Political asylum
Vladimir Petrov was a Soviet spy in Australia who defected in exchange for political asylum in 1954. The Australian government responded by recalling the USSR embassy in Canberra and cutting off diplomatic relations with Moscow.
Vladimir Petrov was the man at the centre of the Petrov Affair, which occurred in 1954. This was a spy event involving Soviet Spy Agent, Vladimir Petrov, then third secretary in the Soviet embassy in Canberra, who wanted to provide ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) information of the Soviet's plans, in return for defection, that is, joining the Australian side and betraying his own country.
Vladimir Nikolayevich Petrov was born in 1915.
Vladimir Nikolayevich Petrov died in 1999.
The Petrov Affair occurred in 1954. It was a spy event involving Soviet Spy Agent, Vladimir Petrov, then third secretary in the Soviet embassy in Canberra, who wanted to provide ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) information of the Soviet's plans, in return for defection, that is, joining the Australian side and betraying his own country.
Vladimir Vladimirovich Petrov was born on 1947-06-30.
Vladimir Petrov - footballer - was born on 1940-03-20.
Vladimir Nikolaevich Petrov has written: 'Gorech' taezhnykh iagod' 'Kalenye strely'
Vladimir Ivanovich Kostin has written: 'K.S. Petrov-Vodkin'
The Petrov Affair was a Cold War spy drama in Australia in April 1954, involving the defection of Vladimir Petrov, third secretary in the Soviet embassy in Canberra.
The Petrov Affair refers to the events surrounding the defection of Vladimir Petrov in April 1954. Petrov was the Third Secretary of the Soviet embassy in the Australian city of Canberra as well as colonel in the KGB. He had been sent to Australia with his wife in 1951 by Lavrentiy Beria, the then-security chief. When Stalin died in 1953, Beria was arrested and shot by the Soviet leaderÕs successors; this made Petrov nervous to return to the Soviet Union in case he would be tabbed as a 'Beria man.' So the KGB colonel made contact with the ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organization) over the next year, providing them with evidence of Soviet espionage in Australia. On April 3, 1954, Petrov formally defectedÉwithout his wife, Evdokia. As she was an MVD officer, the MVD claimed that Australian authorities had kidnapped Vladimir Petrov and therefore needed to get her. On April 19, the KGB escorted Evdokia Petrova to Sydney Airport, where the then-Australian prime minister Robert Menzies made contact with her through a flight attendant. Menzies was not satisfied with the answer she gave and had ASIO officials seize Petrova at Darwin Airport when her plane made a fuel stop. She was then offered asylum and went with her husband.
The Petrov Affair occurred in 1954. It was a spy event involving Soviet Spy Agent, Vladimir Petrov, then third secretary in the Soviet embassy in Canberra, who wanted to provide ASIO (Australian Security Intelligence Organisation) information of the Soviet's plans, in return for defection, that is, joining the Australian side and betraying his own country. The whole affair was important because it changed how Australians responded to the threat of Communism. It resulted in the breaking of diplomatic relations between Australia and the USSR and cemented Australia concerns about the spread of communism.