:06:00
How do you become the KGB top spy
in the United States?
:06:03
Gotta know someone
:06:06
You gotta know someone
:06:09
So politics is politics
:06:23
Walter, get me Kruschev's files
:06:26
Pass me that
:06:27
I wanna see their career
chronologies side by side
:06:32
We know they're not related, right?
:06:34
Right
:06:34
They're not from the same hometown
:06:37
They went to different schools
:06:38
Right
:06:40
So if they were gonna meet
:06:43
they should have met here
:06:45
I think they could've met
:06:46
They could not
:06:48
He was an engineer
stationed outside of Moscow
:06:50
at the end of '41
:06:53
That's it
:06:55
They know each other
:06:57
They're war buddies
:06:58
That's pretty thin, Kenny
:07:00
Real life usually is, Walter
:07:04
They know each other, Jack
:07:06
Kruschev and Fomin were war buddies
:07:08
You sure?
:07:09
Don't take it to court, but we've
got good circumstantial evidenct
:07:13
What's your instinct?
I gotta move on this
:07:19
My gut's telling me that
:07:20
Kruschev's tuming to a trusted
old friend to carry his message
:07:25
Okay. We're going
:07:29
I've been instructed to tell you
:07:31
that the American government
would respond favorably
:07:33
to an offer along the lines
that you have discussed
:07:36
If such a solution were raised
at the U. N. by Ambassador Zorin
:07:40
he would find a favorable reply
from Ambassador Stevenson
:07:43
So I understand you correctly
:07:47
if the missiles in Cuba
were dismantled
:07:51
returned to the Soviet Union
:07:53
and a guarantee was made
not to reintroduce them
:07:56
the United States
would be prepared to guarantee
:07:58
that it would never invade Cuba