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Australian History

Tarmac capers

Document Z by Andrew Croome

by Judith Armstrong
September 2009, no. 314

Document Z by Andrew Croome

Allen & Unwin, $23.99 pb, 347 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

Devotees of the television program Spooks may find Australian history less than exciting, but the Petrov Affair is surely the exception that confounds the cliché. Its ingredients included the Cold War, espionage, agents, a defection (hugely important propaganda for the Menzies government on the eve of the 1954 federal election) and a charming woman, the defector’s wife, who was unceremoniously hustled on to a waiting aeroplane by beefy officials from the Russian Embassy. The poignancy of Evdokia Petrova’s white shoe lying abandoned on the tarmac as the plane took off was only eclipsed by the drama of the refuelling stop in Darwin, where she was prevailed upon by Australian security to remain in this country with her husband, Vladimir. He was quite clear about his defection; Evdokia, in that pivotal moment and long afterwards, was tormented by uncertainty.

 


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Document Z by Andrew Croome

Allen & Unwin, $23.99 pb, 347 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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