From Martha’s Vineyard Magazine:
“The Defection of Simas Kudirka”
(Simas Kudirka aboard the Sovetskaya studies the deck of the
Coast Guard cutter Vigilant before his bid for freedom on the Vineyard Sound)
Thirty-five years ago, a leap to freedom ended in disaster
one mile west of Menemsha.
Voice of America bulletin to eastern Europe, Tuesday,
November 24, 1970: “Dispatches
from Massachusetts report that a crewman of a Soviet fishing mother ship tried
to defect while the vessel was tied up alongside a US Coast Guard cutter off
Martha’s Vineyard island. The reports say the Soviet seaman got aboard the
cutter but was returned to his own ship at the request of the Soviet captain.
Details about the incident remain unclear. Dispatches said American and Soviet
officials were conferring . . . about fishing rights in the North Atlantic.”
10:00 a.m., Monday, November 23, 1970 Skies over Vineyard Sound this
late-autumn morning are gray. The air is mild. The Sovetskaya Litva, 5oo feet
long, lies at anchor one mile west of the entrance to Menemsha harbor. She
serves as a refrigerator, factory, and mother ship to the Soviet-controlled
Lithuanian fishing fleet. She carries 170 officers and crew.
The Vigilant, a medium-range Coast Guard cutter based in New
Bedford, approaches the Sovetskaya Litva from astern. The cutter, 210 feet
long, is designed for offshore fishing patrols and rescues. She carries 10
officers and 61 crewmen. Her master is Commander Ralph W. Eustis, a 1955
graduate of the United States Coast Guard Academy in New London and one of the
most admired Coast Guard captains in New England. This November morning, his
job is to ferry a delegation of five officials from the New Bedford fishing
industry and the federal government to meet officers in charge of the
Lithuanian fleet. There will be a daylong conference aboard the Litva regarding
the methods by which the Soviets catch yellowtail flounder, a staple of the New
Bedford fleet, rapidly vanishing from Georges Bank. In 1970, foreign fleets may
fish as close as twelve miles from the US coastline, and the Litva has been
operating east of Nantucket, on Georges Bank.
Commander Eustis has been skipper of the Vigilant for sixteen
months. He expected to meet the Litva nearer her own fleet, somewhere off
Noman’s Land, just south of Gay Head. He is thus surprised to see her anchored
in Vineyard Sound. But the weather has been foul for several days, and he
thinks the decision of the Soviet ship to come inshore is wise. It will be
easier to transfer the American conferees in the lee of Menemsha Bight. At the
invitation of the Soviet vessel, he moors alongside her, his port side to her starboard
side. The Vineyard shoreline is close enough to see the windows in the summer
houses at Lobsterville and Gay Head.
Soviet seamen and Coast Guard crewmen crowd the rails, shout
greetings, and throw cigarettes, coins, and caps to one another. Commander
Eustis and the American delegation are lifted from the helicopter deck of the
Vigilant on an old tire suspended from a boom aboard the Litva. According to
Day of Shame, a 1973 book by Algis Ruksenas on the events of this day, Eustis
turns to Lieutenant Commander Paul E. Pakos, his second in command, before he
is taken from the deck of his ship. “No cross-visiting at this time, Paul,” he
says. “We’ll see how things are later.”
10:30 a.m.
(Coast Guard officers from the Vigilant are carried to the fisheries
conference aboard the Sovetskaya Litva on a tire suspended from the cargo boom.)
On the third deck of the Sovetskaya Litva, a man watches the
Soviet and American crew members laugh and talk. He is forty years old, a
native of the village of Griskabudis, Lithuania. His name is Simonas (Simas)
Kudirka. He is the illegitimate son of a woman born in Brooklyn, where her own
father had emigrated and worked in a foundry for nine years before returning to
Griskabudis. As a boy, Simas Kudirka heard stories of the United States from
his grandfather. Now he is seeing America and Americans up close for the first
time in his life.
Like most of his fellow citizens, his life has been hard, his
teenage years bisected by invasion and occupation, first by the Nazis, then by
the Soviets. According to For Those Still at Sea, an autobiography written with
Larry Eichel in 1978, Kudirka refused in 1948 to turn in his cousin, a guerilla
fighting the Soviets from the woodlands around his village. To escape the
sadness of the fate of his country, and to see something of the world his
grandfather described to him in his boyhood, Kudirka joined the Lithuanian
fishing fleet as a radio technician and operator. It is a good job, when he is
allowed to do it, but the punishment for his refusal to inform on his cousin
never ends. Mostly he is given toilets to clean, and he is refused papers and a
passport to go ashore when the Litva is in port.
