Clement Tibel, an unknown French physicist who studies energy, was kidnapped to the Soviet Union by Boris, a KGB member dressed as a conductor of a symphony orchestra, on his way to the International Thermonuclear Conference in Vienna in 1957. Later, Tibel worked for the Soviet Institute of Atomic Energy for more than 10 years under the duress of the KGB. Sixteen years later, Tibel (alias Khalikov) went to London, England, to visit Britain's new thermonuclear device as a member of the Soviet scientific delegation. The British counterintelligence agency kidnapped Tibel in a premeditated car accident and sent him to the hospital for an injection to put him in a coma. The staff of the Soviet Embassy in Britain arrived in a hurry, and the doctor said, "Ha is dead." Soon he falsely claimed to have been cremated. The British authorities asked Tibel to confess the KGB elements mixed with British scientists, and Tiebel agreed. These agents were arrested one by one. The British counter-espionage agency gave Tibel a reward and a self-defense pistol to return to France. Knowing that Tibel was not dead and had defected and fled, the KGB tracked him down and killed him. As soon as Tibel left the British spy agency. Is surrounded by the KGB. He was hiding and running for his life. He fled to France and met his remarried wife in a small restaurant.