What is the ? (A quick "listicle" or a deep-dive essay?)
Who is your ? (History buffs, tech professionals, or casual readers?) Moscow Rules
These became known as the . While they were never an official manual, they were the unspoken commandments of the shadow war. 1. Assume Nothing Never take a situation at face value. If something feels "off," it is. Verify every detail twice. 2. Never Go Against Your Gut Your intuition is a survival mechanism. If you feel watched, act like you are. Logic can be fooled; your instincts usually can't. 3. Everyone is Under Surveillance Assume your "secure" room is bugged. Assume your phone is tapped. Treat every stranger as a potential set of eyes. 4. Don’t Look Back You are never completely alone. Checking over your shoulder reveals your anxiety. Maintain a "natural" flow to avoid drawing attention. 5. Go With the Flow, Blend In Cultural camouflage is your best defense. Dress like the locals. Adopt the pace and habits of the city. 6. Vary Your Pattern and Stay Within Your Cover Predictability is a death sentence. Change your route to work every day. If your cover is a businessman, act like one 24/7. 7. Lull Them Into a False Sense of Security Be boring. What is the
Establish a mundane routine before breaking it for a "move." Make the surveillance team bored enough to look away. 8. Don’t Harass the Opposition Professionalism prevents escalation. If you catch a tail, don't taunt them. Keep the relationship "clinical." 9. Pick the Time and Place for a Meeting Never meet on the enemy’s terms. Use "gaps" in surveillance to disappear. Ensure your exit strategy is as clean as your entry. 10. Keep Your Options Open Always have a backup plan (and a backup for the backup). Know your surroundings better than the locals. Never get backed into a corner. Why They Still Matter Today While they were never an official manual, they
In the height of the Cold War, Moscow was the most dangerous city in the world for a Western intelligence officer. The KGB was everywhere—bugging apartments, tailing cars, and watching every street corner. To survive, CIA officers developed a "gut-level" philosophy for operating under total surveillance.
While the Soviet Union is gone, the Moscow Rules have transitioned from espionage into the world of and personal privacy . In an age of digital tracking and data harvesting, the core philosophy remains the same: Assume you are being watched, protect your patterns, and trust your instincts.