Kudirka looks down to the deck below him and sees two young
crew members pick up glossy magazines tossed over the rail from the Vigilant.
They hide them under their jackets and scurry below. Four feet away from
Kudirka, the political officer of the Litva has also seen the crewmen run off
with the magazines. Kudirka hears him say to another officer, “Those two will
never go to sea again.” In his autobiography, Kudirka will write: “I heard
those words and inside I blew up. They would be booked on voyages and then
taken off at the last minute by border police without ever knowing why. They
would always be threatened with the loss of their right to work. And for what?
In the instant they picked up those magazines, their lives melted into mine and
mine melted into meaninglessness. We were victims – all of us. We were trapped
on a floating jail. . . . The idea of jumping to the American ship flashed into
my mind out of nowhere.” Kudirka has a wife, Genele, and two small children, a
girl named Lolita and a boy named Evaldas. “I would work hard,” he will later
write of his thoughts at this moment aboard the Litva. “I would get my family
out of the Soviet Union. It wouldn’t be easy – I knew that – but in three or
four years I could do it. I could pull them out into freedom, and any wound I
had caused would be healed. “My mind was set. I was going to jump.”
11:00 a.m.
Aboard the Vigilant, Lieutenant Douglas Lundberg, the operations officer, is leaning against the rail on the bridge wing. Only a few feet separate him from the main deck of the Litva. He turns and sees a short, dark-haired, youthful man, built like a middleweight wrestler. The man looks at him across the space between the two ships. He says quietly, “I want political asylum.” Then he looks left and right, sees no one near, and murmurs, “Gestapo. Gestapo.”
Lundberg stares at the man for a moment. He turns and walks
into the bridge, finds Paul Pakos, the second in command, and says, “Mr. Pakos,
you aren’t going to believe this, but this guy says he wants political asylum.”
Pakos and Lundberg go out to the bridge wing. Quietly the man tells the two officers,
“I will check.” He goes below, then returns. “Not too cold,” he says. “I swim.”
He mimes swimming with his hands. He disappears again.
Pakos orders a ladder hung from the starboard bow, hoping the
Soviets cannot see it. He sends a man over to the Litva and asks Commander
Eustis to return to the Vigilant. While he waits for the captain to come back,
he sends a coded message to Coast Guard offices in downtown Boston. “Estimate
with 80 percent probability” that a crewman will attempt to defect from the
Litva to the Vigilant, it says. “Same man later indicated to Executive Off.
that water not too cold and he would swim. . . . If escape undetected, plan to
recall entire delegation under false pretenses and depart. If escape detected,
foresee major problems if delegation still aboard. Req. advise.” The message is
sent at 12:43 p.m.
Commander Eustis is lifted back to the Vigilant. Pakos tells
him of the would-be defector. Eustis gets a look at the man, who is milling
around on the main deck of the Litva. Eustis thinks that “any man who would
make a decision like this in his own mind must be going to do it.” He tells his
officers to do nothing to entice the man and to say nothing to the Vigilant’s
crew. He returns to the Sovetskaya Litva so as not to arouse suspicion.
1:05 p.m.
(Captain Fletcher W. Brown Jr., chief of staff of the Coast
Guard First District, returns from lunch to his office in the John F. Kennedy
Federal Building at Government Center in Boston. He is handed the coded message
from the Vigilant, which has just come in. Captain Brown is generally aware
that the United States accepts refugees and asylum seekers from Cuba, the
Soviet Union, eastern Europe, and Vietnam, but the State Department has never
sent Coast Guard headquarters in Washington specific instructions about what to
do with a defector, and no guidelines have ever been given to the First
District. “Thank God, at least we’ve got Eustis down there,” Captain Brown
says.)
As chief of staff, Brown is second in command of the First
District. But for twenty days, he has been acting district commander. His boss,
Rear Admiral William B. Ellis, is at home in Beverly, recovering from a hernia
operation. First, Captain Brown calls Coast Guard headquarters in Washington
with the news of a possible defection during the fishing conference on Vineyard
Sound, and relays the secret message from the Vigilant. He is told to keep
headquarters informed of developments. Then he calls Admiral Ellis at home for
his counsel – just as he has on other First District matters, great and small,
during the admiral’s convalescence.
“Mentally, he was at work, merely as a result of continued
briefings,” Brown will later tell Algis Ruksenas, the author of Day of Shame.
