During the time
I was in Prague, Czechoslovakia was still completely mired in the Warsaw Pact
world, occupied by the Soviet Army and controlled thoroughly by the Communist
government, including its secret police and informers. We Americans had to work
in an environment in which we were constantly under surveillance, either openly
or covertly. We had to assume our phones, apartments, and cars were tapped and
bugged. Although I worked in a part of the embassy that in theory was free of
taps and bugs, we had to operate as though it were not. There were only a few
places where we could speak with freedom. . . .
Everywhere I
went in Prague and Czechoslovakia I was followed, or I had to assume I was if I
could not actually see it. Generally, I could spot the surveillance cars
whenever I drove away from the embassy or my apartment; people sat in the park
outside my front door at least until darkness, ready to call up the cars when I
went out. (One friend tipped me off to the fact that they generally broke off
the surveillance at about 8:00 pm, if I didn’t go out before that; if, in fact,
I wanted to call on somebody without my tail I generally waited until then,
although of course it was foolish to assume they were not there if I could not
see the obvious ones.)
Of course we
were often amused by the surveillance, although I usually felt irritated and
harassed as well. One time, on Labor Day when the American embassy was on
holiday and the Czechs were not, I set off for the center of town to shop for
presents to take home on an approaching vacation. Because of center-city
parking difficulties, I headed off on foot for the Metro station when I left my
building, walking briskly up a small side street. One of the surveillance cars,
standing by to pick me up, was parked in the street. As I walked past, the
driver ducked down behind a handy newspaper. Just as I boarded the train, I saw
one of “my” team jump on to the next car, and when I emerged from the station
into Václavské náměstí (Wenceslas Square), a follow-car was standing on
the street outside.
First I went
into a record store. In Prague shops, the procedure was that as many clients
could enter, as shopping baskets were available at the entrance. Any overflow
had to wait until a basket was turned in. Since it was a working day, neither
my shadow nor I had to wait. I spent the next twenty minutes or so selecting
records for my nephews and watching the shadow trying to look absorbed in the
racks of recordings.
At my next stop,
I ran into an embassy friend who told me of some attractive garnet jewelry at a
shop in a labyrinthine building called the Lucerna. She tried to explain
exactly where the shop was, but I kept going down dead-end corridors in
Lucerna, turning around to find myself face to face with my pursuit. He kept
taking off and putting on his jacket and, one time, changing his shirt
entirely. I’m certain he thought I was trying to lose him and became ever more
frantic. I never did find the jewelry store; perhaps I should have asked my
shadow if he knew where it was.
Another time I
went to the theater with a Czech friend who had received permission from the
authorities to emigrate. Generally I did not go out publicly with any dissident
friends. In this case I judged it would be acceptable, since he was about to
leave the country in a few weeks anyway. We drove in my car to the theater,
which was located on the outskirts of the city. We were early so we went into a
neighboring coffee shop while we waited. Surveillance had caught up with us,
and one of the followers stood with his hip wedged right up to the corner of
the table where we were sitting. I assumed he had some taping device in his
pocket, but we had nothing of moment for him to carry back to his lab for analysis.
There is nothing like a hostile hip to dampen even the most innocuous
conversation. After the performance was over, we left the theater and, driving
away, I could see we had at least twice the normal number of surveillance cars
on our tail. My friend consequently decided he should disembark at a Metro
station, since he was living against regulations in an apartment without
registration. When we met some months later in London, he told me he was
followed for three days after our outing.
Wherever we were
in Prague, we had to assume we were observed, listened to, followed, and
photographed. Some of the cameras were ingeniously hidden in pocketbooks (for
women) or the old-fashioned, accordion-style briefcases (for men). I became
adept at spotting them in crowds out on the streets; the pursuers would turn
the cameras at rather awkward angles to shoot me buying souvenirs on the
Charles Bridge or walking up the street. Men also carried small, leather purses
in which they had two-way radios, with wire antennas, with which they could
communicate to a surveillance officer on an adjacent street. What possible use
all this was, I cannot tell. Except for my contacts with the dissident
community, about which the authorities were well aware, my life in Prague was an
open book.