Skip to content
Advertisement

Politics

Latest Stories

e1e9dcea39c012054b0f6a70670019ae.jpg

e1e9dcea39c012054b0f6a70670019ae.jpg

IOC President Thomas Bach, left, welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin before the IOC President?'s Gala Dinner on the eve of the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2014, in Sochi, Russia. (AP Photo/Andrej Isakovic, Pool)

a9afbeb938760c054b0f6a706700bc15.jpg

a9afbeb938760c054b0f6a706700bc15.jpg

Workers line up outside a ticket box office on the Olympic Plaza ahead of the upcoming 2014 Winter Olympics, Thursday, Feb. 6, 2014, in Sochi, Russia. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

2398c4f35b0b1d054b0f6a706700b47f.jpg

2398c4f35b0b1d054b0f6a706700b47f.jpg

In this file photo from April 30 1998, Poland’s Cold War spy, Ryszard Kuklinski greets steel mill workers in Nowa Huta, southern Poland. From behind the Iron Curtain, Kuklinski passed some 35,000 pages of Warsaw Pact secrets to the CIA, including the communist government's plan to impose martial law in 1981 and launch a brutal crackdown on the pro-democracy Solidarity movement. He was spirited out of Poland with his wife and two sons shortly before the Dec. 13, 1981 military crackdown, and the family lived in hiding in the U.S. Poland’s military court sentenced him to death for treason and desertion. The charges were lifted in 1998 and Kuklinski came on a visit.(AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

5e2fa03c5b0b1d054b0f6a706700722a.jpg

5e2fa03c5b0b1d054b0f6a706700722a.jpg

In this file photo of April 30, 1998, surrounded by bodyguards, Poland’s Cold War spy, Ryszard Kuklinski, left, visits Krakow, southern Poland. From behind the Iron Curtain, Kuklinski passed some 35,000 pages of Warsaw Pact secrets to the CIA, including the communist government's plan to impose martial law in 1981 and launch a brutal crackdown on the pro-democracy Solidarity movement. He was spirited out of Poland with his wife and two sons shortly before the Dec. 13, 1981 military crackdown, and the family lived in hiding in the U.S. Poland’s military court sentenced him to death for treason and desertion. The charges were lifted in 1998 and Kuklinski came on a visit.(AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

99c16bec5b0b1d054b0f6a706700e604.jpg

99c16bec5b0b1d054b0f6a706700e604.jpg

This Feb. 6, 2014 photo shows the poster for a new Polish movie about a Cold War spy Ryszard Kuklinski that opens in Poland on Friday, Feb. 7, 2014 and later this month in Britain and Ireland, in Warsaw, Poland.. The riveting movie “Jack Stong,” named after Kuklinski’s CIA codename, tells how from behind the Iron Curtain, he passed some 35,000 pages of Warsaw Pact secrets to the CIA, including the communist government's plan to impose martial law in 1981 and launch a brutal crackdown on the pro-democracy Solidarity movement. He was spirited out of Poland with his wife and two sons shortly before the Dec. 13, 1981 military crackdown, and the family lived in hiding in the U.S., where both his sons died in accidents. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)

d458df575b0b1d054b0f6a706700588b.jpg

d458df575b0b1d054b0f6a706700588b.jpg

This Feb. 6, 2014 photo shows the poster for a new Polish movie about a Cold War spy Ryszard Kuklinski that opens in Poland on Friday, Feb. 7, 2014 and later this month in Britain and Ireland, in Warsaw, Poland. The riveting movie “Jack Stong,” named after Kuklinski’s CIA codename, tells how from behind the Iron Curtain, he passed some 35,000 pages of Warsaw Pact secrets to the CIA, including the communist government's plan to impose martial law in 1981 and launch a brutal crackdown on the pro-democracy Solidarity movement. He was spirited out of Poland with his wife and two sons shortly before the Dec. 13, 1981 military crackdown, and the family lived in hiding in the U.S., where both his sons died in accidents. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)