“What happened this day is merely an extension of exactly the same thing I did
every single day – except this was a beaut. I felt obligated – it was essential
– that I call him as my immediate, designated superior.” In November 1970, he
regards Admiral Ellis as one of the wisest and finest officers he has known in
a twenty-two-year Coast Guard career. But the admiral, a 1936 graduate of the
Coast Guard Academy, is a man schooled only in the subjects of engineering and
seamanship. He knows little of history or world affairs – still less of the
record of Soviet behavior toward its unsuccessful asylum seekers.
Admiral Ellis tells his chief of staff that if the defector
reaches Vigilant, the Soviets should be told. And if they want him back, they
should have him. “If we allowed the Vigilant to be used as a haven under that
circumstance, if we went on this way,” the admiral will tell a Coast Guard
board of investigation two weeks later, “we would never be able to have
meaningful meetings again with these people.” But he has a more personal,
visceral reaction to the news of a possible defection – one he never reveals to
official investigators. To Ellis, the man is a maritime lawbreaker, a villain. “He’s
a deserter no matter what he is,” he will tell Ruksenas, the author, ten months
later. “And I don’t think I thought about the political overtones. . . . If he
did get aboard, we were going to have to – under any rules of decency – send
him back. . . . I figured that if one of my men had deserted to a foreign ship,
and I had been asked – invited – to go aboard and get him, I would have sent
some people to get him. If this guy said he wasn’t coming back, I’d have
dragged him back.”
Ellis speaks forcefully to Captain Brown about the Coast
Guard obligation to return the man, but would insist forever after that he was
only offering advice as a superior officer on leave. Yet Captain Brown senses
the conviction in Admiral Ellis’s voice and hears something more: “I did not
feel that I had any authority to refuse Admiral Ellis’s orders on that day,” he
will testify to the board of investigation. If he receives different
instructions from Coast Guard headquarters or the State Department later in the
day, he knows he will overrule Ellis as acting district commander. But if he
receives inadequate instruction, or no instruction at all, he will feel compelled
to obey his admiral, off-duty though he may be. He will later tell Ruksenas
that he realized that, from this moment forward, there was “no way to come out
of this situation clean.”
1:15 p.m.
Many men, in offices located farther and farther from the
drama playing out off Menemsha Bight, begin to make disinterested, narrow,
bureaucratic decisions that will profoundly affect the life of Simas Kudirka,
who has not yet made his leap to freedom. In his call to headquarters in
Washington, Captain Brown does not ask how to handle a defector once aboard,
but focuses instead on that part of the Vigilant’s message suggesting the man
may swim between the two vessels. He asks Rear Admiral Robert E. Hammond, the
chief operations officer at Washington headquarters, how much force the Coast
Guard may use to retrieve a Soviet seaman in territorial waters if the Soviets
are trying to pick him up too. Captain Brown regards an attempted defection in
American waters as an extraordinary event, and expects Admiral Hammond, an old
friend from the academy, to take charge of the case personally in Washington.
But Hammond delegates the responsibility. He calls Captain Wallace C. Dahlgren,
the chief of intelligence, into his office and tells him to get direction from
the State Department. Dahlgren has been at his post for just six weeks and
knows almost nothing of State Department organization. It takes him four phone
calls over the course of an hour and forty-five minutes to reach the right
foreign-service officer, familiarize him with the outline of the problem, and
get guidance about whether the Coast Guard is actually permitted to rescue a
man swimming in American waters at the end of November.
2:00 p.m.
(A note from Kudirka to the Vigilant declaring his intentions
to defect.)
Aboard Vigilant, Lieutenant Lundberg is in the wheelhouse
when the man appears opposite the bridge wing again. The man points to a small
package in his hand. Lundberg goes to the end of the bridge wing. The man
tosses the package. It barely clears the spray shield. Lundberg leans over the
rail and catches it. It is a package of cigarettes. He says “Thanks” as
nonchalantly as he can, removes a cigarette, lights it, and walks back inside
the bridge. He feels something bulky in the bottom of the package. He tears at
the cellophane. It is a note: “My dear comrade,” it says on one side, “I will
up down of [jump from] russians ship and go with you together. If is a possible
please give my signal. I keep a sharp lookout = Simas.” On the other side, it
reads: “I up down in the time, when the conference is End, and your delegats go
into your ships a board!”
