In October 1940, Molody became a Red Army conscript and soldier. Later, he evinced a strong capacity to learn quickly and to master new tasks and assignments prodigiously. He also proved adept at mastering foreign languages in a short period of time. Therefore, he was quickly re-assigned as a reconnaissance and military intelligence officer by autumn 1940. As a military intelligence officer, he served in the GRU (Soviet Military Intelligence). In Molody's biography of himself as the KGB illegal, Gordon Lonsdale (
Spy: Twenty Years of Secret Service), he narrates the "legend" that he was from a Polish family from Lvov (Lviv) and two years younger than he really was (that is, Lonsdale was two years younger than Molody in the "legend" or backstory). Lonsdale in the "legend" had first arrived in Warsaw in the summer of 1939. He begins to work with a Polish underground resistance group and obtains papers as a Volksdeutscher. Lonsdale continues to describe the situation in Warsaw which after September 1939 fell was conquered and divided between the Soviets and Nazi Germany. Germany held Warsaw. All the while, Lonsdale (Molody) was learning and practicing his Polish and German from summer 1939 to summer 1940. Ostensibly he was part of the Polish underground movement (the backstory), but in reality this time period and training was part of his language training as a GRU intelligence officer. Molody (as Lonsdale) was also receiving training using passwords, dead drops, safehouses and learned how to escape a surveillance tail from enemy intelligence agents. Sometime in late 1940 or early 1941, Molody (as Lonsdale) began his work as a Volksdeutscher inside a German
Organization Todt. Todt was in charge of building civil infrastructure (bridges, roads, railways) in Lvov. The next part of his GRU work during WWII was spent with the renowned William Fisher (the famous
illegal better known by his U.S. identity of Colonel Abel). In late 1939, Molody found himself in a hospital in Moscow where he began a short course in intelligence work. He was also given a course in radio communication that is, how to work as a radio operator, coding and decoding radio messages. In January 1940, Molody was parachuted surreptitiously in Belarus near Minsk. In 1943, he was unexpectedly picked up by the
Abwehr (German intelligence) for having some discrepancy with his papers. He was soon interrogated by an Abwehr intelligence officer who turned out to be William Fisher. Fisher incredibly was a Soviet intelligence agent who managed to infiltrate German intelligence, that is, the Abwehr. Fisher's cover was named Alec. Alec selected Molody for an Abwehr operation behind Soviet lines. During the medical examination of Molody, Alec (Fisher) found a medical problem with Molody, noted it in the file and then released Molody. Thereafter, Molody served as Fisher's radio operator for Soviet intelligence. Fisher continued to serve in the Abwehr and through Molody sent information back to the Soviets about the Abwehr's agents behind Soviet lines. Molody noted that Fisher's coordinates for the Abwehr agents dropped behind Soviet lines were quite precise. Soviet forces were able to capture the German agents quickly. Molody wrote of Fisher (in the Lonsdale memoir), "This was my first introduction to one of the most remarkable men I have ever met in my life, who is also indeed one of the most astute intelligence officers of all time." Sometime in early 1944, Molody and Fisher's assignment in Minsk ended. After the end of the war, from 1946 Molody enrolled as a war veteran into the Trade Law Department of the prestigious
Institute of Foreign Trade, where he mastered the
Chinese language. ==Career as a Soviet "illegal" in the INO (Foreign Department) of the MGB==