyk, Aleksei Maklakov, Stanislav Pozdniakov, Denis Laktionov, Andrey Perlov, Youlia Fedossova, Vladimir Antyufeyev, Andrei Panin, Andrey Zvyagintsev, Daniil Simkin, Eduard Artemyev, Yury Komarov, Artem Kryukov, Alexander Gavrilov, Evgeny Zarafiants, Marina Gershenovich, Maria Guerassimenko, Yuri Yukechev, Evgeny Shaldybin, Dmitry Zatonsky, Viktor Tolokonsky, Mikhail Simonyan, Alena Alekseeva, Sergey Teslya, Irina Ufimtseva, Sergei Klimovich, Yevgeni Podgorny, Olesya Syreva, Sergei Zhukov, Grigory Kiriyenko, Vladimir Paznikov, Vladislav Bobrik, Alena Zavarzina, Yekaterina Ilyukhina, Eugene Nalimov, Yuriy Nazarov, Valentin Kuzin, Liliya Vasilchenko, Irina Strakhova, Larisa Merk, Konstantin Shamray, Ivan Kulakov, Olga Nikolaeva, Irina Alfyorova, Anton Mordasov, Oleg Tolmachev, Ruben Aganbegyan, Anton Tokarev. Excerpt: Sergei Nicholaevich Kourdakov (Russian: March 1, 1951 - January 1, 1973) was a former KGB agent and naval officer who from his late teen years carried out more than 150 raids in underground Christian communities in regions of the Soviet Union in the 1960s. At the age of twenty, he defected to Canada while a naval officer on a Soviet trawler in the Pacific and converted to Evangelical Christianity. He is known for having written The Persecutor (also known as Forgive Me, Natasha), an autobiography that was written shortly before his death in 1973 and published posthumously. Since its publication, it has...