For the second time that afternoon, Commander Eustis is
recalled to his ship. The Vigilant has not yet heard back from the First
District after sending its original message about a possible defection. Eustis
orders a second message sent. It summarizes the note in the cigarette package
and asks for a forty-four-foot lifeboat from the Menemsha Coast Guard station
to stand by far off from the Vigilant, ready to sweep in and pick up a man in
the water. The message is sent to Boston at 2:23 p.m., but the cryptographic
machines aboard ship and at the First District do not work properly. It will
take eight tries to get the message out. Boston does not receive it for another
four hours and fifteen minutes. The forty-four-footer is never sent.
Headquarters in Washington is never informed. The reason: by the time this new
message reaches Boston, everyone in a position of authority will have gone home
for the night. Meantime, Kudirka goes below decks on the Litva, certain he has
made himself clear. The Americans will be ready to receive and protect him
after he jumps.
3:30 p.m.
Edward L. Killham, serving his third tour of duty in charge
of bilateral matters in the office of Soviet Union affairs at the State
Department, speaks with Captain Dahlgren, the intelligence officer at Coast
Guard headquarters. He has read the Vigilant’s original message. Two hours have
passed since the First District asked headquarters the procedural question
about how hard it may compete with the Soviets to recover an asylum seeker from
American waters.
Killham does not address this question immediately. To him,
the obviousness of the overture – so public – is his first concern. It makes
him think that the defection might be fake, a provocation designed to embarrass
the United States on home waters. Killham knows that even if the defector is
sincere, more than half of all asylum-seekers change their minds and go back
within seventy-two hours. There is no point involving lawyers and superiors in
this case while matters remain so hypothetical.
Killham answers the technical question Dahlgren relays about
retrieving a defector from the water. He says that the Coast Guard ought to
treat it as a regular search-and-rescue operation: “Don’t encourage him, but if
he jumps in the water, you guys make a living of fishing people out of the
water. You ought to beat the Soviets to him. Get him out and call us and we’ll
decide what to do then.” He does not make the larger point that the Coast Guard
should, of course, hold on to the defector until notified otherwise. “I did not
specifically discuss it with Captain Dahlgren,” he will tell the Coast Guard
board of investigation, “because it seemed to me inconceivable that once a man
had sought asylum on an American vessel that he could be returned. . . .
However, in hindsight I might say that [I] was not imaginative enough. As I
said, I couldn’t imagine that this thing could be permitted to develop the way
. . . it did. In fact, I still find it hard to believe.”
4:30 p.m.
As darkness falls on Vineyard Sound, Simas Kudirka looks up
and down the main deck of the Litva. He sees no one. He climbs over the
railing. Then he jumps – probably close to ten feet – clearing the rail of the
Vigilant. He lands beneath the portside lifeboat, rolls under it, then goes
through a hatch, up a flight of stairs – and runs into Ivan Burkal, the acting
commander of his own fishing fleet.
The conference is over, and the Americans are back aboard the
Vigilant. Burkal is touring the cutter with two other Soviet officers.
“Kudirka! What are you doing here?” Burkal says. “Excuse me, I don’t have
time,” Kudirka says. He keeps going up the stairs and runs into the bridge. He
sees Lundberg and says hello. The men in the wheelhouse are startled to see the
man on their own ship. No one has seen him jump. They cheer, shake his hand,
clap him on the back. Lundberg moves Kudirka down one deck to the
watchstander’s head, a small bathroom with a toilet and wash basin. Lundberg
goes to the captain’s cabin. “He’s aboard,” he tells Commander Eustis. “Who?”
asks Eustis. “The defector,” says Lundberg.
Eustis goes down to the watchstander’s head. Kudirka is
trembling. He throws his arms around the skipper. “Oh, captain, thank you!” he
cries. Eustis will tell the board of investigation that Kudirka, in those first
moments aboard the Vigilant, appeared to have put his whole life behind him.
“It was the moment at hand that was [his] concern,” Eustis says. More than
anything, Eustis now wants to send the three Soviet officers – the fleet
commander, the political officer, and a Soviet translator – back to the Litva.
He will then inform Boston, cast off from the Soviet ship, move away, and wait
for instructions to come back from the State Department, via headquarters.
Eustis goes to the bridge and looks down on the helicopter deck. The three
Soviet officers stand there talking with one another. Instead of going back,
they walk forward to his cabin and sit on a sofa, facing the American
delegation, and say nothing.
4:35 p.m.
Five minutes after Kudirka jumps, Captain Brown, acting
commander at the First District, gets permission from headquarters to go home
for the night. It is dark and rainy in Boston. He reasons that if the man were
going to leap into the water, he would have done so by the end of what, for
Brown, is a normal working day.
He walks in the door of his home in Gloucester at 6 p.m. His
wife tells him that there is an urgent message from the First District office.
He doesn’t even remove his overcoat. He knows what the message will be. He
calls Lieutenant Kenneth N. Ryan, the rescue coordination officer in Boston,
and is told the defector is aboard. Commander Eustis – looking for guidance,
finding no one who can help him in the Boston office, and unaware that Admiral
Ellis is on leave – has called Ellis at home. The admiral has told Eustis what
he told Brown earlier in the afternoon: the Soviets should be notified, and if
they want him back, the defector should be returned.
Surprised by Ellis’s orders, Eustis has gone to the
watchstander’s head. He has spoken with the defector for half an hour. Kudirka
has given Eustis a packet of papers and small photographs of himself and his
wife. “How could a man leave his family and his whole life so completely, as he
would have to do?” Eustis will later ask Ruksenas, the author. “I was very impressed
with him, that he had made a decision like this. . . .” With a sense of
sadness, Eustis gives Kudirka the news that he must be returned. “No give me
back!” Kudirka cries. “No give me back! They kill me! My life no good over
there!”
Now Captain Brown speaks with Eustis via a public
radiotelephone link. Hoping to navigate around Admiral Ellis, Brown advises
Eustis to try to persuade the Soviet officers in his cabin to leave, in return
for a promise that the Vigilant will not depart with the defector unless
ordered to do so from Washington. “This is a matter that will have to be
resolved by the State Department,” he tells Commander Eustis, who signs off. Ryan,
at the First District, now asks Captain Brown whether he should call
headquarters in Washington with the news that the defection has occurred. Word
will then be passed to the State Department, which will give guidance. “No.
Hold on a minute,” says Brown. “I’ll get back to you shortly.” Once again he
calls Admiral Ellis for advice.
5:30 p.m. – 8 p.m.
(The deck beneath the lifeboat of the Coast Guard cutter
Vigilant, where Simas Kudirka landed after his leap to freedom, and where he
briefly escaped his Soviet pursuers)
Kudirka sits in the watchstander’s head, his arms around his
knees, feeling numb, wondering if he has somehow violated the rules of
defection. “What was happening out there, beyond the door of this toilet,” he
will write in his autobiography, “where men I could not see were debating my
fate in a language I could not understand?” During the course of the evening,
Captain Brown speaks with Admiral Ellis three times. Ellis dismisses the idea
that headquarters or the State Department will offer any better guidance than
they already have – that the Coast Guard may indeed rescue a man who jumps in
the water. He also scoffs at the idea that the man has any reason to fear for
his life. The Soviets “are not barbarians,” he tells his chief of staff. To the
board of investigation, he will later say: “I think that any man in that
circumstance would plead for his life.
I didn’t, and I still don’t, feel there [are] any facts that
the Russians go around killing people.” Aboard the Vigilant, Commander Eustis
speaks with Brown four times that night. With each call, he hears Brown’s views
harden, and his own options as master of the Vigilant diminish. The American
conferees, aware now of the defection, are sharing a cabin with the three
sullen Soviet officers, who refuse to leave. The Americans insist to Eustis and
the Russians that this is a matter for the State Department to resolve. But the
foreign policy of the United States no longer seems to be a part of Brown’s
thinking, and Eustis doesn’t feel he can ask Brown whether the State Department
has given instructions without appearing to question his orders.
At 8 p.m., the Soviet political officer hands Commander
Eustis a note, sent from his ship. The Litva has overheard the radiotelephone
conversations spelling out the instructions from Admiral Ellis that the Soviets
must be officially notified of the defection, and formally request Kudirka’s
return. The note declares that Kudirka has broken into the captain’s safe,
stolen 3,000 rubles, and is now hiding aboard the American ship. The Soviets
want him back. No one searches the defector for the money. No one sees that a
charge of thievery gives the Coast Guard a new opportunity to take Kudirka
ashore, with any willing accuser, on the pretext of filing a criminal complaint
with the police, a district attorney, or a representative of the United States government
– perhaps the State Department or Immigration and Naturalization. “I had the
formal note. I knew now that I must return him,” Eustis will tell the board of
investigation. He goes to the watchstander’s head to speak with Kudirka.
Kudirka despairs. He cannot understand why asylum is not being granted, and why
the Americans do not understand the danger he is in. “Dear Captain, please not
giving me again, again,” Kudirka pleads. “For me is Siberia. Siberia is death.”
8:24 p.m.
In Boston, Lieutenant Ryan is busy handling radiotelephone
calls between the Vigilant and Captain Brown. He finally gets a few minutes to
inform headquarters in Washington of the defection and the Soviet note
requesting that the sailor be returned, which he learns of while listening in
to a conversation between Commander Eustis and Captain Brown. He tells the duty
officer at headquarters that the man “is being returned” at the written request
of the Soviet master.
The duty officer at headquarters calls Admiral Hammond, the
chief of operations, at home and tells him “the case has been resolved” with
the return of the defector – which has not yet actually occurred. Admiral
Hammond will say later: “I thought what had happened was that he had come
aboard [and] either the ship or the district had urged him to go back and not
cause an incident between the two vessels on a fisheries conference, and that
the man had either agreed to go back or had been led back. I just felt that he
had gone back really of his own free will. Practically so.”
The duty officer at headquarters now calls the State
Department. Four hours have passed since Kudirka’s jump. The news of the
defection and the return reaches Edward A. Mainland at home. Mainland is an
assistant to Edward Killham, the Soviet bilateral affairs specialist at the
State Department, who had left work at 7 p.m., assured by Captain Dahlgren at
headquarters that a defection will not occur after night falls in southeastern
New England. Mainland is perplexed by the news of the return – he will place a
call of his own to Coast Guard headquarters three hours later to check again
what few facts headquarters has – but he does not try to stop what might still
be happening on or between the two ships. And he does not call Killham, his
boss, with a report.
Killham will not find out about what is still to transpire on
the decks of the Vigilant until he returns to work the next day. “I spent most
of the morning trying to find out what had happened,” he will tell the board of
investigation. “And everything I found out kept getting worse and worse.”
8:50 p.m.
The Soviet officers want Eustis to order his own men to force
Kudirka back to the Litva. Eustis insists that the Russians do it themselves.
“I thought he was a guy that was in fear of his life, and he was going to put
up an awful struggle either way,” Ralph Eustis will say later. “I just felt
that if somebody had to use that much force to subdue somebody, let them do it.
Why make my guys do it?”
The Soviets seem reluctant. In this hesitation, Eustis sees a
last chance to save Kudirka. At 10:14 p.m. he places a final call to Captain
Brown at his home. The skipper says that the Soviets do not want to force their
own man off the Vigilant. Eustis starts to suggest that he order the Russian
officers back to the Litva. He will then transport Kudirka to New Bedford and
let the State Department take it from there. Captain Brown cuts him off.
“Commander Eustis, you have your orders, you have no discretion,” he declares.
“Use whatever force is necessary.” Never before has Captain Brown given him so
direct and forceful an order. Dismayed, Eustis goes to the Soviet officers.
“He’s all yours,” he says. “When I hung up the phone, why, well, I guess I totally
broke down in this house with my wife,” Captain Brown will tell Ruksenas many
months later. “And I can just see it right now. I told my wife – I said: ‘I
spent all my life saving people, and I finally had to give an order, and I
think it’s for a man to be killed.’”
10:30 p.m. – 11:50 p.m.
With the three Soviet officers, three additional crewmen from
the Litva force their way into the watchstander’s head. They hit Kudirka and
kick him, driving him to the floor. He breaks free and runs down a passageway
to the door of the captain’s cabin. The door is open. “Help me! Oh, God, help
me!” he cries to the Americans inside. The Russians grab him. He clutches the
doorknob. They pull, striking his arms and hands. Robert Brieze, a Latvian
refugee who escaped his country, sailed to Boston in 1944, and is now president
of the New Bedford Seafood Producers Association, leaps to his feet and tries
to push the Soviets away. “No, no, you cannot do this!” he yells. But he is
pulled back by William Gordon, head of the delegation, who tells him matters
have gone too far to stop. The Soviets close the door on Kudirka’s hands. But
the Russians lose their grip, and Kudirka flies out the portside hatch, where
he tumbles under the same lifeboat he’d landed under six hours earlier. He
crawls under the railing and rolls over the side. Lundberg, the lieutenant to
whom Kudirka had tossed his note in the cigarette pack early in the afternoon,
is standing near the lifeboat. He sees the defector’s fingertips clutch the lip
of the deck for a moment. Then the fingers let go. “Man overboard!” Lundberg
cries. Life jackets are dropped into the narrow space between the Vigilant and
the Sovetskaya Litva. On the bridge, Paul Pakos shines the port signal lamp
down on the water between the two ships. Commander Eustis orders his men to
unmoor the cutter, cutting the lines with axes if necessary. He orders his
vessel to back away from the Litva to avoid crushing the man. The turbines
rumble.
But from the lip of the deck, Kudirka has swung himself onto
a covered deck below. From the Litva, his fellow sailors see him run toward the
stern of the Vigilant. They run along the deck of the mother ship, shouting to
the Soviet officers and crewmen in pursuit that the escapee is one deck below
them, heading aft.
On the fantail, Joseph Jabour, commissaryman third class, is
wearing a telephone apparatus on his chest. He is temporarily assigned the duty
to call the bridge when the stern lines are cast off. Kudirka, shirtless, runs
toward him, climbs the .50 caliber gun mount on the fantail, and tries to go
over the side. Jabour and a boatswain’s mate grab his wrists. Kudirka speaks to
them gently, trying to tell them a boat is supposed to be waiting for him out
there in the darkness. But the Russians come running across the deck, leap onto
the backs of the Americans, and haul Kudirka back onto the fantail. One tries
to snare the wire on Jabour’s telephone to choke Kudirka. Jabour pulls it back.
Kudirka “was screaming,” one of the Americans will tell the board of investigation.
“I don’t know what he was saying. It was in Russian. He made screaming sounds
of pain.”
The Russians drag Kudirka feet first to the ladder up to the
helicopter deck. One has Kudirka in a headlock and cracks his head into the
stanchions of the ladder as they climb it. Jabour knows orders have been passed
not to get involved, but he does not know from whom they came. He does not use
his telephone to call the bridge about the beating he witnesses.
The Soviets, carrying blankets and a rope, tie Kudirka to a
lifeboat winch. As the Vigilant begins to back away from the Litva, at least
two mooring lines snap. The Litva’s cargo boom tears away several antennas and
a signal light atop the bridge of the Vigilant. As the Vigilant backs away, a
Soviet sailor notices the movement. He wraps a line around Kudirka’s neck and
tries to throw it to his mother ship. Ensign John Hughes, gunnery officer
aboard the Vigilant, runs up to the bridge and says the Soviet sailors are
beating and trying to strangle the defector. Pakos orders him to stop it if he
can. Hughes returns to the flight deck and unwraps the line from around
Kudirka’s neck. He orders the Soviets to stop hitting their captive.
Kudirka, bound in the blanket, is hauled into a tool shack on
the helicopter deck. The crewmen hit him again. When the Vigilant stops, they
carry him from the shack to the cutter’s lifeboat, which has been lowered to
the level of the helicopter deck.
Commander Eustis comes down from the bridge. He sees Kudirka
tied in the blanket from feet to neck, lying on the deck. Kudirka is conscious.
He looks up at Eustis as the captain approaches him, but to Eustis, his eyes
appear blank, at least at first. Eustis will tell the board of investigation,
“I approached this man, tried to speak to him and indicated that I was sorry
for what was going to happen to him, and was personally, as a man, concerned
for him. He said nothing to me at the time, but he did indicate he knew who I
was and attempted to let me know, ‘That’s the way it was.’” It is 11:30 p.m.
Kudirka, still bound, is dropped two or three feet into the
Vigilant’s lifeboat, landing head first on the engine hatch. The boat, manned
by Vigilant sailors and filled with the Soviet assailants, motors a mile across
Vineyard Sound with one Russian sitting on Kudirka’s head, another occasionally
chopping at his neck and body with the knife-edge of his hands. It is unclear
whether Kudirka is conscious. “If he is not dead now,” the Soviet political
officer tells the Americans, “he will be dead in a few minutes.”
At the Sovetskaya Litva, the tire is lowered and Kudirka is
hauled onto it. The Soviets climb on top of him, and the crew is raised to the
deck of the mother ship. The Soviet captain sends down a bottle of Scotch, a
gift for Commander Eustis. It is a bottle of Johnnie Walker Red Label. To this
day, the skipper of the Vigilant cannot remember what he did with it.
Aftermath
A brief story about the attempted defection in Vineyard Sound
appears the next morning in the New Bedford Standard-Times. It is picked up by
the wire services. Lithuanian Americans protest in Boston, Washington, and
Cleveland. The story makes the front pages of The New York Times, the Los
Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune. The Washington Post says in an editorial:
“No more sickening and humiliating an episode in international relations has
taken place within memory than the American government’s knowing return of a
would-be Soviet defector to Soviet authorities on an American ship in American
waters . . . . [T]he heart clogs in contemplation of this fantastic parable of
our times.”
President Richard M. Nixon declares himself outraged by the
return of the defector. He orders an investigation at the State Department.
Guidelines on defection cases are swiftly handed down to Coast Guard
headquarters and passed to all Coast Guard districts: no defector is to be
returned without specific instructions from the State Department. A
subcommittee of the House of Representatives holds hearings. At the conclusion
of the Coast Guard investigation, Admiral Ellis and Captain Brown are forced
into retirement. They will remain friends, play bridge weekly with their wives, and attend Coast Guard
functions together. But they will never again discuss the incident. Captain
Brown dies in Easton, Maryland, in 1981 at the age of sixty-one, Admiral Ellis
in Glen Ridge, New Jersey, in 2001 at the age of eighty-seven.
For permitting foreign nationals to use force on a Coast
Guard vessel, Commander Eustis loses his command of the Vigilant and is
reassigned to shore duty as second in command at Governor’s Island, New York,
the largest Coast Guard base in the world. Passed over for promotion to
captain, he will retire from the Coast Guard in 1975. He will spend the next
twenty-three years in business, much of it working with the Department of
Defense on antisubmarine warfare matters. Today he lives in Mattapoisett with
his wife Merry. This year, he is the co-chairman of the fiftieth reunion of his
class at the Coast Guard Academy in New London.
Protesters gather at the State Department, demanding the head
of Ed Killham, the Soviet specialist, for telling the Coast Guard that it could
fish a defector from the water, but failing to add that it should keep him
afterward. He is quickly transferred to the diplomatic wilderness of
Copenhagen. In 1976 he is invited to work as a Soviet expert at the Strategic
Arms Reduction talks in Geneva. He is appointed deputy chief of missions, the
number two man, at the American embassy in Brussels, and retires as the head of
the State Department’s office of Central African Affairs in 1987. With his wife
Lucy, he now lives in Georgetown, where he is working on a book about the
nineteenth-century Russian statesman Mikhail Speransky.
Fate of Simas Kudirka
Simas Kudirka is sent first to the Potma prison in the
province of Moldova, 225 miles southeast of Moscow. There he engages in a
series of protests, hunger strikes, work stoppages, and attempts to alert the
West to conditions in Soviet prisons. For his transgressions, he is sent to
Camp No. 36, Special Correctional Work Institution, in the Perm region. In
winter, on early mornings, the temperature falls to 70 degrees below zero, and
birds freeze to death in mid-air if they try to fly.
In September 1973, a Lithuanian émigré living in New York
learns that Kudirka’s mother had been born in the United States and that the
defector, born out of wedlock, might be able to claim American citizenship. The
State Department takes up the case and requests Kudirka’s release. At first the
Soviets balk. But senators and congressmen demand his return, and Henry
Kissinger intervenes personally with the Soviet embassy and the Soviet
leadership. On August 23, 1974, Kudirka is taken from prison and granted
citizenship at the US embassy in Moscow. With his family, he flies out of the
Soviet Union on November 5, 1974. He settles first in Brooklyn, the place of
his mother’s birth, where he becomes a janitor. Eventually he moves to Los
Angeles, where he manages a building in Santa Monica. In 2002, he returns to
live in a liberated Lithuania, the land from which he tried to escape
thirty-five years ago, finding instead seven hours of freedom in the
watchstander’s head of a Coast Guard cutter named Vigilant, moored one mile
west of the shoreline of Menemsha Bight.
^ This gives a very detailed account of what happened. The
Americans involved (both on the Ship and on Land – including the US Coast Guard
and the State Department) are just as guilty as the Soviet KGB for their cruel
and inhumane treatment of Simas Kudirka.
The Americans should have been charged and put on Trial
instead of just being reassigned or forced to Retire.
Because of their Stupidity Simas Kudirka was tortured by the
KGB and spent 4 years in Prison.
He was only allowed to leave when his Mother was able to
regain her American Citizenship (she was born in New York – but until 1952 American
Women couldn’t always pass on their American Citizenship to their Children if
they married a Foreigner.)
Simas Kudirka just wanted to live in Freedom and the Americans
involved in this acted more Communist than the Soviets in their betrayal of
him. ^
https://mvmagazine.com/news/2005/12/01/defection-simas-kudirka
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